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M’s outlast Minnesota with 11th-inning victory B1

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS August 3, 2015 | 75¢

Port Angeles-Sequim-West End

Board decision on bond to come

‘I hate to see it dirty’

Sequim officials eye ballot item BY JAMES CASEY PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

JAMES CASEY/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Julian McCabe — fortified with cigar, dog treats, trash retriever and sack — crosses a bridge on the Waterfront Trail scanning for litter to pick up.

PA man on watch against Waterfront Trail litter Julian McCabe sets his sights on refuse in regular rounds BY JAMES CASEY PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — Picky, picky, picky. Uppy, uppy, uppy. Julian McCabe walks the Waterfront Trail each day, literally picking-upping his way from a discarded tissue to an empty snack bag to a paper cup tossed aside.

“I’ve lived here all my life. I hate to see it dirty,” the 81-year-old retired paper millwright explains of why he stashes trash in the sack he carries. The sun is barely up and the tide is barely out when McCabe leaves the home he’s owned since 1960 near Francis Street Park and takes to the trail. He’s followed the routine for two years.

Tools of the trade Clad in low hikers, shorts and a short-sleeve shirt, he wears a belt pack he says holds dog treats. He carries a long-handled trash retriever, a plastic shopping bag that contains a plastic bottle, and gloves.

McCabe will spend the next hour scouring the trail and Hollywood Beach for anything that’s been misplaced and must be replaced in his bag, which he’ll have to empty twice before he returns home. “You’d be surprised what you can find on this trail,” he said. “It’s just amazing how many people just throw everything away.” McCabe polices the path — part of the Port Angeles portion of the longer Olympic Discovery Trail — daily, walking from the park west to Hollywood Beach one day, from the park east to Ennis Creek the next. TURN

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SEQUIM — Sequim School Board members will decide tonight just when they’ll test the Scottish adage, “Third time’s lucky.” Two previous attempts to pass a construction bond were not. Citizens for Sequim Schools have called for supporters to “pack the boardroom” to urge school directors to put the bonds on the Nov. 3 ballot. The meeting will start at 6 p.m. at 503 N. Sequim Ave. Board members already have agreed to seek the $49.3 million bond issue. Tonight they’ll consider a resolution to place the measure on the Nov. 3 general election ballot. Only four members will decide the question because John Bridge will be out of town. “We need this resolution passed by the board on Monday to move forward,” Citizens for Sequim Schools member Colleen Robinson wrote in a Facebook posting. If placed on the ballot and approved — which takes a 60 percent supermajority — the bond money would go toward building a new elementary school, renovating and expanding four existing facilities, and demolishing a fifth one.

The alternative Should voters reject the resolution, board members have said that their alternative is to schedule a special election for Feb. 9, 2016 at a future meeting. Board members must make up their minds by Tuesday, the deadline to put an issue on the November ballot. Each alternative has its appeal. A November vote would save the district about $40,000, according to board member Walt Johnson, because the cost of the election would be spread among all the sponsors of ballot issues. TURN

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Library’s kids area closed starting today The layout of the collection and furnishings will be reconfigured to better meet modern services and patron needs, said Noah Glaude, Port Angeles Library manager.

The rest of the library will remain open and operate its usual hours during the renovation project. The renovation is being funded by the North Olympic Library System as a planned project of the library’s 2015 capital improvement budget.

Material available

$20,000 donation

During the closure of the children’s area, a small collection of children’s items for browsing and checkout will be available elsewhere in the library, he said. Patrons also can continue to place holds on and check out children’s material from other branches.

The custom interactive furnishings have been made possible by a $20,000 donation from the Port Angeles Friends of the Library. For more information, contact KEITH THORPE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS Glaude at nglaude@nols.org or Childrens librarian Jennifer Lu’Becke straightens a shelf 360-417-8500, ext. 7717. Library information is avail- while boxes wait to be filled with books at the Port Angeles Public Library on Friday. able at www.nols.org.

PA space undergoing renovations PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — The Port Angeles Library’s children’s area will be closed today through Saturday, Aug. 29 during a $40,000 renovation. The renovation will add an interactive learning space designed to teach the Every Child Ready to Read program’s “Pre-literacy Skills and Practices,” with interactive play part of the program. The 18-year-old children’s section at the library at 2210 South Peabody St., also will get new carpet, fresh paint and upgraded electrical connections and technology.

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INSIDE TODAY’S PENINSULA DAILY NEWS 99th year, 173rd issue — 2 sections, 16 pages

CLASSIFIED COMICS COMMENTARY DEAR ABBY DEATHS HOROSCOPE NATION PENINSULA POLL PUZZLES/GAMES

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*PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

SPORTS WEATHER WORLD

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A2

UpFront

MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 2015

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Tundra

The Samurai of Puzzles

By Chad Carpenter

Copyright © 2015, Michael Mepham Editorial Services

www.peninsuladailynews.com This is a QR (Quick Response) code taking the user to the North Olympic Peninsula’s No. 1 website* — peninsuladailynews.com. The QR code can be scanned with a smartphone or tablet equipped with an app available for free from numerous sources. QR codes appearing in news articles or advertisements in the PDN can instantly direct the smartphone user to additional information on the web. *Source: Quantcast Inc.

PORT ANGELES main office: 305 W. First St., P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362 General information: 360-452-2345 Toll-free from Jefferson County and West End: 800-826-7714 Fax: 360-417-3521 Lobby hours: 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday through Friday ■ See Commentary page for names, telephone numbers and email addresses of key executives and contact people. SEQUIM news office: 360-681-2390 147-B W. Washington St. Sequim, WA 98382 JEFFERSON COUNTY news office: 360-385-2335 1939 E. Sims Way Port Townsend, WA 98368

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Circulation customer SERVICE! To subscribe, to change your delivery address, to suspend delivery temporarily or subscription bill questions: 360-452-4507 or 800-826-7714 (6 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday through Friday; 7 a.m.-noon Sunday) You can also subscribe at peninsuladailynews.com, or by email: subscribe@ peninsuladailynews.com If you do not receive your newspaper by 6:30 a.m. Monday through Friday or 7:30 a.m. Sunday and holidays: 360-452-4507 or 800-826-7714 (6 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday through Friday; 7 a.m.noon Sunday) Subscription rates: $2.85 per week by carrier. By mail: $4.10 per week (four weeks minimum) to all states and APO boxes. Single copy prices: 75 cents daily, $1.50 Sunday Back copies: 360-452-2345 or 800-826-7714

Newsroom, sports CONTACTS! To report news: 360-417-3531, or one of our local offices: Sequim, 360-681-2390, ext. 5052; Jefferson County/Port Townsend, 360-385-2335, ext. 5550; West End/Forks, 800-826-7714, ext. 5052 Sports desk/reporting a sports score: 360-417-3525 Letters to Editor: 360-417-3527 Club news, “Seen Around” items, subjects not listed above: 360-417-3527 To purchase PDN photos: www.peninsuladailynews.com, click on “Photo Gallery.” Permission to reprint or reuse articles: 360-417-3530 To locate a recent article: 360-417-3527

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS (ISSN 1050-7000, USPS No. 438.580), continuing the Port Angeles Evening News (founded April 10, 1916) and The Daily News, is a locally operated member of Black Press Group Ltd./Sound Publishing Inc., published each morning Sunday through Friday at 305 W. First St., Port Angeles, WA 98362. POSTMASTER: Periodicals postage paid at Port Angeles, WA. Send address changes to Circulation Department, Peninsula Daily News, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. Contents copyright © 2015, Peninsula Daily News MEMBER

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The Associated Press

Newsmakers Celebrity scoop ■ By The Associated Press

Lear looks to keep pushing boundaries VETERAN TV PRODUCER Norman Lear of “All in the Family” fame is looking ahead to his next groundbreaking series. Lear, 93, told a TV critics’ meeting Saturday that he’s working on a Hispanic version of Lear his singleparent comedy “One Day at a Time.” “I love the idea because I don’t see enough of that representation on the air,” said Lear, who is the subject of a PBS “American Masters” documentary planned for 2016. The original series aired from 1975 to 1984 and starred Bonnie Franklin as the mother of two girls, played by Valerie Bertinelli and Mackenzie Phillips. The reboot would focus on a Latino woman with perhaps a boy and a girl, Lear said, and a grandmother. He wants to show three generations of Latinas, he said. Does he have actors in mind? “Yes, but I’m not going to share,” Lear replied, his tone as jaunty as his trademark white hat.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

RUSH

WRAPS TOUR

Geddy Lee of Rush performs during the final show of the R40 Tour at The Forum in Los Angeles on Saturday. was hospiPerformer Brenda Vac- talized Wednesday caro will replace Valerie Harper in a play in Maine before an as Harper recovers from an evening perforillness and brief hospitalmance. ization. York The Ogunquit PlayVaccaro General house said in a release SatHospital urday night that Vaccaro said she was released will step into the role of Millicent Winter in the pro- Thursday. Playhouse officials said duction of “Nice Work If Harper is “feeling great right You Can Get It,” which is now,” and they want her to playing through Aug. 15. The 75-year-old Harper, continue resting and spending time with her family. who has battled cancer,

Vaccaro steps in

FRIDAY/SATURDAY QUESTION: Which do you prefer on the North Olympic Peninsula: unusually hot weather or unusually cold weather? Hot weather

39.9%

Cold weather

38.9%

Doesn’t matter

21.2%

Total votes cast: 970 Vote on today’s question at www.peninsuladailynews.com NOTE: The Peninsula Poll is unscientific and reflects the opinions of only those peninsuladailynews.com users who chose to participate. The results cannot be assumed to represent the opinions of all users or the public as a whole.

Setting it Straight

Passings

Corrections and clarifications

By The Associated Press

CILLA BLACK, 72, the big-voiced British singer who was a product of Beatles-era Liverpool and became a national treasure over a 50-year music and television career, has died. Spanish police said Sunday that the singer died Saturday at her home in Estepona, Spain. Ms. Black Ms. in 2009 Black’s spokesman, Nick Fiveash, confirmed her death and said details would be released after a coroner’s report was completed. Ms. Black was born Priscilla White in Liverpool, England, in 1943. As a teenager, she sang part-time and worked in the cloakroom of the Cavern Club, where her musical talent was spotted by rising local stars The Beatles. Signed by the Fab Four’s manager, Brian Epstein, she had a string of hits starting in 1964 with “Anyone Who Had a Heart,” written by Burt Bacharach and Hal David, and “You’re My World.” Both went to No. 1 in Britain, and the latter also

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS PENINSULA POLL

charted in the U.S. She also had success with the Bacharach-David theme tune for the 1966 film “Alfie,” and recorded several Beatles songs, including “The Long and Winding Road.” By the late 1960s, she was famous enough to be known by her first name alone and hosted a BBC variety show, “Cilla.” With her reliable good cheer and tireless work ethic, Ms. Black was a TV natural. Her catchphrase — delivered in a strong Liverpool accent that replaced the letter “t” with “r” — was “a lorra, lorra laughs.” She became a British television fixture as the cheeky, cheery host of matchmaking game show “Blind Date” (between 1985

Laugh Lines THE WHITE HOUSE is using a special Twitter account to answer questions about the new nuclear agreement. Finally, using Twitter for what it was designed for — explaining complex, international nuclear agreements involving several nations. Seth Meyers

and 2003) and heartwarming-reunion program “Surprise Surprise.”

The Peninsula Daily News strives at all times for accuracy and fairness in articles, headlines and photographs. To correct an error or to clarify a news story, phone Executive Editor Rex Wilson at 360-4173530 or email mfoster@peninsuladailynews.com.

Peninsula Lookback From the pages of the PENINSULA DAILY NEWS and Port Angeles Evening News

1940 (75 years ago) Clallam County commissioners today voted to appropriate $350 to aid in the solution of the Lake Crescent murder mystery. The commissioners held a hearing yesterday in the courthouse. A reward of $100 will be paid for information leading up to the identification of the body, and $250 will be allotted for expenses incidental to the investigation of the crime. The body of a woman wrapped in two blankets around which many strands of half-inch rope were wound was found in Lake Crescent near Rocky Point on July 6. The body had been in the water more than six months, county medical officer Dr. I.E. Kaveney said.

1965 (50 years ago) The Canadian ferry Princess Marguerite made an unscheduled stop in Port Townsend following

the death of one of the passengers. The boat pulled in after leaving Seattle when the unidentified woman — believe to be about 60 years old from the southwest United States — collapsed. It’s the second time the big ferry has docked in Port Townsend this summer. The Princess Marguerite pulled in for 20 minutes June 20 when a 3½-yearold girl slipped and fell, suffering a skull fracture.

1990 (25 years ago) Sequim School Board members will get their first look at the fire-damaged high school principal’s office and counselors’ offices this afternoon. Superintendent Ken Anderson scheduled a special meeting to tour the burned-out areas of the building and give members an update on damage estimates. The offices and a hall-

way burned in an early morning blaze July 26 that authorities say was caused by burglars who broke in through a library window. The library and teachers’ lounge suffered smoke damage. Damage was initially estimated at $1 million but has been lowered to $250,000.

Seen Around Peninsula snapshots WANTED! “Seen Around” items recalling things seen on the North Olympic Peninsula. Send them to PDN News Desk, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles WA 98362; fax 360-417-3521; or email news@ peninsuladailynews.com. Be sure you mention where you saw your “Seen Around.”

Lottery LAST NIGHT’S LOTTERY results are available on a timely basis by phoning, toll-free, 800-545-7510 or on the Internet at www. walottery.com/Winning Numbers.

Looking Back From the files of The Associated Press

TODAY IS MONDAY, Aug. 3, the 215th day of 2015. There are 150 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: ■ On Aug. 3, 1492, Christopher Columbus set sail from Palos, Spain, on a voyage that took him to the present-day Americas. On this date: ■ In 1807, former Vice President Aaron Burr went on trial before a federal court in Richmond, Va., charged with treason. He was acquitted less than a month later. ■ In 1914, Germany declared war on France at the onset of World War I. ■ In 1936, Jesse Owens of the United States won the first of his four gold medals at the Berlin

Olympics as he took the 100-meter sprint. ■ In 1943, Gen. George S. Patton slapped a private at an army hospital in Sicily, accusing him of cowardice. Patton was later ordered by Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower to apologize for this and a second, similar episode. ■ In 1949, the National Basketball Association was formed as a merger of the Basketball Association of America and the National Basketball League. ■ In 1958, the nuclear-powered submarine USS Nautilus became the first vessel to cross the North Pole underwater. ■ In 1972, the U.S. Senate ratified the Anti-Ballistic Missile

Treaty between the United States and the Soviet Union. The U.S. unilaterally withdrew from the treaty in 2002. ■ In 1981, U.S. air traffic controllers went on strike, despite a warning from President Ronald Reagan they would be fired, which they were. ■ In 1993, the Senate voted 96-3 to confirm U.S. Supreme Court nominee Ruth Bader Ginsburg. ■ In 1994, Arkansas carried out the nation’s first triple execution in 32 years. Stephen G. Breyer was sworn in as the Supreme Court’s newest justice in a private ceremony at Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist’s Ver-

mont summer home. ■ Ten years ago: Fourteen Marines from a Reserve unit in Ohio were killed in a roadside bombing in Iraq. Spacewalking astronaut Stephen Robinson removed two worrisome pieces of filler material from the shuttle Discovery’s belly in an unprecedented space repair job. ■ Five years ago: A warehouse driver killed eight co-workers and himself in a shooting rampage at a Manchester, Conn., beer distributorship. ■ One year ago: A strong earthquake in China’s southern Yunnan province toppled thousands of homes, killing more than 600 people.


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Monday, August 3, 2015 P A G E

A3 Briefly: Nation Ferguson spurs 40 new state laws across U.S. JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — When a white Ferguson policeman fatally shot a black 18-year-old nearly a year ago, the St. Louis suburb erupted in violent protests and the nation took notice. Since then, legislators in almost every state have proposed changes to the way police interact with the public. The result: Twenty-four states have passed at least 40 new measures addressing such things as officer-worn cameras, training about racial bias, independent investigations when police use force and new limits on the flow of surplus military equipment to local law enforcement agencies, according to an analysis by The Associated Press. National civil rights leaders praised the steps taken by states but said they aren’t enough to solve the racial tensions and economic disparities that have fueled protests in Ferguson, Baltimore, New York and elsewher.

Koch issues warning DANA POINT, Calif. — Billionaire industrialist Charles Koch warned America is “done for” if the conservative donors and politicians he gathered at a retreat this weekend don’t rally others to their cause of demanding a smaller, less-intrusive government. “History demonstrates that when the American people get motivated by an issue of justice, that they believe is just, extraordinary things can be accomplished,” he said Sunday, going on to reference the American

Revolution, abolition of slavery and women’s and civil rights movements. “We, too, are seeking to right injustices that are Koch holding our country back.” Listening intently inside a tightly guarded luxury resort in Southern California were 450 business leaders — many among them top political contributors — and the elected officials who receive that largesse. They’ve been strategizing with officials at the education, policy and activist groups that Koch and his brother David have spent years building up and funding. That network has a budget of $889 million through the end of 2016 — and much of it will be directed at electing a Republican to the White House.

Blasts rock churches LAS CRUCES, N.M. — A pair of small explosions just 20 minutes and a few miles apart shocked congregants Sunday morning at two churches in southern New Mexico. There were no injuries or deaths from the blasts outside Calvary Baptist and Holy Cross Roman Catholic in Las Cruces, Las Cruces police spokesman Danny Trujillo said. Each building sustained minor damage. Authorities are working to determine who planted the explosives, what materials were used and whether the blasts were related. “It doesn’t appear to be coincidental because of the timing, but you never know,” Trujillo said. The Associated Press

Obama orders deeper cuts for power plants Opponents plan to sue immediately BY JOSH LEDERMAN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — Aiming to jolt the rest of the world to action, President Barack Obama moved ahead Sunday with even tougher greenhouse gas cuts on American power plants, setting up a certain confrontation in the courts with energy producers and Republican-led states. In finalizing the unprecedented pollution controls, Obama was installing the core of his ambitious and controversial plan to drastically reduce overall U.S. emissions, as he works to secure a legacy on fighting global warming. Yet it will be up to Obama’s

successor to implement his plan, which has faced steep Republican opposition from Capitol Hill to the 2016 campaign trail. Opponents planned to sue immediately and to ask the courts to block the rule temporarily. Many states have threatened not to comply. The Obama administration estimated the emissions limits will cost $8.4 billion annually by 2030. The actual price won’t be clear until states decide how they’ll reach their targets.

Called burdensome But energy industry advocates said the revision makes Obama’s mandate even more burdensome, costly and difficult to achieve. “They are wrong,” Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Gina McCarthy said flatly, accusing opponents of promulgating a “doomsday” scenario. Last year, the Obama adminis-

tration proposed the first greenhouse gas limits on existing power plants in U.S. history, triggering a yearlong review and more than 4 million public comments. On Monday, Obama was to unveil the final rule publicly at an event at the White House. “Climate change is not a problem for another generation,” Obama said in a video posted to Facebook. “Not anymore.” The final version imposes stricter carbon dioxide limits on states than was previously expected: a 32 percent cut by 2030, compared to 2005 levels, the White House said. Obama’s proposed version last year called only for a 30 percent cut. Immediately, Obama’s plan began reverberating in the 2016 presidential race, with Hillary Rodham Clinton voicing her strong support and using it to criticize her GOP opponents for failing to offer a credible alternative.

Briefly: World Olympic board orders testing of water in Rio RIO DE JANEIRO — The International Olympic Committee said Sunday it will order testing for disease-causing viruses in the sewage-polluted waters where athletes will compete in next year’s Rio de Janeiro games. Before, the IOC and local Olympic organizers in Rio said they would only test for bacteria in the water, as Brazil and virtually all nations only mandate such testing to determine the safety of recreational waters. But after an Associated Press investigation published last week revealed high counts of viruses directly linked to human sewage in the Olympic waters, the IOC reversed course after being advised by the World Health Organization (WHO) that it should expand its testing. “The WHO is saying they are recommending viral testing,” IOC medical director Dr. Richard Budgett said.

U.S., Egypt talks on CAIRO — Despite persistent human rights concerns, the United States on Sunday

resumed formal security talks with Egypt that were last held six years ago and kept on hiatus until now amid the political Kerry unrest that swept the country in the wake of the Arab Spring. Two days after the U.S. delivered eight F-16 warplanes to Egypt as part of a military support package, Secretary of State John Kerry restarted the socalled “strategic dialogue” with Egyptian officials in Cairo.

Peacekeeper killed BANGUI, Central African Republic — One United Nations peacekeeper was killed and eight were injured Sunday in Central African Republic’s capital after they came under attack by armed men bearing machine guns and grenades, a U.N. spokesman said. The peacekeepers were attempting to carry out an arrest warrant issued by the public prosecutor in Bangui’s PK5 district, said the spokesman, Hamadoun Toure. He declined to disclose the target of the warrant or the nationality of the peacekeepers. The Associated Press

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

PALESTINIAN, ISRAELI

TENSIONS FLARE UP

A Palestinian demonstrator kicks a tear gas canister fired by Israeli soldiers during clashes at the entrance to Duma village near the West Bank city of Nablus on Sunday. Tensions remain high after suspected Jewish assailants set fire to a West Bank home and burned a sleeping Palestinian toddler to death. The child’s 4-year-old brother and both his parents also were seriously wounded. The attack drew Palestinian anger and widespread Israeli condemnation.

Zimbabwe: Another American kills second lion in illegal hunt BY FARAI MUTSAKA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

HARARE, Zimbabwe — Now there are two: Zimbabwe accused a Pennsylvania doctor Sunday of illegally killing a lion in April, adding to the outcry over a Minnesota dentist the African government wants to extradite for killing a well-known lion named Cecil in early July. Zimbabwe’s National Parks and Wildlife Management Authority accused Jan Casimir Seski of Murrysville, Pa., of shooting the

Quick Read

lion with a bow and arrow in April near Hwange National Park, without approval, on land where it was not allowed. Landowner Headman Sibanda was arrested and is assisting police, the authority said.

Director at hospital Seski is a gynecological oncologist who directs the Center for Bloodless Medicine and Surgery at Allegheny General Hospital in Pittsburgh. He’s also an active big-game

hunter, according to safari outfitters and bow-hunting sites where kill shots identify “Dr. Jan Seski” as the man standing next to slain animals including elephants, a hippo, an ostrich and antelopes such as an impala, a kudu and a nyala. The Associated Press called and knocked on the door at Seski’s home, which is set back among some woods outside Pittsburgh. The AP also left a message with an answering service for his medical practice, with no immediate response.

. . . more news to start your day

West: Northern California wildfire threatens homes

Nation: Tent collapse in Chicago suburb kills one

Nation: Action franchise cruises past ‘Vacation’

World: Slain journalist showed signs of torture

WILDFIRES BLAZING IN several Western states Sunday chewed up forests and threatened homes but were most numerous in Northern California where dozens are raging and setting off evacuations. Wildfires are burning in Washington and Oregon. The biggest California wildfire — raging in the Lower Lake area north of San Francisco — spread overnight, expanding more than 30 square miles in four or five hours, said California’s Forestry and Fire Protection Director Ken Pimlott. The fast-moving blaze had charred 71 square miles by Sunday.

ONE PERSON WAS killed and up to 20 injured Sunday when a tent collapsed during a brief storm at a festival in a suburb of Chicago. Art Woods, a city council member from the suburb of Wood Dale, said three of the victims were injured seriously and taken to local hospitals. The incident happened at about 2:40 p.m. when high winds and hail blew the tent from its moorings, said Craig Celia, a spokesman for Wood Dale, which is about 25 miles northwest of Chicago. The annual celebration known as the Prairie Fest is a four-day event with food, live music, a carnival and fireworks.

THE STAKES MAY be high for Ethan Hunt and his team in “Mission: Impossible — Rogue Nation,” but it was hardly impossible for the Tom Cruise film to conquer the box office. The fifth installment in the nearly 20-year-old film series has earned $56 million, according to studio estimates Sunday. Opening weekend audiences were 62 percent male and 81 percent older than 25. Meanwhile, Warner Bros.’ “Vacation” went a bit off track. The $30 million film earned $14.9 million over the weekend and $21.2 million since opening Wednesday.

MEXICO CITY OFFICIALS said Sunday they are pursuing all lines of investigation into the killing of a photojournalist whose body was found in the capital, where he had fled because of harassment in the state he covered. But the killings may have had to do more with the four women found dead alongside Ruben Espinosa, 31, who worked for the investigative magazine Proceso and other media, Mexico City prosecutor Rodolfo Rios Garza said in news conference. Rios did not identify the other victims, only giving their ages as 18, 29, 32 and 40. All were shot in the head with a 9 mm weapon.


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PeninsulaNorthwest

MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 2015

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Planned Parenthood funds on line in D.C. House on recess as Senate mulls ending federal aid to organization PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Eye on Congress

NEWS SERVICES

WASHINGTON — This week, the Senate will debate a bill to end federal funding of Planned Parenthood, then join the House in summer recess. Congress will reconvene Sept. 8.

Contact legislators (clip and save)

CHARLIE BERMANT/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

RELAXING

DAY ON THE WATER

Emily Gustafson of Port Townsend takes Moxie out for a ride on a paddleboard last week. The dog was well behaved, mostly, but jumped into the water at one point and caused Gustafson to capsize. Temperatures across the North Olympic Peninsula are expected to soar into the 70s and possibly higher as an unusually warm summer settles across the region. For a full five-day forecast, see Page A8.

Revitalize PA founder back from Chattanooga BY ARWYN RICE PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — Leslie Kidwell Robertson of Revitalize Port Angeles has returned from her visit to Chattanooga, Tenn., tired but elated after her trip. “It’s so much more than I e x p e c t e d ,” Robertson said Sunday. Robertson Robertson traveled to Chattanooga on Wednesday with 20 sympathy and support banners signed by Port Angeles residents and returned Saturday morning. Four Marines and a Navy sailor were killed July 16 at a Navy and Marine Corps reserve center in Chattanooga by a gunman who later died in a shootout with police. In the aftermath of the shootings, Robertson and others who led a spirited effort to beat Chattanooga in Outside magazine’s “Best Town Ever” online contest in May turned to a mission to bring peace and sympathy to the larger city. “We were rivals, but when that shooting happened, we became humans rather than competitors,” Robertson said. In Chattanooga, she was taken to visit two public memorials to those who

were killed and to the gravesites of a Marine and the sailor killed. She also met the father of the slain sailor. “That moment, hearing him say that [our effort] helps, makes it all worth it,” she said. She presented the banners to Chattanooga city officials Thursday during an informal gathering where the banners were displayed at Chattanooga City Hall. Chattanooga city officials said they will frame the banners and display them at the Chattanooga Public Library. Robertson said the two cities have become something like sister-cities, and she hopes to see more exchanges and for residents to visit each others’ cities. “If any Chattanoogan wants to come to Port Angeles, we will roll out the red carpet,” she said. Chattanooga and Port Angeles were finalists for Outside magazine’s “Best Town Ever” online contest — the top two cities of 64 selected to compete. Chattanooga won in the final showdown, but Port Angeles fans put up a fight. Port Angeles supporters, led by Revitalize Port Angeles members, gathered more than 62,000 votes. In the final vote, Chattanooga, gathered 67,432 votes to Port Angeles’ 62,130 (52 percent to

Briefly: State

48 percent). “It really is a city,” Robertson said, but noted that the people of Chattanooga, which has a population of 170,000, feel more like they live in a town.

Taking a breather She said her next step is to take a rest and recover from the last few months’ activities. Revitalize is really just starting up, she said. In addition to gathering residents to discuss ways to improve the city, the effort has led to a member becoming a “one-man vandalism task force,” and another group repainting the staircase behind the Conrad Dyar Memorial Fountain. Members are currently setting their sights on two major projects, Robertson said. The first, she said, is to make people more aware of the living-wage job opportunities there are in Port Angeles. “There are more than people realize. We want to help people find them,” she said. Robertson said the second project is to involve youth in Revitalize goals, but that project will have to wait until school begins in September.

“Eye on Congress” is published in the Peninsula Daily News every Monday when Congress is in session about activities, roll call votes and legislation in the House and Senate. The North Olympic Peninsula’s legislators in Washington, D.C., are Sen. Maria Cantwell (D-Mountlake Terrace), Sen. Patty Murray (D-Seattle) and Rep. Derek Kilmer (D-Gig Harbor). Contact information — The address for Cantwell and Murray is U.S. Senate, Washington, D.C. 20510; Kilmer, U.S. House, Washington, D.C. 20515. Phone Cantwell at 202224-3441 (fax, 202-2280514); Murray, 202-2242621 (fax, 202-224-0238); Kilmer, 202-225-5916. Email via their websites: cantwell.senate.gov; murray. senate.gov; kilmer.house.gov. Kilmer’s North Olympic Peninsula is located at 332 E. Fifth St. in Port Angeles. Hours are 9 a.m. to noon Tuesdays and from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesdays and Thursdays. It is staffed by Judith Morris, who can be contacted at judith.morris@ mail.house.gov or 360-7973623.

State legislators

Jefferson and Clallam counties are represented in the part-time state Legislature by Rep. Kevin Van De Wege, D-Sequim, the House majority whip; Rep. Steve Tharinger, D-Sequim; and Sen. Jim Hargrove, D-Hoquiam. Write Van De Wege and Tharinger at P.O. Box 40600 (Hargrove at P.O. Box 40424), Olympia, WA 98504; email them at vandewege. kevin@leg.wa.gov; tharinger. steve@leg.wa.gov; hargrove. jim@leg.wa.gov. Or you can call the Legislative Hotline, 800-5626000, from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Mondays through Fridays (closed on holidays and from noon to 1 p.m.) ________ and leave a detailed mesReporter Arwyn Rice can be sage, which will be emailed reached at 360-452-2345, ext. to Van De Wege, Tharinger, 5070, or at arice@peninsuladaily Hargrove or to all three. news.com. Links to other state officials: http://tinyurl.com/ pdn-linksofficials.

Learn more

Teams find missing berry picker OK TROUT LAKE — Search and rescue teams have found the 87-year-old Oregon woman who went missing Thursday while picking huckleberries near Trout Lake in southwest Washington. The Skamania County

Sheriff’s Office said the woman was spotted Sunday morning by a search crew flying over the Sawtooth Berry Fields. She is being brought out on horseback, and officials said she appears to be in good condition. The Sheriff’s Office said Wasco Fujiwara of The Dalles, Ore., was picking huckleberries with her daughter Thursday when the two became separated.

Wildfires grow

Memories The most precious things in life.

LUCERNE — A lightning-caused fire in Central

Washington has burned more than 9 square miles near Lake Chelan, growing thousands of acres between Saturday and Sunday. Several hundred people were evacuated from a Lutheran retreat center and the Holden Mine Remediation Center on Saturday. Officials said Holden Village is not threatened, but the blaze threatens the only evacuation route. The Wolverine Fire, which started Wednesday, is burning in timber about 3 miles northwest of Lucerne. The Associated Press

Pacific Rim Hobby

Websites following our state and national legislators: ■ Followthemoney. org — Campaign donors by industry, ZIP code and more ■ Vote-Smart.org — How special interest groups rate legislators on the issues. ■ CIVIL-SERVICE JOB PROTECTIONS: Voting 256 for and 170 against, the House on Wednesday passed a bill (HR 1994) reducing certain civil-service protections to make it easier for supervisors to fire or demote poorly performing employees at the Department of Veterans Affairs.

The bill denies those receiving notices the opportunity to appeal their dismissal to the full Murray Merit Systems Protection Board, often a monthslong process. Instead, targeted employees Cantwell w o u l d appeal to an administrative law judge, with a decision required within 45 days. In addi- Kilmer tion, the bill extends the probationary period for new hires and eliminates a civil-service requirement that targeted employees receive 30 days’ notice of the action against them and seven days to submit a response. A yes vote was to send the bill to the Senate. Kilmer voted no.

■ REVIVAL OF E X P O R T- I M P O R T BANK: Voting 64 for and 29 against, the Senate on Monday advanced an amendment to HR 22 (above) that would renew the Export-Import Bank’s congressional charter, which expired June 30. Supporters defend the bank as a job-creator that returned $675 million to the Treasury last year, while critics see it as corporate welfare for firms such as Boeing, Caterpillar and General Electric. The bank provides direct loans and loan-guarantees to foreign purchasers of U.S. products in politically or economically risky markets abroad. By law, it cannot compete with commercial lenders. Fewer than 2 percent of the bank’s transactions have defaulted in recent years, and it usually returns a profit to the Treasury even with an exposure of $100 billion-plus in taxpayer liability. A yes vote was to keep the Export-Import Bank in business. Cantwell and Murray ■ CHANGES TO voted yes. SOCIAL SECURITY, ■ THREE-MONTH MEDICARE: Voting 167 for and 241 against, the T R A N S P O R TAT I O N House on Tuesday defeated BILL: Voting 91 for and a motion by Democrats to four against, the Senate on prevent regulatory actions Thursday joined the House under HR 427 (above) that (above) in passing a bill would restructure Medicare (HR 3236) to fund surfacetransportation construction or Social Security. The motion stated oppo- projects in the U.S. through sition to changes such as Oct. 29. The bill gives Congress converting Medicare to a voucher program or raising more time to seek agreethe Social Security retire- ment on longterm funding sources for transportation ment age. A yes vote was to protect projects in addition to the Medicare and Social Secu- federal gasoline and diesel rity as now structured. taxes that supply the HighKilmer voted yes. way Trust Fund. A yes vote was to send ■ T H R E E - M O N T H President Barack Obama a PATCH OF HIGHWAY short-term funding bill for FUND: Voting 385 for and road, bridge, tunnel and 34 against, the House on mass-transit construction. Cantwell and Murray voted yes. 571322157

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■ SIX-YEAR TRANSPORTATION BILL: Voting 65 for and 34 against, the Senate on Thursday passed a bill (HR 22) that would authorize $350 billion over six years for highway and mass-transit construction, auto and road safety and other transportation programs. The first three years would be financed by Highway Trust Fund receipts, the sale of Strategic Petroleum Reserve oil and miscellaneous revenue measures, with the final three years not yet paid for. House GOP leaders declined to take up the bill because it reauthorizes the Export-Import Bank, among other objections. The Senate then passed a three-month transportation bill (below). A yes vote backed a longterm transportation bill and a reauthorization of the Export-Import Bank. Cantwell and Murray voted yes.

■ CONGRESSIONAL BLOCKAGE OF REGULATIONS: Voting 243 for and 165 against, the House on Tuesday passed a GOPdrafted bill (HR 427) that would allow major rules issued by the executive branch to take effect only if they receive — in advance — votes of approval from both chambers of Congress. This would reverse present law, under which Congress can disapprove of new regulations only after they are in place. The bill covers rules having at least a $100 million impact on the economy. Under the separation of powers doctrine, Congress is entrusted to write laws and the executive branch to implement them, usually through a rulemaking process that invites comments from stakeholders and the general public. Critics said that in writing several dozen rules each year to put new laws into effect, the executive branch often usurps legislative powers, making bills like this one necessary. A yes vote was to send the bill to the Senate. Kilmer voted no.

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Wednesday passed a bill (HR 3236) that would authorize funding for road, bridge, tunnel and masstransit construction projects through Oct. 29 while adding $8 billion to the Highway Trust Fund to keep it solvent through Dec. 18. The bill would pay for itself by making accounting changes in several federal programs. A yes vote was to send the bill to the Senate. Kilmer voted yes.

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS


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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 2015

A5

Hot, dry conditions stir up Paradise Fire BY ARWYN RICE PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK — Doris Ranzman had followed the expert advice, planning ahead in case she wound up unable to care for herself one day. But when a nursing-home bill tops $14,000 a month, the best-laid plans get tossed aside. Even with insurance and her Social Security check, Ranzman still had to come up with around $4,000 every month to cover her care in the Amsterdam Nursing Home in Manhattan. “An awful situation,” said her daughter, Sharon Goldblum. Like others faced with the stunning cost of elderly care in the U.S., Goldblum did the math and realized that her mother could easily outlive her savings. So she pulled her out of the home. For the two-thirds of Americans older than 65 who are expected to need some long-term care, the costs are increasingly beyond reach. The cost of staying in a nursing home has climbed at twice the rate of overall inflation over the last five years, according to the insurer Genworth Financial. One year in a private room now runs a median $91,000 a year, while one year of visits from homehealth aides runs $45,760.

Six figures

Inversion layer

of the Queets River valley near Coal Creek, Eagle said in the daily fire report. A full-motion video camera was installed at the site to provide fire managers with real-time information and thermal imaging, she said. Eagle said the camera system is capable of detecting hot spots and potential new starts, even through thick inversions and marine layers. A similar camera has been installed on a ridge east of the fire, she said. The fire was sparked by lighting in mid-May and smoldered in deep duff until June 14, when dry conditions allowed it to move into dry moss and lichen in the tree canopy and burn 300 acres in a few days.

An inversion at about 2,000 feet above sea level created smoke impacts in many river valleys along the southwest side of the Olympic Peninsula. Smoke was thick enough ________ to obscure views from Kloochman Lookout Rock, a Reporter Arwyn Rice can be former fire observation reached at 360-452-2345, ext. tower located southwest of 5070, or at arice@peninsuladaily the fire on the northern rim news.com.

Briefly . . . Motorcycle vs. deer crash injures two

Body found in river

VANCOUVER, Wash. — Vancouver police say a woman’s body was found in the Columbia River on Sunday morning. The Columbian newspaSEKIU — Two residents per reported the body was were treated and released for their injuries after their spotted about 50 feet from the shore off Southeast Rivmotorcycle hit a deer Satershore Drive, east of Interurday afternoon. state 205, in Vancouver. Martin L. Crilly, 59, of The Clark County MediSekiu was riding a black 2005 Kawasaki motorcycle cal Examiner’s Office is working to identify her and westbound on state Highdetermine the cause of her way 112 one mile east of death. Sekiu at 4:22 p.m. Saturday, according to a State Pedestrian hit-run Patrol report. A deer attempted to SEATTLE — The State cross the road and was Patrol is seeking informastruck by the motorcycle. tion about a hit-and-run Crilly and Carol A. crash involving a passenger Crilly, 59, a passenger on car and a pedestrian just the motorcycle, were taken south of downtown Seattle by ambulance to Forks on Sunday morning. Community Hospital, The collision happened according to the report. on the ramp from northBoth had been treated bound Interstate 5 to Dearand released, a hospital born Avenue. spokeswoman said Sunday. The vehicle that fled the Neither drugs nor alcoscene is described as a hol were thought to be maroon passenger car with involved, according to the tinted windows and a flat State Patrol, and no right front tire. charges are pending. Rick Johnson of the

State Patrol said the pedestrian is in stable condition. State Patrol detectives are asking anyone that may have information regarding this incident to call Detective Russ Haake at 425401-7717 or e-mail him at Russ.Haake@wsp.wa.gov.

Court arraignment SHELTON — A Belfair woman charged with killing her longtime boyfriend is to be arraigned in Mason County Superior Court today. The Kitsap Sun reported that 54-year-old Bridget Ann Graham is charged with second-degree murder for the July 20 shooting of 52-year-old Joseph Sedlacek. She reportedly told a detective that she became angry at Sedlacek after he threatened to call state child welfare workers. Deputies responded to a report that a man had been shot inside a home at about 8 p.m. July 20 in the community of Belfair View Estates, just west of Belfair. Peninsula Daily News and The Associated Press

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Goldblum estimates that she and her mother spent at least $300,000 over the last two years for care that insurance didn’t cover. “If you have any money, you’re going to use all of that money,” Goldblum said. “Just watch how fast it goes.” How do people manage the widening gap between their savings and the high cost of caring for the elderly? Medicare doesn’t cover long-term stays, so a large swath of elderly people wind up on the government’s health insurance program for the poor, Medicaid. For those solidly in the middle class, however, the answer isn’t so simple. They have too much money to apply for Medicaid but not enough to cover the typical three years of care. Some 60 percent of Americans nearing retirement — those between the ages of 55 and 64 — have retirement accounts, according to the Employee Benefit Research Institute. The median balance is $104,000. Combined with other savings and income, that amount might provide some retirees with all they need for decades. But everything changes when, for instance, an aging father struggling with dementia requires more help than his wife and children can manage. Plans that looked solid on paper are no match for their bills. “Within the first year,

savings appeared sufficient to cover 10 years at The Stratford, enough to last until she reached 100. Duffy said that the home’s directors told her not to worry about her mother running out of money and winding up on Medicaid, even though the government program pays just a portion of what many facilities charge. After all, many of the same homes that refuse to admit seniors on Medicaid will keep those who spend all their savings and wind up on the program. “‘We will keep her here’ — that’s what they said,” Duffy recalls. “But I didn’t get that in writing.” A representative from Cost savings the nursing home declined On average, a shared to comment. room in a nursing home runs nearly $11,000 a year Needs increase less than a private room, As Nappa’s dementia and a room in an adult- progressed, she needed family home runs cheaper more attention. still. That meant moving her Still, there’s not a lot of from an independent unit room for creativity, said Liz that cost $3,000 a month, to Taylor, a self-employed geri- a dementia unit that cost atric care manager in Lopez $6,000. Island. Trips to the emergency “The amount of care you room, hearing aids and need dictates the price, and other costs that Medicare there aren’t that many didn’t cover added up. ways around it,” she said. Soon enough, the money Hiring an aide to spend that was supposed to last the day with an elderly par- 10 years was gone in two. ent living at home is often Duffy enrolled her the cheapest option, with mother in Medicaid, confiaides paid $20 an hour in dent that The Stratford’s some parts of the country. management would keep But hiring them to work its promises. around the clock is often the Two months later, she most expensive, Taylor said. received a letter saying her “Needing help to get out mother had 30 days to find of bed to use the bathroom a new home. in the middle of the night Duffy protested, writing means you need a nursing letters to the management home,” she said. and local newspapers, and Greg Crist, a spokesman succeeded in keeping her for the American Health mother at the Stratford for Care Association, the coun- two months until social try’s largest trade group for workers helped line up an nursing homes, said many adult family home willing of the same trends driving to take Medicaid payments. health care costs higher But the stress and the have pushed up nursing change of surroundings home bills. strained her mother’s Americans are living health, Duffy said. Six longer though not always weeks after moving, she healthier, he said, so resi- was dead. dents are more likely to “She declined so quickly,” arrive with chronic ail- Duffy said. “Being in familments that require more iar surroundings is hugely attention. important for dementia Facilities also have patients. There’s no doubt in expanded the range of ser- my mind that the move hasvices they offer. tened her death. It was dev“The cost is an element astating, just devastating.” that may seem overwhelmRanzman’s story has a ing at first,” Crist said, “but happier ending. when you consider all the Her daughter pulled her services — 24 hours, seven- out of the Amsterdam Nursdays-a-week care, with full ing Home and rented a house room and board — it sheds in Smithtown, Long Island, some light on it.” with a patio and a backyard full of azaleas and trees. Evicted It was Ranzman’s own To Roslyn Duffy, it space. She had round-theseemed that her mother, clock aides, a large window Evelyn Nappa, had every- and plenty of sunlight. Her daughter, Goldblum, thing she needed. After a stroke made it noticed that Ranzman’s difficult to live alone, Nappa memory improved quickly. moved from Arizona to Her mother seemed happier Seattle to be near her and more alert. “It was less than half the daughter and soon settled into The Stratford, an cost of a nursing home and assisted-living facility, a million times nicer,” Goldwhere she quickly made blum said. “She showed friends of fellow residents such improvement.” What’s more important and the staff. “The care was great,” to Goldblum is that her Duffy said. “We loved that mother seemed content when she died in April at facility.” With the sale of the age 86, lying in bed and surhouse in Arizona, Nappa’s rounded by family. most people are tapped out,” said Joe Caldwell, director of long-term services at the National Council on Aging. “Middle-class families just aren’t prepared for these costs.” Many who can afford it buy insurance to help pay for long-term care years in advance, when insurers are less likely to reject them. But even those with insurance, like Ranzman, come up short. Forced to improvise, they sell the house and lean on family. They move in with their adult children or arrange for their children to move in with them. Some can save money by switching to different facilities.

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Costs of elder care force hard decisions

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Roslyn Duffy looks through photos of her late mother, Evelyn Nappa, at her home in Seattle. Duffy had to scramble to find a home willing to take Medicaid payments after her mother was evicted from a Seattle assisted-living facility.

O L Y M P I C NATIONAL PARK — The Paradise Fire flared up Saturday evening and Sunday morning, creating a smoky haze and advancing the western fire front. The fire, aided by hot, dry weather, was working its way west but has not reached Bob Creek, said Koshare Eagle, spokeswoman for the team managing the fire burning in the Queets River valley, 13 miles inside Olympic National Park. Bob Creek has been designated by fire managers as the western containment line, a natural barrier where firefighters have a chance to stop the fire from moving farther west into less controlled areas. The fire is currently

21 percent contained by natural barriers north of the Queets river and inside the Queets River valley’s rocky ridges to the east. New acreage has not been established because the fire team has not been able to get a infrared flight to measure the new fire boundaries, Eagle said. The last time the fire was mapped it had reached 1,786 acres— the largest wildfire on record since the Olympic National Park was created.


A6

MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 2015 — (C)

PeninsulaNorthwest

Trail: Greets path users CONTINUED FROM A1 On a recent late-July morning, the tidal flats emit a sulfurous odor that still can’t hide the rich aroma of McCabe’s cigar. “I always say, ‘Hi,’ to everyone on the trail, and they always say, ‘Hi,’ back as a rule. They see me with my cigar. If I don’t have my cigar they say, ‘Where’s your cigar at?’” Today McCabe will greet several bicyclists, runners and walkers, including a man with a sleeping baby held in a halter against his chest. Everyone seems glad to see him. While McCabe greets all comers, his attention is focused on the ground.

PT Family Portrait set later this month Mari Mullen, Port Townsend Main Street executive director. PORT TOWNSEND Participation in the — The public is invited portrait is free of charge to visit downtown Sunand open to all, Mullen day, Aug. 30 to particisaid, regardless of if they pate in the 12th version live in Port Townsend. of the Port Townsend The Celebrate Main Family Portrait, a histori- Street 30th anniversary cal crowd shot that party will cost $10 for a freezes a moment in time seat at a table. for the city, its residents and visitors. Significant settings The portrait, which Traditionally, the phohas been taken about tographs are set in a hisevery three years since 1986, will be shot in con- torical or significant areas. junction with a commuThe most recent shot nity picnic gathering at was in 2013 with the Washington and Taylor schooner Adventuress — streets downtown. then celebrating its cenThe community portrait and picnic will be in tennial — in the background. celebration of the 30th In 2010, the commuanniversary of the Port nity portrait was with Townsend Main Street the newly commissioned Program. MV Chetzemoka ferry. Participants will be This year’s portrait, asked to gather at 4:45 Celebrate Main Street, is p.m. at the intersection. The group photograph connected to the downwill be taken at 5 p.m. by town area because it will be taken in the 30th year photographer David of the Port Townsend Conklin of Port Main Street Program. Townsend. The Main Street ProPosters of the shot gram is charged with will be printed Monday, revitalizing the downAug. 31. They will be town area and supportavailable at Printery ing its merchants. Communications, 631 Mullen, along with Tyler St. for $10 each. Conklin, will set up a test Printery owner Mike shot during the week of Kenna was one of the Aug. 15 to determine founders of the Family whether it’s possible to Portrait process, said

BY CHARLIE BERMANT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Trash and treasure “I’ve found a lot of needles. I put them into a plastic bottle. I take it up to the doctor’s office, and they dispose of it for me.” His six-block meandering stroll produces more trash than treasure, although he occasionally finds something valuable. “I’ve found a few nickels and dimes and quarters. I have found some cell phones. I turn those in [as found property to police]. “I collect aluminum cans JAMES CASEY/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS and then sell them; then my wife (Maureen, to whom Julian McCabe treks the Waterfront Trail he’s been married 59 years) snatching litter from the landscape. gives the money to Habitat for Humanity or her church. message starting, “Hi, “I’ve found some things I “I can grab a needle John!” think were stolen items. Whether John ever got with these darned I’ve found backpacks. I the note or threw it away actually found some beer things [his giant remains unknown. cans that were full of beer.” tweezers], but if It’s still shy of 8 a.m. when he finishes his route. [smokers] can’t pick Sawing the way The MV Coho ferry is Some discoveries give up their own cigarette rounding Ediz Hook on its cause for pause. butts, I’m not going to run from Victoria. A gaggle “I’ve found partial swimof Canada geese takes flight pick them up for ming suits. I found the top from the water for reasons and the bottom in different them.” only the honking birds places.” JULIAN MCCABE understand. McCabe stops to remove Waterfront Trail volunteer Once a scuba diver, a 6-inch-long twig from the McCabe says he speared pavement, a small thing but McCabe has spotted sea lots of lingcod for his famione that could trouble a otters and seals, and many ly’s dinner table. bicyclist. raccoons have crossed his He also retrieved the He’s removed much path. bodies of drowning victims larger obstacles. Then there’s the uniden- from Port Angeles Harbor, “I have come down here tified animal by whose bur- Lake Sutherland and Neah with my quad (small all- row he once found an empty Bay. terrain vehicle) and my bottle. “It wasn’t pleasant, but I chainsaw and sawed away a McCabe placed the bot- know if it were one of my tree that was in the way.” tle far back in the hole. kids, I’d want them found.” For tasks like that, he “Next time I came back, Now, McCabe enjoys the first gets the city parks it was out on the edge again. little adventures, the minor department’s permission. So I put it back. It’s hap- mysteries, the tiny treaBut he said he didn’t seek pened about six, eight sures that brighten his approval for one runner’s times. daily ramble, but he recalls request after last winter’s “Whatever lives in that one encounter that was snowfall. hole doesn’t like that bottle. deadly serious. “It kind of tickled me: A It’s a contest between it and McCabe says he came jogger who knew I have a me.” across a young lady several quad asked, ‘Can you make He won’t trifle with ciga- months ago who’d slit her some tracks so we can jog?’” rette butts, not that they’re wrists with a shard of glass. The snow stayed track- too small. He called 9-1-1, and fireless. “I can grab a needle with McCabe sets a brisk pace these darned things [his fighter/paramedics rushed and doesn’t hesitate to giant tweezers], but if her to Olympic Medical clamber into a ravine to [smokers] can’t pick up Center in Port Angeles. “Later I got a call: ‘Is this retrieve a piece of paper or their own cigarette butts, the person who . . . to scramble up the riprap at I’m not going to pick them “I said, ‘Yes.’ Hollywood Beach. up for them.” “Then the dispatcher This day, he doesn’t By now he has snared a encounter the canine large beverage cup with told me, ‘She says thank friends who know he carries plastic lid and straw, sev- you.’ “That’s all I ever knew.” dog treats. eral scraps of paper, a plas_______ “A couple of dogs, they tic spoon, a length of golden see me, and their people ribbon, and a single toddlerReporter James Casey can be have to hold them back; size white sock. reached at 360-452-2345, ext. He’s also picked up a 5074, or at jcasey@peninsuladaily they’re just straining to piece of paper that bears a news.com. come to me.”

Death Notices Christal Ann Ericksen

Genevieve W. Vanderziel

Jan. 3, 1948 — July 24, 2015

May 22, 1928 — July 30, 2015

Christal Ann Ericksen of Skowhegan, Maine died of natural causes in Port Townsend. She was 67. Services: A potluck open house will be from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Friday, Aug. 7 at Boy Scout Cabin, 3075 Discovery Road, Port Townsend. Kosec Funeral Home, Port Townsend, is in charge of arrangements.

Port Angeles resident Genevieve W. Vanderziel died of age-related causes at her home. She was 87. A complete obituary with details of a celebration of life will follow. Drennan-Ford Funeral Home, Port Angeles, is in charge of arrangements. www.drennanford.com

Remembering a Lifetime ■ Death and Memorial Notice obituaries chronicle a deceased’s life, either in the family’s own words or as written by the PDN staff from information provided by survivors. These notices appear at a nominal cost according to the length of the obituary. Photos and ornamental insignia are welcome. Call 360-452-8435 Monday through Friday for information and assistance and to arrange publication. A convenient form to guide you is avail-

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

able at area mortuaries or by downloading at www.peninsuladailynews.com under “Obituary Forms.” ■ Death Notices, in which summary information about the deceased, including service information and mortuary, appears once at no charge. No biographical or family information or photo is included. A form for death notices appears at www.peninsuladailynews.com under “Obituary Forms.” For further details, call 360-417-3527.

shoot from a rooftop or if a fire crane should be used. The test will create the poster’s graphical frame in which the final shot is inserted, to ensure quick publication. Mullen, who has headed the Main Street program for a little more than half of its 30-year history, said the last few portraits have drawn about 500 people. Mullen said that Main Street will set up 50 tables and 400 chairs. The photograph will have no theme, Mullen said, although participants are encouraged to wear bright colors to demonstrate Port Townsend’s variety of residents.

Picnic celebration Participants will bring their own meals to the picnic. The Main Street Program will provide tables, chairs, live music, a winebeer garden and decorations, as well as dessert and a choice of drinks. Live music will be provided by the Toolshed Trio, in which Conklin plays bass. For tickets, go to www. ptmainstreet.org, Event Brite.com “Celebrate Main Street” or call the Port Townsend Main Street office, 360-385-7911.

CHARLIE BERMANT/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Main Street Executive Director Mari Mullen, left, and downtown business owner Bickie Steffens plan for the Port Townsend Family Portrait to be taken Aug. 30.

Bond: Contract delays CONTINUED FROM A1 It’s likely, Johnson said, that Sequim would go it alone if it chose to wait until next February. Furthermore, delaying construction contracts until next winter could run into competition from an expected Seattle-area building boom. However, he said, statewide statistics give an edge for success to special elections. Moreover, at least two — maybe three — present board members won’t be around come February. Johnson will retire at he end of this year to be replaced by voters’ choice among candidates Heather Short, William Payne and Charles Meyer, two of whom will advance from Tuesday’s primary ballot to the general election. Board member John Bridge likewise will retire, to be replaced by either Jim Stoffer or Charla Wright. And incumbent board member Heather Jeffers faces opposition from Robin Henrikson. “There are two of us who are lame ducks and a third who is on the ballot who might not get re-elected,” Johnson said. “So we may have half of the school board voting on this on Monday who won’t be on the board when they have to face the consequences. “There could be some advantage to having the new board members make this decision.”

Although he won’t be at tonight’s meeting, Bridge said he’d favor the Nov. 3 election. “I personally think we’ve had two spring votes. I think now what we need is for a few more people to come out and vote [in the general election].” Those earlier efforts met with mixed success. Voters defeated a $154 million measure by a 56-44 percent margin in April 2014. A $49.2 million bond last February received 6,691 yes votes to 5,026 no votes — 57.11 percent to 42.89 percent — but fell short of the required 60 percent supermajority.

More funds, less tax

The bond would fund a new science wing of six laboratory classrooms at Sequim High; and add band, orchestra and choir rooms to the performing arts wing. Music students now must cross the street to attend classes in the former Sequim Community School.

Portable classrooms As it heads into a new school year, Helen Haller will house all-day kindergarten classes in four portable classrooms. The district kitchen will prepare meals for 1,800 students daily with 1970s equipment for which replacement parts no longer are available, district officials said. Sequim High will serve 100 students above its designed capacity, and Greywolf will add a fourth portable unit to house its library and computer labs that once occupied space in its main building. As for that Scottish adage, some trace it to John Lee, who was convicted of murder in 1885 but survived three attempts in one day to hang him, had his death sentence commuted, and later was freed after 22 year in prison. Lee lived another 60 years after his scheduled execution. Originally an international celebrity, he died in obscurity.

A measure similar to that will go on the ballot, be it November’s or February’s, board members have decided. However, because of changes in the real estate market, the levy would raise $35,000 more money than the previous measure would have produced, but at a tax rate 3 cents less per $1,000 of assessed fair-market value. If approved, the bond would renovate and expand Greywolf Elementary; build a new school to replace Hellen Haller Elementary; renovate Hellen Haller to house fifth-graders; renovate and expand Sequim High School; demolish the _______ Sequim Community School Reporter James Casey can be building; and upgrade the reached at 360-452-2345, ext. district kitchen and mainte- 5074, or at jcasey@peninsuladaily nance facility. news.com.


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Monday, August 3, 2015 PAGE

A7

Mideast acts like it’s still 1979 I

STARTED MY CAREER AS a foreign correspondent in Beirut in 1979. I didn’t know it at the time, but 1979 turned out to be one of the great vintage years for foreign news — particularly from the Middle East. It set in motion the most important dynamThomas L. ics still shaping that Friedman region today. In fact, it’s been 1979 for 36 years. And the big question about the Iran nuclear deal reached last month is: Will it ultimately be a break from the history set in motion in 1979, and put the region on a new path, or will it turbocharge 1979 in ways that could shake the whole world? What happened in 1979? For starters, there was the takeover of the Grand Mosque in Mecca by Islamic extremists who challenged the religious credentials of the Saudi ruling family, accusing them of impiety. The al-Sauds responded by forging a new bargain with their religious conservatives: Let us stay in power and we’ll give you a freer hand in setting social norms, relations between the sexes and religious education inside Saudi Arabia — and vast resources to spread the puritanical, antiwomen, anti-Shiite, anti-pluralistic Sunni Wahhabi fundamentalism to mosques and schools around the world. This Saudi lurch backward coincided with Iran’s Islamic Revolution in 1979, which brought Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini to power. That revolution set up a global competition between Shiite Iran and Sunni Saudi Arabia for leadership of the Muslim world, and it also led to a big surge in oil prices that gave both regimes more money than ever to export Shiite and Sunni fundamentalism. That is why the Egyptian scholar Mamoun Fandy liked to say, “Islam lost its brakes in 1979.” That competition was further fueled by the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979 — which spawned the Sunni jihadist movement and eventually al-Qaida — and by the Three Mile Island, Pa., nuclear accident, also in 1979, which basically ended all new building of nuclear power plants in America, making us more dependent on fossil fuels. Of course, the Islamic Revolution in

Iran also led to a break in relations with the U.S. — and shifted Iran from a tacit ally of Israel’s to a country wishing “death to Israel.”

S

O THE U.S.-Iran nuclear deal marks a big change — but because it will lead to an end to economic sanctions on Iran, it could turbocharge 1979 as easily as end it. That depends on a lot of factors. Will the nuclear deal empower the more moderate/pragmatic majority inside Iran rather than the hard-line Revolutionary Guards Corps? The reason to be worried is that the moderates don’t control Iran’s nuclear program or its military/ intelligence complex; the hard-line minority does. The reason to be hopeful is the majority’s aspiration to reintegrate with the world forced the hard-liners to grudgingly accept this deal. A lot will depend also on Saudi Arabia moderating the anti-modernist trend it imposed on Sunni Islam. Last Tuesday, the Middle East Media Research Institute released a translation of a TV interview by the Saudi author Turki al-Hamad about the extremist discourse prevalent in Saudi Arabia. “Who serves as fuel for ISIS?” he asked. “Our own youth. “What drives our youth to join ISIS? The prevailing culture, the culture that is planted in people’s minds. “It is our youth who carry out bombings. . . . You can see [in ISIS videos] the volunteers in Syria ripping up their Saudi passports.”

PAT BAGLEY/CAGLE CARTOONS

Give me five years of $25-a-barrel oil and you’ll see reformers strengthened in Iran and Saudi Arabia; they’ll both have to tap their people instead of oil. But while that oil price decline is necessary, it is not sufficient. Both regimes also have to stop looking for dignity and legitimacy in combating the other — and Israel — and find it, instead, in elevating their own people. Saudi Arabia’s attempt to bomb Iranian influence out of Yemen is sheer madness; the Saudis are bombing rubble into rubble. Will Iran spend its windfall from this nuclear deal trying to dominate the Arab world? Maybe. But Iraq, Syria, Libya and Yemen today are like a giant Superfund toxic cleanup site. Iran wants to own that? It will sap more of its strength than strengthen it. We know. On July 9, Agence France-Presse reported that the International Monetary Fund estimated Saudi Arabia, whose HAT’S WHY ANOTHER population tripled since 1975, would run a factor determining if 2015 is a break with 1979 or a multiplier of it budget deficit this year exceeding “$130 billion, the largest in the kingdom’s will be the energy revolution in America history,” and “to finance spending — efficiency, renewables and fracking — Riyadh has already withdrawn and whether it keeps putting downward pressure on oil prices. $52.3 billion from its fiscal reserves in the

T

first five months of the year.” Iran’s population has doubled since 1979, 60 percent of its residents are younger than 30 and it has 20 percent unemployment. Last April, Issa Kalantari, a former Iranian agriculture minister, warned that because of dwindling water resources, and over-exploitation, if Iran doesn’t radically change its water usage “50 million people — 70 percent of Iranians — will have no choice but to leave the country,” Al-Monitor reported.

N

UKES ARE HARDLY THE only threats for this region. Both Iran and Saudi Arabia desperately need to make 2015 the end of the 1979 era. It would be fanciful to predict that they will — and utterly realistic to predict the destruction that will visit both if they don’t.

________ Thomas L. Friedman is a three-time Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist for The New York Times. His column appears in the Peninsula Daily News on Mondays. Contact Friedman via www.facebook. com/thomaslfriedman.

Get government out of marriage WHEN THE U.S. SUPREME Court ruled that states must recognize same-sex marriages, dissenting Chief Justice John Roberts wondered whether polygamy will be next. Some legal Froma scholars have responded that Harrop yes, the arguments for gay marriage could apply to relationships among more than two partners, as well. William Baude, a law professor at the University of Chicago, wrote: “By those lights, groups of adults who have profound polyamorous attachments and wish to build families and join the community have a strong claim to a right to marry.” There’s a more basic question here: Why is government in the business of conferring a right to marry at all? What is it about this thing called marriage that justifies a grab bag of legal benefits? That would include tax advantages, inheritance rights, hospital visitations and the ability to

make end-of-life decisions for one’s spouse. The recent Supreme Court case disposed of the idea that only a man and woman can provide a stable home for children. Many gay couples do a better job of raising children than some heterosexual pairings. And in any case, children have never been a requirement for marriage. Baude inadvertently points to the illogic of tying any benefits to state-sanctioned marriage by using the word “polyamorous” in referring to polygamous relationships. Merriam-Webster defines polyamory as “the state or practice of having more than one open romantic relationship at a time.” It makes no sense that having a romance (or two or three) should entitle one to leave an estate to a partner tax-free or get in on another’s company health plan. We can be totally in tune with the notion that such benefits help families. And we can agree that children tend to be better off in households headed by devoted parents. Marriage is a wonderful institution, but it does not follow that government should be defining it. Let ministers, priests, rabbis,

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS JOHN C. BREWER PUBLISHER AND EDITOR ■

360-417-3500

john.brewer@peninsuladailynews.com

LEAH LEACH EXECUTIVE EDITOR 360-417-3531

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STEVE PERRY ADVERTISING DIRECTOR 360-417-3540

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MICHELLE LYNN CIRCULATION DIRECTOR 360-417-3510

michelle.lynn@peninsuladailynews.com

www.peninsuladailynews.com Follow us on Facebook (Peninsula Daily News) and Twitter (@PenDailyNews)

ADAM ZYGLIS/CAGLE CARTOONS

imams and ship captains tie the marital knot. And have government recognize civil unions only. Civil unions need not be between romantic partners. The pairing could be close friends, cousins, office mates. And of course, it could be a church-sanctioned spouse. Sorry, polygamists, only one civil union partner at a time. If your lawyers should design plausible legal group arrangements, we’ll reconsider. At the time of the high court’s decision, Roberts opined that “people of faith can take no com-

fort in the treatment they receive from the majority today.” In an ideal world, the opposite would be true. Religious authorities would have greater control over the terms of holy matrimony. They would control the definition of marriage and decide whom they will or will not join. More than one clergyman has confided to me that he would just as soon not be conferring legal benefits when he marries people. The Catholic Church does not countenance divorce, and an annulment is difficult to get.

NEWS DEPARTMENT Main office: 305 W. First St., P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362 ■ MICHAEL FOSTER, managing editor; 360-452-2345, ext. 5064 mfoster@peninsuladailynews.com ■ LEE HORTON, sports editor; 360-417-3525; lhorton@peninsuladailynews.com ■ DIANE URBANI DE LA PAZ, features editor; 360-452-2345, ext. 5062 durbanidelapaz@peninsuladailynews.com ■ General news information: 360-417-3527 From Jefferson County and West End, 800-826-7714, ext. 5250 Email: news@peninsuladailynews.com News fax: 360-417-3521 ■ Sequim office: 147 W. Washington St., 98382; 360-681-2390 CHRIS MCDANIEL, 360-681-2390, ext. 5052, cmcdaniel@peninsuladailynews.com ■ Port Townsend office: 1939 E. Sims Way, 98368; 360-385-2335 CHARLIE BERMANT, 360-385-2335, ext. 5550, cbermant@peninsuladailynews.com

The church makes its rules. Other faiths make their rules according to their creeds. The state should have no business here. If a couple want to register their silver pattern and have a guru marry them at dawn on California’s Mount Tamalpais, that should be their choice. If they want to be partnered with the legal rights of a civil union, as well, they should be able to find a bureaucrat in nearby downtown San Rafael to do the paperwork. Everyone would win. People of faith could continue to enter into marriages with, if anything, more powerful rules. Those wanting a less intensely religious union could get one. And best of all, we would end the odd custom whereby government grants financial and emotional advantages on the basis of an implied romance.

________ Froma Harrop is a columnist for the Providence (R.I.) Journal. Her column appears Mondays. Contact her at fharrop@gmail. com or in care of Creators Syndicate Inc., 737 Third St., Hermosa Beach, CA 90254.

HAVE YOUR SAY We encourage (1) letters to the editor of 250 words or fewer from readers on subjects of local interest, and (2) “Point of View” guest opinion columns of no more than 550 words that focus on local community lifestyle issues. Please — send us only one letter or column per month. Letters and guest columns published become the property of Peninsula Daily News, and it reserves the right to reject, condense or edit for clarity or when information stated as fact cannot be substantiated. Letters published in other newspapers or websites, anonymous letters, letters advocating boycotts, letters to other people, mass mailings and commercial appeals are not published. We will not publish letters that impugn the personal character of people or of groups of people. Include your name, street address and — for verification purposes — day and evening telephone numbers. Email to letters@peninsuladailynews.com, fax to 360-417-3521, or mail to Letters, Peninsula Daily News, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. Sunday RANTS & RAVES 24-hour hotline: 360-417-3506


A8

WeatherWatch

MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 2015 Neah Bay 65/55

g Bellingham 75/58

Yesterday

P.M. BREEZY

Port Townsend 75/55

P.M. BREEZY

Port Angeles 73/55

Sequim Olympics 75/54 Freeze level: 14,000 feet Port Ludlow 77/54

Forks 74/54

Aberdeen 73/56

Forecast highs for Monday, Aug. 3

Last

New

First

Sunny

Billings 97° | 61°

San Francisco 68° | 60°

Minneapolis 78° | 58°

Denver 87° | 64°

Chicago 84° | 68°

Los Angeles 80° | 67°

WEDNESDAY THURSDAY

71/55 Brief reprieve from all-sun

72/55 Sun retakes blue dome

Fronts

Aug 6

FRIDAY

Marine Conditions

70/55 “OK, break’s over,” Sol says

CANADA

Seattle 83° | 62° Tacoma 84° | 62° Yakima 92° | 68° Astoria 70° | 56°

ORE.

Tides

Spokane 97° | 65°

TODAY

8:47 p.m. 5:53 a.m. 10:32 p.m. 10:05 a.m.

TOMORROW

Hi 85 88 84 77 87 89 91 97 89 99 95 92 103 90 95 78

Lo 56 66 66 62 57 70 66 67 64 63 67 61 70 68 77 62

Prc .08 .69

Otlk PCldy Cldy Cldy PCldy Clr PCldy Clr Clr Clr Clr Clr Clr Clr Clr Cldy PCldy

WEDNESDAY

Low Tide Ht 9:25 a.m. -1.5’ 9:52 p.m. 0.5’

High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht 3:45 a.m. 8.0’ 10:09 a.m. -0.8’ 4:29 p.m. 8.4’ 10:48 p.m. 0.4’

High Tide Ht Low Tide 4:42 a.m. 7.2’ 10:55 a.m. 5:17 p.m. 8.4’ 11:48 p.m.

Ht 0.0’ 0.4’

Port Angeles

4:55 a.m. 5.9’ 11:27 a.m. -0.5’ 6:21 p.m. 7.2’

6:02 a.m. 5.5’ 12:22 a.m. 2.5’ 7:37 p.m. 7.1’ 1:03 p.m. 0.6’

7:15 a.m. 5.1’ 7:37 p.m. 7.1’

1:22 a.m. 1:03 p.m.

1.8’ 1.7’

Port Townsend

6:32 a.m. 7.3’ 12:39 a.m. 3.6’ 7:58 p.m. 8.9’ 12:40 p.m. -0.5’

7:39 a.m. 6.8’ 8:35 p.m. 8.9’

1:35 a.m. 2.8’ 1:26 p.m. 0.7’

8:52 a.m. 2.0’ 9:14 p.m. 8.8’

2:35 a.m. 2:16 p.m.

2.0’ 1.9’

Dungeness Bay*

5:38 a.m. 6.6’ 12:01 a.m. 3.2’ 7:04 p.m. 8.0’ 12:02 p.m. -0.5’

6:45 a.m. 6.1’ 12:57 a.m. 2.5’ 7:41 p.m. 8.0’ 12:48 p.m. 0.6’

7:58 a.m. 5.7’ 8:20 p.m. 7.9’

1:57 a.m. 1:38 p.m.

1.8’ 1.7’

LaPush

High Tide Ht 2:51 a.m. 8.6’ 3:44 p.m. 8.3’

© 2015 Wunderground.com

Albany, N.Y. Albuquerque Amarillo Anchorage Asheville Atlanta Atlantic City Austin Baltimore Billings Birmingham Bismarck Boise Boston Brownsville Buffalo

*To correct for Sequim Bay, add 15 minutes for high tide, 21 minutes for low tide.

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2:05 pm

7:35 am 7:55 am 8:35 am

2:50 pm 3:10 pm 3:45 pm

8:50 am 9:00 am

4:20 pm 4:40 pm

9:10 am 9:50 am

4:50 pm 5:15 pm

82 93 88 85 94 90 87 84 83 98 84 87 97 82 96 88 85 82 96 89 65 89 76 83 97 91 89 98 90 97 84 97 85 65 91 90 92 96

Trip #2 6:40 pm

1:10 pm

7:05 pm

1:20 pm

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1:40 pm 2:00 pm 2:25 pm 3:05 pm

7:35 pm 8:15 pm 8:30 pm 9:10 pm

3:40 pm

9:35 pm

4:05 pm

10:00 pm

4:10 pm

10:00 pm

4:35 pm

10:30 pm

0s

10s

63 51 74 60 67 57 71 60 64 75 63 52 77 63 66 73 62 62 75 66 52 66 54 61 53 68 57 57 80 72 64 68 74 53 68 84 78 71

.01 PCldy Clr Cldy PCldy Clr PCldy PCldy Clr Clr Clr Clr Clr PCldy Clr PCldy Clr Clr Rain PCldy Clr .07 Cldy PCldy Cldy Rain Clr Clr Clr Clr PCldy Clr Clr Clr .14 Rain .01 Cldy Clr Cldy .05 PCldy PCldy

20s 30s 40s

50s 60s

70s

80s 90s 100s 110s

Los Angeles Louisville Lubbock Memphis Miami Beach Midland-Odessa Milwaukee Mpls-St Paul Nashville New Orleans New York City Norfolk, Va. North Platte Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Pendleton Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, Maine Portland, Ore. Providence Raleigh-Durham Rapid City Reno Richmond Sacramento St Louis St Petersburg Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco San Juan, P.R. Santa Fe St Ste Marie Shreveport

83 89 89 97 91 98 85 86 93 93 89 91 85 90 85 89 101 90 103 83 86 98 90 93 93 98 93 92 92 87 95 98 77 75 90 83 74 98

84 64 67 Cldy Sioux Falls 66 PCldy Syracuse 80 60 67 .01 PCldy Tampa 86 73 3.91 77 Clr Topeka 93 71 81 Cldy Tucson 99 75 .34 73 Clr Tulsa 94 73 70 Rain Washington, D.C. 92 73 71 PCldy Wichita 91 71 63 Clr Wilkes-Barre 83 58 .03 74 PCldy Wilmington, Del. 88 64 71 Clr _______ 74 PCldy 57 PCldy Hi Lo 70 Cldy 60 48 73 .01 Clr Auckland 91 70 73 1.73 Rain Beijing 86 67 61 PCldy Berlin Brussels 88 64 69 Clr 101 79 86 Clr Cairo 86 60 64 PCldy Calgary 80 62 61 Clr Guadalajara Hong Kong 89 76 68 PCldy Jerusalem 95 75 63 Clr 66 38 65 Clr Johannesburg 87 61 64 Clr Kabul 75 56 70 Cldy London Mexico City 77 56 70 Clr 81 63 63 Clr Montreal 73 53 76 PCldy Moscow 95 80 74 1.22 Rain New Delhi 95 63 66 Cldy Paris 74 Clr Rio de Janeiro 84 70 94 68 69 Cldy Rome 62 PCldy San Jose, CRica 81 66 59 43 76 .35 PCldy Sydney 93 79 60 Cldy Tokyo 77 61 59 Rain Toronto 68 Clr Vancouver 75 59

ber orientation at the Veterans Center, 261 S. Francis St., from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday. All women 18 and older are welcome. Information on DAR is and other materials will be available. If possible, bring

Qty (pills)

Clr PCldy Rain Clr PCldy PCldy Clr PCldy PCldy Clr

Otlk Sh Clr Clr PCldy Clr PCldy Ts Sh Ts Clr PCldy PCldy Ts Ts Cldy Sh PCldy Clr Clr Ts Cldy Clr Ts Clr

a laptop, since searching for a Revolutionary War ancestor is part of the event. Refreshments will be offered. For more information, phone Joyce Stroeher at 360-417-3054.

Call for additional location fares

For Reservations & More Info:

360-417-0700 or 800-457-4492 • www.dungenessline.us

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30

$109.99 Flovent 110mcg

Spiriva 18mcg

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Celebrex 200mg

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Advair 250/50mcg

180 ds $184.99 Xifaxan 200mg

360 ds $114.99

Zetia 10mg

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Crestor 20mg

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Combivent 18/103mcg 600 ds $119.99 Symbicort 160/4.5ug

Trip #1 12:45 pm

High

Cartography © Weather Underground / The Associated Press

Burlington, Vt. Casper Charleston, S.C. Charleston, W.Va. Charlotte, N.C. Cheyenne Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Columbia, S.C. Columbus, Ohio Concord, N.H. Dallas-Ft Worth Dayton Denver Des Moines Detroit Duluth El Paso Evansville Fairbanks Fargo Flagstaff Grand Rapids Great Falls Greensboro, N.C. Hartford Spgfld Helena Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Jackson, Miss. Jacksonville Juneau Kansas City Key West Las Vegas Little Rock

Drug Name

500 W. Hendrickson Rd. • Sequim, WA

1:30 pm

Low

CALL NOW & SAVE UP TO 84% ON YOUR NEXT PRESCRIPTION

Oh... I was hoping for Harrison Ford!

6:25 am

-0s

PORT ANGELES — The Michael Trebert Chapter of the National Society Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) will have a new and prospective mem-

THE FIFTH AVENUE

Departure Westbound: Leaves SeaTac Airport South Baggage Claim area, Door 00 Leaves Greyhound Station 503 S. Royal Brougham Way Leaves Seattle Amtrak Station 303 South Jackson Leaves Seattle Hospitals Arrives Edmonds Ferry Terminal Ferry Leaves Edmonds Arrives Kingston Ferry Terminal Call for arrival area Arrives Discovery Bay Call for arrival area Arrives Port Townsend Haines Place Park and Ride Arrives Sequim Mariner Cafe, 609 West Washington Arrives Port Angeles Gateway Transit Center 123 East Front Street

-10s

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

COMING SOON TO

Trip #1 6:00 am

Pressure

GLOSSARY of abbreviations used on this page: Clr clear, sunny; PCldy partly cloudy; Cldy cloudy; Sh showers; Ts thunderstorms; Prc precipitation; Otlk outlook; M data missing; Ht tidal height; YTD year to date; kt knots; ft or ’ feet

DAR to hold membership orientation

BIG CHANGES

Departure Eastbound: Leaves Port Angeles Gateway Transit Center 123 East Front Street Leaves Sequim Mariner Cafe, 609 West Washington Leaves Port Townsend Haines Place Park and Ride Leaves Discover Bay Call for departure area Arrives Kingston Ferry Terminal Ferry Leaves Kingston Arrives Edmonds Ferry Terminal Amtrak Station, 211 Railroad Avenue Arrives Seattle Hospitals Arrives Seattle Amtrak Station 303 South Jackson Arrives Seattle Greyhound Station Arrives SeaTac Airport Airline Departures area

Warm Stationary

Aug 22 Aug 29

Nation/World

Victoria 76° | 56°

Olympia 84° | 56°

Aug 14

Sunset today Sunrise tomorrow Moonrise today Moonset today

74/55 Sun burns off cool nights

Washington TODAY

Strait of Juan de Fuca: W wind 5 to 15 kt rising to 15 to 25 kt. Wind waves 2 ft or less building to 2 to 4 ft. Tonight, W wind 30 to 40 kt. Wind waves 5 to 7 ft. Ocean: NW wind 5 to 15 kt. Wind waves 1 to 2 ft. W swell 5 ft at 7 seconds. Tonight, NW wind 5 to 15 kt rising to 15 to 25 kt. Wind waves 2 to 4 ft. NW swell 4 ft at 6 seconds.

Ä 37 in Afton, Wyo.

Miami 89° | 77°

Low 55 Strips of gauze wrap stars

Valley, Calif.

Atlanta 95° | 69°

El Paso 97° | 71° Houston 97° | 76°

Full

à 120 in Death

New York 91° | 73°

Detroit 82° | 66°

Washington D.C. 94° | 67°

Cartography C artogra artography t phy by y Keith Keith ith Thorpe Th horp / © Peninsula Daily News h

TUESDAY

Cloudy

TEMPERATURE EXTREMES for the contiguous United States:

Cold

TONIGHT

Pt. Cloudy

Seattle 83° | 62°

Almanac

Brinnon 77/58

OUTDOOR BURN BAN IN EFFECT PENINSULA-WIDE

The Lower 48

National forecast Nation TODAY

Statistics for the 24-hour period ending at noon yesterday. Hi Lo Rain YTD Port Angeles 78 51 0.00 13.75 Forks 82 52 0.00 39.95 Seattle 92 61 0.00 16.56 Sequim 86 55 0.00 7.92 Hoquiam 76 56 0.00 20.15 Victoria 83 53 0.00 14.05 Port Townsend 84 52 **0.00 8.73

Olympic Peninsula TODAY

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WINNIPEG MANITOBA, R3H 0Z4 CANADA

CODE: AJ44


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Monday, August 3, 2015 SECTION

CLASSIFIEDS, COMICS In this section

B

Seahawks have too many stars Chancellor’s holdout shows Seattle’s enviable problem

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Kam Chancellor is the only Seattle Seahawks player to skip the first few days of training camp. Chancellor reportedly is seeking more guaranteed money.

ANALYSTS COMMONLY SAY that Kam Chancellor plays safety like a linebacker. No way. He plays Dave safety like a Boling Thracian gladiator. Big men, proud men back away when they see him stalking. Professional athletes consider career longevity and make postcareer plans when Chancellor is locked onto target.

ALSO . . . ■ Hawks sign Wagner, make two other moves/B3

When the Seahawks took the field in the last Super Bowl, Chancellor ignored a torn knee ligament and a severe bone bruise to not only play in the game, but make 10 tackles. And then you talk to him in the locker room and discover he’s so humble and thoughtful that he makes you wonder how such a savagely physical player can exude such a sense of what . . . dignity . . . nobility? Seriously. This guy is Spartacus. TURN

TO

BOLING/B3

Mariners slide past Twins

NFL

Seattle scores three in 11th to break tie BY BRIAN HALL THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Colts quarterback Andrew Luck was the first player picked in the 2012 NFL draft.

Luck and Wilson best of 2012 QBs BY STEVEN WINE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

MIAMI — The pontificating and prognosticating that have always swirled around the quarterback class of 2012 can transform even a punter into a pundit. Take comparisons between Andrew Luck and Ryan Tannehill, two of the five current starting QBs drafted in 2012. This spring, Tannehill became the first of the group to sign a contract extension, and punter Pat McAfee was quick to suggest his Colts teammate was worth a lot more. “Today’s market showed that a 25-25 record gets you 96 million American dollars,” McAfee tweeted. “Andrew’s about to own a team I think.” Tannehill is actually 23-25 with the Dolphins. McAfee made a typo in his rush to offer an opinion on how the quarterbacks of 2012 stack up, an ongoing debate that began even before that year’s draft.

MINNEAPOLIS — Logan Morrison hadn’t taken batting practice in the cage for four days because of a sore thumb and had only recently started swinging again since leaving a game Wednesday. The lack of practice didn’t matter Sunday when he stepped to the plate in e x t r a innings. Next Game MorriToday son’s RBI vs. Rockies double in at Denver the 11th i n n i n g Time: 5:40 p.m. broke a tie On TV: ROOT and Austin Jackson added a two-run double as the Seattle Mariners outlasted the Minnesota Twins 4-1. “When you barrel it, you don’t feel it no matter how bad your hand hurts,” Morrison said. Hitting for the first time in the game after pinch-running for Robinson Cano, Morrison

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Logan Morrison (20) scores on a single by Austin Jackson as Twins catcher Kurt Suzuki, left, bobbles the throw from left field during Seattle’s three-run 11th inning. drove a pitch from Brian Duensing to the wall in right-centerfield to score rookie Ketel Marte. Duensing had relieved Kevin Jepsen (2-6), who lost in his Minnesota debut after being acquired before Friday’s trading deadline. Morrison hasn’t started since injuring his thumb but came off the bench for the second straight game. “It doesn’t really hurt unless I get jammed, so I’m glad I didn’t get jammed,” Morrison said. “I was looking for a pitch in

the middle of the plate and it ish what had been an early pitching duel. happened to be the first one.” Nelson Cruz broke a 0-0 tie Third game, three hits in the top of the ninth with his 29th home run of the season. Marte had three hits and a The homer was off Minnesota walk in his third major league closer Glen Perkins, who has game for Seattle, which split the allowed runs in four of his six four-game series and won for outings since the All-Star break the second time in seven games. after giving up just five runs in Fernando Rodney (4-4) 38 games before it. pitched around a walk in the “I’m not going to give in to 10th, and Tom Wilhelmsen him,” Perkins said of the 3-0 allowed a leadoff double in the pitch to Cruz. 11th before recording his second TURN TO M’S/B3 save in as many chances to fin-

Successes and question marks They’ve collectively thrown more than 6,600 passes in three seasons. Luck is the best so far. Seattle’s Russell Wilson has exceeded expectations, Robert Griffin III has fallen short of them. Tannehill has made slow, steady progress. Griffin and Nick Foles carry the biggest question marks into 2015. “By and large, it’s pretty much as advertised,” said longtime NFL power broker Bill Polian, a 2015 NFL Hall of Fame inductee. “You’ve got two guys who have performed awfully well, two where you could say the grade is incomplete, and one, Tannehill, who keeps getting better. “That’s about the way the draft typically goes.” Polian wants to see a larger body of work before drawing final conclusions. TURN

TO

NFL/B2

GEORGE LEINONEN/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

SCENIC SUNDAY

RIDE

With the Olympic Mountains in the background, Steve and Corene McDaniel of Allyn ride among lavender and wildflowers up the driveway to the Washington Lavender Farm on Sunday. The farm was one of six lavender farms open to the Family Fun Ride, which is part of the Tour de Lavender’s Pedal Power Weekend, in Sequim over the weekend. On Saturday, 255 riders participated in the Metric Century Plus Ride and the shorter Family Fun Ride.


B2

SportsRecreation

MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 2015

Today’s

Latest sports headlines can be found at www. peninsuladailynews.com.

Scoreboard Area Sports BMX Racing Port Angeles BMX Track Sunday Single 4 Strider Total 1. Isaiah Charles 2. Makaylie “Kaylie-Bug” Albin 3. Laila Charles 26-30 Cruiser 1. Stephon Jasicki 2. Scott Gulisao 3. Robert “Faceplant” Williams 10 Novice 1. Joseph Clemens 2. Hunter “The Brother’s Trouble” Hodgson 3. Bryce “The Brother’s Trouble” Hodgson 4. Carlos Moreno 7 Intermediate 1. Jaron Tolliver 2. Rily “Rippin” Pippin 3. Benjamin Clemens 10 Intermediate 1. Deacon Charles 2. Cholena Morrison 14 Intermediate 1. Grady Bourm 2. Jaxon Bourm 9-10 Local Open 1. Grady Bourm 2. Jaxon Bourm 3. Benjamin Clemens 4. Hunter “The Brother’s Trouble” Hodgson 5. Bryce “The Brother’s Trouble” Hodgson

Baseball Mariners 4, Twins 1, 11 innings Sunday’s Game Minnesota ab r hbi KMarte 2b 4 1 3 0 Dozier 2b Seager 3b 4 1 0 0 Hicks cf N.Cruz rf 5 1 2 1 Mauer 1b Cano dh 4 0 1 0 Sano dh Morrsn pr-1b 1 1 1 1 Plouffe 3b S.Smith lf 4 0 0 0 Nunez pr-3b AJcksn cf 5 0 1 2 ERosar rf-lf Trumo 1b 2 0 0 0 SRonsn lf Iwakm p 0 0 0 0 TrHntr ph-rf CaSmth p 0 0 0 0 KSuzuk c JMontr ph 1 0 1 0 EdEscr ss Zunino c 10 00 BMiller ss 5 0 0 0 Sucre c 30 00 Gutirrz ph 1 0 0 0 Rodney p 0 0 0 0 Wlhlms p 00 00 Totals 40 4 9 4 Totals Seattle

ab r hbi 4111 5000 5010 4000 3000 0000 4000 3000 1000 4000 4020

1/ Ca.Smith 0 0 0 1 3 0 Rodney W,4-4 1 0 0 0 1 1 Wilhelmsen S,2-2 1 1 0 0 0 1 Minnesota Pelfrey 8 4 0 0 1 3 Perkins 1 2 1 1 0 1 May 1 1 0 0 0 2 1/ 2 2 2 1 Jepsen L,2-6 3 0 Duensing 0 1 1 1 1 0 2/ 0 0 0 1 Fien 3 1 Duensing pitched to 2 batters in the 11th. WP—Jepsen. Umpires—Home, Mike Muchlinski; First, Mark Wegner; Second, Marty Foster; Third, Tony Randazzo. T—3:12. A—30,325 (39,021).

Twins 3, Mariners 2 Saturday’s Game Seattle Minnesota ab r hbi ab r hbi KMarte 2b 4 0 1 0 Dozier 2b 4010 Seager 3b 4 1 1 0 Hicks cf 4010 N.Cruz rf 4 1 2 1 Mauer 1b 3000 Cano dh 4 0 0 1 Sano dh 3010 S.Smith lf 4 0 0 0 SRonsn pr 0100 AJcksn cf 4 0 0 0 Plouffe 3b 4110 JMontr 1b 3 0 1 0 TrHntr rf 4000 Morrsn pr-1b 1 0 0 0 ERosar lf 2100 BMiller ss 2 0 1 0 KSuzuk c 4021 Zunino c 3 0 0 0 EdEscr ss 3000 Totals 33 2 6 2 Totals 31 3 6 1 Seattle 100 001 000—2 Minnesota 000 100 002—3 Two outs when winning run scored. E—B.Miller (12). DP—Seattle 2. LOB—Seattle 6, Minnesota 6. 2B—N.Cruz (17), B.Miller (15), Sano (7). 3B—Plouffe (4). HR—N.Cruz (28). SB—E.Rosario (9). IP H R ER BB SO Seattle Montgomery 6 4 1 1 2 6 Wilhelmsen H,4 1 0 0 0 1 0 Rodney H,5 1 0 0 0 0 3 Ca.Smith L,1-5 BS 2/3 2 2 2 1 1 Minnesota Gibson 7 6 2 2 1 4 1/ 0 0 0 0 Fien 3 0 2/ 0 0 0 1 O’Rourke 3 0 May W,7-7 1 0 0 0 0 1 HBP—by Gibson (B.Miller). WP—Montgomery, Ca.Smith 2. Umpires—Home, Tony Randazzo; First, Mike Muchlinski; Second, Mark Wegner; Third, Marty Foster. T—2:45. A—36,901 (39,021).

American League 37 1 4 1

Seattle 000 000 001 03—4 Minnesota 000 000 001 00—1 DP—Minnesota 2. LOB—Seattle 7, Minnesota 5. 2B—Morrison (8), J.Montero (2), Edu. Escobar 2 (15). HR—N.Cruz (29), Dozier (23). IP H R ER BB SO Seattle Iwakuma 8 2/ 3 3 1 1 1 8

Houston Los Angeles Texas Seattle Oakland New York Baltimore Toronto

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

West Division W L 60 46 55 49 51 53 48 58 47 59 East Division W L 59 45 53 51 54 52

Pct GB .566 — .529 4 .490 8 .453 12 .443 13 Pct GB .567 — .510 6 .509 6

Tampa Bay Boston

52 54 47 59 Central Division W L Kansas City 62 42 Minnesota 54 50 Detroit 51 54 Chicago 50 53 Cleveland 48 56

Go to “Nation/World” and click on “AP Sports”

.491 .443

8 13

Pct GB .596 — .519 8 .486 11½ .485 11½ .462 14

Saturday’s Games Kansas City 7, Toronto 6 Boston 11, Tampa Bay 7 L.A. Dodgers 3, L.A. Angels 1 Baltimore 6, Detroit 2 Houston 9, Arizona 2 Chicago White Sox 8, N.Y. Yankees 2 Minnesota 3, Seattle 2 San Francisco 9, Texas 7, 11 innings Oakland 5, Cleveland 1 Sunday’s Games Toronto 5, Kansas City 2 Detroit 6, Baltimore 1 Tampa Bay 4, Boston 3 Houston 4, Arizona 1 N.Y. Yankees 12, Chicago White Sox 3 Seattle 4, Minnesota 1, 11 innings Texas 2, San Francisco 1 Oakland 2, Cleveland 1, 10 innings L.A. Dodgers 5, L.A. Angels 3, 10 innings Today’s Games Minnesota (E.Santana 2-1) at Toronto (Price 9-4), 10:07 a.m. Houston (McCullers 5-3) at Texas (Lewis 11-4), 5:05 p.m. Tampa Bay (Karns 6-5) at Chicago White Sox (Quintana 6-9), 5:10 p.m. Seattle (F.Hernandez 12-6) at Colorado (E.Butler 3-7), 5:40 p.m. Baltimore (T.Wilson 1-1) at Oakland (Chavez 5-10), 7:05 p.m. Cleveland (Kluber 6-11) at L.A. Angels (Richards 10-8), 7:05 p.m. Tuesday’s Games Boston at N.Y. Yankees, 4:05 p.m. Minnesota at Toronto, 4:07 p.m. Kansas City at Detroit, 4:08 p.m. Houston at Texas, 5:05 p.m. Tampa Bay at Chicago White Sox, 5:10 p.m. Seattle at Colorado, 5:40 p.m. Baltimore at Oakland, 7:05 p.m. Cleveland at L.A. Angels, 7:05 p.m.

National League West Division W L Los Angeles 60 45 San Francisco 57 47 San Diego 51 54 Arizona 50 53 Colorado 44 59 East Division W L Washington 54 48 New York 54 50 Atlanta 47 58 Miami 43 62 Philadelphia 41 65 Central Division W L St. Louis 67 38

Pct GB .571 — .548 2½ .486 9 .485 9 .427 15 Pct GB .529 — .519 1 .448 8½ .410 12½ .387 15 Pct GB .638 —

Pittsburgh Chicago Cincinnati Milwaukee

61 57 47 44

43 47 56 62

.587 5½ .548 9½ .456 19 .415 23½

Saturday’s Games L.A. Dodgers 3, L.A. Angels 1 Philadelphia 12, Atlanta 2 Houston 9, Arizona 2 Chicago Cubs 4, Milwaukee 2 Cincinnati 4, Pittsburgh 3 San Diego 5, Miami 3 N.Y. Mets 3, Washington 2 Colorado 6, St. Louis 2 San Francisco 9, Texas 7, 11 innings Sunday’s Games Pittsburgh 3, Cincinnati 0 Miami 5, San Diego 2 Atlanta 6, Philadelphia 2 Houston 4, Arizona 1 Chicago Cubs 4, Milwaukee 3 St. Louis 3, Colorado 2 Texas 2, San Francisco 1 L.A. Dodgers 5, L.A. Angels 3, 10 innings Washington at N.Y. Mets, late. Today’s Games Arizona (Godley 2-0) at Washington (Fister 4-6), 4:05 p.m. Chicago Cubs (Lester 6-8) at Pittsburgh (Liriano 7-6), 4:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets (B.Colon 9-10) at Miami (Koehler 8-7), 4:10 p.m. San Francisco (M.Cain 2-2) at Atlanta (Foltynewicz 3-3), 4:10 p.m. San Diego (T.Ross 7-8) at Milwaukee (W.Peralta 2-5), 5:10 p.m. Seattle (F.Hernandez 12-6) at Colorado (E. Butler 3-7), 5:40 p.m. Tuesday’s Games Arizona at Washington, 4:05 p.m. Chicago Cubs at Pittsburgh, 4:05 p.m. L.A. Dodgers at Philadelphia, 4:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets at Miami, 4:10 p.m. San Francisco at Atlanta, 4:10 p.m. St. Louis at Cincinnati, 4:10 p.m. San Diego at Milwaukee, 5:10 p.m. Seattle at Colorado, 5:40 p.m.

Football NFL Preseason Sunday’s Game Pittsburgh vs. Minnesota at Canton, 5 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 13 New Orleans at Baltimore, 4:30 p.m. Green Bay at New England, 4:30 p.m. N.Y. Jets at Detroit, 4:30 p.m. Miami at Chicago, 5 p.m. Washington at Cleveland, 5 p.m. Dallas at San Diego, 7 p.m. Friday, Aug. 14 Carolina at Buffalo, 4 p.m. Tennessee at Atlanta, 4 p.m. Pittsburgh at Jacksonville, 4:30 p.m. N.Y. Giants at Cincinnati, 4:30 p.m. Denver at Seattle, 7 p.m. St. Louis at Oakland, 7 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 15 Tampa Bay at Minnesota, 5 p.m. San Francisco at Houston, 5 p.m.

SPORTS ON TV

Today 4 p.m. (26) ESPN Baseball MLB, Chicago Cubs at Pittsburgh Pirates (Live) 4 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Football CFL, Toronto Argonauts at Hamilton Tiger-Cats (Live) 4 p.m. (311) ESPNU Basketball H.S., Adidas Nations, Third-place Game (Live) 5:30 p.m. (25) ROOT Baseball MLB, Seattle Mariners at Colorado Rockies (Live) 6 p.m. (311) ESPNU Basketball H.S., Adidas Nations, Championship (Live) Kansas City at Arizona, 6 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 16 Indianapolis at Philadelphia, 10 a.m.

Basketball Liberty 78, Storm 62 Sunday’s Game SEATTLE (62) Tokashiki 2-8 0-0 4, Clark 2-4 1-2 6, Langhorne 5-9 2-2 12, Bird 5-17 1-1 14, Loyd 0-1 1-2 1, Bishop 3-7 0-0 8, Goodrich 2-8 0-0 5, Gatling 2-4 1-2 5, O’Hea 3-3 0-0 7, MosquedaLewis 0-1 0-0 0, Hollingsworth 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 24-62 6-9 62. NEW YORK (78) Charles 11-18 7-8 29, Cash 2-4 0-0 4, Swords 3-5 0-1 6, Prince 5-9 0-0 11, T.Wright 0-3 3-4 3, Stokes 2-5 0-1 4, Boyd 0-7 0-0 0, Carson 5-8 1-2 11, Wiggins 3-8 2-2 10, Warley-Talbert 0-1 0-0 0. Totals 31-68 13-18 78. Seattle 23 12 9 18—62 New York 23 13 24 18—78 3-Point Goals—Seattle 8-17 (Bird 3-7, Bishop 2-4, Clark 1-1, O’Hea 1-1, Goodrich 1-3, Loyd 0-1), New York 3-8 (Wiggins 2-5, Prince 1-2, Boyd 0-1). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds— Seattle 40 (Loyd 5), New York 43 (Charles 8). Assists—Seattle 18 (Goodrich 7), New York 22 (T.Wright, Prince 5). Total Fouls—Seattle 15, New York 13. Technicals—New York defensive three second. A—10,682 (19,522).

Transactions BASEBALL American League BOSTON RED SOX — Placed RHP Rick Porcello on the 15-day DL, retroactive to Thursday. HOUSTON ASTROS — Optioned RHP Vincent Velasquez to Corpus Christi (TL). NEW YORK YANKEES — Placed RHP Diego Moreno on the 15-day DL. Recalled RHP Branden Pinder from Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL). OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Designated LHP Eric O’Flaherty for assignment. Recalled RHP Aaron Brooks from Nashville (PCL). Sent RHP Taylor Thompson to Nashville (PCL) for a rehab assignment. TAMPA BAY RAYS — Placed OF Steven Souza Jr. on the 15-day DL. Optioned LHP Matt Moore to Durham (IL). TEXAS RANGERS — Placed RHP Tanner Scheppers on the 15-day DL. Recalled RHP Phil Klein from Round Rock (PCL).

Kenseth stretches his fuel and steals a win at Pocono THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LONG POND, Pa. — Matt Kenseth stretched his fuel and zipped past the fading leaders in the final thrilling laps Sunday to win the NASCAR Sprint Cup race at Pocono Raceway. The 400-mile race came down to fuel — which cars had it, and which cars didn’t. Joey Logano, Kyle Busch and Martin Truex Jr. were all inside the top five in the final five laps when they ran out of fuel. Busch failed in his bid to become the ninth driver since 1972 and the first since Jimmie Johnson in 2007 to win four straight Cup races. Kenseth won for the first time at Pocono. With Busch’s recent dominance, Kenseth made it five wins in the last six races for Joe Gibbs Racing. Brad Keselowski was second,

Auto Racing followed by Jeff Gordon, Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Greg Biffle. Logano was 11th, Truex was 20th and Busch 21st. Busch remained outside the top 30 in points, the second marker he needs to hit to qualify for the Chase. Busch had won three straight Cup races and four of five, swept the Xfinity and Cup races last weekend at Indianapolis and won the Truck Series event Saturday at Pocono. “I wish I had saved a little more,” Busch said. “I wish I had known [Logano] was that far from making it. It’s a shame we couldn’t get it done.” With a win, Busch would have had the points needed to at least crack the top 30, though he’d have

to stay there for the final five races before the 16-driver field is set for the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship. “We got greedy,” Busch said. “But that’s the position we’re in.” Kenseth had the only position that mattered, winning for the first time this season since Bristol and for the first time ever at Pocono. “I never thought I’d win at Pocono,” he said.

IndyCar Rahal wins in Ohio LEXINGTON, Ohio — Graham Rahal won the IndyCar race Sunday in his home state of Ohio, and in the process made up considerable ground on series leader Juan Pablo Montoya with two events remaining in the season. Rahal held off Justin Wilson on the final restart, on the 84th of 90

laps in the 203-mile race at MidOhio. Wilson finished second, 3.4 seconds behind. Simon Pagenaud was third, followed by pole winner Scott Dixon. Montoya, who came into the race with a 42-point lead over Rahal, finished 11th. Rahal now trails by only nine points. Rahal is a native of New Albany, which is about 45 miles south of the Mid-Ohio course. This was the third IndyCar win of his career and second of the season. The final two races of the season are at Pocono on Aug. 23 and Sonoma on Aug. 30, with the latter worth double points. With Montoya leading comfortably coming into this race, contenders like Rahal, Dixon, Helio Castroneves and Will Power were under pressure to gain ground Sunday.

It was a missed opportunity for everyone but Rahal. Dixon did move a bit closer to the top, but he had won five times at Mid-Ohio, so his fourth-place showing was a bit of a letdown. Power, the defending series champion, finished 14th, one spot ahead of Castroneves. Rahal had an Ohio State football-themed helmet designed to honor the reigning college football champions, and he’s making quite a push to win a title of his own in his No. 15 Honda. Montoya, meanwhile, has come back to the pack. This year’s Indianapolis 500 winner had finished out of the top 10 only once all season until a last-place showing at Iowa on July 18. He was out of the top 10 again Sunday, and the championship appears to be very much up for grabs.

NFL: Luck expected to sign big deal next year CONTINUED FROM B1 the most talented offensive cast of his career. “Thus far Andrew is everyBut it’s safe to say the Colts feel good about their much-scruti- thing that everybody thought he nized decision to take Luck over would be,” Polian said. “And the 2011 Heisman Trophy winner sky’s the limit.” Griffin’s career has been a Griffin with the top overall pick. roller-coaster in danger of derailing. Chasing Manning Taken second overall, he was Peyton Manning won one 2012 NFL Offensive Rookie of the Super Bowl in Indianapolis, and Year as Washington won the NFC his successor is so talented the East, but he’s since battled injuColts talk of multiple titles with ries and been benched by two Luck. coaches. “Since my first day in this It’s unclear how much the athbuilding that has been the goal letic, freestyling Griffin will stay — to win the Super Bowl, and try in the pocket this season. to win another,” Luck said. “You have got to be true to who “Obviously it’s a lot easier said you are,” he said in June. than done, but that’s what we “Right now I’m a 25-year-old work for.” young man who can do a lot of difLuck has started all 48 games, ferent things, so I’m not going to advancing Indy one step deeper in limit myself to just being a dropthe playoffs each year. back passer.” In 2014 he set a Colts singleThe same issue inspired doubts season record with 4,761 yards about Wilson. He’s answered passing and had 40 touchdown detractors by staying healthy and passes. Now he’s surrounded by winning a lot — 36-12 in the regu-

lar season and 1-1 in the Super tory, and Philadelphia won the NFC East a year after going 4-12. Bowl. He backslid last year, throwing 10 interceptions in eight games Wilson a ‘perfect fit’ before breaking a collarbone. An Wilson has the best passer rat- offseason trade sent Foles to the ing (98.6) and touchdown-inter- Rams, who haven’t had a winning ception ratio (72-26) among the record since 2003. 2012 QBs. “That’s the ultimate factor in He has also benefited from the judging quarterbacks — winning best supporting cast, but it’s clear games,” Tannehill said. Wilson was a steal with the 75th “We’re here to win. That’s what overall pick. we get paid to do.” “He gives us such a dynamic And Tannehill has fallen short. approach to the quarterback posiWilson won a Super Bowl, and tion,” coach Pete Carroll said. Luck, Griffin and Foles won divi“He’s a perfect fit for us.” sion titles, but Tannehill has yet Like the Dolphins with Tanne- to oversee a winning season, hill, the Seahawks locked up Wil- plagued by poor protection and son by signing him to a four-year, enduring 139 sacks, by far the $87 million contract extension most in the NFL in that span. last week. He has showed admirable Foles was a third-round after- durability, starting every game thought, too, taken 88th by the since being drafted eighth overall, Eagles. and last year set a franchise In 2013 his 27-2 touchdown- record for completions while interception ratio set an NFL throwing for 4,045 yards and 27 record, his passer rating of 119.2 touchdowns. was third highest in league hisThe Dolphins rewarded Tan-

nehill with a $96 million, six-year deal through 2020, making him their first franchise quarterback since Dan Marino. “They put their money where their mouth is,” Tannehill said. The Colts, meanwhile, exercised the fifth-year option on Luck, who will make $7 million this year. Team owner Jim Irsay has repeatedly promised to lock up Luck before he hits free agency after the 2016 season, and knows it will be costly. Which gets back to the point raised by McAfee: If Tannehill is worth $96 million, what is Luck worth? “That’s a good question,” Polian said with a laugh. “Frankly, I don’t know the answer. We’re going to have to find out next year, I would guess.”

________ AP sportswriters Tim Booth in Seattle, Howard Fendrich in Washington and Michael Marot in Indianapolis contributed to this report.


SportsRecreation

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 2015

B3

Boling: Teams must draft well Wagner gets paid, guys happy with big-number extensions at an early SEAHAWKS LINEBACKER BOBBY WAGNER opportunity. And that’s what makes A day before signing a contract extension To stay competitive, it so hard to define his though, they have to draft value. well, be committed to playTeammates will say he’s dynastic franchises ended. fiscal injustice. pretty self-contained until But how difficult is it to ing young guys early so Although the Seahawks they can develop. the team is facing a pivotal proved that you can keep ignore Chancellor? A And those who don’t moment, when the season’s almost everyone when you player that all agree is the trajectory needs immediate have a franchise quarterblueprint for what this era develop to a high degree don’t earn the second conredirection, and then Chan- back, Russell Wilson, mak- of Seahawks players are tract. cellor speaks and everyone ing less money than supposed to be about. Churn at the mid and in the room takes heed. He was so highly backup center Lemuel lower ends of the roster is thought of, in fact, that he Jeanpierre in 2014. a fact of life in the cap era. Bennett, too was one of the first of the That luxury ended FriChancellor knows that core defensive guys to get How do you not pay this day morning when Wilson he has never been more contract extensions. He guy for what he is — one of agreed to a four-year convaluable, with backup turned into a bargain for tract extension for a the very best to ever play safety Jeron Johnson gone the team. reported $87.6 million. his position in the NFL? as a free agent and All-Pro It was a win-win for But then there’s the verfree safety Earl Thomas Avoiding precedent Wilson and the Hawks. satile and sometimes out for now following Make that win-win-win if unblockable Michael Benshoulder surgery. He also NFL front-office types, you add the enamored fan nett, who shares Chancelunderstands that his style though, know they face a base. lor’s dyspepsia over his of play takes a toll, even if future of guys lining up at But reality started contract. (Although Benhe’s only 27. their doors whenever they about as soon as the connett has shown up for the Nobody in the league is start giving out early going to feel sorry for the first days of training camp fetti from the Wilson celeextensions and merit Seahawks, who are facing while Chancellor has been bration hit the ground. raises. Wagner cited his own the First World problem of elsewhere to make his It becomes a greater needs. Bennett restated his issue when the player is having too many guys point). worth. And Chancellor deserving elite-level conAll-Pro linebacker somebody like Chancellor, then missed his second day whose worth is unanitracts. Bobby Wagner, prior to But the Chancellor situsigning a four-year contract of training camp Saturday. mously regarded. ation, particularly, is a Wagner got his just desextension Saturday night, The obvious tactic is to serts with an extension answered these questions reiterate your undying love tough one. How do you find ways to Saturday night. But both Friday when asked about and respect, and cite the some of the Seahawks’ new Chancellor and Bennett team’s history of rewarding pay an unhappy gladiator? have multiple years roster realities: “You can’t the deserving at the appro________ remaining on existing con- priate time. keep everyone.” Dave Boling is a sports columIt’s an NFL truism since tracts, cases in which the Until now, the nist for The News Tribune. He can Seahawks historically the salary-cap era began. Seahawks have been masbe contacted at dave.boling@theAnd that’s why the days of ignored players’ pleas of terful at keeping their core newstribune.com. CONTINUED FROM B1

“You can’t keep everyone.”

DAVE LOGAN/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

WISDOM

FROM A PRO

Former Major League Baseball player Brent Lillibridge discusses batting technique during a clinic at Volunteer Field in Port Angeles on Saturday. More than a dozen area players ages 9 and older attended the free clinic, in which Lillibridge, who played for six franchises in six big league seasons, emphasized attitude and mechanics, including utilizing the legs to add power to the upper body swing.

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McClendon said lefthander Vidal Nuno will come out of the bullpen to start Tuesday’s game at Colorado, filling the open rotation spot after Seattle traded J.A. Happ to Pittsburgh on Friday. Nuno’s start is considered a spot start for now, according to McClendon. Up next

Mariners RHP Felix Hernandez (12-6, 3.02 ERA) Mariners reliever Char- will open the three-game lie Furbush (left biceps ten- series at Colorado today.

Trainer’s room

HOUSING WITH ALL

Kitchens, extra storage, daily meal, A VAILABLE N OW ! 2 B EDROOM housekeeping, activities, transportation A PARTMENT and utilities (except telephone and TV) Income Limits Apply.

The Seahawks have released veteran defensive tackle Tony McDaniel to save salary cap space after signing Wilson and Wagner to contract extensions. Seattle made the move with McDaniel on Sunday. It will save the club between $2.5 and $3 million against the salary cap. McDaniel was set to make $2.5 million in base salary. McDaniel spent two seasons with the Seahawks, starting 29 of 32 regularseason games. He had 83 tackles, two sacks and one fumble recovery in the regular season, and started five of six postseason games with Seattle.

Trade for Seisay The Seahawks’ busy Sunday continued when they added depth to their secondary by acquiring cornerback Mohammed Seisay from the Detroit Lions for an undisclosed 2016 draft pick. Seattle had an open spot on their 90-man roster after releasing McDaniel earlier in the day. The draft pick going back to Detroit is expected to be a late-round selection. Seisay appeared in 13 games last season for Detroit as a rookie, and played in the Lions’ playoff loss to Dallas. He was signed by the Lions as an undrafted rookie free agent out of Nebraska. Seisay fits the profile of Seattle’s cornerbacks at 6-foot-2 and 200 pounds. Two projected contributors in Seattle’s secondary — Jeremy Lane and Tharold Simon — are both still recovering from offseason surgeries.

NEW YORK — Tina Charles scored 29 points and the New York Liberty pulled away in the third quarter and beat the Seattle Storm 78-62 on Sunday for their fourth straight home victory. Up 36-35 at the half, the Liberty (13-6) outscored for Storm (5-16) 24-9 in the third quarter. Epiphanny Prince and Essence Carson each scored 11 points for the Liberty. Candice Wiggins added 10. Seattle’s Sue Bird, the first pick of the 2002 draft, was 3 of 7 from beyond the arc to score 14 points, becoming the first player in WNBA history to score 5,000 points and amass 2,000 assists.

Sue Bird The Liberty inducted former star Becky Hammon into the franchise’ Ring of Honor at halftime. Hammon joined the San Antonio Spurs last year as the first full-time paid female assistant coach in the NBA and coached the Spurs’ to a summer league title last month.

P.O Box 1108 Carlsborg, WA 98324 551571

561298380

360-681-3800 TDD 711

251 S. Fifth Ave., Sequim • suncrestvillage@gres.com

McDaniel cut

full time, 5 Yr. experience, CDL a must, send resume to:

THE LUXURIES...

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SEATTLE — Right on the heels of signing quarterback Russell Wilson to a contract extension, the Seattle Seahawks have locked up All-Pro middle linebacker Bobby Wagner. It was the first of three moves Seattle made in a short stretch of time. The Seahawks Wagner and Wagner finalized a four-year contract extension Saturday night, making sure Seattle keeps Wagner beyond the 2015 season when his rookie contract was set to expire. Team owner Paul Allen confirmed the agreement in a tweet. NFL.com reports the deal is worth $43 million, which makes Wagner the highest-paid middle linebacker in football. Wagner was an All-Pro last season and finished second on the team with 104 tackles despite missing five games with a painful toe injury — and that was after having 140 and 119 the previous two years. Wagner has been Seattle’s starting middle linebacker since being selected in the second round of the 2012 draft. Wagner said Friday that his deadline for an extension was “now,” and that he briefly considered holding out from training camp to make his point. “It’s important to be recognized as one of the best. It’s not up to me. I let the people who get paid to figure that out, figure that out,” Wagner said on the first day of training camp. “My job is to go out there and make sure this defense is ran right and that’s the best defense. And it will be the best defense that you guys see on this field — again.” The stretch last season when Wagner was out only reinforced his importance to the best defense in the NFL. When he returned in late November, the Seahawks became immov-

able again. They didn’t allow a fourth-quarter point from Week 12 through the end of the regular season. Had it not been for the toe injury, Wagner likely would have been in the discussion for defensive player of the year. And he’s getting rewarded for that performance. “History shows that if you play well, you’re supposed to get paid,” Wagner said. “That’s the viewpoint, and we’ll see if it holds up.”

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dinitis) threw a bullpen session, which McClendon characterized as “OK.” McClendon said Furbush’s next session will be pushed back one day to Wednesday. If all goes well, the lefthander could start a rehab assignment. He’s been out since July 8.

AN INDEPENDENT LIVING RESIDENCE

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• Sequim • Discovery Bay • Edmonds • Seattle Hospitals • Amtrak

MARINERS MANAGER LLOYD MCCLENDON Regarding the pitching of starter Hisashi Iwakuma on Sunday

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THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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“Just an amazing outing; one that we desperately needed.”

Starter set

BY TIM BOOTH

Charles scores 29 Liberty beat Storm

M’s: Iwakuma ‘unbelievable’ CONTINUED FROM B1 while giving up three hits and a walk. “The least likely outcome “Unbelievable, and I told for him there is a home run. him he was unbelievable,” He just happened to hit it. I Mariners manager Lloyd take my chances, and it McClendon said. didn’t work out.” “He just left one pitch Brian Dozier tied the up. Other than that, I mean, game in the bottom of the just an amazing outing; one ninth with his 23rd homer that we desperately of the season off Seattle needed.” starter Hisashi Iwakuma, Twins starter Mike Pelwho had allowed just two frey threw eight scoreless baserunners until that innings, allowing four hits. inning. He retired 15 of the final 17 Iwakuma hadn’t allowed hitters he faced and got 16 a run to Minnesota in his outs on groundballs. first five career starts and Jepsen was acquired Frientered the ninth with a day to help a struggling span of 42 straight score- bullpen, but he walked two less innings. batters and struck out Cruz He finished with a sea- with two runners on before son-high eight strikeouts departing.

McDaniel gets cut


B4

Fun ’n’ Advice

MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 2015

Dilbert

Son hesitates with gay mom’s twins

by Scott Adams

For Better or For Worse

Classic Doonesbury (1984)

Frank & Ernest

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

DEAR ABBY: I am a 22-year-old male and my brother, “Brian,” is 14. When I was 9, our parents split up. After a year, Mom realized she was a lesbian. She is married now to a younger woman, and they are starting a family through in vitro fertilization. Mom’s wife is carrying twins — a boy and a girl. When I first heard about their plans to conceive, I was devastated. After a few months, Mom and I were able to reconnect and talk about it. I’m happy they’re happy, but I’m still uncomfortable with the situation. When the children are born, I am unsure how I will be known. Mom says Brian and I will have “a sister and a brother.” Brian is excited that he will no longer be the youngest. But at my age, as a business owner and in a serious relationship, I prefer to consider Brian my sibling, not the twins. I will love the babies because they are connected to me, but I’m leaning toward being called their uncle or cousin because the twins will not be my blood relations. I guess I’m “old school,” and with all the changes I’ve experienced in my life I’m not sure I want all of a sudden to say I have new siblings. Is this OK? Finding My Way in Connecticut

by Lynn Johnston

by G.B. Trudeau

by Bob and Tom Thaves

DEAR ABBY one else. The problem is, Van Buren he’s very stubborn about certain things — like his health. It’s a constant battle to get him to go to the doctor or dentist. I worry about him sometimes when he is ill. When he insists he doesn’t want to see a doctor, it makes me feel like he doesn’t care about making sure he’s healthy enough to spend the rest of his life with me. Patrick is my first serious boyfriend, so I’m not sure if this is just a “guy thing” or if it’s just his problem. Am I wrong to be upset that he cares so little about his health, or should I let him be? Proactive in Louisiana

Abigail

Dear Proactive: You appear to be wrongly attributing your boyfriend’s reluctance to see a doctor or dentist to a personal rejection. It may be a “guy thing” — or there may be other reasons for it. Have you asked him if he even has a health care provider he could contact, whether he has insurance to cover it, or whether he is afraid of doctors? Some people are — and the same goes for dentists. It’s important that you know what you’re dealing with. Until you understand the reason for his resistance, you won’t be able to help him resolve the problem.

Dear Finding: I don’t think you have to announce anything when your mother’s children are born. As long as your relationship with them is a loving one, I don’t think the “label” matters.

Garfield

by Jim Davis

Dear Abby: My boyfriend, “Patrick,” and I have been dating for a year and a half. He’s an incredibly sweet guy who treats me right. My family loves him, and his family loves me. I can’t see myself being with any-

________ Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, the late Pauline Phillips. Letters can be mailed to Dear Abby, P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069 or via email by logging onto www.dearabby.com.

The Last Word in Astrology ❘ Red and Rover

Rose is Rose

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Make things happen. Thinking about what you want but not acting on your thoughts will not lead to happiness or success. Channel your energy into getting ahead and reaching your goals. Love and romance are on the rise. 3 stars

by Brian Basset

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Finish your chores and take care of personal responsibilities before someone complains or takes over. Problems with children will develop if you overreact or give in to emotional manipulation. Avoid unnecessary spending and avoid trying to buy someone’s attention or affection. 4 stars

by Pat Brady and Don Wimmer

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): By helping others, you will bring about personal changes or alter the way you live. Use your personal space to host talks, meetings and to network. Don’t let an emotional issue cause you to let someone take advantage of your generosity. 2 stars

ZITS ❘ by Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CANCER (June 21-July 22): An open-minded approach will help you make better choices when dealing with peers or relatives. It is important to control your impulses if you want to avoid making a costly mistake.

Dennis the Menace

by Hank Ketcham

Pickles

by Brian Crane

by Eugenia Last

and you will reach your destination and make a good impression on the people LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Deal with financial, medical you meet along the way. or legal institutions to avoid Staying closer to home will an unexpected setback due not earn you as favorable a response. Someone will to a lack of knowledge or documentation. Protect your meddle and cause setbacks position and your reputation. if you aren’t careful. 2 stars If you are left in a vulnerable CAPRICORN (Dec. position, someone will take 22-Jan. 19): Don’t speak advantage of you. 3 stars openly about what you have. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. Bragging will make someone 22): Be secretive about any jealous and put you in a personal matters that can compromising position. The affect your money, health or current legal situation. Don’t less you share about your be fooled by someone offer- financial situation, the better. Focus on helping others by ing compliments or gifts. You’ll be disappointed by the offering suggestions, not cash. 4 stars outcome of a situation that you face at home. 3 stars AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 18): Use your unique ideas 22): Change what isn’t work- to dazzle someone you want ing for you. It’s up to you to to form a personal or busimake the adjustments that ness partnership with, and will lead to happiness. Look you will find a way to get for a new job or learn skills things up and running. Love that teach you what you need to know or do in order is on the rise. Explore new to reach your goals. 3 stars possibilities with someone special. 4 stars SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 21): Staying on track and refusing to back down under 20): You can make headway pressure will lead to victory. professionally if you are Determination and putting adaptable and dependable. more muscle into reaching Give your all and you will your goals will help you sur- reap the rewards. Use your pass any controversy or skills more diversely and you opposition. Strive to be will learn quickly and surunique. 5 stars prise someone in a position to influence your income. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Take charge 3 stars Your intuition will be on target. 5 stars

The Family Circus

by Bil and Jeff Keane


Classified

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 2015 B5

Peninsula MARKETPLACE IN PRINT & ONLINE PLACE ADS FOR PRINT AND WEB: Visit | www.peninsuladailynews.com

Reach The North Olympic Peninsula & The World

s

s

TO DAY ’ S H OT T E S T N E W C L A S S I F I E D S !

TOYOTA: ‘00 Camry. 4 Cylinder, 5 speed, 125K miles. $4,300. (360)477-6573

3010 Announcements DONATION and VOLUNTEERS NEEDED: To make lab quilts for d i s a bl e d ve t s. A t t h e senior center August 4th from 1-4 p.m,. Donations needs, thread, scissors, batting, needles, pins. (360)457-7004

4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale General General General Clallam County Clallam County AVAILABLE ROUTE in PORT TOWNSEND Peninsula Daily News Circulation Dept. Looking for individuals interested in Port Townsend area route. Interested parties must be 18 yrs. of age, have a valid Washington State Drivers License, proof of insurance and reliable vehicle. Early mor ning delivery Monday through Fr i d a y a n d S u n d a y. . Call Jasmine at (360)683-3311 Ext 6051 Or email jbirkland@ peninsuladailynews.com

L a s e r Ta g i n PA . Crowd funding event: 7/15 through 8/30. For more info visit: PA-LASERTAG.com SCRIPTURES ONLY Seeks Contacts 797-1536 or 417-6980

3023 Lost LOST: Cat. black and white male 15 month old (253)-549-5016 LOST: Dog, black fem a l e, bl u e c o l l a r, W. 12th and N. 7/29. (360)775-5154

4026 Employment General

CITY ENGINEER: City of Sequim. $76,320$97,740 + exc benefits; requires BA civil engineering + current Professional Engineer License WA state + 3 years supervisory engineer ing wor k exp. S e e w w w. s e q u i m wa.gov. Closes 8/25. COOK: Part time, rate DOE, Benefits. Submit application at: Sherwood Assisted Living, 550 W. Hendr ickson R d . S e q u i m , WA 98382

DENTAL HYGIENIST 8-5 p.m., Tue. and Wed., 2 PART-TIME d ay s a r e n e g o t i a bl e . RESIDENTIAL AIDES Please contact 360-437Arlene Engle and Res- 9392 ask for Beth or p i t e C e n t e r P r ov i d e s email resume to: support services to con- pldentistry@gmail.com sumers in accordance w i t h e s t a bl i s h e d p r o gram objectives and the t r e a t m e n t g o a l s. R e quires H.S. Diploma or equivalent and experience providing direct services to individuals with mental illness, developmentally disabled, or substance abuse; Resume / cover letter to: • Director of Nursing PBH 118 East 8th St., • Licensed LPN/RN P o r t A n g e l e s , W A • Salary DOE 98362. EOE • Benefits http://peninsula Submit resume with behavioral.org letter of consideration: Peninsula Daily News PDN#452/Staff Port Angeles, WA 98362 7 CEDARS RESORT IS NOW HIRING FOR THE FOLLOWING ELECTRICIAN PT/FT POSITIONS: Frederickson Electric Bartender, F&B Bingo is seeking an 01 or 02 Cashier, Busser/Host, electrician. If you are Cocktail Server, Cuscommitted to good tomer Service Officer, service and doing high Deli/Espresso Cashier, quality work, you will fit Dishwashers, IT Sysin with our crew. Fulltem Administrator III, time position with comCooks, Porter, Table p e t i t i ve w a g e s a n d Games Dealer. For benefits. Call more Info and to apply (360) 385-1395 to reonline, please visit our quest an application. website at. www.7cedarsresort. Equipment Operator, full com time, 5 yr. experience, CDL a must. Send resume to: P.O. Box 1108 Carlsborg, WA 98324

Aerospace Industry. Full time work, paid vacation and benefits. If this interests you ACTI in Por t Angeles may be your answer! We are looking for layup fabricators, trim techs and assemblers. For job infor mation please contact Wor kSource at 228 W 1st St or call 360-457-2103. We’d love to have you join our team if you qualify! BOOKKEEPER Full charge, 32-35 hr/wk, range $19-$22/hr. Description at www.unitedwayclallam.org. Send letter/resume to United Way, POBox 937, PA, WA 98362 or info@unitedwayclallam.org.

Substitute Carrier for Combined Motor Route Peninsula Daily News and Sequim Gazette Is looking for individuals interested in a Substitute Motor Route in Sequim. Interested parties must be 18 yrs. of age, have a valid Washington State Dr ivers License and proof of insurance. Early morning delivery Monday through Friday and S u n d a y. P l e a s e c a l l Gary at 360-912-2678

O3A has a Senior Retraining Program 20hrs/ week, min wage. Opportunity to update skills & learn new ones. Eligible; 55+, unemployed, meet low income requirements. Call: 360-3795064 for more info.

Family Services Coordinator Assistant, Training and Tech Assistant Assist in the development, implementation and evaluation of program family services and enrollment with a focus on supporting the childcare partnership’s serving infants and toddlers. (PM): Olympic Area www.oesd.wednet.edu Agency on Aging (O3A) 360-479-0993. seeks PM based in Port EOE and ADA. Hadlock. 40 hrs./wk/, $44,632-$55,740 annual range, exempt, full agency paid benefit package. FT System Administra- P M m a n a g e s s e r v i c e tor III. Provides leader- contracts in a 4-county ship in the IT Dept. for area. Required: WDL, system administration, auto-ins, BS/BA liberal d e v e l o p i n g s t a f f , arts, soc. health services evaluating and recom- + 3 years exp. in admin mending new and up- and/or social ser vices graded hardware and p l a n n i n g & m a n a g e software, and ensuring ment, competitive bids, efficient and effective contract monitor ing & operation for Resor t evaluation. For job dep r o p e r t i e s n e t wo r k . scription & application: Fo r e s s e n t i a l f u n c - 3 6 0 - 3 7 9 - 5 0 6 1 o r tions, qualifications, www.o3a.org. Open until and to apply, please filled; applications received by 5:00 pm Frivisit our website at day, August 14, 2015 rewww.7cedars ceive first consideration. resort.com. Native American pref- O3A is an EOE. erence for qualified PSYCHIATRIC CASE candidates. MANAGER Provide case manageHIRING: Bartender and ment services assisting server. Apply in person. clients in achieving goals J o s h u a ’s R e s t a u r a n t established in their indiand Lounge, Por t An- vidual treatment plans at geles. PBH and in community. Part-time with benefits. Human Resource Di- Requires BA in Behavrector: The Hoh Indian i o r a l S c i e n c e a n d 2 Tr i b e , a Wa s h i n g t o n years case management State Native American or clinical treatment sercommunity, is seeking vices experience. Rean Human Resource Di- s u m e / c ove r l e t t e r t o : rector. The position is PBH 118 E. 8th St., Port based in Forks, Wa. Ap- Angeles, WA 98362 Http://peninsula plicants should send a behavioral.org cover letter, resume, and three professional refer- EOE ences to Hoh Indian Tribe C/O Administration Westport L.L.C. has an P.O. Box 2196 Forks, oppor tunity for an AcWA 98331. Electronic c o u n t S p e c i a l i s t . Fo r applications can be sent complete job description to kristinac@hohtribe- and to apply, please visit nsn.org . For full an- w w w . w e s t p o r n o u n c e m e n t , g o t o tyachts.com/careers www.hohtribe-nsn.org. Questions or additional 4080 Employment information, contact KrisWanted tina Currie 360-3746502. Opening Closes ALL-PHASE SERVICES 8/3/15. Pressure washing, gutter cleaning, other services avail. Licensed Nurse needCall anytime ed, flexible hours, with (360)775-5737 benefits. 3+ shifts per we e k . C a l l D o n n a . A Plus Lawn Ser vice. (360)683-3348. Hedge, shrub trimming, thatching, many references, professional results. Here today here tomorrow. Senior Discounts. P A only. Local Olympic Community call (360) 808-2146 Action Early Childhood Services is hiring for Handyman with Truck. the following postions Property maintein Clallam and Jeffern a n c e, g u t t e r c l e a n s o n C o u n t y fo r t h e ing,moss removal, 2015- 2016 Program dump runs, furniture Year: Teacher, teachmoving, debris hauler assistant, itinerant ing, minor home reteacher assistant, subpairs, house/RV presstitute teacher assistsure washing. Call for ant, substitute cook estimate 360-461hours and weeks var9755 ies by site for all listed positions applications are available at OlyCAP - 823 Commerce Loop, Port Townsend , WA (360) 3852571 228 W First Street, Port Angeles, WA ( 3 6 0 ) 4 5 2 - 4 7 2 6 www.olycap.org Closed when filled The Hoh Indian Tribe, a Washington State Native American community, is seeking an Housing Director. The position is based in Forks, Wa. Applicants should send a cover letter, resume, and three professional references to Hoh Indian Tribe C/O Administration P.O. Box 2196 Forks, WA 98331. Electronic applications can be sent to kristinac@hohtribensn.org . For full announcement, go to www.hohtribe-nsn.org. Questions or additional information, contact Kristina Currie 360-3746502. Opening Closes 8/12/15.

Young Couple Early 60’s available for seasonal cleanup, weeding, trimming, mulching & moss removal. We specialize in complete garden restorations. Excellent references. 457-1213 Chip & S u n ny ’s G a r d e n Transformations. License# CC CHIPSSG850LB.

105 Homes for Sale Clallam County

ACCTS PAYABLE/ RECEPTIONIST: Looking for an exceptional person with excellent front office--customer service skills. Must be very organized, a true multitasker. AP knowledge, computer aptitude, and general office experience required for this very busy front desk. Apply online at

581377289

Charming fixer! What a great project house on approximately . 3 3 a c r e s ! Fo r c e d a i r electric heat, 3 br and a full bathroom on the main floor, spacious kitchen with breakfast nook, living room with oak floors underneath the carpet, tons of built-ins throughout the home. Add heat to the two upstairs rooms and you could have 2 more bedrooms! Needs new interior and exterior paint, a new roof, some windows, plumbing and electr ical will possibly need updating. 2 car detached garage and fruit trees. Near Lion’s park. MLS#290338 $115,000 Kelly Johnson (360) 477-5876 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES

Beautiful View, Improved Price A rare find in the heart of the city, hidden and private, this is a jewel of a home. A refined beauty, this property is on a double corner lot with gorgeous, mature landscaping. Circulating hot water fur nace for wonderful even heat throughout home. Two fireplaces one up, one down. Private, secluded hot tub area, with hook up. Upgrades, updates, throughout, ongoing thru life of home. Huge garage with wor kshop. Wo n d e r f u l b a ck ya r d Greenhouse and tool shed. SELLER WILL INC L U D E H O M E WA R RANTY POLICY FOR BUYER FOR ONE YEAR MLS#290702 $359,500 Sherry Grimes UPTOWN REALTY (360)417-2797 BREATHTAKING VIEWS Shipping lanes, Mt. Baker, and Cascades, on nearly 2 Acres near the Port Ludlow resort. 2 br., 2 ba., 1,664 sf., vaulted ceilings, newer windows / metal roof, metal steps and ladder to beach. On the upper parcel, there is a huge 1,200 sf. garage with RV parking, workbenches, workout room and guest quarters. MLS#800449 $399,950 Kevin Hunter Ludlow Bay Realty (360)437-0800 Classic Port Ludlow Resort custom home Admiralty Inlet and Cascade Mountain views. The great room is open and comfortable with a superior propane fireplace. 2,511 sf., configured as a 2 br., but there could be a 3rd PLUS a den/office, crafts or wine room. MLS#784313 $349,500 Kevin Hunter Ludlow Bay Realty (360)437-0800

Incredibly RARE NO-BANK waterfront home with shipping lanes/mountain views. 3 br., 2.5 ba., 2,603 sf. (PLUS!), great room with huge view windows. Sliding glass doors open to the large deck and straight out to the sandy beach. Huge interior, fully finished workshop. MLS#818840 $695,000 Kevin Hunter Ludlow Bay Realty (360)437-0800 Investment Property! 3 Homes on a 0.32 acres, Excellent Location on Cherry Hill!, Main house 2,662 SF 4 br. 3 ba, upstairs of main has auxiliar y dwelling unit, 1st rental 602 sf 1 br. 1 ba, 2nd rental 648 sf 1 br. 1 ba, 3 detached garages, 2 rentals bring in $1,300 mo. MLS#291506/291448 $395,000 Team Thomsen UPTOWN REALTY (360)808-0979

TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD: CALL: 452-8435 TOLL FREE: 1-800-826-7714 FAX: 417-3507 VISIT: WWW.PENINSULADAILYNEWS.COM OR

CLASSIFIED@PENINSULADAILYNEWS.COM DEADLINES: Noon the weekday before publication. ADDRESS/HOURS: 305 West First Street/P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. Open 8 a.m.-5 p.m. weekdays CORRECTIONS AND CANCELLATIONS: Corrections--the newspaper accepts responsibility for errors only on the first day of publication. Please read your ad carefully and report any errors promptly. Cancellations--Please keep your cancellation number. Billing adjustments cannot be made without it.

105 Homes for Sale Clallam County

Saltwater and Mountain Views Saltwater and Mountain Views from this BRAND NEW 3 br, 2 ba, 2,118 sf., home in Cedar Ridge. Spacious gourmet kitchen includes Quartz countertops. 878 sf attached 3-car garage. MLS#291513/820201 $475,000 Rick Patti Brown Windermere Just Listed! Real Estate Beautiful Sunland condo Sequim East with views of the Straits. (360) 775-5780 Large corner unit completely remodeled in 2014 with top of the line mater ials. 3 br, 3 ba. Custom alder cabinets, granite, and tile countertop, built-ins, pantry, solid core doors, windows and trim. Huge laundry room added with new washer and drier, lots of storage with closet builtins. Custom railing, designer lighting, new wiring, plumbing, new water softener, attic insulation and much more. Enjoy the beautiful sunrises, sunsets and Sunland amenities. Priced under recent appraisal. MLS#291520 $255,000 Sherry Grimes UPTOWN REALTY (360)417-2786 NEARING COMPLETION 3 b r, 2 b a , 2 , 3 3 7 s f home in Cedar Ridge. Open concept floor plan, and 9’ ceilings. 832 SF attached 3-car garage! MLS#291515/820232 $495,000 Alan Burwell Windermere Real Estate Sequim East (360) 460-0790

OH WHAT A VIEW From this bare lot property on Miller Road with water and septic hookups in the street. Ideal setting for daylight basement type home. Great salt-water and mountain views, too. Just bring the house-plans. MLS#291528/824920 $85,000 Chuck Murphy Windermere Real Estate FSBO: Sequim 1961 sf, Sequim East 2Br, 2ba., den with F/P, (360) 808-0873 light, bright , mt. view, Panoramic View – like new, upgrades ++, Must See Home lots of closets, soak tub, Water views from living murphy bed, room AND daylight park-like landscape, basement. 4 br, 1.5 ba all appliances. home plus an adjacent (360)232-4223 ex t r a l o t fo r p r i va c y. Fenced back yard, covHistorical Station ered patio. Enjoy apples Master’s house 2 parcels combined for from your own tree while .68 acres zoned commer- taking in the Strait. MLS#291478/821148 cial in downtown Joyce. $249,900 Located just behind the Rick Patti Brown Joyce Museum and the Windermere Joyce General Store and Real Estate includes the original StaSequim East tion Master’s house. Built (360) 775-5780 around 1915 with some of the Chicago Burlington QUIET COUNTRY colors remaining on the SETTING ex t e r i o r. A nyo n e w i t h some imagination and Spacious home situated creative ideas could do on mostly level, private something special with 3 . 8 5 a c r e s . Pa r t i a l l y wooded, partially this property. cleared. One full acre of MLS#291221 $39,900 mature cedar and some Harriet Reyenga fir trees behind home. (360) 457-0456 Recent upgrades to WINDERMERE home. Detached 2,240 PORT ANGELES sf. garage with a 900 sf. apartment. Workshop. . Home in the woods MLS#291298/810035 Wooded 3.05 acres in $425,000 Port Angeles City limits. Patty Brueckner Clean 2 br. 1.5 ba home (360)460-6152 with attached garage, TOWN & COUNTRY skylights, recessed lighting, parquet floors, stone entry, with tile floors and tile countertops in well appointed kitchen. Rich wood cabinetry throughout house. Morso free s t a n d i n g w o o d s t ove heats and accents. Office, laundry, deck and lots of privacy. Wonder- SEQ: 3 br., 2.5 ba., f u l m a t u r e t r e e s s u r - custom home set in a r o u n d t h i s i n t o w n s p e c t a c u l a r p r i va t e h i d e a w a y. P l e n t y o f g a r d e n . M o u n t a i n room for a nice large views, stunning pond shop or outbuilding and and waterfall, organic zoning might allow some vegetable garden and sor t of future subdivi- fruit orchard. 2,158 of living space. Visit our sion. website: 520grandMLS#291521 $219,900 viewdrive.com or call Ed Sumpter owner and landscaper Blue Sky Real Estate Richard Gray at 415Sequim 342-6057 $435,000 360-683-3900

E-MAIL:

SEQUIM BEAUTIFULLY REMODELED HOME w i t h N E W E V E R YTHING. 206 E Fir St. OPEN HOUSE SATURD AY, A U G U S T 1 s t , 11-4. 2BD/1.75B with large bright bonus room. Excellent central location. 1,447 sf with attached 190 sf storage, 520 sf detached two car carport, shop. $188,000. Laurene 360-393-2259 Superb Admiralty II Condo On the front row of Ludlow Bay. 2 br., 2 full ba., 1,277 sq ft, huge view windows, balcony, with galley kitchen, excellent for rental if desire. Walk the beach, close to Port Ludlow GOLF course. MLS#553295 $209,000 Kevin Hunter Ludlow Bay Realty (360)437-0800 TAKE ANOTHER LOOK Beautiful 3 bd 2 ba, 1,906 sf. In Sunland, large living, dining, kitchen and sun room, b r e a k fa s t b a r, f r e n c h doors to spacious deck, vaulted ceilings, propane fireplace, amenities: pool, beach access and cabana, tennis. MLS#766083/290561 $255,000 Tyler Conkle (360)460-0331 WINDERMERE SUNLAND 360-670-5978 Updated Craftsman Home 4 br., 2 ba., 2,356 sf., Living room with wood floors and fireplace, kitchen with tile counters and stainless appliance s, d i n i n g r o o m w i t h french doors opening to deck, fenced backyard with 2 story playhouse, 2 c a r t a n d e m g a ra g e and RV parking, landscaped yard, apple trees and water feature, water and mountain view, new heat pump 2012. MLS#291432 $230,000 Jean Irvine UPTOWN REALTY (360)417-2797 Waterfront Condo Waterfront condo in the heart of the Port Ludlow resort is perfectly prepared for your escape. Shipping lanes / mountain view of Admiralty Inlel, see carriers, subs, cruise ships, and eagles! This pristine recently remodeled condo is 3 br., 2.5 ba, plus a very spacious bonus office / den. Owner is installing new carport. MLS#657355 $315,000 Kevin Hunter Ludlow Bay Realty (360)437-0800

308 For Sale Lots & Acreage

505 Rental Houses Clallam County

1/2 of Coho Resort Lot, S e k i u , w i t h 3 0 ’ d o ck space and cabin. Overlooks straits and harbors. $29,000. (360)6812500 or 360-775-7255

3 br., 2 ba., 2 carport, 2 car garage. 6 ml. west of P.A.. First, last deposit. $1,200/mo. + $1,000. d e p. Ava i l a bl e F i r s t week of August. No pets/smoking. Min. 6 month lease. Must have exc. references. (360)912-2768

ACRES: Dungeness river, 1.4. $150k. Deer Park 2.4, $140K. Salt Creek 5.5 $160K. Dan Kelly 55 acres $1.6 million. Morse Creek, recreational lot. $59K. Owner Finance. (360)461-3688

Country home for rent. 2,600 sf. 4 br, 2.5 bath, oversized 2 car garage on 2+ acres. $1,500. per month, $1500. deposit. Call 360-460-2747

311 For Sale Manufactured Homes

P.A.: Nice 2 Br., quiet dead end street, pets neg. $850. 461-7599.

INVESTMENT/STARTER HOME FOR SALE BY OWNER!. Quiet Bluff’s prop. 2 br, 2 ba, 14 X 66, ‘77 Fleetwood Mobile home with tip-out on 4/10 acre. Storage shed, newer carpet, vinyl, updates. Part water view, huge front yard, garden area. Big cedars/firs out back. $89,000. 360-417-6867

605 Apartments Clallam County

SEQ: 55 and older, 2 Br. 2 Ba. West Alder Estates. Close to ever ything. Selling for less than appraisal. For details, (360)808-5418 or 808-5801. S E Q U I M : M a n u fa c tured home. Nice, comfor table, older 2 br, 2 ba in quiet over 55 park. New roof and energy efficient windows, newer water heater. Includes kitchen appliances, W/D. Carport and shed. Small rear deck. Very private. Low maintenance yard. Close to downtown. Must see. $38,500 Offers considered. (360-460-6004)

505 Rental Houses Clallam County Properties by

Inc.

RENTALS AVAILABLE

Inc.

RENTALS AVAILABLE COMMERCIAL HOMES APARTMENTS

452-1326

665 Rental Duplex/Multiplexes

P.A.: 433 1/2 E. First St. 2 Br., 1 bath, No pet/ smoke. $600, first, last, $600. dep. 461-5329.

683 Rooms to Rent Roomshares

ROOMMATE WANTED To share expenses for very nice home west of P.A. on 10+ acres. $425 mo., includes utilities, DirectTV, wifi. Must see. Call Lonnie after 5 p.m. (360)477-9066

1163 Commercial Rentals

COMMERCIAL HOMES APARTMENTS

452-1326

(360)

Properties by

SEQUIM: Fur nished 1 Br. $380, plus $350 deposit, plus electric. (360)417-9478

417-2810

HOUSES/APT IN PORT ANGELES

Properties by

Inc.

RENTALS AVAILABLE COMMERCIAL HOMES APARTMENTS

452-1326

A 1BD/1BA $575/M DUPLEX 1/1 $600/M H 2BD/1BA $650/M A 2BD/1BA $675/M H 2BD/1BA $775/M A 2BD/1.5BA $825/M H 2/1 JOYCE $900/M H 3BD/1BA $1100/M H 3BD/2BA $1100/M

QUALITY OFFICE SPACE: 970 sf, great location, lots of parking. $1,170/mo. Avail. 9/1 (360)683-4184

6010 Appliances

WASHER/DRYER Stacked, Maytag, electric combination. 5 yr. like new. $350/pr. (360)683-2037

6025 Building Materials

HOUSES/APT IN SEQUIM

A 2/2 GOLF COURSE $825/M COMPLETE LIST @ 581351581

www.crestwoodskillednursing.com

1116 East Lauridsen Blvd., Port Angeles, WA 98362 Phone: 360.452.9206 EOE

Mowing Lawns, lots and fields. Trimming, pruning of shrubs and trees. Landscape maintenance, pressure washing, light hauling and more. Free quotes. Tom (360)460-7766. License: bizybbl868ma

BEAUTIFULLY MAINTAINED 3 br, 2 ba home on nearly an acre! spacious fa m i l y r o o m l e a d s t o b a ck p o r c h a n d b a ck yard. very nice master bedroom and bath. open layout and lots of natural sunlight! this proper ty h a s a b e a u t i f u l b a ck yard with a fire pit and horseshoe pits- great for entertaining. MLS#291340/812079 $188,500 Jake Tjernell (360)460-6250 TOWN & COUNTRY

Incredible 2.5 acres On Olele Point Road in Port Ludlow. Overlook of Oak Bay, the shipping lanes, and the mountains. See cruise ships, naval vessels, eagles and heron. Come build your dream home and escape to gorgeous Admirlty Inlet. MLS#676975 $125,000 Kevin Hunter Ludlow Bay Realty (360)437-0800

5000900

CAREGIVERS NEEDED We will train. Benefits provided. Contact Donna (360)683-3348

P O R TA B L E T O I L E T 1,640 Sf. and PUMPER/LABORER. Double Lot Excel. dr iving record. Well maintained 3 br, 2 Apply at Bill’s Plumbing. ba, home with 2 car garSeq. (360)683-7996 age on an extra large lot with fenced in back yard. Preschool Co-Teacher Features include large Part-time preschool co- kitchen with eating area teacher in a five-day per and skylight, formal dinw e e k C h r i s t i a n p r e - ing area, living room with school. Early childhood f i r e p l a c e a n d i n s e r t . educational experience Laundry room with utility is preferred. Contact sink, heat pump, newer H o l y Tr i n i t y L u t h e ra n roof and windows. Church at 452-2323 for MLS#290836 $200,000 a job description and apTom Blore plication. Application 360-683-7814 deadline is August 14th. PETER BLACK REAL ESTATE PROGRAM MANAGER

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Don

Call: 360.452.8435 or 800.826.7714 | Fax: 360.417.3507 In Person: 305 W. 1st St., Port Angeles s Office Hours: Monday thru Friday – 8AM to 5PM

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1111 Caroline St. Port Angeles

FENCING: Old cedar split rails. (81) apprx 11’ l o n g . $ 7 . 5 0 e a . o b o. C a s h o n l y, S e q u i m . (360)683-3212

P.A.: 2 Br. 1 bath, car- 6038 Computers por t, no smoking, no pets. $750.+ dep. MISC: Papershredder : (360)457-7012. $30., Computer table: CENTRAL P.A.: 1 Br., $ 2 0 , 2 1 ” C o m p u t e r 1ba., $600 first/last/de- scree: $20. (360)681-5473 sposit. (360)460-0392


Classified

B6 MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 2015

Momma

By DAVID OUELLET HOW TO PLAY: All the words listed below appear in the puzzle –– horizontally, vertically, diagonally, even backward. Find them and CIRCLE THEIR LETTERS ONLY. DO NOT CIRCLE THE WORD. The leftover letters spell the Wonderword. POSTING ON SOCIAL MEDIA SITES Solution: 4 letters

S T N E M H S I L P M O C C A 8/3/15

DOWN 1 1997 Hawke/Thurman sci-fi movie 2 Semiannual astronomical event 3 Many a windmill 4 Sushi bar cupful 5 Hardly outgoing 6 Was in first place 7 Stretch of history 8 Practice session 9 Wild guess 10 Fast food chain known for its roast beef 11 Halloween treats 12 Like firm spaghetti 13 More smooth 18 Guitarist Clapton 22 “Star Trek: Enterprise” network 25 Bambino’s home 26 Watched with suspicion 27 Mali neighbor 31 Yale student 34 Digital camera type, for short 37 Poet’s “above” 39 Popeye’s Olive

Friday’s Puzzle Solved Saturday’s Puzzle Solved

6050 Firearms & Ammunition WE BUY FIREARMS CASH ON THE SPOT ~~~ ANY & ALL ~~~ TO P $ $ $ PA I D I N CLUDING ESTATES AND OR ENTIRE COLLECTIONS Call (360)477-9659

6055 Firewood, Fuel & Stoves FIREWOOD: $179 delivered Sequim-P.A. True cord. 3 cord special $499. (360)582-7910 www.portangelesfire wood.com

6080 Home Furnishings

U N A S U C M O O L T L N E A

S I R A T E N R E S L O N S N

I D C U N S A S E O I E E S S

6080 Home Furnishings

MASSAGE CHAIR Brookstone. Top of the line red leather reclinable massage chair with multiple settings. $2200 new. $1100. (360)477-0710

©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.

KILYS ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

40 See socially 41 Salon colorings 42 Topic 43 Bogey, vis-à-vis par 44 Nest egg named for a Del. senator 47 Nonbeliever, to some 48 Moving day stack 49 Show in a television series

8/3/15

52 “Look what I found!” 53 Shaw’s “__ and Cleopatra” 54 Ticket part you keep 57 Feeds the kitty 61 Smidge, as of salt 63 Org. at 11 Wall St. 66 Actor’s aid 67 Poetic tribute 68 It may be crude

LEAGIO

S T N E V E F F I Y R O T S E 8/3

ERREEV Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

Yesterday's

7025 Farm Animals 9820 Motorhomes & Livestock

6100 Misc. Merchandise

M I S C : 2 m e n s b i ke s, 26”, 21 speed, all terrain. good condition. $50./each. Wall stand bike storage rack. $30. (360)681-6022 MISC: New Briggs and Stratton shr imp and crab puller 3.5 hp motor. $700., Honda generator, 2000, used (1 time). $700. Hood Canal pots, crab pots, $50. Crab rings, $10. 1000’ Weighted rope a n d bu oy s, $ 4 0 / p e r 200’. (360)452-2705. Call after 4 p.m. SCHWINN: 24” adult 5 speed, trike, like new. $600. (360)683-7593

MISC: Mahogany dining table, 2 leaves, table pads, six chairs, $400. 6125 Tools Mahogany china cabinet, $400. Kitchen table, four chairs, 1930’s style, GENERATOR: Honda $220. Chaise lounge, EM5000is- electric start, $250. (360)457-7579. used 3 hours. New on line price $3,599. asking ROCKER RECLINER: $2,900. Call Nelson Brown leather, swivel, (360)457-0843 almost new. Paid $400, asking $200. S m a l l Tu r r e t L a t h e : (360)457-5040 Precision metal cutting, Harding copy 8 pos turTABLE: Dining Table, ret full set of 5c collets, solid wood and 6 chairs, with all tooling, cutting wrought iron trim. Seats tools, drills, taps, meas8 with leaf. ex. cond. uring tools, phase con$250. (360)681-4996. ver ter, r uns on 240w. $1500 o.b.o. 681-0505 TA B L E : Po t t e r y B a r n after 5:30p.m. C o u n t r y Fa r m . 7 1 ” X 35.5.” $200/obo. TOOLS: Table saw: 10” (360)681-2417 $100., Reciprocating Saw: $40, Circular saw: $25, Hand tools, one or 6100 Misc. all: $1-$10. Merchandise (360)681-5473

BEDROOM SET: Cal Shop solid wood, (2)night stands, (2) Lg., bed lamps, Armoir with mirror 3 drawers and 2 shelves, Dresser with 3 w ay m i r r o r a n d n i n e MISC: MOVING. Miller 220 spot welder with 2 drawers. $1400 o.b.o. sets of tongs, $225. Pro(360)504-9792 to Form Vacuum FormRECLINER: Cream col- i n g m a c h i n e . N eve r or, comfy, micro fiber, used make plastic molds man size, 4 years old, up to 22”x51” $2900. original $600, sell for Te n n s m i t h s h e e r m a chine 52” plate $1200. $150. (360)477-4538 Upholstery machine/ MISC: Lopi Woodstove, business star tup sup$300. Dinette Set, $30. plies $800. Approximately 100# candle/canning TV, $10. Several guitars, wax, 50 cents a pound. $250-$650. (360)452-7743 (360)504-2407

S R E O R S H A S H T A G E R

Accomplishments, Advise, Announcements, Answer, Audience, Business, Censor, Clips, Commemoration, Comment, Connect, Crafts, Cute, Events, Facts, Fashion, Follow, Food, Hashtag, Hide, Ideas, Messages, News, Occasions, Online, Pictures, Post, Products, Quotes, Sale, Selfies, Send, Share, Sites, Status, Story, Text, Topics, Trending, Videos Yesterday’s Answer: Pitch

PALAH

Goods

HIDE-A-BED: Leather sofa, Lazy boy, 7’, Camel color, 3 cushions, new $2,800. excellent condition. $800. (360)683-2037

E E S X I A I C S A I K S G E

Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.

BEDROOM SET: Hun- MISC: Electric wheeltley 1950’s, excellent chair. Hoveround MPV5 condition, maple wood, great shape. $600/obo (360)797-0092 makeup vanity, queen size bed and dresser, 1 night stand.$1,000/for 6115 Sporting the set. (360)452-2168 FURNITURE: MOVING MUST SELL. Hutch, oak 80”H x 66”W x 18”D, top is 12” D, $500. Bookcases (4), 6’ H x 30.5” W x 11” D, 4 shelves, $40 ea. All prices obo. (360)681-2535

N N R T T T H T W H L D W A W

by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

7030 Horses

WANTED: Round 40-60 Lb. Hay Baler and or B a l e s o f h ay, R o u n d same size. (360)5656317.call 8am-6pm

T O U Q B P I C S G T E S T F D E A S O S O P ‫ ګ‬ D O L I ‫ ګ‬ N E D L ‫ ګ‬ E D I I S ‫ ګ‬I E P E V N R C I C O N S M S U A E F O C M I A C M E T O O S U F M E S I V D

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

BULL: Limousin/ White fa c e m i x , a p p r ox . 1 8 months old. East Sequim area. (360)683-2304

TRACTOR:NEW HOLLAND. Like new 2008 tractor used only 124 hours. Diesel, 4WD, 28hp with front end loader. This powerful, compact, versatile tractor is easy to operate and perfect for the small farm or estate. It has both rear and mid PTO’s, and fits the 230 GM New Holland mower deck, designed to cut at 7 different levels (not included). $11,450.00. Call Jeff at (360)683-0745 or email at jeffaok@hotmail.com.

E O U I T N L C T C E N N O C

© 2015 Universal Uclick www.wonderword.com Download our app!

By Ray Hamel

by Mell Lazarus

6045 Farm Fencing & Equipment

S T C U D O R P C O M M E N T

6140 Wanted & Trades WANTED: ‘05-’10 Pathf i n d e r, 4 R u n n e r o r Trooper, low miles. (360)963-2122

LONG DISTANCE No Problem! Peninsula Classified 1-800-826-7714

8120 Garage Sales Jefferson County Copper Penny Sale BIG CLEARANCE SALEONE DAY ONLY - FRIDAY JULY 31st, 10-4 p.m., 44 Village Way, Port Ludlow. Sofa’s, tables, dressers, storage, lamps, ar t, home decor and more...30% - 40% 50% off!!! copperpennyportludlow@gmail.com

8142 Garage Sales Sequim GARAGE SALE. Tue.Wed. AUg. 4 and 5th, 8-8 p.m., 217 N Ryser Ave. Model trains in N, HO and O scales with track.Vinyl records, CDs and VHS moviesElectronics and miscellaneous items.

8182 Garage Sales PA - West

HORSES: 2 matched handsome Appaloosa gelding trail horses. age 15 and 20. 16H and 15H $750/each. (360)457-4288 QH Mare for lease, needs experienced rider. Also, horse trailer for sale. 2 horse, tandem axle, new tires. $1488. call for more info. 4177685 or 928-5027.

7035 General Pets C a i r n Te r r i e r : ( To t o ) pups. AKC breeder of healthy, loving, athletic C a i r n s fo r 3 0 y e a r s . Home raised, no kennel dogs. Shots, wor med, vet checked. $800. (360)928-9427 FREE: Young str iking black shor thair cat w/white bib and b o o t s, s l e n d e r w / l o n g l e g s . Wa s o n c e i n a good home apparently, likes to lapsit. Fearful, has been on her own for a while, gradually relaxing. (360)417-1175

9820 Motorhomes

AUCTION: Airpor t Rd. Self Storage, 12 p.m. Tue. Aug. 4. at 4114 S. Air por t Rd. Unit 212, 1116, 1117, 1017 (360)460-8333 to verify.

8183 Garage Sales PA - East ATTENTION EVERYONE WHO HAS SOMETHING TO MAKE, FIX OR BUILD. Fr i . - S a t . , 8 - 4 p. m . , 2222 E 7th Ave. Gales Edition, off Bake St. Left at the fire station. Look at our stuff. Isn’t it neat? A Sub-Contractors dream, a Handymans’ treat. A Do-ItYourselfers sale, so you can do it cheap. We eve n d u g d e e p and found car par ts that look antique. Come see our trove. Treasures untold. Just how much crap can one shop hold? Plumbing, Electrical, D r y wa l l , C a r p e n t r y, Au t o m o t i v e , Wo o d working and more.

CHECK OUT OUR NEW CLASSIFIED WIZARD AT www.peninsula dailynews.com

37’ Diesel pusher 300 Cummins 6 Speed Allison Trans. 6500 Watt Gen, 2 Slides, levelers Awnings, day & night shades corin counters, 2 each AC TVs Heaters, tow Package,excellent cond. Call for more det a i l s $ 3 9 , 0 0 0 . O B O. 360 582 6434

MOTORHOME: ‘96 30ft. Southwind Stor m. 51k miles. Custom interior, Roadmaster towing system, Banks Power Pack and other extras. Very nice cond. $18,500. (360)681-7824

GMC: 26’ Motorhome. 1976. $16,500. (360)683-8530

(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: SHOVE SWIFT HIGHLY ANYHOW Answer: She just couldn’t decide if she was going to do the laundry. She was being — WISHY-WASHY

9832 Tents & Travel Trailers

9808 Campers & Canopies

TRAILER: ‘89, 25’ Hi-Lo C A M P E R : O u t d o o r s Voyager, completely re- man, bed, refrigerator, conditioned, new tires, stove. $1,500. (360)912-2441 AC, customized hitch. $4,750. (360)683-3407. TRAILER: ‘97 Nash, 26’, sleeps 4, queen bed, gas/electric, AC, tub and shower, TV. Ex. Cond, new tires. $7,800. Rainbow RV Park. 261831 Hwy 101 #36. Sequim. Ask for Jerry. (360)5736378.

9050 Marine Miscellaneous

Canopies

WINNEBAGO: ‘87 Chieftain, 27’, 37,250 orig. miles, low hours on generator, nicely equipped kitchen, includes TV and microwave. New ver y comfortable queen mattress, lots of extras. $10,500. (360)461-3088

TENT TRAILER: ‘08 R o c k w o o d Fr e e d o m . Sleeps 8, tip out, stove, gas/elec. fridge, furnace, toilet with shower, king and queen beds with heated mattresses. Outside gas bbq and shower. Great cond. $7,495. (360)452-6304 TRAILER: 22ft. Holiday Rambler, sleeps 4, roof AC, kitchen, needs work. $1,900. 461-3232 TRAILER: ‘99 Sierra, 25’, needs TLC. $7,000/obo. 417-0803.

CAMPER: ‘96 S&S Cab over, 8.5’, large bed. $2,500. 683-3170 LANCE: ‘97, Camper Squire 3000, 8’6”, extended cab, for short box extended cab pickups. $4,000/obo. (360)790-0685

9050 Marine Miscellaneous

S I LV E R S T R E A K : 1 7 ’ H a r d t o p, a l u m i n u m . Brand new, 4 hrs. on 115 hp, plus 9.9 Yamaha, fully equipped. $45,000. (360)683-8668

BAYLINER: ‘81, 21’ and trailer, hull is sound, eng i n e a n d o u t d r i ve i n good shape. $1,800. (360)681-2747

B E L L B OY : 1 4 ’ , E - z UTILITY TRAILER: 16’, load, 25 hp Evinrude, 4 MOTORHOME: Bound- ramps, tandem axle, cur- hp Johnson, short shaft er ‘03, 36’. 2 slides, HAS rent license. $2,250. motors. $1,000 firm. (360)460-0515 EVERYTHING, W/D, ice (360)683-9783 maker, barn stored, ex. cond. 22K ml. Price reBOAT: 10’ Spor t Cat, duced to $39,900/obo. 9802 5th Wheels ‘97, Fiberglass, electric (813)633-8854 trolling motor, oars, battery and charger, load MOTORHOME: Dodge ramp. $650. ‘76 Class C. 26’, new (360)681-4766 tires, low miles, nonsmoker, in PA. $2,500 BOAT: 16’ Larson, 40 firm. (360)460-7442. horse mercur y, Eagle depth finder, with trailer. RV: ‘91 Toyota 21’.V-6, $1988. 417-7685 or 928C r u i s e c o n t r o l , ove r 5027. drive, 90K miles. $9,900. Dutchmen: 2012 Denali (360)477-4295 2 5 9 R X L f i f t h w h e e l B OAT: ‘ 7 4 L i g h t n i n g 30.5’Dr y Weight 7534 sailboat, 19’. On trailer. lbs, one owner, AC, re- $1000 obo. 460-6231 mote control for jacks and awning, Truck hitch BOAT: Lonestar, 17’ fis y s t e m , R V c o v e r , berglass. EZ Loader galStrong arm jack stabiliz- vanized trailer. $600. (360)928-9436 ers included $27,900. (360)808.3072 BOAT: Tollycraft, ‘77, WINNEBAGO KOMFORT: ‘02 34’ triple 2 6 ’ S e d a n , w e l l ‘02, BRAVE, 33’,. Class slide. New appliances, equipped and mainA, Model 32V, Ford V10 good shape. $13,950. tained classic, trailer, gas engine with 2 slides, Will deliver. 461-4374 dingy and more. See at Onan Generator, rear camera, tow package, ROCKWOOD, ‘10, 5th 1 5 1 8 W. 1 1 t h a l l e y. l eve l e r s. S l e e p s t wo, wheel, 26’, many extras, $20,000/obo. (360)457-9162 dinner for 4, party for six, b e l o w b o o k va l u e @ 42.8K miles, $29,800. $23,000. (360)457-5696. B OAT T R A I L E R : ‘ 9 9 , (407)435-8157 20’ Heavy duty, custom. NO TEXTING T E R RY: ‘ 9 6 , 2 6 ’ 5 t h $1,500. (360)775-6075 Wheel. $4,500/obo. (360)640-0111 MISC: 6hp Evenr ude. $450. (2) Cannon elec9808 Campers & tric downriggers. $650 for both. (360)460-6647

9832 Tents & Travel Trailers

CHEVY: Motorhome, “89 Class C 23’ 41K. New tires, electrical convertor, high output alternator. Captain’s chairs and s o fa . L a r g e f r i g a n d freezer. Lots of storage. Outstanding condition. $9,750/OBO (360)797-1622

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ACROSS 1 Receives 5 Slide downhill on runners 9 Long stories 14 Water color 15 Frankfurt mister 16 Chat room troublemaker 17 Thanksgiving, casually 19 “Humble” home 20 River through Rome 21 Actress/activist who was Ossie Davis’ life partner 23 “Give me __!”: start of a Hoosier cheer 24 Becomes slippery, as a road 28 Dirty dishes site 29 Negative aspect 30 Hot chili pepper 32 Parisian summer 33 Wood choppers 35 When repeated, a former breath freshener 36 Hard luck case 38 Crooked craps cube 42 “My bad” 45 __ Nineties 46 Nepalese staple 50 Tres menos dos 51 Finds 55 Doze briefly 56 Alpha follower 58 In the best shape 59 Part of TGIF: Abbr. 60 Anonymous man 62 Storage auction buys 64 Argentine icon played by Madonna 65 “Where Are You!” toon pooch 69 Roman agriculture goddess 70 Quattro automaker 71 Texting button 72 Garbage 73 Film holder 74 Other than that

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

SKI BOAT: ‘73 Kona. 18’ classic jet ski boat. 500 c.i. olds. engine. B e r k l e y p u m p . To o much to mention, needs upholstry. $2500. (209)768-1878

SMOKERCRAFT: 13’, E-Z loader, 5 hp., Honda 4 stroke, Minn-kota 40lb., extras, all in new condition, must see. $4,300. (360)681-8761 WANTED: Sailboat, 23’ 27’, with trailer, motor and instruments. (360)582-7970

9817 Motorcycles

HARLEY: ‘06 Custom Deluxe. 25K miles. Comes with extras: rear seat, windshield, sissy bar. New tires. Harley Custom Paint #123 of 150. Immaculate condition. $12,500. Call Lil John Kartes. (360)460-5273

H A R L E Y DAV I D S O N ‘93, Wide glide, black PEDDLE Boat: on trail- with chrome. $10,500 /obo. (360)477-3670. er, like new, $2,000/obo. (360)452-8607 Harley Davidson: Trike, ‘11, 8,800 miles, fully loaded. $27,000 FIRM. (360)477-9527 HD: ‘81 XLS Sportster. 1,000 cc, 9K. $2,500. (360)683-5449

H O N DA : ‘ 8 4 S a b r e, SAILBOAT: ‘04 WWP19 1100cc. runs excellent. 5hp mtr, trailer, new ra- $1,100. (360)775-6075 dio and stereo. Ready to sail, garaged. $6,200. HONDA: ‘98 VFR 800. hermhalbach@waveRed, fuel injected V-4, cable.com or 100+hp, 23K mi., (360)504-2226 c l e a n , fa s t , ex t r a s . $4,500. (360)385-5694 TENT TRAILER: Coachman ‘11 Clipper 126 K AWA S A K I : ‘ 0 6 N o Spor t. Pop up, Queen mad. Very clean. Lots of bed on each end. extras. $6,000 obo. Fr idge, stove, stereo, Mike at (360)477-2562 furnace, hot water heater, excellent condition. K T M : ‘ 1 2 2 0 0 X C - W. Ve r y l i t t l e u s e. Ta bl e $5,500/OBO with bench seats, sofa (360)477-3676 and table that folds into SEARAY, ‘88 Sundancbed. Must see to appreer, boathoused in PA, SUZUKI: ‘00 600 Kataciate! $6,500. Call na. 5k ml. $2,200. ( 3 6 0 ) 6 4 0 - 2 5 7 4 o r 800 engine hr., $33,000. (541)840-1122 (707)241-5977 (360)640-0403.


Classified

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

ACETYLENE: Cutting CAMERA: Electric Reti- FREE: Short boat trailer, M I N OX : 3 5 G L w i t h SADDLE: Good conditorch, like new. $50. na II, uncommon. $100. 14-16ft, usable. electronic flash and cas- tion. $100. 461-3311 (360)582-6434 (360)379-4134 (360)452-2066 es. $100. (360)379-4134 SAW: 10” comp. slide AIR CLEANER: High CANOPY: White, fits FREE: Stereo/radio, MISC: (2) axes, (1) split- Makita, #LS1011 $150. (360)452-2468 end unit, Friedrichs C90, Ranger Pick up. $150. works real well, beautiful ting maul, (1) sledge like new, plus extra filter. cabinet, 55x28. U-haul. hammer, (1) pick. $15. (360)808-6792 SHOES: Womens 9.5 $150.obo (360)775-5348 (360)457-9041 each. (360)457-5385 Merrell Croc, black/grey, CAR TOP CARRIER: AMMO: (2) boxes, .38 Yakima, like new with FREEZER: 5cf chest MISC: Chess pieces and new, never worn. $55. (360)460-8768 cal, special wadcutters. locks. $95. 477-4123 type. $50.obo. clocks, 1947 Kingsway $30.each. 681-3339 (425)466-8369 Florentine, dual timing SMOKER: Little smoker, clock. $45.obo 452-6842 CERAMIC: Lladro piece. still in box. $50. AMMO: 460 Weatherby Man with violin. Perfect FREEZER: Magic Chef (360)461-0940 M a g nu m , ( 1 ) b ox o f cond. $65. 681-7579 8.8 cu ft, upright, only MISC: Craftsman scroll20-500 grain round used four months, like i n g s a b r e s aw. $ 2 0 . SOFA: Oak trim. $150. nose. $130. 457-2050 Craftsman 3/8” drill. $10. CHAIR: 1920’s wood new. $100. 681-3561 (360)452-5848 (360)683-2589 arms, covered seat and APPLE IPAD: 16 GB, back. $35. 457-6139 FRIGIDARE: Certified, with case, new. $200. (hospital use) digital de- MISC: Loveseat recliner SPIN MOP: Extra mophead, used only once. (360)582-7827 CLARINET: Suzuki with humidifier with hepa fil- $100. Matching swivel $20. (360)477-4004 ter. $65. (360)775-6129 rocker recliner $100. or music stand. $80. ART: Framed “Friends both for $175. 457-0283 STOOL: Milking, solid (360)582-0942 G A M E : Fo u r p l aye r, of the Field”, s/n and 1st “ C r a b f e s t ” c a r t o o n . COMMODE: Adjustable Sega golf game, lightly M I S C : S t r o n g m e t a l wood, maple color, vintage. $45/obo. $200. for both. 461.7365 height, stable, large and used. $20. 452-1106 car/truck ramps $30. (360)683-7435 Bread maker $35. portable. $50. 452-8760 ART: Illinois 1st PheaGLASSWARE: Fostoria (360)457-6139 STOVE: Great condition. sand stamp print A/P American, LOT- 50 piec$175.obo. with signed governor COUCH: Chaise, full es! exc. condition! $200. MUZZLELOADER: size, hide-a-bed, purple (360)808-2179 stamp. $200. 461-7365 (360)452 8264 Knight Bighorn, 50 cal., fa b r i c, yo u h a u l , n o and accessories. $350. TABLE: One leaf and 6 smoke. $100. 461-6295 A R T : N e w, P a c i f i c GOLF BAG CART: $25. (360)460-5971 chairs. #18181 Cochran. Northwest poster set, (3) (949)241-0371 $175. (360)808-7641 different ones. $12. for CRUCIFIX: 18”, more atNU-WAVE PRECISION: tractive/realistic than GOLF CLUBS: Titleist induction cook top with all. (360)452-1277 most, hangable. $30. irons, tour edge graphite DVD and warranty, new. TABLES: (3) 1940’s $40. 1950’s $40. Oak (360)457-6343 ART: Rie Munoz “Tendwoods, putter, bag, pull $85. (360)775-6129 coffee table $20. ing the Nets” very nice cart. $85. 452-1277 (360)452-9685 DESK: Hardwood, $50 frame. $95. 681-7579 ORCHID POTS: (10) obo. (360)452-2468 HELMET: White H-D TABLES: Oak coffee taLarge and small. $50. BED FRAME: Queen helmet, size large, new. ble. $50. Oak side table. (360)452-7377 size, metal, on wheels. DOG CRATE: Medium $75. (360)683-0033 $35. (360)452-5848 size. $35. 683-0146 $40. (360)683-2589 HIP BOOTS: Mens size ORGAN: Hammond with TO O L S : B e n c h d r i l l bench, excellent quality. BED: Full size, com- DOLL: 26” porcelain col- 9, good condition. $10. press, used very little. $200. (360)452-7377 lector bride doll in box plete, good cond. $50. (360)457-5385 $65. (360)683-3580 “ w i n t e r bl i s s ” . M i n t . (360)461-0940 HOPE CHEST: Cedar, PAINTING: Oil, signed, TOPSY TURVY: tomato $95.obo. 683-7435 sea scape, framed, size BED: Queen size matmade by Lane. $150. and herb planter, as 58” x 34”. $100. tress, boxspring and DOLL: French doll, Pro(360)683-0146 seen on TV, new in box. (360)683-0703 frame, great condition. vence dress, mint condi$10. (360)457-6343 HOSES: (2) Soaker hos$100. (360)457-5953 tion. $15.obo. e s , s a v e w a t e r . PLAYPEN: Like new, TREADMILL: Pro-form, (360)797-1179 dark blue $50.obo. BENCH: Bedroom, floral $10.each. 452-1106 almost new. $195. (360)477-9962 cushion, brass legs, 48” DOOR: Antique swing(360)681-7700 X 18” X 20”. $49. ing wood door with glass JAC K E T: S h e a r l i n g POOL TABLE: Regula(360) 775-0855 panels, unique, NICE! flight jacket, mens XL, tion pool table. $200. TV: 32” Vizo, excellent never worn. $150. $60. (360)452-8264 condition. $50. (360)683-1138 BIKE: 26” Dahon Fold(360)385-9255 (360)683-3420 ing mountain gold 21 D R I L L P R E S S : 5 / 8 speed, with accessories. chuck, on mobile stand. JUICERATOR: New in PROM DRESS: Size TV WALL MOUNT: New box, retails for $370, 7/8, pink, comes with fo r f l a t s c r e e n T V ’s $200. (360)683-0033 $50. (360)683-0791 gloves and purse, worn Acme, $30. 26”-47”, tilting. $30. once. $40. 808-2179 B I K E : A d u l t t h r e e ECHO TRIMMER: Gas (360)683-0703 (360)582-3851 w h e e l e d b i ke , u s e d powered GT 200R, line QUILTING: Fabric $1. UNIFORM: US Navy JUICER: Jack La Lane’s once. $200. 461-0651 included. $50. Po w e r Ju i c e r. U s e d per yard. (360)437-2537 summer shore patrol (206)595-2025 BOARD GAMES: (4) once. $35.00 R A N G E : W h i r l p o o l , u n i fo r m , s i ze s m a l l . Vintage football games. ELECTRIC GUITAR: (360)681-2800 white, 30” electric self- $100. (360)379-4134 $25.obo. Ibanez G10, 7 string with LADDER: 20 foot exten- cleaning, like new. $150. (360)452-6842 VASES: $1. each. stand, soft fender carry sion ladder. $90. (206)595-2025 (360)437-2537 BOOKCASE: Oak, four case. $100. 681-2800 (949)241-0371 R E C L I N E R : B r o w n WALKIE TALKIE: Sets, shelf, excellent condiFIREPLACE SCREEN: LAPTOP: Nobilis, 13” leather, rocker, excellent tion. $50. 457-0283 beautiful leaded glass, s c r e e n , W i n d ow s 7 , condition. $65. 683-0791 5 pair. $50. for all. (360)683-9295 B O O K C A S E S : L t . approx 40”x30”. $150. 250GB HD, barely used. (720)635-4473 ROCKING CHAIRS: (2) WATER PURIFIER: Wabrown $85. Dark brown $200. (360)457-6343 Large weathered wicker. terwise 7000, purification $65. 1 year old, contemF O U N TA I N : G a r d e n MASSAGE TABLE: Ex- $25. each or $45.for and distiller, 8 gal. reserporary style. 477-4004 fountain, cement, two cellent condition. $200. both. (360)460-8768 voir. $100. 461-0940 BOOKSHELF: Wood tier, boy and girl on top. (360)461-3311 ROLLERS: 10ft. roller WEDDING GOWN: Size 48”x38”x12”, great con- $60. (360)808-6682 MATTRESS: Full size. assembly for feeding 6-8, off white satin, plus dition. $30. 452-9685 FREE: (2) Electronic Pillow top, very clean. wood into tools. $ veil, new. $125. $150.ea. (985)290-5769 BU S H WAC K E R : 2 2 ” pieces, Kenwood and $70. (360)797-1179 (360)681-3339 25cc, sears, good condi- Fisher. (360)683-9295 M I C R OWAV E : S u n - RUG: Octagon, 50” di- WINE COOLER: Comtion. $50. 582-6434 FREE: Beautiful pink, vi- beam “Express Meals” ameter, brown, floral, pressor style, 12 bottle, CLOTHES: Girls size 6. brant rhody, 2.5 feet tall, microwave/convection multi color. $89. excellent condition. $75. you dig. (360)797-1912 oven. $50. 452-8760 $10. for all. 477-9962 (360)775-0855 (720)635-4473

E E F R E Eand Tuesdays A D SS FRMonday

Mail to: Bring your ads to: Peninsula Daily News Peninsula Daily News PO Box 1330 305 West 1st St., PA Port Angeles, WA 98362 or FAX to: (360)417-3507 Email: classified@peninsuladailynews.com

NO PHONE CALLS

Automobiles 9180 Automobiles 9180 Automobiles 9817 Motorcycles 9180 Classics & Collect. Classics & Collect. Classics & Collect. SUZUKI: ‘96, 1400 Special Edition, lots of chrome beautiful bike. $2,500. (360)457-6540 or (360)452-644.

9805 ATVs

SEAT: ‘69, 600D. Made in Spain, Everything redone. $9,000/obo. (360)379-0593

1930 Model A: In exceptional condition, newly rebuilt engine. $19,000. Call Jim. (360)301-4581

FORD: 1929-30 Custom Model A Roadster. Perfect interior, very clean, r uns great on Nissan p i ck u p r u n n i n g g e a r. Owner sunny day driver B M W : ‘ 0 7 Z 4 3 . 0 S I only. Teal green, black R o a d s t e r. 4 7 K m i l e s, f e n d e r s v i n y l t o p . w e l l m a i n t a i n e d , l i ke $25,700 Real eye catchnew. $20,000. e r. ( 3 6 0 ) 7 7 5 - 7 5 2 0 o r KUBOTA: RTV-X1100C (360)477-4573 (360)457-3161. Diesel UTV 4WD with Dump box. Truly New CHEV: ‘00 SS Camaro. c o n d i t i o n . 4 0 t o t a l Super Spor t package. FORD: 1929 Model A hours. Hard Cab with New, wheels, tires, bat- Roadster, full fendered, steel doors, Heat and tery and license. Flow a l l m u s t a n g r u n n i n g AC, H y d r a u l i c D u m p master exhaust system, gear. $18,500. 460-8610 b o x . A u x i l i a r y w o r k T.top, black leather inlights. Strobe & signals. terior , cherry red. NEVN o t h i n g ev e r t o w e d . ER ABUSED! 81K ml. Used as personal trans- $6,000. (360)457-9331 port by disabled Project M a n a g e r o n 8 0 a c r e CHEVY: ‘56 Pickup, rec o n s t r u c t i o n s i t e . stored, 350 V8, AOD, $16,500. Available car IFS. $18,000/obo. hauler trailer. Dual axle. (360)683-7192 FORD: 1950 Original Electric Brakes. $2200. Sell Kubota with or with- C H E V Y : ‘ 5 7 B e l a i r, 2 Convertible. Beige interiout trailer. Located PT. door, hardtop project. or and top on burgundy J a y ( 3 6 0 ) 5 3 1 - 3 8 2 1 . Fresh 327 / Muncie 4 restoration featured in J a y @ i n f o a g e s e r v i c - sp., 12 bolt, 4:11 posi B u l b H o r n m a g a z i n e. es.com rear - complete and sol- Appeared in ads ran by Bon Marche. Mechaniid. $9,500. cally sound and clean. (360)452-9041 9180 Automobiles Owner restored. Classics & Collect. CHEVY: ‘77 Corvette, t- $26,700. (360)775-7520 tops, 65K original ml., or (360)457-3161.

FORD: ‘62 Thunderbird. Landau 116K mi. powder blue, white vinyl, new int., clean engine and trunk. $18,500. (360)385-5694

6K on rebuilt engine, 350 cubic inch / 350 hp, s e c o n d o w n e r, n ew brake system, new suspension, flowmasters, exc. condition, must see. $12,500/obo. (360)437-4065

F O R D : 1 9 5 2 P i c k u p, Mustang front, 302, C4, 9” Ford rearend. $8,500. 460-8610

JAGUAR: ‘83, 350 Chevy engine and transmission, many new par ts. FORD: ‘70, 500, 4dr.,3 $2,500/obo. (360)452speed stick, 302, new 4156 or (360)681-7478. ex h a u s t , n ew t i r e s / VW: Karmann Ghia, wheels. $2,650. ‘74. $4,500. (360)452-4156 or (360)457-7184 (360)681-7478

9292 Automobiles Others BUICK: Reatta ‘90, Conv, mint cond 106km, $7000. Pics. (360)6816388. jimfromsequim @olympus.net CADILLAC: ‘89 Coupe Deville, 2 door, only 2 owners, tan, very good cond. New tires. $2,500. (360)796-0588 or 912-3937.

CHEVY: Volt, ‘13, Black with premium package. Mint condition with less than 5,800 miles on it! Includes leather seats, navigation, ABS brakes, alloy wheels, automatic temperature control, and much more. Still under warranty! $21,500. Call 360-457-4635

CHRYSLER: ‘04 PT Cruiser Touring - 2.4L 4 c y l i n d e r, a u t o m a t i c , chrome wheels, good tires, privacy glass, keyless entry, power windows, door locks, and mirrors, cruise control, tilt, air conditioning, CD stereo, dual front airbags.76K ml. $5,495 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com

5A246724

F

9292 Automobiles Others

9556 SUVs Others

DODGE: ‘99 Ram 1500 C l u b C a b S LT 4 X 4 5.9L V8, Automatic, all oy w h e e l s, 3 5 ” p r o comp m/t tires, big lift kit, tow package, sprayi n b e d l i n e r, r u n n i n g boards, rear slider, tinte d w i n d ow s, key l e s s entry, power windows, door locks, and mirrors, cruise control, tilt, air conditioning, Kenwood CD stereo with auxiliary input, dual front airbags. 120K ml. $7,995 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com

CHEVY: ‘99 Suburban, 4 W D, V 8 , s e a t s 8 . $3,200. (360)808-2061

FORD: ‘07 Ranger XLT Supercab 4D 2WD 4.0L V6, 5 Speed manual, bedliner, tow package, air conditioning, privacy glass CD stereo dual front airbags. 85K ml. $8,495 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com FORD: ‘91 Thunderbird Sport. High output 5 liter V- 8 , Au t o m a t i c, r u n s good. $995. 460-0783 FORD: ‘92 Thunderbird. Low mileage. $2,000. (360)461-2809 or 4610533

NOTICE OF INVITATION FOR BIDS

SEALED BIDS will be received by the Board of Clallam County Commissioners at 223 East Fourth Street, Room 150, Port Angeles, Washington until 10:00 a.m., Tuesday, August 18, 2015, at which time they will be publicly opened and read aloud for.

MERCURY: ‘05 Mountaineer. AWD, V-8, loaded, leather, 3rd row seat, p w r eve r y t h i n g . 1 1 0 k miles. $6,995 obo. (360)452-6458 no calls after 8pm. The fabrication of 26 interpretive panels for the Elwha Interpretive Gateway kiosk, and other related 9730 Vans & Minivans work.

Others

Complete plans and specifications may be obtained CHRYSLER: ‘98 Mini- from the office of the Public Works Department, van, great shape, clean. Courthouse, 223 E. 4th St., 6, Port Angeles, WA 98362-3015, (360) 417-2319. Questions regarding $3400. (360)477-2562 this project may be directed to Ray Bradford at (360) 417-2530.

The sealed bids must be clearly marked on the outside of the envelope: “BID PROPOSAL - Elwha Interpretive Center Kiosk Panels, CRP C1230N”. Address bid proposal to: Board of Clallam County Commissioners, 223 E. 4th St., Ste. 4, Port Angeles, WA 98362-3015 or hand-deliver to 223 E. 4th St., Room 150, Port Angeles, Washington. Bid documents delivered to other offices and received late by the Commissioners’ Office will not be considered nor will bids received by facsimile or e-mail.

FORD: ‘01 Crown Victoria, LX, 113K ml., original owner. $3,900. (360)461-5661

FORD: ‘04 Explorer E d d i e B a u e r AW D Sport Utility - 4.6L V8, Automatic, alloy wheels, good tires, running boards, roof rack, sunroof, factory tow package, privacy glass, keyl e s s e n t r y, p o w e r windows, door locks, and mirrors, power programmable heated leather seats, third row seating, cruise control, tilt, air conditioning, rear air, dual zone automatic climate control, CD/cassette stereo, dual front airbags. $7,495 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com

9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices Clallam County Clallam County

DODGE: ‘02 Grand Caravan. Spor t model, 3.3L V6, red, roof rack, good condition, 186k miles, $2,200. (360)928-3761 Clallam County will determine the lowest responsible bidder in accordance with the terms of Clallam VW: ‘89 Vanagon Carat. County Code Section 3.12.070 and reserves the Sleeps 2, with table, 7 right to reject any and all bids and to waive inforseats, extremely clean, malities in the process or to accept the bid which in auto, axle rebuild. its estimation best serves the interests of Clallam $7,900 obo. 461-3232 County.

9931 Legal Notices Clallam County CLALLAM COUNTY FIRE PROTECTION DISTRICT 3 Clallam County Fire Prot e c t i o n D i s t r i c t N o. 3 “District”, a municipal corporation, is soliciting applications for general architectural/engineering services. Interested parties should obtain the Request For Statements of Qualification from the Distr ict by contacting CCFPD 3 at 360-6834242 or at www.clallamfire3.org. Interested parties shall submit a statement of qualifications in accordance with the RFQ and chapter 39.80 RCW by 5 p.m. on August 10, 2015. Pub: July 24, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, August 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 2015 Legal No. 646889

Clallam County in accordance with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 78 Stat. 252, 42 U.S.C. 2000d to 2000d-4 and Title 49, Code of Federal Regulations, Department of Transportation, subtitle A, Office of the Secretary, Part 21, nondiscrimination in federally assisted programs of the Department of Transportation issued pursuant to such Act, hereby notifies all bidders that it will affirmatively insure that in any contract entered into pursuant to this advertisement, disadvantaged business enterprises will be afforded full opportunity to submit bids in response to this invitation and will not be discriminated against on the grounds of race, color, national origin, or sex in consideration for an award.

The attached contract plans, these contract provisions and Standard Specifications for the above-described project are hereby APPROVED THIS 28TH DAY OF JULY, 2015 BOARD OF CLALLAM COUNTY COMMISSIONERS _______________________________ Jim McEntire, Chair ATTEST: _______________________________ Trish Holden, CMC, Clerk of the Board PUB: August 3, 10, 2015 Legal No: 648508

File No.: 7037.106065 Grantors: Northwest Trustee Services, Inc. Wells Fargo H O N DA : ‘ 0 6 A c c o r d . Bank, N.A. as trustee for Freddie Mac Securities REMIC Trust, Series 2005C l e a n , l o w m i l e a g e . S001 Grantee: Jeremy S. Percival, as his separate estate Ref to DOT Auditor $10,000 OBO cash. File No.: 2005 1158721 Tax Parcel ID No.: 053013 230000 Abbreviated Legal: (360)374-5060 PTN SE4 SW4 NW4 S13 T3 ORS WWM CLALLAM, CO. Washington Notice H O N D A : ‘ 0 6 C i v i c . of Trustee’s Sale Pursuant to the Revised Code of Washington 61.24, et seq. C l e a n , l o w m i l e s . THIS NOTICE IS THE FINAL STEP BEFORE THE FORECLOSURE SALE OF YOUR HOME You have only 20 DAYS from the recording date of this notice to $11,000. (360)460-1843 pursue mediation. DO NOT DELAY. CONTACT A HOUSING COUNSELOR HONDA CIVIC: ‘04 Hy- OR AN ATTORNEY LICENSED IN WASHINGTON NOW to assess your situabrid, one owner, excel., tion and refer you to mediation if you are eligible and it may help you save your home. See below for safe sources of help. SEEKING ASSISTANCE Housing cond., $6500. 683-7593 counselors and legal assistance may be available at little or no cost to you. If TOYOTA: ‘00 Camry. 4 you would like assistance in determining your rights and opportunities to keep Cylinder, 5 speed, 125K your house, you may contact the following: The statewide foreclosure hotline for assistance and referral to housing counselors recommended by the Housmiles. $3,500. ing Finance Commission Telephone: Toll-free: 1-877-894-HOME (1-877-894(360)477-6573 4 6 6 3 ) . W e b s i t e : h t t p : / / w w w. d f i . w a . g o v / c o n s u m e r s / h o m e o w n e r V W: ‘ 1 3 J e t t a T D I , 4 ship/post_purchase_counselors_foreclosure.htm The United States Departdoor, diesel, sunroof, ment of Housing and Urban Development Telephone: Toll-free: 1-800-569G P S , 7 5 K m i l e s . 4287. Web site: http://www.hud.gov/offices/hsg/sfh/hcc/fc/index.cfm?webLis$24,000. (320)232-5436 tAction=search&searchstate=WA&filterSvc=dfc The statewide civil legal aid hotline for assistance and referrals to other housing counselors and attorneys Toll-free: 1-800-606-4819. Web site: http://nwjustice.org/what9434 Pickup Trucks Telephone: clear. I. On September 4, 2015, at 10:00 AM. inside the main lobby of the ClalOthers lam County Courthouse, 223 East 4th Street in the City of Port Angeles, State of Washington, the undersigned Trustee (subject to any conditions imposed by CANOPY: For Ford pick the Trustee) will sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder, payable up, short box. 1987-96. at time of sale, the following described real property “Property”, situated in the $ 3 0 0 o b o. ( 3 6 0 ) 4 7 7 - County(ies) of CLALLAM, State of Washington: That portion of the Southeast 4213 or (360)461-4972 Quarter of the Southwest Quarter of the Northwest Quarter of Section 13, Township 30 North, Range 5 West, W.M., Clallam County, Washington, deCHEVY: ‘85, 4x4, many scribed as follows: Beginning at the Quarter corner on the West line of said new parts. $1,700. Section 13, thence Easterly 1318 feet more or less to the Southeast corner of (360)452-4156 or said Southeast Quarter of the Southwest Quarter of the Northwest Quarter; (360)681-7478. thence North along the East line thereof to a point 60 feet South of the NorthCHEVY: ‘92, S10, 4x4, east corner of said Southeast Quarter of the Southwest Quarter of the North4 . 3 V 6 , 8 , 0 0 0 Wa r n west Quarter, said point being the True Point of Beginning; thence South 200 Winch, canopy and bed- feet; thence West parallel with the South line of said Southeast Quarter of the liner, , class 3 hitch. Southwest Quarter of the Northwest Quarter to the center line of the County Road; thence Northerly along the center line of said County Road to a point $2,500/obo. 200 feet from the last preceding course when measured at right angles there(360)477-5061 to; thence East parallel with the South line of said Southeast Quarter of the DODGE: ‘03 Ram 1500. Southwest Quarter of the Northwest Quarter to the True Point of Beginning; 5.7 Liter Hemi engine. 4 except right of way for existing roads. Situate in Clallam County, State of door, seats 6. Pristine. Washington. Commonly known as: 262 Lewis Road Port Angeles, WA 98362 which is subject to that certain Deed of Trust dated 06/10/05, recorded on 7K miles. $16,000 obo. 06/17/05, under Auditor’s File No. 2005 1158721, records of CLALLAM (360)808-7913 County, Washington, from Jeremy S. Percival, an unmarried individual as a DODGE: ‘95 Ram 1500. separate estate, as Grantor, to Olympic Peninsula Title, a Washington corpo1 / 2 t o n . 1 8 0 K m i l e s ration, as Trustee, to secure an obligation “Obligation” in favor of Washington G o o d m e c h . c o n d . Mutual Bank, a Washington corporation, as Beneficiary, the beneficial interest $1,900 obo. Call Terry in which was assigned by Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, as receiver (360)461-6462 of Washington Mutual Bank to Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. as trustee for Freddie 9292 Automobiles Mac Securities REMIC Trust, Series 2005-S001, under an Assignment/SucDODGE: ‘98 Ram 1500 cessive Assignments recorded under Auditor’s File No. 2013-1293609. *The Others 4X4, 360 auto, canopy, Tax Parcel ID number and Abbreviated Legal Description are provided solely c l e a n 1 8 4 k m i l e s . to comply with the recording statutes and are not intended to supplement, DODGE: ‘91 Spirit. 3.0 $3,200. (360)640-0974 amend or supersede the Property’s full legal description provided herein. II. No V 6 , AC. R u n s g r e a t . $ 9 0 0 . ( 3 6 0 ) 4 5 2 - 1 6 9 4 FORD: ‘01 F350, crew action commenced by the Beneficiary of the Deed of Trust is now pending to seek satisfaction of the Obligation in any Court by reason of the Grantor’s or evenings. cab with 8’ bed. 7.3 liter Borrower’s default on the Obligation secured by the Deed of Trust. III. The diesel, 220k miles, well Beneficiary alleges default of the Deed of Trust for failure to pay the following m a i n t a i n e d , $ 1 2 , 5 0 0 amounts now in arrears and/or other defaults: Amount due to reinstate as of obo. (360)928-1022 04/24/2015. If reinstating after this date, please contact NWTS for the exact reFORD: ‘86 F250, 4x4, 4 instatement amount. Monthly Payments $20,955.05 Lender’s Fees & Costs speed, with canopy, 6.9 ($564.64) Total Arrearage $20,390.41 Trustee’s Expenses (Itemization) TrusD i e s e l , 8 , 0 0 0 l b wa r n tee’s Fee $700.00 Total Costs $700.00 Total Amount Due: $21,090.41 Other winch, 16’ custom alumi- known defaults as follows: IV. The sum owing on the Obligation is: Principal num wheels, exel. tires. Balance of $184,906.83, together with interest as provided in the note or other Clean interior. $6,500 instrument evidencing the Obligation from 11/01/13, and such other costs and obo (206)795-5943 after fees as are due under the Obligation, and as are provided by statute. V. The Property will be sold to satisfy the expense of sale and the Obligation as pro4:30pm weekdays. vided by statute. The sale will be made without representation or warranty, exMAZDA: ‘02 Miata, 6 press or implied regarding title, possession, encumbrances or condition of the s p e e d , h a r d t o p, n ew FORD: ‘97 Diesel 4WD Property on September 4, 2015. The default(s) referred to in paragraph III, tobrakes, timing belt, cool- Power stroke with bed- gether with any subsequent payments, late charges, advances costs and fees est car on the Peninsula. liner, canopy, new tires, thereafter due, must be cured by 08/24/15 (11 days before the sale date), to transmission overhauled $8,500. (360)683-0146. cause a discontinuance of the sale. The sale will be discontinued and terminat$7,900. (360)461-3232 ed if at any time before 08/24/15 (11 days before the sale date), the default(s) as set forth in paragraph III, together with any subsequent payments, late 9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices charges, advances, costs and fees thereafter due, is/are cured and the TrusClallam County Clallam County tee’s fees and costs are paid. The sale may be terminated any time after 08/24/15 (11 days before the sale date), and before the sale by the Borrower, Grantor, any Guarantor or the holder of any recorded junior lien or encumLEGAL NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, That the Clallam Cou brance paying the entire balance of principal and interest secured by the Deed nty Department of Community Development, Planni of Trust, plus costs, fees, and advances, if any made pursuant to the terms of ng Division, has issued a Determination of Nonsigni the obligation and/or Deed of Trust, and curing all other defaults. VI. A written ficance (DNS), on August 3, 2015, under SEPA Rul notice of default was transmitted by the Beneficiary or Trustee to the Borrower es (Chapter 197 11 WAC) and the Clallam County and Grantor at the following address(es): NAME AND ADDRESS Jeremy S. Environmental Policy Ordinance (Chapter 27.01) for Percival 262 Lewis Road Port Angeles, WA 98362 Unknown Spouse and/or Domestic Partner of Jeremy S. Percival 262 Lewis Road Port Angeles, WA the following proposed nonproject actions: 98362 Jeremy S. Percival 404 North Park Drive Sultan, WA 98294-7607 UnRezone and Comprehensive Plan and Zoning Map known Spouse and/or Domestic Partner of Jeremy S. Percival 404 North Park Drive Sultan, WA 98294-7607 by both first class and certified mail, return reAmendment Application REZ201500001 – Clallam County Parks, Fair, and Facilities Department: The ceipt requested on 10/16/14, proof of which is in the possession of the Trusproposed action is a Rezone to amend the Clallam tee; and on 10/16/14 Grantor and Borrower were personally served with said County Comprehensive Plan Land Use Designation written notice of default or the written notice of default was posted on a conMap and Zoning Map for the property described be spicuous place on the real property described in paragraph I above, and the low. Approval of the request would change the zoni Trustee has possession of proof of such service or posting. VII. The Trustee, ng and Comprehensive Plan designation for 1 parc whose name and address are set forth below, will provide in writing to anyone el containing a total of approximately 20 acres of la requesting it a statement of all costs and trustee’s fees due at any time prior to nd presently zoned Rural Low (R5) to Parks and Re the sale. VIII. The effect of the sale will be to deprive the Grantor and all those creation (PR). The proposal is located east of Sequ who hold by, through or under the Grantor of all their interest in the Property. im off of the Old Blyn Highway, which is located wit IX. Anyone having any objection to the sale on any grounds whatsoever will be h i n t h e N ½ o f t h e S E ¼ o f t h e S W ¼ o f afforded an opportunity to be heard as to those objections if they bring a lawSection 31, T 30N, R2W, W.M. Clallam County, Sta suit to restrain the sale pursuant to RCW 61.24.130. Failure to bring such a lawsuit may result in a waiver of any proper grounds for invalidating the Truste of Washington. tee’s sale. X. NOTICE TO OCCUPANTS OR TENANTS - The purchaser at the After review of the completed environmental checkli Trustee’s Sale is entitled to possession of the property on the 20th day following the sale, as against the Grantor under the Deed of Trust (the owner) and sts and other information on file with the agency, anyone having an interest junior to the Deed of Trust, including occupants who the Clallam County Responsible Official has determ are not tenants. After the 20th day following the sale the purchaser has the ined that these proposals will not have probable sig right to evict occupants who are not tenants by summary proceedings under nificant adverse impacts on the environment. Copi Chapter 59.12 RCW. For tenant-occupied property, the purchaser shall proes of the DNS are available at the Department of C vide a tenant with written notice in accordance with RCW 61.24.060. The trusommunity Development during normal business ho tee’s rules of auction may be accessed at www.northwesttrustee.com and are urs. A fourteenday comment period has been allo incorporated by this reference. You may also access sale status at www.northwed for this determination in order to receive any p westtrustee.com and www.USA-Foreclosure.com. Date Executed: Northwest ertinent comments. Comments regarding this SEPA Trustee Services, Inc., Trustee Authorized Signature 13555 SE 36th St. Suite Determination will be accepted until August 17, 100 Bellevue, WA 98006 Contact: Heather L. Smith (425) 586-1900. (TS# 2015. 7037.106065) 1002.274089-File No. PUB: August 3, 2015 Legal No.649029 PUB: August 3, 24, 2015 Legal No:

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