Tuesday
Grab the Money Tree
Mostly sunny for remainder of week B10
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS June 23, 2015 | 75¢
Port Townsend-Jefferson County’s Daily Newspaper
ONP wildfire surges Weather to remain warm, dry
Nothing wrong with car Probe into hit-run vehicle refutes accused’s claim BY CHARLIE BERMANT
BY ARWYN RICE
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT TOWNSEND — The vehicle involved in a June 10 hitand-run incident had no mechanical difficulties despite what its driver said at the time of his arrest, police said. Paul D. Bromfield, 42, was apprehended at his home after he allegedly drove his 2000 Pontiac Grand Am through the uptown district at excessive speeds, hitting a motorist and almost running over a man on a scooter. At the time of his arrest, Bromfield said the brake and accelerator pedals were both stuck, but an inspection found no such problems, according to Port Townsend Police Officer Luke Bogues.
OLYMPIC NATIONAL PARK — A forest fire on the western slope of the Olympic Mountains grew by 200 acres in a single evening and is expected to erupt again as warm, dry weather settles into the area. The previously slow-growing Paradise Fire erupted late Sunday afternoon into an active wildfire as winds fanned the flames up a steep slope and across treetops. Cooler and calmer weather Monday morning damped down the flames and slowed the fire’s progress. The Jefferson County fire is inside Olympic National Park on the north floodplain of the Queets River valley near Paradise Creek, 13 miles northeast of Quinault.
No defects
Fire area soars The fire was officially listed by officials at 407 acres Sunday morning and grew to an estimated 600 acres by Monday morning, Diane Avendrop, spokeswoman for the team assigned to the fire, said Monday. “The fire has been picking up in the late afternoon and evening on days with warm and dry weather. Most of the growth happens then,” Avendrop said. Because of the amount of smoke obscuring the fire area, it was uncertain exactly how many acres had burned overnight, she U.S. FOREST SERVICE said. An aerial surveillance photo taken before dark Sunday shows the Olympic National TURN TO FIRE/A4 Park wildfire surging in size to nearly 600 acres along the Queets River.
“Nothing was found indicating a mechanical or operational defect with the vehicle,” Bogues said. Bromfield, who remains in Jefferson County jail on a $75,000 bond, was charged with hit-andrun injury accident, reckless driving and two counts of reckless endangerment. He was arraigned on those charges Friday, entering no plea. He is scheduled for pre-trial appearances July 10, July 24 and Aug. 7 with the trial scheduled for Aug. 17 and Aug. 18 in Jefferson County Superior Court, 1820 Jefferson St. According to a report by Bogues, police received multiple calls about a “small black vehicle” that was traveling at excessive speeds through the uptown district June 10. TURN
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New Y will bring jobs, chamber told BY CHARLIE BERMANT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT TOWNSEND — A proposed YMCA building will create new jobs and a big payroll to the Port Townsend area, a business audience was told Monday. “There will be a lot of opportunities,” Erica Delma, program executive of the Jefferson County YMCA, told a group of about 40 people gathered for the Jefferson County Chamber of Commerce weekly luncheon at the Elks Lodge. “This will include membership services, play care and kid care as well as several leadership and management positions.” Delma said there is no estimate as to the number of jobs, but projections showed an increase in annual payroll from the current $225,000 level to around $750,000.
This does not include any jobs created by Jefferson Healthcare, the city of Port Townsend, the Port Townsend School District or the Jefferson Aquatic Coalition, all of which are partnering with the YMCA on the new venture, she said. The YMCA is two years into a seven-year process that will end with a new building constructed on the Mountain View Campus, 1925 Blaine St., Port Townsend.
Process described A public survey and the facility’s preliminary design are completed, to be followed by a capital feasibility study through the end of 2015, a capital campaign that will begin in January and could take as long as two years. CHARLIE BERMANT/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS Ground-breaking for construcJefferson County YMCA Executive Director Erica Delma, left, chats with YMCA Olympic tion is planned for early 2018.
Peninsula CEO Kyle Kronk, center, and Earll Murman of the Jefferson Aquatic Coalition
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YMCA/A4 at Monday’s Jefferson County Chamber of Commerce meeting. 561344314
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PHOTOS DISPLAYED ON ALL THREE WEBSITES:
peninsuladailynews.com • sequimgazette.com • forksforum.com
INSIDE TODAY’S PENINSULA DAILY NEWS 99th year, 148th issue — 2 sections, 18 pages
BUSINESS CLASSIFIED COMICS COMMENTARY DEAR ABBY DEATHS HOROSCOPE LETTERS NATION/WORLD
B5 B5 B4 A7 B4 A6 B4 A7 A3
*PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT
PENINSULA POLL PUZZLES/GAMES SPORTS WEATHER
A2 B6 B1 B10
A2
UpFront
TUESDAY, JUNE 23, 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
Advertising is for EVERYONE! To place a classified ad: 360-452-8435 (8 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday through Friday); fax: 360-417-3507 You can also place a classified ad 24/7 at peninsuladailynews. com or email: classified@ peninsuladailynews.com Display/retail: 360-417-3540 Legal advertising: 360-4528435 To place a death or memorial notice: 360-452-8435; fax: 360417-3507 Toll-free from outlying areas for all of the above: 800-826-7714 Monday through Friday
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
Audit Bureau of Circulations
The Associated Press
Newsmakers Celebrity scoop ■ By The Associated Press
Lawyers ask judge to toss Cosby lawsuit A FEDERAL JUDGE should throw out a defamation lawsuit against Bill Cosby filed by three women accusing him of decades-old sex crimes because the remarks were personal opinions protected under the U.S. Constitution, his lawyers said Monday. Tamara Green, Therese Serignese and Linda Traitz say in their lawsuit that Cosby their reputations were tarnished after the comedian, through his representatives, defended himself as they stepped forward in recent years with accusations against him. The comments in question range from brief statements dismissing their accusations as “ridiculous claims” and “absurd fabrication” to longer remarks that attempt to discredit the accusers by highlighting their pasts. “As the old saying goes, ‘consider the source,’” ends one statement that touches on Traitz’s criminal and
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS PENINSULA POLL
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SIR PAUL
IN
PHILADELPHIA
SUNDAY’S QUESTION: How often do you think about where your food comes from?
Paul McCartney performs in concert during his “Out There Tour 2015” at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia on Sunday.
Always
38.3%
Sometimes
38.8%
Seldom prison record. But Cosby lawyer Robert LoBue argued in a nearly two-hour hearing in federal court Monday that many of the comments are
constitutionally protected personal opinions. Joseph Cammarata, a lawyer for the three women, disputed those arguments.
for East Germany. After reunification, he was convicted in 1998 of illegally importing technology in contravention of an embargo but acquitted of carrying out illegal money transfers and wasn’t tried over other allegations of financial wrongdoing.
him land roles in movies starring Cary Grant and Clifton Webb. He stole scenes as the pint-sized suitor who told Monroe’s character she possessed a “certain animal magnetism” in “Gentlemen Prefer Blondes.” Mr. Wentzlaff retired from show business at 12. He served in the Navy during the Vietnam War and retired from the U.S. Postal Service a few years ago.
Never
16.6% 6.4%
Total votes cast: 658 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.
Passings By The Associated Press
ALEXANDER SCHALCK-GOLODKOWSKI, 82, the longserving head of East Germany’s foreign trade operations who helped keep the communist country afloat by procuring Western cash through often-murky deals, has died. Mr. SchalckGolodkowski’s publisher Verlag Edition Ost said Monday Mr. Schlakthat he died Golodkowski June 21 in a Munich hospital after a long battle with cancer. Mr. Schalck-Golodkowski was a discreet but influential figure whose office handled the purchase of high-tech, luxury and other goods as well as the sale of East German products to pay off the country’s debts. He boasted of bringing in billions in hard currency
Setting it Straight
________ GEORGE KARL WENTZLAFF, 69, a child actor best known for his role as Marilyn Monroe’s young admirer in “Gentlemen Prefer Blondes” has died. A spokeswoman from the Sonoma County Coroner’s Office said Mr. Wentzlaff died of a heart attack June 14 at his Camp Meeker, Calif., home. Mr. Wentzlaff appeared in several movies in the 1950s under the stage name George Winslow. His raspy voice and deadpan comedic delivery helped
Corrections and clarifications
■ Sequim public works administration is based at the city’s new Civic Center,
152 W. Cedar St., while public works crews operate out of space at 169 W. Hemlock St.
An article on Page C1 Sunday gave an incorrect address for public works’ location. ■ Bats are mammals of
the order chiroptera. A story on rabies on Page A7 Sunday incorrectly described bats as rodents, which are mammals of the order rodentia.
________ 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 360-417-3530 or email rwilson@peninsuladailynews.com.
Peninsula Lookback From the pages of the PENINSULA DAILY NEWS and Port Angeles Evening News
1940 (75 years ago)
Bart Murray, special Clallam County deputy sheriff and Clallam Bay businessman, was in serious condition at the Davidson and Hay Hospital in Port Angeles with a skull fracture sustained in an altercation with a West End man in Clallam Bay on Saturday night. Seen Around Sheriff Charles Kemp Peninsula snapshots and Deputy W.H. HolenA HERD OF two dozen stein were expected to arrive in Port Angeles with elk grazing next to state Laugh Lines the man who allegedly Highway 112 just east of struck Murray. His name Joyce . . . PIZZA HUT has not been released. ANNOUNCED it will be Kemp said Murray was WANTED! “Seen Around” unveiling a pizza whose performing his duty as speitems recalling things seen on the crust is stuffed with hot North Olympic Peninsula. Send cial deputy sheriff in Clalthem to PDN News Desk, P.O. Box lam Bay when he was dogs. It’s the first pizza where 1330, Port Angeles WA 98362; fax knocked down and struck 360-417-3521; or email news@ they promise to deliver an his head on a concrete sidepeninsuladailynews.com. Be sure ambulance in 30 minutes. walk. you mention where you saw your Conan O’Brien “Seen Around.” A detailed account of
the incident had not yet been received by the sheriff.
1965 (50 years ago) Clallam County jail is without occupants today, since its only resident, a trusty, walked away Thursday night. It was not known that trusty Gary Edward Fey, 18, was missing until nighttime jailer Victor Glidden received a phone call from Fey’s mother at about 7:40 p.m. She told Glidden that her son had called from a telephone booth and informed her that he was going to go on the lam, according to sheriff’s reports. Fey, who pleaded guilty to consuming beer as a minor Monday, was made a
trusty Wednesday. The trusty has his own cell, which is not locked. He acts as a janitor in the Sheriff’s Office.
1990 (25 years ago) Safety concerns have forced Port Townsend Mayor Brent Shirley to close City Dock. Pedestrians and boats are now barred from using the dock until a safety inspection is finished. The historical dock has numerous rotting pilings and other structural deficiencies. A citizens committee formed to assess the dock’s future has recommended renovation of the dock and condemned Marine Park Building at a projected cost of $400,000.
Looking Back From the files of The Associated Press
TODAY IS TUESDAY, June 23, the 174th day of 2015. There are 191 days left in the year. Today’s Highlights in History: ■ On June 23, 1972, President Richard Nixon and White House chief of staff H.R. Haldeman discussed using the CIA to obstruct the FBI’s Watergate investigation. The same day, Nixon signed Title IX, which barred discrimination on the basis of sex for “any education program or activity receiving federal financial assistance.” On this date: ■ In 1314, during the First War of Scottish Independence, the two-day Battle of Bannockburn,
resulting in victory for the forces of Robert the Bruce over the army of King Edward II, began near Stirling. ■ In 1757, forces of the East India Co. led by Robert Clive won the Battle of Plassey, which effectively marked the beginning of British colonial rule in India. ■ In 1812, Britain, unaware that America had declared war against it five days earlier, rescinded its policy on neutral shipping, a major issue of contention between the two countries. ■ In 1931, aviators Wiley Post and Harold Gatty took off from New York on a round-the-world
flight that lasted eight days and 15 hours. ■ In 1938, the Civil Aeronautics Authority was established. ■ In 1956, Gamal Abdel Nasser was elected president of Egypt. ■ In 1967, President Lyndon B. Johnson and Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin held the first of two meetings at Glassboro State College in New Jersey. ■ In 1985, all 329 people aboard an Air India Boeing 747 were killed when the plane crashed into the Atlantic Ocean near Ireland because of a bomb authorities believe was planted by
Sikh separatists. ■ Ten years ago: Former Ku Klux Klansman Edgar Ray Killen, 80, was sentenced to 60 years in prison for the 1964 Mississippi slayings of three civil rights workers. ■ Five years ago: Gary Faulkner, who was detained by authorities in northern Pakistan during a personal quest to track down Osama bin Laden, was released. ■ One year ago: President Barack Obama, speaking at the White House Summit on Working Families, said the United States should join the rest of the industrialized world and offer paid leave for mothers of newborns.
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, June 23, 2015 P A G E
A3 Briefly: Nation Governor wants Confederate flag removed CHARLESTON, S.C. — South Carolina’s governor declared Monday that the Confederate flag should be removed from the grounds of the Statehouse, reflecting what she described as a new consensus that the slayings of nine black churchgoers has changed what the banner stands for. Gov. Nikki Haley’s aboutface comes just days after authorities charged Dylann Storm Roof, 21, with murder. The young white man Haley appeared in photos waving holding Confederate flags and burning or desecrating U.S. flags, and purportedly wrote of fomenting racial violence. Haley, a Republican, urged the state’s GOP-led House and Senate to debate the issue no later than this summer. If not, she said she will call a special session and force them to resolve it.
Supremacist donor WASHINGTON — Republican presidential candidates, GOP lawmakers and the lone black Republican in the House are returning donations from the leader of a white supremacist group cited by Charleston church murder suspect Dylann Roof or giving the money to charity. Rep. Mia Love of Utah, an
African-American Republican woman who was elected to the House last year, said through a spokesman that she had returned $1,000 in donations from Earl Holt, leader of the Council of Conservative Citizens. The campaigns of Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., and Rick Santorum said they would donate the money received from Holt to a fund set up by Charleston’s mayor to assist the victims’ families. Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, who is expected to announce his presidential candidacy next month, has received $3,500 in donations from Holt since 2011. Walker will donate the money to charity, said his spokeswoman, AshLee Strong, in an email. Another presidential hopeful, Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, said he will return the $8,500 he received from Holt.
Kayaker over dam UPPER SANDUSKY, Ohio — Investigators say one of two brothers who had been kayaking on a river in northwest Ohio jumped back in the water when his brother went over a submerged dam. Neither brother survived. Police in Upper Sandusky said their bodies were found in the Sandusky River after the accident Sunday night. Investigators with Ohio’s watercraft division said one of the brothers was on shore with a woman when he saw his brother go over the so-called low-head dam. Police identified the men as 45-year-old Billy Zornes and 46-year-old Lewis Zornes. The Associated Press
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WATER
FOR PRAYERS
Kanwarias, worshippers of the Hindu god Shiva, carry metal canisters filled with holy water from the Ganges River as they enter a temple for prayers on the outskirts of Allahabad, India, on Monday. Kanwarias are devotees making a ritual pilgrimage in which they walk the roads of India clad in saffron and carry ornately decorated canisters of the sacred water.
Homegrown hate a form of terrorism, too U.S. authorities focus more on jihad wannabes BY ERIC TUCKER
Briefly: World Girl suicide bombers kill 30 in mosque BAUCHI, Nigeria — Two girls blew themselves up Monday near a crowded mosque in northeast Nigeria’s biggest city, killing about 30 people, witnesses said. It is the fourth suicide bombing this month in Maiduguri, which is the birthplace of the Boko Haram Islamic extremist group. Fishmonger Idi Idrisa said one teenager exploded as she approached the mosque crowded with people from the nearby Baga Road fish market. The second teen appeared to run away and blew up further away, killing only herself, he said. Boko Haram has kidnapped hundreds of girls and women, and the numbers of female suicide bombers has raised fears that it is using the captives in its campaign.
U.S. preservation HAVANA — A U.S. foundation will ship nearly $900,000 in supplies to build a state-of-theart facility to preserve Ernest Hemingway’s books, letters and photos — the first major export of construction materials to
Cuba since President Barack Obama loosened the trade embargo on the island. The Bostonbased Finca Vigia FoundaHemingway tion has been trying for years to help Cuba stop thousands of pages of documents from slowly disintegrating in the baking heat and dripping humidity of the sprawling home where the American writer lived and worked outside Havana from 1939 to 1960.
Journalist freed BERLIN — An Al-Jazeera journalist detained by German authorities on an Egyptian arrest warrant emerged from a Berlin judicial building Monday again a free man after prosecutors decided not to pursue an extradition request further. Ahmed Mansour, 52, was detained Saturday at Berlin’s Tegel airport as he tried to board a Qatar Airways flight to Doha. A dual Egyptian-British citizen, he was convicted in absentia in Egypt on charges that his lawyers and reporters’ groups call politically motivated. The Associated Press
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON — Confronting extremists, law enforcement in the U.S. has been focusing on aspiring jihadists who align with the Islamic State, overshadowing longstanding concerns about avowed racists, neo-Nazis and anti-government militias. The South Carolina shootings, experts said, are a reminder of the persistent dangers posed by disaffected people who are bent on violence but whose statements before they act may skate below the radar of police and federal authorities. The killings at a black church in Charleston, S.C., appear to fit a grim pattern of violence fueled by hate-filled ideology, joining other attacks by extremists in the past five years that have targeted Jewish and Sikh centers, federal government buildings and police officers. While the number of Americans professing extremist ideologies fluctuates, the election of President Barack Obama, coupled with a national economic downturn, has in recent years intensified anger among white supremacists and anti-government groups to levels not seen since the time of the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing, said Mark Pitcavage, director of investigative research at the Anti-Defamation League. “We’re actually about six years into a major resurgence of rightwing extremism, the largest we’ve had since the mid to late 1990s,” Pitcavage said. The Southern Poverty Law Cen-
Quick Read
ter in Montgomery, Ala., says it has counted more than 30 acts or plots of domestic terrorism or h a t e - driven rampages since 2010, an increase from Roof the five years before that. Those include the killings in Kansas last year of three people outside a Jewish community center and Jewish retirement home; a 2011 bomb plot that targeted the route of a Martin Luther King Jr. Day parade in Spokane; an assault-rifle attack on a Mexican consulate and federal courthouse in Austin, Texas; the murders of six at a Sikh temple in Wisconsin, and the slaying of two Las Vegas police officers by a couple with anti-government views who left behind a swastika and a yellow flag bearing the words “Don’t Tread on Me.”
Working alone The culprits are often individuals with little or no association with organized hate groups, acting on their own. In the Charleston case, 21-year-old Dylann Roof has been charged with nine counts of murder. He is accused of opening fire inside a Bible study last Wednesday night in the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church. The Justice Department is investigating the killings as a hate crime. Roof, currently held on $1 million bond on a gun charge, had displayed on his Facebook page the flags of past white-led regimes in Africa and complained that “blacks were taking over the world” and that “someone needed
to do something about it for the white race,” according to a friend who spoke with the FBI after seeing him on surveillance images. To some extent, law enforcement faces the same challenges in keeping tabs on Islamic State sympathizers seeking to travel to Syria or commit acts of terror at home — investigations in which the FBI dissects social media communications for evidence of intent to commit a crime.
Free speech Ron Hosko, a former FBI assistant director and current president of the Law Enforcement Legal Defense Fund, said that when it comes to investigating would-be domestic terrorists, the FBI has long faced the challenge of not treading on free speech rights while trying to make the right call about when hate speech is about to cross the line into illegal action. “It’s a big, free country where people say crazy things, and part of that is just the uncertainty of what somebody will say versus what they intend to do,” he said. John Cohen, a former Department of Homeland Security counterterrorism coordinator and now a professor at Rutgers University where he co-leads an initiative examining targeted violence directed at faith communities, said he believes there is more law enforcement can do — similar to its terrorism investigations — to track warning signs on social media and investigate Internet postings that hint at violence. “We use them effectively in international terrorism cases,” he said. “We’re not using these same tools with the same rigor when we’re seeking to identify or detect potential school shooters or someone who would attack a church,” he said.
. . . more news to start your day
West: Aerial support helps battle High Sierra wildfire
Nation: 5 rescued as storms pound Midwest
Nation: Climate change deadly in federal report
World: Caribbean country helping migrants to leave
AIR TANKERS AND helicopters were helping hundreds of firefighters Monday battle a wildfire south of Lake Tahoe where no structures have been damaged, but the California mountain town of Markleeville remained on standby for possible evacuations. About 500 personnel were expected to be on the fire lines about 20 miles west of the Nevada border, Sierra Front fire spokeswoman Jenny Ramella said. The fire was sparked by lightning Friday and has burned nearly 15 square miles of timber and grass. It was about 10 percent contained after forcing the evacuation of some campgrounds, officials said.
FIVE PEOPLE WERE rescued from damaged buildings in a Michigan town, and thunderstorms packing strong winds caused damage in Iowa and Illinois as severe weather swept through parts of the Midwest on Monday. A mother and two small children were rescued from a collapsed Goodwill store, and two others were helped from a damaged pharmacy in Portland, 25 miles northwest of the Michigan state capital of Lansing. The Chicago Department of Aviation reported that airlines servicing Chicago’s O’Hare and Midway airports canceled more than 500 flights because of weather concerns.
FAILURE TO ACT on climate change could cause an estimated 57,000 deaths in the United States from poor air quality by 2100, the Obama administration argued in a new report Monday that warns of dire effects of global warming. The report underscored the costs of inaction on climate change as well as the benefits from taking action now. The administration estimates that 12,000 people in 49 U.S. cities could die from extreme temperatures in 2100. The White House report is part of a weeklong effort to emphasize climate change to mark the second anniversary of a “climate action plan.”
MIGRANTS WHO WOULD like to leave the Dominican Republic ahead of a wave of expected deportations are being offered help from the government of the Caribbean country. The migration agency said it has started a free bus service to take migrants to the border with Haiti. The agency says the program will run for two weeks starting today. The announcement Monday follows a June 17 deadline for migrants to apply for legal residency under a program aimed at regulating the flow of migrants across the porous border with Haiti. The government is reviewing nearly 290,000 applications for residency.
A4
TUESDAY, JUNE 23, 2015 — (J)
Fire: Public
PeninsulaNorthwest Briefly: State information Study to look at pot levels in Wash. sewers
CONTINUED FROM A1 Avendrop said a helicopter operating out of Port Angeles was on its way to fly over the fire Monday afternoon to map the fire’s new boundaries. Fire managers planned to hold a public information meeting in Port Angeles at 7 p.m. Monday to provide new maps and photos of the fire area and an update of the fire activity. A second meeting is scheduled for 6 p.m. today in Forks, but a location for the meeting had not been announced by Monday evening. [The PDN’s website, www.peninsuladailynews. com, will report the location as soon as it’s announced.] Warm temperatures and low humidity were forecast for the area for the coming week — conditions that are expected to help the fire continue to grow. On Monday, an 18-member firefighting team was working the fire from the ground level while two helicopters used bucket drops of water to slow the fire’s spread, using a portable tank set up along the Queets River to supply water.
Burning treetops The fire is burning through dry lichen and moss in old-growth treetops in a remote, steep, heavily vegetated area of the park. The area contains dangers to firefighters including rolling rocks, falling snags, and unstable burning material, conditions that make it impossible for firefighters to build a fire line. It is located deep inside the park’s wilderness area and is not threatening any structures. The fire is believed to have been started by a lighting strike between May 17 and May 21, and smoldered in the underbrush until it was discovered by a private pilot flying through the area June 14, Avendrop said.
Fresh firefighters A team of 10 specially trained firefighters from
SEATTLE — The federal government has agreed to pay for an analysis of sewer samples to determine levels of marijuana use in Washington state. The University of Puget Sound said Monday the National Institutes of Health is chipping in $120,000 so Dan Burgard, an associate chemistry professor, can conduct a threeyear study that will look at how per-capita pot use changed after legalization. The university said Burgard has adapted a method developed in Italy for retrieving and analyzing wastewater. He and his students plan to test 110 random, one-liter samples taken from two wastewater treatment plants in Western U.S. FOREST SERVICE Washington each year. The research is being An unidentified firefighter works though done in collaboration with deadfall, ferns and underbrush near the Caleb Banta-Green, a Paradise Fire in Olympic National Park. senior scientist at the University of Washington’s California were initially les, Avendrop said. “There is no place to Alcohol and Drug Abuse assigned to assess the fire, which had to be accessed by operate where the fire is,” Institute. trail due to the location of she said. That team is led by Incithe fire. The California firefight- dent Commander Kelvin from the ers were pulled from the Thompson fire Sunday, and were National Forest Service replaced with a fresh team office in Quilcene. A National Incident of 18 firefighters, Avendrop Management Organization said. The new wildland fire- team from Portland, Ore., fighting team includes has been selected to take members from the Black over managing the situaHills Wildland Fire Module tion from the current team. The Portland team is one in South Dakota, the Hebron Wildland Fire Mod- of seven full-time profesule from the Klamath sional fire management National Forest in Califor- teams of the U.S. Departnia, Olympic National For- ment of Agriculture Forest est and Olympic National Service. The new management Park. One of the two helicop- team is headed by Incident ters assigned to the fire is Commander Bill Hahnenon loan from the Grand berg of Grand Junction, Canyon National Park and Colo. No timeline for transithe other is from the National Park Service tion to the new fire managePacific Northwest fleet, ment team was available Monday afternoon. Avendrop said. Separate from the fire________ fighting team, the current Reporter Arwyn Rice can be fire management team is reached at 360-452-2345, ext. operating from the park 5070, or at arice@peninsuladaily headquarters in Port Ange- news.com.
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Climber rescue DARRINGTON — An injured climber who fell while ascending Dome Peak in the Mount BakerSnoqualmie National Forest has been rescued. Snohomish County Sheriff’s spokeswoman Shari Ireton said searchand-rescue crews responded after an emergency beacon alert was picked up about 4 p.m. Sunday. A rescue helicopter was dispatched to the area and found the climber, who had possible rib fractures from falling and landing on the lip of a crevasse. The man was flown to Cascade Valley Hospital in Arlington Sunday night. His name, age and condition weren’t immediately available.
Missing mom found TACOMA — The body of an Orting mother of two, who went missing more than two weeks ago, has been found in the woods near Kapowsin. The Tacoma News Tribune reported search dogs led detectives Saturday to 28-year-old Nicole White’s body, which had been wrapped in a tarp. Her car was found over
an embankment near Graham shortly after she disappeared. White was last seen leaving a Spanaway bar June 6 with a man she met through an online dating service. Her mother reported her missing the following day. Pierce County sheriff’s spokesman, Ed Troyer, said the man White met at Jeepers Country Bar and Grill remains a person of interest. He is in Pierce County Jail on unrelated weapons charges.
WSU president SPOKANE — The board of regents of Washington State University will soon begin the process of replacing President Elson S. Floyd. Floyd died of complications from colon cancer on Saturday at the age of 59. Dan Bernardo has been named the acting president. WSU spokeswoman Kathy Barnard said the regents in the next few weeks will hold a special meeting to appoint an interim president and likely name a committee to conduct a nationwide search for a new president. The Associated Press
ARWYN RICE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Car: Witness accounts CONTINUED FROM A1 during the incident, the report states. In his report, Bogues Dozens say they witnessed the black car driven said he observed a 238-footby Bromfield collide with a long tire mark from the Volvo station wagon near middle intersection of Lawthe Uptown Theatre, then rence and Monroe streets accelerate eastbound on curving into a 90-degree Lawrence Street, according turn where Lawrence to police. Street bends into Jackson The driver of the Volvo, Street. Juliet Tuuri, 18, had been sideswiped on the passen- Driver blames brakes ger side, and the rear bum“The vehicle could not per detached from the car. Witnesses at the scene have slowed in that manner said that Bromfield’s vehi- if the brakes were not funccle “nearly struck [Tuuri] tioning,” Bogues wrote. Bromfield blamed malhead on,” according to the equipment, report, and nearly crashed functioning into Robert Pray of Port according to the report. He said that he purTownsend, who was driving chased the car a few days a small scooter. Witnesses estimated the earlier from a dealership speed of the vehicle from 50 and that he had lost control to 100 mph at various times of the vehicle because the
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Fred, a 5-year-old German shepherd, greets Chelsea Eastin, 27 of Bremerton after finishing Saturday’s Dennis Wilcox Pooch and Papa Walk along the Waterfront Trail with Kathleen Graf. Graf is the widow of the walk’s namesake, Dr. Dennis Wilcox, a veterinarian who spearheaded the first Pooch and Papa Walk. About 20 human-dog teams registered for the walk, which supports Pink-Up Port Angeles. Additional Pink-Up Port Angeles activities will be held during the week to support Operation Uplift, a Port Angeles-based group that provides help and information for people with cancer.
YMCA: Estimated costs
CONTINUED FROM A1 begins, the structure would probably take about 18 The cost is estimated months to build, according between $13 million and to Olympic Peninsula ________ $15 million for a building YMCA CEO Kyle Kronk, Jefferson County Editor Charlie which suggests a projected Bermant can be reached at 360- between 47,000 and 52,000 completion in 2020. 385-2335 or cbermant@peninsula square feet. Jefferson County YMCA dailynews.com. Once construction is a component of the Olympic Peninsula Y, which is based in Port Angeles.
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accelerator and brake pedals were both stuck. He said he was yelling as he drove as a reaction to losing control of the car. He said that he recalled hitting someone while he was in the wrong lane and was able to control the vehicle enough to park it near his house at 903 Jackson St. He said that he didn’t report the incident to the police because he didn’t have a phone, and when he saw the police outside impounding the car, he “didn’t think to come outside and approach the police or the tow truck,” the report states.
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Public survey Jefferson Aquatic Coalition President Earll Murman said the public survey indicated substantial interest in a new facility. The survey reported that 81 percent of county residents did not visit a fitness facility of any kind and were responsible for their own physical health, while 54 percent of those surveyed said they would make use of the new YMCA. While calculating membership costs at between $35 and $74 a year, the YMCA projected that it could collect $779,820 in annual membership fees, Murman said. Delma said she was inspired by the partnership between Harrison Medical
Center and the Silverdale YMCA, and that a similar partnership with Jefferson Healthcare will be key part of the new Y’s success. “People can come out of physical therapy and get right on the indoor track,” Delma said. “This can be so valuable to patients who are recovering from knee surgery or some other condition.” During Monday’s question-and-answer session, retired Washington State University executive Katherine Baril said a new YMCA will help to attract and retain younger residents. “Creating a walkable, bikeable community can be more important than jobs because if you bring people here, they can create their own jobs,” Baril said. “Young people can provide the services needed to keep older people like me healthy, which prevents us from getting cranky.”
________ Jefferson County Reporter Charlie Bermant can be reached at 360-385-2335 or at charlie. bermant@peninsuladailynews. com.
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Clallam pot law goes to planning commissioners BY ROB OLLIKAINEN PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — Clallam County commissioners still intend to place a recreational marijuana law on the November ballot. The three commissioners Monday remanded a proposed pot zoning ordinance to the county Planning Commission for a recommendation with the caveat that any change to the existing interim law be approved by the voters. The new ordinance would impose tighter restrictions in Clallam County on the growing, processing and sale of up to one ounce of marijuana to adults 21 and older under state Initiative 502. Like the current ordinance, the new proposal would restrict marijuana businesses from most rural neighborhoods. It would allow the growing and processing of cannabis in 11 county zones, including commercial forest, rural commercial, urban commercial and industrial.
Impasse Community Development Director Mary Ellen Winborn requested the remand after the Planning Commission was unable to decide on a recommendation on the proposal last month. Three members of the panel voted against an affirmative recommendation, four voted yes and two were absent, according to the minutes of the May 20 meeting. Winborn has said the new ordinance provides predictability for growers and assuages the valid concerns of rural county residents. “Land use is at the center of economic development,” Winborn told commissioners. “It’s important that we get it right.” Commissioners on June 8 said they would ask citizens to weigh-in on the staff proposal. They held firm to that decision Monday. Planning Manager Steve Gray said the Planning Commission would re-evaluate the prohibition of marijuana on agriculture lands. The current draft does not allow marijuana in agricultural retention zones as Commissioner Jim McEntire and some citizens had requested. Last week, the county Agricultural Commission supported marijuana businesses on agriculture lands with “appropriate development standards,” Gray said in a staff memo. “Based on the body of work by the Planning Commission, the Department [of Community Development] believes there was either consensus and/or majority support on appropriate regulation of marijuana production, processing and retailing for most county zones,” Gray wrote. “At a minimum, we are
Lawmakers’ deadline is set June 30 BY CHRIS MCDANIEL PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
SEQUIM — If a state budget is not finalized by June 30, state parks will close to the public beginning July 1 — forcing campers with Fourth of July plans to head elsewhere. “If a budget is not signed, on June 30 campers will be told to leave the parks, and the gates will be locked,” said Terri McQuillen, senior park aide at Sequim Bay State Park west of the city. “The Fourth of July vacation season starts July 1 [just] as reservations [would be] cancelled, and visitors forced to stay home or find other places to go.” And park employees — along with more than 26,000 state workers — would be furloughed if a budget isn’t signed into law by midnight June 30. Nick Brown, general counsel for the governor, said that dozens of agencies and other offices will either completely close or partially close under a government shutdown. State parks would be completely shut down. “We love our jobs,” McQuillen said. “State Parks are crown jewels in our state that provide healthy, family recreation. We get visitors from all over the world. We want to work
‘Right way to go’ Chapman said onus falls on Winborn to convince the public that a more-restrictive marijuana law is the “right way to go.” The existing ordinance works well, Chapman added, and few marijuana businesses have opened since the interim law took effect last year. Chapman said he would vote to make the interim ordinance permanent. Fifty-five percent of Clallam County voters backed the 2012 state initiative to legalize marijuana for recreational use. Many proponents of the industry have avoided speaking at public meetings because they do want to reveal the location of their growing operations, Planning Commission member Gary Gleason said. Gleason estimated that there are 300 medicinal marijuana producers in Clallam County. “They are deathly afraid of being exposed,” Gleason said. McEntire noted that the county ordinance only deals with recreational marijuana. “We don’t get into the medical side because we don’t know what the legislature has done, is doing, or will do with regard to how to integrate both of those segments of the marijuana industry into one regulatory framework,” McEntire said.
STEVE GILSTROM
From left, State Parks employees Randy Rondeau, Todd Jensen, Patti Wong, Terry McQuillen and Trevor Consoliver rally in front of Sequim Bay State Park to protest the state Legislature’s lack of progress in passing a budget, which could result in the closure of parks and furloughs for employees. and help people have mem- Townsend and Riverside orable, fun vacations.” State Park near Spokane. The local rally was orgaUp to the edge nized by the Washington Federation of State EmployThe state has never had a government shutdown, ees. “We ask the public to call but the Legislature has 1-800-562-6000 and tell taken its budget talks to the brink before, including two state senators to comproyears ago, when Gov. Jay mise and agree to a budget Inslee signed a budget June before July 1,” McQuillen said. “Ask them to support 30. Workers at agencies our state parks and fund around the state — includ- us.” The rally also was ing those at Sequim Bay State Park — protested the intended to bring attention situation Thursday, to several ongoing issues demanding that lawmakers facing state parks, including a move during former get a deal done. About eight people par- Gov. Chris Gregoire’s ticipated in such a rally at administration to make the entrance of Sequim Bay them self-sustaining. “The agency cannot be State Park, including park self-supporting,” rangers from Fort Worden fully State Park near Port McQuillen said. “The Dis-
cover Pass revenue and other fee-based activities . . . are not enough to keep our parks system healthy and sustainable. “As it stands today, the parks system is in decline and struggling to meet its mission. Parks are receiving minimum services and threatened with closure annually.” There is currently a $470 million parks maintenance backlog with no long-term solution, she noted.
________ Sequim-Dungeness Valley Editor Chris McDaniel can be reached at 360-681-2390, ext. 5052, or cmcdaniel@peninsuladailynews. com. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
House Democrats release latest state budget plan as time ticks Supreme Court, and would pay for collective bargaining agreements and freeze OLYMPIA — As the tuition at state universities clock ticks down on the and colleges for one year. state’s second overtime legislative session, House ‘Very basic needs’ Democrats released their This budget, however, is latest budget proposal Monday, a plan that doesn’t “designed to meet the very include any new taxes but basic needs of the state and looks for additional revenue avoid a shutdown,” Sullivan through closing or limiting said. If only that budget alone several tax exemptions. The new plan comes is passed, it “merely keeps days after Gov. Jay Inslee the lights on for another said that Democrats’ plan two years,” he said. Sullivan encouraged for a new capital gains tax Senate Republicans to conwas off the table. Inslee said tax exemp- sider additional revenue tions should be the compro- from a secondary bill. That measure limits mise that the House and Senate consider in order to exemptions like the sales reach a budget agreement tax exemption for residents quickly and avoid a partial who live in states without a sales tax and repeals othgovernment shutdown. The House Appropria- ers, like the sales tax on tions Committee held a pub- bottled water and another lic hearing Monday on the on extracted fuel, to raise basic underlying budget, $356.5 million for the next and a committee vote on it two-year budget. The bill would pay for was scheduled for today. House Majority Leader teacher raises and increase Pat Sullivan said in a written spending on early learning statement that the base bud- and higher education. Those measures also get would put more money to be heard into the education system, as were before the mandated by the state Monday
BY RACHEL LA CORTE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
New to Jim’s
Appropriations Committee. Also to be heard was a bill that would delay full implementation of a voterapproved initiative to reduce class sizes. Sullivan, D-Covington, wrote that the plan is a “gohome compromise solution that both sides can be happy with.” “Neither side gets everything they want, but both sides get something, and most important, will be doing right by the people of Washington,” he wrote. A message left with Senate Republican leaders was not immediately returned. The Democratic-controlled House and Republican-controlled Senate have
been locked in budget negotiations for several weeks. They are currently in a second overtime legislative session after adjourning both a regular 105-day legislative session and a 30-day special session without reaching a deal on a two-year operating budget that is expected to be about $38 billion. The current special session ends Saturday. A new two-year budget must be signed into law by midnight June 30 or else dozens of state agencies and other offices would completely or partially close and more than 26,000 workers would be furloughed, according to the state Office of Financial Management.
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State parks imperiled by lack of budget deal
hopeful that a remand will provide the board a clear recommendation from the Planning Commission on appropriate zones and development standards for marijuana production, processing and retailing, particularly where there is majority agreement.” Nancy Esteb, chair of the Planning Commission, told commissioners that the marijuana issue had become “distressing” for the commission. “We spent many work sessions on this, which was necessary because it’s such a complex issue,” Esteb said. “My worry is that in taking this ordinance to the voters, they will not have the time to spend six work sessions on it to vote responsibly.” Commissioner Mike Chapman took “great umbrage” with the notion that voters would not be informed. “I think this is one of the most educated electorates in the state of Washington,” Chapman said. “I know this county. People will study this, they will read the newspaper articles, they’ll go to the forums, they’ll talk to friends. I’m not afraid that the voters will be uneducated.”
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Winery to host concert to aid First Step BY DIANE URBANI DE LA PAZ PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — In what Amber Hosken hopes will become a summertime tradition, live music will fill Harbinger Winery on Friday night in a benefit concert for First Step Family Support Center. Hosken, marketing coordinator at First Step, has worked with board member Sarah Cronauer to make this happen: Folk songbird and cellist Emma Beaton of Nashville, Tenn., and her friends Blair McMillan and David Moss will arrive for the 7 p.m. show at Harbinger’s tasting room. Tickets are $20 per per-
son or two for $35, with proceeds to support First Step’s programs for young parents across Clal- Beaton lam County. To purchase, visit FirstStepFamily.org or phone the agency at 360-457-8355; any remaining tickets will be sold Friday evening at the winery, 2358 W. U.S. Highway 101.
Early start Beaton, who grew up in Qualicum Beach, B.C., has been traveling the continent with her music since
she was a youngster. With her debut recording, “Pretty Fair Maid,” she won the Canadian Folk Music Awards’ Young Performer of the Year prize — at age 18. She went on to study at Boston’s Berklee College of Music and toured for six years with her folk band Joy Kills Sorrow. For a time, she lived in New York City with McMillan, her sweetheart. They joined the Brooklyn music scene and met Moss, a likeminded soul who still lives there. Beaton and McMillan moved to Nashville seven months ago — “it feels like home,” she said — and have
managed to put together a tour with their friend Moss. Port Angeles might not have been on their itinerary. But Cronauer, who joined First Step’s board just six months ago, invited the trio out to here, having discovered Beaton’s music in 2013. Joy Kills Sorrow played a house concert at Cronauer’s place two summers ago, and she’s been a fan ever since of the artist’s unusual pairing of voice and cello.
Scottish foundation The daughter of Scottish emigrants, Beaton grew up playing Scottish music — and during many summers in her youth, did some
branching out at Port Townsend’s Festival of American Fiddle Tunes. Beaton was a cellist first; then she started singing while in high school. It’s not easy doing both at the same time, she said, but whichever instrument she’s using, she seeks the essential connection with her audience. To her mind, a show isn’t just about ascending the stage and playing flawlessly. No, “getting the audience laughing,” Beaton said, “getting them responding is one of the most important things.” With words and music, she seeks to let her listen-
ers in. They’re part of it, after all. Hosken, for her part, said the Harbinger concert is a three-way collaboration: Cronauer, Harbinger and the musicians all wanting to get together for a local cause. Harbinger will donate 25 percent of wine sales Friday evening to First Step. Desserts, courtesy of board members, will be laid out for donations. “I do think we can have a really nice party there,” Hosken said.
_______ Features Editor Diane Urbani de la Paz can be reached at 360452-2345, ext. 5062, or at diane. urbani@peninsuladailynews.com.
Chattanooga film fest offers free tickets to competitors City reaches out to ‘Best Town Ever’ foes PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — Less than a month after pulling off its second victory in Outside magazine’s “Best Town Ever” contest, Chattanooga, Tenn., is reaching out to other contenders to share in enjoyment of the arts and the outdoors. The 2016 Lookout Wild Film Festival — which features outdoors and conservation films — is reserving 50 free passes for residents of other cities and towns that took part in the contest, including Port Angeles. The festival will be held Jan. 29 through Jan. 31, in Chattanooga.
BILL SPERRY/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
SV. NIKOLAI
MONUMENT DEDICATED
Clallam County Commissioner Bill Peach, left, Jefferson County Commissioner Kathleen Kler, center, and Forks City Attorney Rod Fleck speak at the dedication of the monument to honor the October 1808 wreck of the ship Sv. Nikolai at 5333 Upper Hoh Road. Although the storm-driven shipwreck was on Rialto Beach, the monument marks the area where a handful of survivors built a refuge after escaping from the Quileute and Hoh tribes. Through interpretive signs detailing the history of the Nikolai, the monument also tells the tale of the first European woman on the North Olympic Peninsula.
Briefly . . .
Outside competition Port Angeles lost in the final round of the Outside contest to Chattanooga earlier this month. One of four last-minute
wild-card entries, Port Angeles won five rounds in a 64-city tournament modeled on the NCAA-style “March Madness” elimination contest before going up against Chattanooga, the Southern Division winner and a former national winner of the annual Outside contest.
Maine, in the contest. Residents from any of the 64 towns in the 2015 first round bracket can apply for tickets to the film festival. To reserve tickets, email organizers at info@lookoutfilmfestival.org. Proof of residency is required, and tickets will be given on a first-come, first served basis.
Western champ
Free lodging
Port Angeles wears the crown as the contest’s Western Division champ, and it will be profiled — along with Chattanooga and 14 other finalists — in the September issue of Outside, a nationally recognized outdoor and adventure magazine. A massive community response helped Port Angeles outperform Santa Barbara, Calif.; Kitsap County’s Bainbridge Island; Glenwood Springs, Colo.; Flagstaff, Ariz.; and Bar Harbor,
One person will be drawn from the pool of those receiving free tickets to also receive free weekend lodging for the festival from Lookout Mountain Vacation Rentals. The 2015 festival featured 58 outdoor adventure and conservation films, after-parties and questionand-answer sessions with filmmakers and adventurers. For more information, visit www.lookoutfilm festival.org.
Death Notices
Death and Memorial Notice
The county ban applies to all outdoor burning except recreational cooking fires. Recreational fires are permitted unless further banned by extreme conditions. OLYMPIA — A burn Recreational fires are ban is now in effect for all limited to 3 feet in diamestate-protected lands in ter and 2 feet in height. Washington because of So-called trash fires for increasing fire danger. debris disposal are illegal The state Department of under any circumstances. Natural Resources on Monday extended a burn ban to Soroptimist award Western Washington, an SEQUIM — Soroptimist order that includes the International of Sequim is agency’s 371,000 acres on offering a professional/techthe Olympic Peninsula. nical award in the amount A similar ban began in of $2,000 to a female of any Eastern Washington last age who either graduated week. from Sequim High School The ban means all outor currently resides in the door burning is prohibited in state forests, state parks Sequim School District. This award is for a and forestlands protected female in a program that by the state agency. will result in a license or It doesn’t cover federal certificate. lands such as national A few examples of such parks or national forests. programs are nursing, Recreational fires in approved fire pits within des- EMT, cosmetology, firefightignated state, county, munici- ing, forestry, paramedic and real estate. pal and other campgrounds Applications are availare still allowed. But fireworks and incendiary devices, able online at www. such as exploding targets, are SISequim.org (click on “What We Do,” then prohibited on all state lands “Awards & Scholarships”). protected by DNR. The deadline for appliThe statewide ban runs cations is July 15. through Sept. 30. Applicants must be So far this year, there have been more than 300 wildfires enrolled at that time. For more information, throughout the state. Clallam County has also email deborah.carlson54@ gmail.com. imposed a ban on all outPeninsula Daily News door burning continuing at and The Associated Press least through Oct. 1.
DNR extends its burn ban to Peninsula
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Colleen Ann Francis
GEORGIA ETTA FRAKER
Feb. 2, 1930 — June 18, 2015
December 7, 1922 May 24, 2015 A longtime Forks resident, Georgia Fraker, age 92, passed away peacefully at her home in Port Angeles on May 24, 2015. She was born to Roy Brittain and Doris (Knight) Brittain on December 7, 1922, in Tonasket, Washington. She moved to the Olympic Peninsula as a very young girl and attended Forks schools, graduating from Forks High School. She eventually married Elmer Vincent Fraker in Port Angeles. Sadly, Elmer passed away in 1999. Georgia was never more alive than when she was preparing meals for and dining with her family. Salmon fishing with her husband, Elmer, was also a favorite as were laughing at jokes with her sisters, rooting on her Mariners and Seahawks, and organizing and cooking Harvest Dinners at the Forks Congregational Church. She loved singing at the church (and in her kitchen) and enjoyed time spent contributing to the casino. Traveling with and to see her family, and doting on her many grandchildren were joys
Mrs. Fraker to be remembered Always up for anything with a smile on her face, she had a wonderful sense of humor and was never above laughing at herself. She was a very warm, caring and generous woman who will be missed by all who were mothered by her. She was an optimist with a positive attitude toward life and death. As she was fading away, she said: “I have to tell my sisters about this.” Her last words were: “Did you get something to eat?” Georgia is survived by her sons, George (Judy) Fraker, Ron (Michelle) Fraker and Randy Fraker; daughter Sherry (Bert) Seelye; stepdaughter JoAnn (Don) Cook; sisters
Dolly Kanig, Doreen St. Clair and Joann (Jack) Campbell; and many grandchildren, greatgrandchildren, greatgreat-grandchildren, nieces and nephews. She is preceded in death by her husband, Elmer Fraker; sisters Virginia Bakken, LaMona Smith and Bonnie Hehr (Gossage), brothers Vernon and Don Brittain, and stepson Jim Fraker. The family would like to thank the volunteers and nurses who provided such wonderful hospice care in her last days. A celebration of life will be held at a later date. Please make memorial contributions to Volunteer Hospice of Clallam County, 540 East Eighth Street, Port Angeles, WA 98362.
Sequim resident Colleen Ann Francis died of a ruptured aorta at University of Washington Medical Center in Seattle. She was 85. A complete obituary will follow. Services: Graveside at Chimacum (Greenwood) Cemetery, state Highway 19 (Beaver Valley Road) just southeast of Chimacum Corner, at 11 a.m., Saturday, June 27; gathering to follow at 52 Bishop Hill Road, Chimacum. Harper-Ridgeview Funeral Chapel, Port Angeles, is in charge of arrangements. www.harper-ridgeview funeralchapel.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. Call 360-452-8435 Monday through Friday for information and assistance and to arrange publication. ■ Death Notices: A form for free death notices appears at www. peninsuladailynews.com under “Obituary Forms.” For further information, call 360-417-3527.
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, June 23, 2015 PAGE
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Are we over-thanking our veterans? BY KEN HARBAUGH
experience that feels it lacks the moral authority to say no. Today, it is taboo to question the honor of a veteran seeking compensation, and those who dare challenge the benefits system are deemed insufficiently patriotic. Policy updates can address some of this. Veterans Affairs should look harder at ways the system is being gamed, and abuses should be ended much as we go after phony workers’ compensation claims. There should be an option for those who want to document injuries to guarantee medical care, but who do not want a compensation payment. And we should double down on programs like job training that empower veterans as opposed to creating dependencies.
ONLINE . . .
T
RAVELING THROUGH an airport recently, I witnessed a now-commonplace ritual: military personnel getting head-of-the-line privileges in the boarding area. As we complete the withdrawal of American troops from Afghanistan, one of the legacies of the longest war in our history is how the public Harbaugh has rallied to support those who served. While this can seem superficial at times, there is not a vet alive who would prefer the other extreme. My father served in Vietnam, and the welcome home his generation received was a national disgrace. Unfortunately, the modernday lionization of veterans has itself gone too far. In Washington, D.C., this knee-jerk support has resulted in policy decisions that will hurt both vets and the larger public over time. Since 2000, the Department of Veterans Affairs has seen its budget nearly triple. Its programs run the gamut from burial benefits to job training. But among the biggest cost drivers is the disability-compensation system, which now approaches $60 billion per year. These disability payments are separate from medical costs associated with treating an injury, and are set at varying levels to compensate injured veterans for an assumed inability to work. The average payout has risen 60 percent (inflation-adjusted) since 2000, and the proportion of veterans receiving some form of compensation has nearly doubled. And while most vets who receive disability checks deserve
■ Do you think America is doing enough, too much or not enough for its military veterans. Take today’s Peninsula Poll at www. peninsuladailynews.com.
them, one of the worst-kept secrets among those seeking a disability rating is that the system can be beaten. Claim the right combination of symptoms, whether you are suffering or not, and there is a decent chance you can get a monthly disability check tax-free for the rest of your life.
T
HERE ARE EVEN blogs out there to walk you through the process of claiming an injury that cannot be disproved. Sometimes it takes no effort at all. When I left the Navy in 2005, I filled out a form and got a medical exam in order to document a fractured shoulder that I had sustained in the line of duty. Soon after, I received a rating and my first monthly directdeposit payment. Not feeling entitled to anything other than medical care, I attempted to discontinue the payment, but was told there was no process for doing so. Even my ability to hold a fulltime job had no bearing on my disability rating. As a nation, we have no greater duty than to care for those who have fought our battles. But the current disabilitycompensation regime demands a closer look, not only for the sake of financial prudence but also to avoid creating a culture of dependency. A recent study by Mark Duggan, an economist at Stanford University, linked rising disability payments to increased unemployment among veterans. The author suggests that such payments may reduce the “recipi-
W
ent’s propensity to work” because move beyond superficial expresdisability checks obviate the need sions of support and ask, “Is this bill too high?” for a job. They are the ones, after all, who are stuck with the tab. PayOMEDAY, ONCE ALL the backlogs at Veterans outs set to top $100 billion are Affairs are cleared, many going to draw attention. will declare “mission accomSo how did we get here? plished.” But this is when the During the past 14 years of real problem will emerge. war, America has experienced a The annual cost of disability perfect storm of sympathy for compensation is rising steadily, veterans: a combination of unmet to $60 billion today from $20 bil- needs like vets waiting for care, lion in 2000. That curve continan admiring but ultimately disues to bend upward. engaged public and a political class with almost no military The American public will
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Clarion call Pope Francis made history June 18 with an encyclical — a papal letter addressed to all bishops in the Catholic Church and to “all people of good will” regardless of faith — declaring the moral imperative for humanity to act on climate change. The pope’s clarion call draws attention to the fact that tackling climate change is fundamentally about protecting our children and grandchildren: “If we want future generations to thrive on Earth, we must act as responsible stewards of creation.” Though all of us experience the effects of climate disruption, the poor, the vulnerable and the disadvantaged communities are those that will be most seriously affected. The pope’s action builds further momentum for upcoming international climate negotiations in Paris this year, and comes on the heels of major global initiatives including an unprecedented agreement between the U.S. and China to cut carbon pollution dramatically and a strong commitment by the world’s largest economies to completely
eliminate fossil fuels this century. Overall, the pope’s encyclical offers moral guidance to the world on addressing climate disruption in light of the church’s core moral teachings. But how solutions to the crisis are made real is a question for our political leaders who are ultimately responsible for implementing solutions. It is critical that our leaders both in Washington state and in Washington, D.C., take meaningful action on climate change in order to protect our planet for generations to come.
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moral authority in the world. I, too, care about human life and the protection of our environment. The papal encyclical affirms that climate change is an issue that needs immediate action. At this time, the faith, the educational and the health communities stand in solidarity in addressing climate change’s impact on all human life, especially on children, the elderly and the poor who are most vulnerable to a range of climate-related effects. Renewable energy (like wind and solar) and energy efficiency will protect human health, preserve Our local nonpartisan the planet and bring us a group, Olympic Climate better future. Action, is working toward The U.S. must take a that goal. Join us at leading role in the upcomolyclimate.org. Robert Sextro, ing United Nations conferSequim ence in Paris and in developing sustainable, clean and healthy energy soluMoral authority tions to climate change, Physicians for Social transitioning to renewable Responsibility has just energy, to energy efficiency, called attention to the and taking a leading role papal ecology encyclical, in the upcoming Paris published June 18. meetings. I have come to the same These are the best point of view held by Pope responses we can make, as Francis. a nation, to the pope’s call It is time to take action for climate action. on climate change. Robert B. Kaplan, Port Angeles The pope’s voice is a
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E HAVE COME A long way since Vietnam, and for that we should be grateful. But over time, an act as simple as honoring service members at the airport can morph into something altogether dishonorable. As veterans, we should not demand more than we are owed. As a society, we should have the guts to push back when necessary, and elect leaders who can make tough choices about issues such as Veterans Affairs spending. Above all, we must guard against the day when the benefits veterans have rightfully earned become a source of resentment to those they have faithfully served.
________ Ken Harbaugh, a former Navy pilot and mission commander, now works for Team Rubicon, a veteran-based disaster-relief organization. His essay first appeared in The New York Times.
Obama showing his emotional side HIS EYES WELL up without warning in private, thinking about his teenage daughters growing up. He choked back tears in public recently while delivering a eulogy for Beau Biden, the son of Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr., who died at 46. He let his passions show this month in a closed meeting with House Democrats, just days after blurting out an uncharacteristically affectionate greeting to a nun before a health care speech. President Barack Obama, whose cool, no-drama style has for years set him apart from the extroverted politicians so common in Washington, D.C., has been getting emotional lately. Longtime colleagues say they are witnessing a more human side of the commander in chief than they have seen before. “My takeaway was, ‘Wow — where’s this guy been?’ ” said Kent Conrad, a former Democratic senator from North Dakota. It is not as if Obama is suddenly channeling House Speaker John A. Boehner, Republican of Ohio, who is known for a misty eye and a quivering lip during interviews and in floor speeches. And the recent displays of emotion are not his first; the president cried while addressing staff members after his 2012 re-election, and again a month later talking about the Newtown, Conn., shooting massacre, which killed 20 young children and six adults. But even Obama has admitted that he has been blindsided recently by fits of sadness, many of them prompted by the thought of his daughters — 14-year-old Sasha, who graduated this month from middle school, and 16-year-old Malia, who will go to college next year — growing up. “I start tearing up in the middle of the day and I can’t explain it,” Obama told attendees at an Easter prayer breakfast in April. “Why am I so sad? They’re leaving me.” The New York Times
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, June 23, 2015 SECTION
CLASSIFIEDS, COMICS, BUSINESS, WEATHER In this section
B Golf
Chambers Bay put on good display THEY CAME TO these dried scablands, this rugged terrain that turned back the pretenders, the whiners and the country-club dandies who simply couldn’t handle the challenges of these parts. Four were tied at the start Dave of the day, from three continents, Boling all of them 30 or younger. Hadn’t the Phils and Tigers heard? This is no country for old men. And it ground them all down, one by one. Nobody made it through this 115th U.S. Open unscathed. Chambers Bay chewed them up. Was it a fair test? Who ever told you golf was going to be fair? Even the winner, Jordan Spieth, double-bogeyed the 17th hole and needed to see Dustin Johnson threeputt on 18 to escape an 18-hole playoff. The ragged, flawed, draWas it a fair matic finish test? Who ever was a perfect ending for a told you golf tournament was going to that had been a be fair? week of squabbling and bellyaching. There had been nonstop grousing about the greens and fuss over the fescue. Yes, it was awful in spots. On a putt at No. 15, Brandt Snedeker’s ball looked like a kid on a skateboard trying to go over a speed bump. Some seemed to take the course conditions personally, as if it was out to get them intentionally. (Hey, they’ve been busting stones on this site for a long time, guys. You didn’t think you’d be exempt, did you?) But nobody, nobody kept their cool for the whole round Sunday. Johnson seemed bloodless, impervious to pressure, a steely-eyed gunslinger. He led the tournament until No. 13, when he flinched, blinked and Spieth and Branden Grace (two of the 54-hole leaders) took over the lead. Grace, a South African with a limited PGA portfolio, was tied at the start of the round and was neck and neck with Spieth until No. 16, when he drove the ball almost onto the train tracks. TURN
TO
Can Spieth be grand? U.S. Open champion is halfway to rare feat BY VICTOR MATHER THE NEW YORK TIMES
At age 21, Jordan Spieth has won his second major and become the most celebrated player in golf. He is also halfway to one of the most difficult feats in sports, the Grand Slam. Indeed, “difficult” may be selling the challenge short. In its modern incarnation, no one has ever completed a Grand Slam in golf, and no one has come especially close. The term comes from bridge, where the taking of all 13 tricks has been called a Grand Slam since at least the early 1800s. The first golfer said to have completed a Grand Slam was Bobby Jones in 1930.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Jordan Spieth holds up the trophy after winning the U.S. Open golf tournament at TURN TO SPIETH/B3 Chambers Bay in University Place.
JEFF HALSTEAD/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
MAKING
WAKE
The Port Angeles-based Wicked No. 01 Sprint Boat team of driver Doug Hendrickson and navigator Nichole Heaton-Muller finished second in the 400 class with a time of 51.40 seconds at the Sprint Boat races at Webb’s Slough in St. John over the weekend. Wicked No. 10, driven by Dan Morrison and navigated by Cara McGuire and also based in Port Angeles, placed second in the Unlimited Class. Sequim-based TNT Racing No. 2 lost in the semifinals, while TNT No. 99 fell in the quarterfinals. American Sprint Boat racing will again make two appearances in Port Angeles this summer: Saturday, July 25, and Saturday, Aug. 22. The latter date will serve as the first round of the first-ever ASB World Championships. The second round will be the following weekend at Webb’s Slough.
BOLING/B3
M’s Iwakuma in game mode after rehab start is 0-1 with a 6.61 earnedrun average in three starts in 2015.
BY MEG WOCHNICK AND BOB DUTTON MCCLATCHY NEWS SERVICE
Seeking comfort zone
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Hisashi Iwakuma last pitched for Seattle on April 20. McClendon is happy with Iwakuma’s progress but said the right-hander will make at least three rehab starts. “He’s not there yet,” McClendon said. “Two starts won’t get him there.” Iwakuma was placed on the disabled list April 24 with a strained lat muscle behind his right shoulder and hasn’t pitched in a game since April 20. An American League All-Star in 2013, Iwakuma
Mark Trumbo knows he’s been pressing since being acquired by the Seattle Mariners on June 3 in a trade with the Arizona Diamondbacks. Knowing it and stopping it are two different things. “The first week was pretty rough,” he said. “I’ve played long enough to recognize the signs that it’s happening, but that doesn’t make it any easier to make the adjustments.” Trumbo had a pair of singles in his first game as a Mariner but plummeted into a 2 for 28 skid over the next seven games. Then just when he seemed to find his timing, back spasms surfaced in batting practice. That knocked him out of the starting lineup for three games. TURN
TO
M’S/B2
1st Annual during each of the months of
SA
May, July, August & October
LMO
U N & H A LI B
T
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SEATTLE — Hisashi Iwakuma took a big step toward rejoining the Seattle Mariners’ rotation, tossing 56 pitches over 3 2/3 innings in his first rehab start for Single-A Everett on Saturday. “For the first time in a long time,” Iwakuma said before Sunday’s game against the Astros through interpreter Antony Suzuki, “[I felt] back in game mode again. “I still need to work on timing and mechanics. Other than that, I felt good.” Of Iwakuma’s 56 pitches, 41 were for strikes. He allowed one run — a solo home run to 2015 firstround draft pick Ian Happ — on three hits and struck out three batters. Manager Lloyd McClendon said Iwakuma’s next rehab start will be Thursday in Triple-A Tacoma against the Reno Aces at Cheney Stadium.
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TUESDAY, JUNE 23, 2015
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SPORTS PIC OF THE DAY
Today Baseball: Klahowya at Olympic Crosscutters, at Civic Field, 6 p.m.
Wednesday Baseball: Olympic Crosscutters at Spanaway (doubleheader), 3 p.m.
Thursday Baseball: North Kitsap at Olympic Crosscutters, at Civic Field, 6 p.m.
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Today 4 p.m. (306) FS1 Baseball MLB, St. Louis Cardinals at Miami Marlins (Live) 5 p.m. (26) ESPN Baseball NCAA, Virginia vs. Vanderbilt, Division I Tournament, National Championship, Game 2 (Live) 5 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Basketball WNBA, Los Angeles Sparks at Washington Mystics (Live) 7 p.m. (25) ROOT Baseball MLB, Kansas City Royals at Seattle Mariners (Live) 7 p.m. (306) FS1 Women’s Soccer FIFA, Japan vs. Netherlands, World Cup, Round of 16 (Live) Houston at L.A. Angels, 12:35 p.m. Baltimore at Boston, 4:10 p.m. Oakland at Texas, 5:05 p.m. Kansas City at Seattle, 7:10 p.m.
BMX Racing Port Angeles BMX Track Sunday Father’s Day Race USABMX Dads 1. Larry Moroles 2. Al Wilcox 3. Gary Price 4. Eric Hodgson Brave Dads 1. Al Wilcox 2. Arthur Buhrer 3. Sean Coleman 4. Eric Murphy 5. Mike Pinell 6. Tino Moreno 7. Eric Hodgson 8. Ernie Vail 4 Strider 1. Gibson Hill 2. Laila Charles 3. Graysen Pinell 4. Grady Pinell 5. Angus Sivesind 46-50 Cruiser 1. Scott Gulisao 2. “Curious George” Williams 3. Robert “Faceplant” Williams 4. Gary Price 5. Eric Hodgson 7 Novice 1. Brayden Martin 2. Sebastian Buhrer 3. Austin Murphy 4. Nickolas Hill 5. Dominic Price 6. Landon Sage 7. Arlo Sivesind 10 Novice 1. Diego Buhrer 2. David Murphy 3. Hunter Hodgson 4. Carlos Moreno 5. Bryce Hodgson 9 Intermediate 1. Jesse “LL Cool J” Vail 2. Landon “L Factor” Price 3. Zachary Pinell 4. Rily “Rippin” Pippin 11 Intermediate 1. Joseph Pinell 2. Taylor “Chewtoy” Coleman 3. Deacon Charles 4. Cholena Morrison 17-18 Intermediate 1. Stephon Jasicki 2. Jaxon Bourm 3. Ty Bourm 7-8 Local Open 1. Jesse “LL Cool J” Vail 2. Austin Murphy 3. David Murphy 4. Nickolas Hill 5. Sebastian Buhrer 6. Brayden Martin 7. Landon Sage 9-10 Local Open 1. Zachary Pinell 2. Diego Buhrer 3. Hunter Hodgson 4. Bryce Hodgson 17-20 Local Open 1. Stephon Jasicki 2. Joseph Pinell 3. Jaxon Bourm 13 and Under Pitbike Open 1. Isaiah Charles
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
National League West Division W L Los Angeles 39 31 San Francisco 38 33 Arizona 34 35 San Diego 34 38 Colorado 30 39 East Division W L Washington 37 33 New York 36 35 Atlanta 35 35 Miami 30 41 Philadelphia 24 47 Central Division W L St. Louis 45 24 Pittsburgh 39 30 Chicago 37 30 Cincinnati 32 36 Milwaukee 25 46
SUMMER
HAS BEGUN
The Port Angeles 9U baseball team started its summer season in Monroe playing in the Legends Tournament earlier this month and went 2-2 to place ninth. “It was a great start to the season, getting the kids together after three practices and playing a tournament,” manager Brian Shimko said. “Great group of kids. Can’t wait to see what the season turns out.” The team is, bottom row, from right: Brody Cronk (batboy), Cade Ellis, Alex Angevine, Mason Surgi, Bryton Amsdill, Colton Romero and Peyton Cagey; middle row, from left: Tucker Rygaard, Ezra Townsend, Coen Cronk, Tyler Hunter, Easton Merritt, Parker Nickerson and Tanner Jacobsen; and back row, from left: assistant coach Cody Romero, assistant coach Gabe Rygaard, assistant coach Jake Thornburg, manager Brian Shimko and assistant coach Scott Ellis. 2. Makaylie Albin 3. Taylor ‘Chewtoy” Coleman
Oakland
31 41 East Division W L Tampa Bay 40 31 New York 38 31 Baltimore 36 33 Toronto 37 34 Boston 31 40 Central Division W L Kansas City 39 27 Minnesota 37 32 Detroit 35 34 Cleveland 32 36 Chicago 30 38
Drag Racing West End Thunder - Forks Saturday and Sunday All Girls Final - Street Car 1. Sue Zink, Port Angeles 2. Tracy Andrews, Port Angeles Pro 1. Pete Dahlgren, Forks 2. Cary Bourm, Forks SuperPro 1. Victor Whitehead, Forks 2. Bob Pigott, Bear Creek
Baseball American League Houston Texas Los Angeles Seattle
West Division W L 41 30 37 33 35 35 32 38
Pct .577 .529 .500 .457
GB — 3½ 5½ 8½
M’s: Cruz still 2nd CONTINUED FROM B1 tions of trying to get adjusted as quick as possible,” he said. “The last time I got traded was Trumbo returned to the lineup Wednesday and put together a in the offseason, so I had a whole four-game hitting streak that was spring training to make friends. punctuated with a home run in This is a new experience.” Saturday’s win over Houston. “This guy has big-time power,” Cruz closes gap manager Lloyd McClendon said. Nelson Cruz made up ground “We haven’t seen it yet, but we will. And when he hits them, on Kansas City’s Kendrys Morales in the latest balloting update to they’ll come in bunches.” The Mariners are hoping to see determine the American League’s the Trumbo who averaged 32 starting designated hitter for the home runs per year from 2011-13 All-Star Game on July 14 in Cincinnati. with the Los Angeles Angels. Even so, Cruz still trails by Trumbo, 29, hit 14 last season 286,109 votes in updated totals when a foot injury limited him to 88 games with Arizona, and he released Monday by Major League had nine in 46 games this season Baseball. A week ago, Cruz trailed Morales, a two-time former Maribefore the trade. “For me,” he said, “things just ner, by 548,977 votes. All voting this season, for the kind of happen when they happen. It’s not something you can first time, is being conducted online at www.mlb.com and the just change overnight.” Friday was a step in the right 30 club websites, including www. direction. After getting just one mariners.com. Voting continues RBI in his first 12 games with the through 8:59 p.m. on July 2. Cruz remains the only Seattle Mariners, Trumbo drove in three runs in Seattle’s 5-2 victory over player cited in the weekly release, which reports the top 15 outfieldHouston. “It feels good, especially, to con- ers and the top five players at all tribute in a win,” he admitted. other positions. Kansas City continues to dom“Maybe those weren’t the prettiest ways to get it done [in refer- inate the voting, although Eric ence to two RBI grounders], but Hosmer surrendered the lead at they’re every bit as effective at first base this week to Detroit’s times.” Miguel Cabrera. And now, maybe, Trumbo can Los Angeles outfielder Mike relax a little. Trout is the only other non-Royal “It’s probably all of the emo- in line to start.
.431 10½ Pct GB .563 — .551 1 .522 3 .521 3 .437 9 Pct GB .591 — .536 3½ .507 5½ .471 8 .441 10
Sunday’s Games Detroit 12, N.Y. Yankees 4 Baltimore 13, Toronto 9 Cleveland 1, Tampa Bay 0 Boston 13, Kansas City 2 Chicago Cubs 8, Minnesota 0 Chicago White Sox 3, Texas 2, 11 innings Oakland 3, L.A. Angels 2 Houston 6, Seattle 2 Monday’s Games Philadelphia at N.Y. Yankees, late.
Detroit at Cleveland, late. Toronto at Tampa Bay, late. Chicago White Sox at Minnesota, late. Houston at L.A. Angels, late. Kansas City at Seattle, late. Today’s Games Philadelphia (O’Sullivan 1-5) at N.Y. Yankees (Sabathia 3-7), 4:05 p.m. Baltimore (U.Jimenez 5-3) at Boston (J.Kelly 2-4), 4:10 p.m. Detroit (Price 6-2) at Cleveland (Salazar 6-2), 4:10 p.m. Toronto (Dickey 3-6) at Tampa Bay (Archer 8-4), 4:10 p.m. Oakland (Chavez 3-6) at Texas (Ch.Gonzalez 2-1), 5:05 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Samardzija 4-4) at Minnesota (Pelfrey 5-3), 5:10 p.m. Houston (McHugh 7-3) at L.A. Angels (C.Wilson 5-5), 7:05 p.m. Kansas City (Guthrie 5-4) at Seattle (Montgomery 1-2), 7:10 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Detroit at Cleveland, 9:10 a.m. Toronto at Tampa Bay, 9:10 a.m. Philadelphia at N.Y. Yankees, 10:05 a.m. Chicago White Sox at Minnesota, 10:10 a.m.
Pct GB .557 — .535 1½ .493 4½ .472 6 .435 8½ Pct GB .529 — .507 1½ .500 2 .423 7½ .338 13½ Pct GB .652 — .565 6 .552 7 .471 12½ .352 21
Sunday’s Games Cincinnati 5, Miami 2 Washington 9, Pittsburgh 2 Philadelphia 9, St. Louis 2 Chicago Cubs 8, Minnesota 0 Colorado 10, Milwaukee 4 Arizona 7, San Diego 2 Atlanta 1, N.Y. Mets 0 L.A. Dodgers 10, San Francisco 2 Monday’s Games Philadelphia at N.Y. Yankees, late. L.A. Dodgers at Chicago Cubs, late. Today’s Games Atlanta (A.Wood 4-4) at Washington (Zimmermann 5-5), 4:05 p.m. Cincinnati (Cueto 4-4) at Pittsburgh (Locke 4-3), 4:05 p.m. Philadelphia (O’Sullivan 1-5) at N.Y. Yankees (Sabathia 3-7), 4:05 p.m. St. Louis (C.Martinez 7-3) at Miami (Urena 1-3), 4:10 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Greinke 5-2) at Chicago Cubs (Hammel 5-2), 5:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets (Niese 3-7) at Milwaukee (Fiers 3-7), 5:10 p.m. Arizona (Ch.Anderson 3-1) at Colorado (K.Kendrick 2-9), 5:40 p.m. San Diego (Despaigne 3-5) at San Francisco (Bumgarner 7-4), 7:15 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Philadelphia at N.Y. Yankees, 10:05 a.m. Atlanta at Washington, 4:05 p.m. Cincinnati at Pittsburgh, 4:05 p.m. St. Louis at Miami, 4:10 p.m. L.A. Dodgers at Chicago Cubs, 5:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets at Milwaukee, 5:10 p.m. Arizona at Colorado, 5:40 p.m. San Diego at San Francisco, 7:15 p.m.
Transactions Baseball American League SEATTLE MARINERS — Released OF Rickie Weeks. TAMPA BAY RAYS — Agreed to terms with 1B Kewby Meyer, 2B Brett Sullivan, INF Blake Butera, OF Landon Cray, LHP Porter Clayton and RHPs Ian Gibaut and Noel Rodriguez.
Sports Briefly . . . Huskies QB Miles retires from football SEATTLE — A chronic hip injury has forced Washington quarterback Cyler Miles to retire from college football, head coach Chris Petersen announced Monday. The school said in a news release that medical personnel have advised Miles that it would be against his best interest to continue to play on the injury, which has persisted throughout his career. Miles, who would have been a fourth-year junior this coming fall, started 12 games for the Huskies last season and played in a total of 20 games during his Washington career. Miles had taken an indefinite leave from the program earlier this year and did not participate in spring practices. As with all medical retirements, Miles can remain on scholarship through the completion of his undergraduate degree, but will not count against the NCAA limit of 85 scholarship players on the roster.
Rose bet on Reds BRISTOL, Conn. — ESPN says it obtained a notebook that
shows Pete Rose bet on Cincinnati Reds games during his last season as an active player in 1986. The career hits leader agreed to a lifetime ban from baseball in 1989 after an investigation by John Dowd, a lawyer retained by Major League Baseball, concluded he bet on the Reds to win from 1985-87 while he was a player and manager. Rose repeatedly denied the allegations before admitting in a 2004 autobiography he bet on Cincinnati to win while he managed the team. Rose became player-manager in 1984 and managed the team until the suspension in August 1989. ESPN’s “Outside the Lines” said it obtained a notebook seized by U.S. Postal Inspection Service in October 1989 from Rose associate Michael Bertolini, which reflect betting records from March to July 1986. The documents are under seal and stored in the National Archives’ New York office, ESPN said. Rose applied for reinstatement to baseball in September 1997 and met in November 2002 with Commissioner Bud Selig, who never ruled on the application. Rose applied again after Selig was succeeded by Rob Manfred in January. Rose is ineligible for the Hall of Fame as long as he is on the
permanently suspended list.
Diddy assaults coach LOS ANGELES — Sean “Diddy” Combs was arrested for assault with a deadly weapon at UCLA on Monday afternoon According to TMZ, the hip-hop mogul — previously known as both Puff Daddy and P. Diddy — assaulted strength coach Sal Alosi. Diddy confronted Alosi after Alosi yelled at Diddy’s son, UCLA cornerback Justin Combs, during a strength and conditioning session. In a press release, the university stated that Diddy’s weapon was a kettleball. No one was seriously injured. “I’m thankful that our staff showed the level of professionalism that they did in handling this situation. This is an unfortunate incident for all parties involved,” UCLA head coach Jim Mora said in a news release. “While UCPD continues to review this matter, we will let the legal process run its course and refrain from further comment at this time.” Justin Combs is a redshirt junior who has played sparingly as a Bruin. The 5-foot-7 defensive back has appeared in seven games in two seasons, recording four tackles. Peninsula Daily News news sources
SportsRecreation
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
TUESDAY, JUNE 23, 2015
B3
Olympic 13U team takes first at Olympia tournament PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
OLYMPIA — The Olympic Junior Babe Ruth 13U baseball team picked up about where it left off last year, going undefeated and winning its first tournament of the season. Olympic is made up mostly of players from the Port Angeles 12U team that competed at the 2014 Cal Ripken World Series in Alachua, Fla. Olympic won all three games at the one-day tournament Saturday, scoring a combined 24 runs and tallying 30 hits while batting .370 as a team. Olympic used four pitchers who combined to allow only 11 runs and 12 hits while striking out 23 batters. “We pitched very well, we played very good defense, stole a lot of bases and hit the ball around the yard in all three games,” Olympic head coach Zac Moore said. “We had very good positional hitting throughout the day.” Olympic opened the tournament with a 5-4 win over D4 Thunder from the Aberdeen area. Olympic pitcher Brody Merritt earned the complete-game victory, going
seven innings and giving up four runs on four hits with 10 strikeouts and three walks. Olympic fell behind 2-0 in the top of the second inning, but struck back with a run of its own in the bottom of the inning off a double by Tanner Lunt down the left-field line. The Thunder scored their other two runs in the top of the third to go up 4-1. Olympic again responded, scoring two in its half of the third. Nathan Miller singled and stole a base and was brought in on a double by Eathan Flodstrom. Flodstrom then scored on a fielder’s choice hit by Tyler Bowen. Merritt and Olympic’s defense kept D4 off the scoreboard the rest of the game. Five of Merritt’s 10 strikeouts came after the third inning. “After the third, Brody just went to work and shut them down,” Moore said. “We also played very good defense behind him, including a key double play from Milo Whitman in the sixth inning, catching a liner up the middle and throwing the guy out at first.” Olympic took the lead in the fifth inning.
The Olympic Babe Ruth 13U team opened the season with a tournament championship in Olympia. The team is, top row, from left: Slater Bradley, Nathan Miller, Tyler Bowen, assistant coach Kevin Miller, Isaiah Getchall, Michael Grubb, Brady Nickerson, Milo Whitman, assistant coach Rob Merritt, Silad Thomas and manager Zac Moore; and bottom row, from left: Brody Merritt, Ethan Flodstrom, Timmy Adams, Alex Lamb, Derek Bowechop, Lucas Jarnigan, Derrick Dunaway and Tanner Lunt Derek Bowechop tripled to scored Bowen and then scored himself after a bad throw to third base. In its second game, Olympic made quick work of Tacoma’s Tugs Red Steen, winning 10-0 in four innings. Flodstrom pitched a complete-game one-hitter, striking out seven and walking four.
“Ethan threw an amazing game, only giving up one hit and striking out seven. It was impressive,” Moore said. “We played very good defense behind him, having zero errors.” Olympic scored seven of its 10 runs in the fourth inning. Flodstrom and Miller bunted their ways on base,
Bowen doubled and Whitman had a single. Merritt brought in two with a deep double, and Isaiah Getchall hit a double over the left fielder. Lucas Jarnigan and Tanner Lunt also had hits and RBIs in the inning. In the championship game, Olympic held off Yelm’s Titans to win 9-7. Olympic starter Timmy
Adams pitched 5 2/3 innings, striking out five and walking one while allowing five hits and six runs. After a solid first three innings, Adams ran into some trouble in the fourth when a couple of costly errors and timely hits by the Titans led to four runs. Olympic, though, kept pace, putting up runs in the second through seventh innings. Getchall drove in Bradley in the second inning, and Alex Lamb brought in Getchall. In the third, Whitman came in on a single by Bowechop. Getchall scored again in the fourth off Miller’s ground-rule double. Olympic plated a pair of runs in the fifth inning: Lunt drove in Bowechop with a base hit to right field and then scored himself on a wild pitch. Flodstrom scored in the sixth and Lunt finished Olympic’s scoring with a run in the seventh. Olympic next plays this weekend in Tacoma. Olympic will host the Junior Babe Ruth 13U state tournament July 9-12 at Volunteer Field in Port Angeles.
Spieth: Slam not easy
BMX
DADS
Port Angeles BMX Track hosted Father’s Day racing on Sunday. Dads who raced included, from left, Sean Coleman, Gary Price, Mike Pinell, Eric Hodgson, George Williams (in background), Tino Moreno, Arthur Buhrer, Al Wilcox and Ernie Vail. Not pictured are Eric Murphy and Larry Moroles. See complete results on Page B2.
Boling: Difficult win CONTINUED FROM B1 ment at minus-4 after starting with a 77. Adam Scott fired a ridicAnd the single toughest ulous 64 on Sunday to get hombre in the field was Jason Day. He collapsed on to minus-3. his final hole in the second Last two standing round because of vertigo, and bounced back to share They were all subplots, the lead Sunday morning. however, as in the end it How tough was Day? came down to Spieth and Just negotiating this Johnson. Spieth held it together course, more than 7 miles to birdie No. 18, while of walking while being Johnson missed the long unsteady, weakened, playeagle putt that would have ing a game of balance won it, then the short putt while fighting off faulty that would have tied it and equilibrium. sent it into a Monday playIt was one of the great off. displays of athletic gumpThat would have been tion in golf history. But he wrong. Alley fights don’t shot a 74 to tie for ninth. end in ties, or go to playRory McIlroy made a offs. run, but finished at even. The drama needed to Snedeker made a run, end in this last hour of and finished minus-1. Pacific Rim sunlight, on South African Louis the summer solstice, as the Oosthuizen made the best warm shadows spread run in memory, shooting a across the suddenly benign 6-under 29 on the back terrain. Chambers Bay was nine to finish the tourna-
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flawed and beautiful and grotesque and tough, tough, tough. The praise and criticisms were all valid. But it was dramatic as heck, and it was great fun seeing these pros get their niblicks handed to them. Here’s the biggest validation for the Chambers Bay U.S. Open of 2015: The best golfer won. Spieth added this Open to his Masters win in April. He may go on to win the British and the PGA, and any number of majors in the future. But few will be as difficult as the one he captured this week.
CONTINUED FROM B1 the United States Open, he did travel to Scotland to However, the four tour- play in the only British naments Jones won were Open of his career. He won, different from the modern but once again could not set and included two ama- play in the PGA because the events overlapped. teur events. That was the only time a The Masters, and thus the possibility of a modern Masters and United States Grand Slam, began in 1934. Open winner also won the But winning the Mas- British Open. It was ters, the United States Hogan’s ninth, and final, Open, the British Open and major. Though the victory was the PGA Championship in the same year has proved to front-page news, there was be too much of a challenge not much hand-wringing for even the world’s most over his missing the PGA; the modern concept of the dominant golfers. Winning the Masters Grand Slam would not and the U.S. Open in the solidify in the public’s mind same year has been done until the early 1960s. Arnold Palmer, who only seven times. The first player to do it often spoke about his desire was Craig Wood in 1941. A to win the Grand Slam, won Grand Slam was not possi- the first two legs in 1960. ble that year, as no British He came close in the British Open was played because of that year, losing to Kel Nagle by just a stroke. World War II. Jack Nicklaus’ turn In any case, Wood was eliminated from the PGA, came in 1972. Like Palmer, which was then played as a he missed a British Open match play tournament, in win by a stroke, losing to Lee Trevino. the round of 32. After Palmer and Nicklaus, it took 30 years and Overlapping tourneys the emergence of another of In 1951, Ben Hogan took the game’s greatest golfers the first two majors. But he to get another Masters-U.S. would have faced a signifi- Open winner. cant hurdle for a Grand Slam: the British Open Tiger Slam started a day after the PGA In 2002, Tiger Woods ended. After suffering terrible won his seventh and eight injuries in a car crash in majors and went into the 1949, Hogan played a light British Open alive for the schedule, and in the end he Slam. But he shot an 81 on elected not to compete in Saturday in terrible condieither of the last two majors. tions, and wound up tied for In 1953, after once again 28th. Woods had amazingly winning the Masters and
All eyes on Spieth That brings us to Spieth, who now looks forward to the British Open at the Old Course at St. Andrews starting July 16 and the PGA Championship at Whistling Straits in Wisconsin beginning Aug. 13. Can he buck history and actually win the Grand Slam? He is significantly less experienced than the others who won the first two legs. Woods was the youngest, at 26; the others were all over 30. Hogan, Palmer, Nicklaus and Woods had all won majors before. To win the Masters and the U.S. Open at 21 is an eye-opening accomplishment, sure to be celebrated for years on its own. To ask Spieth to go on and win the next two majors is a tall, tall order. But that does not mean that everyone will not be watching to see if he can do it.
Sunday ratings down from 2012 U.S Open THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW YORK — With Tiger Woods missing the cut, the U.S. Open’s TV viewership for the final ________ round was down 30 percent from the last time the tourDave Boling is a sports columnist for The News Tribune. He can nament was on the West be contacted at dave.boling@ Coast. thenewstribune.com. Sunday’s coverage on
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side chance to contend going into the fourth round that year, though he got off to a slow Sunday start and was never a factor on the last day. This was the first Open of Fox’s 12-year contract with the USGA to take over coverage from NBC.
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won all four majors consecutively, from 2000 to 2001; though he was highly lauded for that feat, it was not considered by most to be a true Grand Slam because it did not take place in a single calendar year. A Grand Slam is so difficult that winning all four majors at any time in one’s career is a much heralded accomplishment itself. Five players have done it: Woods, Nicklaus, Hogan, Gary Player and Gene Sarazen.
B4
Fun ’n’ Advice
TUESDAY, JUNE 23, 2015
Dilbert
❘
Mom’s new ‘love’ surprises daughter
by Scott Adams
For Better or For Worse
❘
Classic Doonesbury (1984)
Frank & Ernest
Garfield
❘
❘
DEAR ABBY: My mom turned 60 last month, and I hosted a party at her house for friends and family. As things were winding down, I took a break from cleaning up to look over the birthday cards from well-wishers that were displayed on a living room table. Among them was a big, gorgeous card from “Cassie,” a woman around my mother’s age, who I always thought was nothing more than an acquaintance. As I read the message she had written inside, my jaw dropped. While not pornographic, her message made clear that she and Mom have an intimate physical relationship that has been going on for a while. I have not discussed the card with Mom, but I suspect she knows I saw it. Lately, I have canceled our weekly lunches together. I don’t have anything against gays; I believe they are entitled to a love life just like the rest of us. But in this case, I can’t help but feel betrayed. Mom was married to Dad for 32 years, bore him three children and seemed happy. Was this all a lie? My biggest concern is, if this relationship becomes permanent, how do I explain it to my children — or worse, my brothers, whose views are conservative and some might say bigoted. I can’t help but wonder if Mom left the card out so she could open a can of worms in my lap. How should I approach this? Please help! Dumbfounded Daughter
by Lynn Johnston
❘
by G.B. Trudeau
by Bob and Tom Thaves
❘
by Brian Basset
❘
by Pat Brady and Don Wimmer
ZITS ❘ by Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman
Dennis the Menace
she was afraid you would react as you Van Buren have. If they become a couple and your children ask questions (keep in mind, they may not ask), tell them the truth. As to making any announcements to your bigoted brothers, leave that up to your mother and resist the urge to be the town crier.
Abigail
Dear Abby: I’m only 18. I know I have a lot to learn in life, but I need help. I’m madly in love with a guy who is “bipolar” about our relationship. One day he loves me and the next he doesn’t. Today, he said he needed some time alone because we’ve been together 24/7. I got all mad and started to go crazy. He’s not breaking up with me. I know he needs space, but I can’t bring myself to let him have it. I don’t want to lose him. Please help me figure out a way to stay with him. Got a Good One in Missouri Dear Got a Good One: If you want to keep your boyfriend, let him have his freedom. I know it sounds contradictory, but the harder you try to hang onto him, the more he will want to get away. And by the way, while he’s enjoying his “space,” you should do exactly the same thing he is doing. If you isolate yourself, you will only become depressed, insecure and clingy, none of which are attractive traits.
❘
by Hank Ketcham
________ 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 ❘ ARIES (March 21-April 19): Don’t wait to be told what to do. Step up and take responsibility, and you will stand out from the crowd. Update your appearance and the way you do things. Taking progressive action will bring positive results. 3 stars
Rose is Rose
DEAR ABBY
Dear Daughter: Some people are bisexual, which means they can be attracted to people of both genders. Your mother may have had a very happy marriage, and then she met Cassie. If she is no longer with your father, it is not a “betrayal” of anyone. Call your mother and arrange to get together. Tell her you saw the card. She may not have told you about her relationship with Cassie because
by Jim Davis
Red and Rover
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Pickles
❘
by Brian Crane
by Eugenia Last
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You will get ahead and complete your journey if you set realistic priorities. You can accomplish your goals and have fun if you make the decision to do something you love for a living. 3 stars
have been hiding information or avoiding someone’s questions. A trip that will take you out of proximity to what you are trying to avoid will buy you time, but it won’t solve the problem. 2 stars
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. TAURUS (April 20-May 22): You’ll be fed false information. Someone will try to 20): Learn as you go. Be make you look bad. Stick to willing to admit when you your game plan and don’t make a mistake. Getting along will be half the battle leave room for error. Precision and practicality will when faced with professional dilemmas. Do what- guide you to the front of any ever it takes to improve your challenge you face. 3 stars health and emotional wellLIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. ness. Diet and exercise will 22): Keep your emotions make a difference. 5 stars tucked away where no one can see your vulnerability. GEMINI (May 21-June Speak with authority and 20): Don’t give in to demands from people look- confidence, and you will ing for a handout. Do what- bypass any competitors ever it takes to make posi- looking for a way to outmative changes at home or to neuver you. Don’t share your appearance. What you personal information. Love do to enhance your life will is in the stars. 3 stars lead to a romantic opportuSCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. nity. 2 stars 21): You may think you have CANCER (June 21-July more disposable cash on hand, but saving for a rainy 22): Make a couple of alter- day will ease your stress. ations at home that will add Someone will be all too to your comfort or lower happy to help you make lavyour overhead. Don’t get ish purchases. Don’t try to angry when you can focus buy love. 4 stars on your own success and happiness. Honesty and SAGITTARIUS (Nov. integrity will outshine emo- 22-Dec. 21): An emotional problem will crop up if you tional deception. 4 stars
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): A short business trip, looking into a new product or collaborating with one of your peers will lead to an interesting but unusual opportunity. Don’t feel you have to make a quick decision. A methodical approach will lead to success. 5 stars
The Family Circus
❘
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Check out your options and make a move. Partnerships, home improvements and using your skills to bring in extra cash will add to your security. Romance will brighten your day and improve your life. Avoid emotional spending. 3 stars PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Emotions will be close to the surface, making it difficult for you to keep your feelings a secret. Try not to engage in discussions that will back you into a corner. Offer kindness and undivided attention, not criticism. 3 stars
by Bil and Jeff Keane
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, June 23, 2015 PAGE
B5 SHIPLEY CENTER
HONORS PROGRAM DIRECTOR
New bistro, wine manager at Wind Rose
The Shipley Center’s Development and Program Director Michelle Rhodes, right, is recognized by the Sequim senior center’s executive director, Michael Smith, and the board of directors for her five years of service. Previously, Rhodes served as the trips and program director. Some of Rhodes’ accomplishments include planning programs and classes, and coordinating a schedule of activities.
SEQUIM — Wind Rose Cellars, located at 143 W. Washington St., has a new bistro and wine bar manager, Lauren Holloway. Holloway manages the wine bar, including food inventory, wine and beer, plus managing the staff and workers.
Airlines rake in record profit in baggage, reservation fees BY SCOTT MAYEROWITZ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW YORK — U.S. airlines continue to collect record fees from passengers who check suitcases or make changes to their reservations. In the first three months of this year, airlines took in $1.6 billion in such fees, up 7.4 percent from the same period last year. That’s the highest amount for the first quarter since bag fees started in 2008, according to data from the Bureau of Transportation Statistics.
$ Briefly . . .
January through March is traditionally the slowest period for air travel. The fees climbed, in part, because more passengers flew at the start of the year — 3.2 percent more seats were filled. The airlines also increased some fees and forced more passengers to pay them.
Fees rising While the standard fee for the first checked suitcase remains $25, fees have been going up for the second or third checked bag or
for overweight luggage. And more passengers are now subject to those fees, which can be as high as $200 per bag. For instance, United Airlines recently reduced the number of bags some elite frequent fliers can check for free. And JetBlue Airways announced in November that it will soon start charging for checked baggage for its cheapest fares, although it has to disclose the amount of the fee and when it would apply to passengers. All of these add-on
charges, along with falling jet fuel prices, helped the largest 26 U.S. airlines post a combined $3.1 billion in profits during the first quarter. Their net profit margin reached 8 percent, a significant jump from the 1.3 percent margin the year before. During the past 12 months, the airlines took in $3.6 billion in bag fees and another $3 billion in reservation change fees, typically $200 for domestic tickets and as high as $1,000 for an international itinerary.
Real-time stock quotations at peninsuladailynews.com
Market watch June 22, 2015
Dow Jones industrials
18,119.78
Nasdaq composite
5,153.97
Standard & Poor’s 500
2,122.85
Russell 2000
103.83
36.97 12.86
7.73 1,292.39
NYSE diary
Mortgage banker
Advanced:
1,882
PORT TOWNSEND — New American Funding, a national mortgage banker, has added Lisa Marie Warren to their Port Townsend office. Warren has 25 years of real estate and mortgage lending experience, plus a special interest in assisting first-time home buyers. She joins Branch Manager Emily C. Ingram in providing residential mortgages in Jefferson County. Mortgage lending professionals, area real estate agents and members of the Jefferson County community are invited to New American Funding’s anniversary party July 14 from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. The party will be held at its offices at 1322 Washington St., Suite 20, on the second floor of the post office building. For more information, phone 360-930-6112 or email lisa.m.warren@ nafinc.com.
Declined:
1,273
U.S. home sales WASHINGTON — More Americans bought
Unchanged: Volume:
100 2.9 b
Nasdaq diary Advanced: Declined: Unchanged: Volume:
1,811 989 134 1.6 b
AP
homes in May, a sign of economic strength that is pushing up average prices. The National Association of Realtors said Monday that sales of existing homes climbed 5.1 percent last month to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.35 million. May was the third consecutive month of the sales rate exceeding 5 million homes, putting home-buying on pace for its best year since 2007.
Gold and silver Gold for August delivery fell $9.30, or 0.8 percent, to settle at $1,192.60 an ounce Monday. July silver rose 1.1 cents, or 0.1 percent, to $16.12 an ounce. Peninsula Daily News and The Associated Press
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BOAT HOUSE: 20’x36’ long, P.A. $2,500/as is. 457-6107 or 775-4821 DETAILER / LOT ATTENDANT Full or Part Time. Auto Dealership looking for Detailer / Lot Attendant. Apply in person: 87 Dryke Rd., Sequim.
Employment Opportunities OR Day Super visor, RN RN, Care manager RN, per diem RN, Clinic Physical Therapist Ultrasonographer Cardiac Echosonographer Maintenance Worker Medical Assistant Food Service Worker Housekeeper Social Work Care Mgr. RN Clinical Educator Marketing and Communications Coordinator For details on these and other positions, and to apply online, v i s i t w w w. o l y m p i c medical.org. EOE
ROLL BAR: for compact-sized truck. Very heavy duty (includes supports and gaskets). This might be just what you are looking for! Super nice-looking, glossy black. $250.00. (360)775-6865
WHY PAY SHIPPING ON INTERNET PURCHASES? SHOP LOCAL peninsula dailynews.com
4070 Business Opportunities
WANTED: Vendors for a Summer Craft Fair. For cost and other info please email: moonunit76@gmail.com
3020 Found FOUND: Dog. Male Chihuahua/wiener. Taylor Established 16-year old Mobile Auto Detailing Cutoff Rd. area. Business. Includes trail(360)683-7035 er, all equipment, supF O U N D : P r e s c r i p t i o n plies, full customer list, 2 glasses left in Lincoln w e e k s o f r i d e a l o n g Park. Describe at Lin- t r a i n i n g , a n d 3 0 - d ay phone support. $17,500 coln Park Store. or best reasonable offer. KEYS: Set of keys found Call 360-775-0865 for on 3rd Street between appt to see business. Chambers and Jones. Serious inquiries only. Call 417-5576 to identify. Detailed biz info will given in person only and not over the phone.
3023 Lost
LOST: Cat. Male. short haired dark gray, 6-16 behind Border Patrol offices. (360)808-1627. LOST: Keys. PA area. (360)457-3139.
LONG DISTANCE No Problem! Peninsula Classified 1-800-826-7714
4026 Employment General 2 CHILD CARE ASSISTANTS Oversees children and young adolescents, individually, or in small groups. Part time-Req. 1 year verifiable exper i e n c e i n c h i l d c a r e. Req. High School Diploma / GED Resume to: PBH 818 East 8th Street, Port Angeles, WA 98362 Or http://peninsulabehavioral.org/ EOE
ACCEPTING APPLICAT I O N S fo r C A R R I E R ROUTE Por t Angeles Area. Peninsula Daily News Circulation Dept. Interested parties must be 18 yrs of age, have valid Washington State Driver’s License, proof of insurance, and reliable vehicle. Early morning 4026 Employment delivery Monday-Friday and Sunday. Apply in General person 305 W 1st St, or send resume to Customer Service Rep. tsipe@peninsuladailyF u l l t i m e . S a l a r y news.com. NO PHONE $16.1810 - $19.3180 hr CALLS PLEASE. ($2,805 - $3,348 per month) Competitive CDL Driver needed. benefit package. AFSC- See hartnagels.com for M E L o c a l # 1 6 1 9 . details. Please apply at: www.cityofpa.us. Job HOUSEWORK. $15/hr. closes on July 9th. or more. (360)912-2079.
TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD: CALL: 452-8435 TOLL FREE: 1-800-826-7714 FAX: 417-3507 VISIT: WWW.PENINSULADAILYNEWS.COM OR E-MAIL: 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.
5000900
SALESPERSON WANTED Looking for 2 sales professionals to join our team and take us to the next level. We are growing and need motivated,honest and hardworking individuals. We sell New GM and Hyundai and a full line of preowned vehicles. Are you looking for great p ay, gr e a t h o u r s a n d m o r e i m p o r t a n t l y, a great selling environment? If you are we are your next and last place to work. Positions will fill fast for the right individual, please send your resume’ to: gmcarsandtrucks@gmail.com
FORD: ‘28, Model A. 2 door sedan. $5,500/obo. (360)670-6160
3010 Announcements
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DOWN 1 Glittery rock music genre
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. ALMONDS Solution: 4 letters
B I S C U I T S T R E S S E D By David Poole
2 O’Neill’s daughter 3 Feudin’ with 4 “Sugar and spice” tykes 5 Like some triangles 6 Wall St. debut 7 Stalactite site 8 Diner basketful 9 Altar exchanges 10 Bachelor __ 11 Food court lure 12 Weathercontrolling “XMen” character 13 Country where damask was first made 21 Brunch dish with hollandaise sauce 23 Sport with mallets 26 Visionary 28 Up-and-comers, and what the circled squares contain 29 D-Day carriers 30 IMer’s “Then again ... “ 31 Western writer Grey 32 Fashion
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Biscuits, Blanched, Buds, Cakes, Cereal, Chocolate, Cookies, Crushed, Desserts, Drupe, Edible, Extract, Granola, Ground, Icing, Iron, Manganese, Oils, Paste, Phytochemicals, Powder, Prunus Dulcis, Rosacea, Salad, Sale, Salted, Savory, Seeds, Sell, Shell, Sliced, Slivered, Smash, Smoked, Smoothie, Snack, Spread, Sweet, Taste, Tree, Vitamins, Whole Yesterday’s Answer: Deadheads THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.
CIMMI ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.
DEAGA ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
36 Gold medalist Korbut 37 Poolroom surface 38 Actor Diggs 41 Where Pikes Peak is: Abbr. 44 Lack of difficulty 46 Left hanging 49 Wedding registry category 50 Betweenseasons TV fare
6/23/15
51 Nitrous __ 52 Interior designer’s concern 56 Zero 58 Mt. Rushmore’s state 59 Ocean predator 60 Not e’en once 62 Attach a patch, say 64 Bridal bio word
SWOORR
Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app
ACROSS 1 Wayne Gretzky’s NHL career record 894 6 SALT warhead 10 Gridiron throw 14 Columbo’s asset 15 Law office hiree, briefly 16 Superficially highbrow 17 Singer Baker 18 Finished 19 Way in 20 Mickey of the Yankees 22 O.K. Corral family name 24 CAT scan kin 25 Table supports 27 Threedimensional historical display 29 Throat soothers 33 “Thrilla in Manila” boxer 34 Props and scenery, as a unit 35 Treat leniently, with “on” 39 Nobelist Morrison 40 Utah’s __ Canyon 42 Intestinal sections 43 Actress North 45 With affection 47 System of connected PCs 48 Stretch out 49 Waded to the other side of 53 Hooting hunters 54 Put a spell on 55 Perfect place 57 Suppresses, as bad news 61 Flower painted by van Gogh 63 Desktop image 65 Niño’s mother 66 Art class subject 67 Roadwork marker 68 Shore up 69 From square one 70 Arborist’s study 71 Heroic Schindler
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
TERPYO Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
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Yesterday’s
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(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: DECAY BRISK STRAND WANTED Answer: The Internet site that sold discount wedding gowns had a — WEB AD-DRESS
4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4040 Employment 4080 Employment 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale General General General General General Media Wanted Clallam County Clallam County CO-OCCURRING DISORDERS PROGRAM Join our team of professionals providing quality services to residents of our community. Both positions FT/benefits. Program Coordinator: Licensed Mental Health or Social Worker ; meets WAC 246811-049 requirements. Chemical Dependency Professional: Licensed CDP; behavioral health or related degree plus 2 years experience. Resume and cover letter to: PBH, 118 E. 8th Street, Port Angeles, WA 98362EOE http://peninsulabehavioral.org COOK: PT cook to join our team at Suncrest Village! Apply online at www.gres.com under the Careers link.
NEW CAREER? If you are looking for a challenging and rewarding new career, we are in need of a highly self-motivated, goal driven, honest, dependable, professional sales person. We offer a great compensaLandscaper Needed tion plan, with 401K, Port Townsend medical, dental, and (360)672-2830 training. Send resume to: sales@priceford.com LOCAL LAND SUR- o r c o n t a c t M a r k V E Y I N G F I R M h a s (360)457-3333. opening for experienced Auto Cad Tech. Survey e x p e r i e n c e a p l u s . Nor thwest Eye SurPlease send resume to: geons has an immediP.O. 2199 Sequim, WA ate temporary need for a par t-time Surgical 98382 Te c h n o l o g i s t i n o u r Sequim location. MAINTENANCE Seeking a trained MANAGER: For retirement commu- technician who assists nity. Looking for a skilled the physician and regand motivated individual istered nurse in rento take charge. Able to d e r i n g p r o fe s s i o n a l t a ke c a r e o f bu i l d i n g care to patients under(plumbing, electrical and going surgical proceH VA C ) , r e s i d e n t r e - d u r e s . S e e k i n g a q u e s t s, m a n a g e p r o - graduate of accredited jects, apt. turns, knowl- program for surgical edge of state regulations technology or central and inspections and just processing with a curplain fix stuff. Benefits rent Washington Surand meals included. Ap- g i c a l Te c h n o l o g i s t ply in person. Park View Registration and CPR certification. Villas, 8th and G St. P.A. HIRING ALL POSITIONS: Smugglers L a n d i n g R e s t a u ra n t Lounge is hiring for all positions. Bar tender, Cooks, Dishwashers Servers. Must be 21.
DENTAL HYGIENIST 8-5 p.m., Tue. and Wed., d ay s a r e n e g o t i a bl e . Please contact 360-4379392 ask for Beth or MEDICAL ASSISTANT email resume to: Seeking full time medical pldentistry@gmail.com assistant, certified or WA state registered eligible. DETAILER / LOT Benefits. Exp. preferred. ATTENDANT Full or Part Time. Auto Send resume to 1112 Dealership looking for Caroline St., Por t AnDetailer / Lot Attendant. geles, WA 98362 Apply in person: MEDICAL OFFICE 87 Dryke Rd., Sequim. Nor th Olympic HealthEDUCATOR: Parents as care Network has openTeachers educator, full- ings for the following potime. See firststepfami- sitions: ly.org for details. 2 full time positions for Medical AssistantsWa s h i n g t o n S t a t e l i cense required. Full time Billing Manager Position- experience in clinical billing and personnel required. Employment Opportunities OR Day Super visor, RN RN, Care manager RN, per diem RN, Clinic Physical Therapist Ultrasonographer Cardiac Echosonographer Maintenance Worker Medical Assistant Food Service Worker Housekeeper Social Work Care Mgr. RN Clinical Educator Marketing and Communications Coordinator For details on these and other positions, and to apply online, v i s i t w w w. o l y m p i c medical.org. EOE
1 Full time position for an Accounting Cler kQuickbooks and excel experience required. Wa g e s D O E . P l e a s e submit resume and references to: Peninsula Daily News PDN # 408/Healthcare Port Angeles, WA 98362
Needs a Handyman! (360)461-1843
SALESPERSON WANTED Looking for 2 sales professionals to join our team and take us to the next level. We are growing and need motivated,honest and hardworking individuals. We sell New GM and Hyundai and a full line of preowned vehicles. Are you looking for great p ay, gr e a t h o u r s a n d m o r e i m p o r t a n t l y, a great selling environment? If you are we are your next and last place to work. Positions will fill fast for the right individual, p l e a s e s e n d yo u r r e sume’ to: gmcarsandtrucks@gmail.com
Summer Camp Counselors needed for meaningful work. No exPARATRANSIT DRIVER: Applications now perience required. Call: 360 689 7544 being accepted for PARATRANSIT DRIVER (Port Angeles Base) with Support Staff Clallam Transit System. To wor k with adults 40-hour work week not w i t h d eve l o p m e n t a l guaranteed. $10.62 per disabilities, no experihour AFTER COMPLE- ence necessary, $10 T I O N O F T R A I N I N G ; hr. Apply in person at $16.87 top wage. Excel- 1020 Caroline St. M-F lent benefits. Job de- 8-4 p.m. scription and application available at CTS Admin- T E M P O R A RY PA R A istration Office, 830 W. TRANSIT DRIVER: ApLaur idsen Blvd., Por t plications now being acA n g e l e s , WA 9 8 3 6 3 . cepted for TEMPORARY 360-452-1315, or online PARATRANSIT DRIVER a t w w w. c l a l l a m t r a n - (Port Angeles Base) with sit.com. A number of eli- Clallam Transit System. gible candidates may be A temporary Employee retained on a next hire is hired on a continuous list for the Port Angeles basis to work 867 hours b a s e fo r s i x m o n t h s. o r l e s s p e r c a l e n d a r APPLICATIONS MUST year, and is expected to BE RECEIVED NO LAT- work less than 70 hours E R T H A N 4 : 0 0 p. m . , per month. Temporar y June 26, 2015. EEO/AA Employees are not eliRN: Per diem. Immedi- gible for benefits other ate opening. Willing to than those required by train someone with a statute (e.g., coverage s o l i d n u r s i n g b a c k - under a workers’ comground. Sequim Same pensation plan). $12.65 per hour after compleDay Surgery. tion of training. Job de(360)582-2907 scription and application T h e Q u i l c e n e S c h o o l available at CTS AdminDistrict is accepting ap- istration Office, 830 W. plications for the follow- Laur idsen Blvd., Por t ing positions: Adminis- A n g e l e s , WA 9 8 3 6 3 . t r a t i v e S e c r e t a r y . 360-452-1315, or online C e r t i f i c a t e d p o s i t i o n : a t w w w. c l a l l a m t r a n K-12 Special Education sit.com. A number of eliR e s o u r c e S p e c i a l i s t . gible candidates may be Call 360.765.3363 for retained on a next hire application materials or list for the Port Angeles download from website b a s e fo r s i x m o n t h s. w w w. q u i l c e n e . w e d - POSITION IS OPEN UNTIL FILLED. EEO/AA net.edu. EOE
Peninsula Classified 360-452-8435
www.peninsula dailynews.com
The Lost Resort At Lake Ozette Deli/clerk/cashier $12.50 per hour, plus tips, housing available. (360)963-2899.
LIFESTYLES EDITOR The Daily World at Aberd e e n , Wa s h . , h a s a n opening for a Lifestyles editor. We are looking for someone who has an eye for design and a WANTED: Little old lady knack for finding the sto(?) to weed flower beds, ries and trends that shed light work flexible sched- light on what life is like in ule, reoccurring, hourly. our community. The sec(360)452-3455 tion also includes ar ts and entertainment news. The ideal candidate will Watchman/Security The Por t of Por t An- have a bright, lively writgeles is seeking indi- ing style, a talent for soviduals interested in a cial media and be skilled par t-time, relief se- in InDesign. Magazine curity position. Any- experience would also o n e i n t e r e s t e d m ay be a plus. Aberdeen is pick up an application o n t h e W a s h i n g t o n and job description at Coast, an hour from the the Port Admin Office, Olympic Rain Forest and 338 West First Street, two hours from Seattle. Por t Angeles, WA or This is a full-time posionline at www.portof- tion. Benefits include, pa.com. Applications but are not limited to, a c c e p t e d t h r o u g h paid vacation, medical, W e d n e s d a y, J u n e vision, dental and life in2 6 t h . T h e s t a r t i n g surance and a 401(K) wage for this position p l a n w i t h a c o m p a ny is $13.44 per hour or match. Send a cover letDOE. Drug testing is ter, resume and writing and design samples to: required. hr@soundpublishing.com To learn more about us, please visit us on the web at www.soundpublishing.com. The Daily World is an equal opportunity employer.
4080 Employment Wanted Where Your Safety Comes First! Now Hiring Multiple Positions M i l lw r i g h t s , E l e c t r i cians, Sawmill, Planer, Engineers.
AAA Lawn Service Mowing, pressure washing, edging, purning and and handyman. (360)460-6647
All your lawn care needs. Mowing, edging, For Entry Level: (No pruning, hauling. Reae x p e r i e n c e n e e d e d sonable rates. mu s t b e a t l e a s t 1 8 (360)683-7702 years old). Competitive Wag e s , M e d i c a l a n d D e n t a l I n s u r a n c e , Alterations and Sew401K/Retirement, and ing. Alterations, mendPaid Vacation. Wash- i n g , h e m m i n g a n d ington: Randle, Mor- s o m e h e a v y w e i g h t ton, and Darrington. s ew i n g ava i l a bl e t o Oregon: Willamina, Til- y o u f r o m m e . C a l l lamook and Warrenton (360)531-2353 ask for B.B. Apply online www.hampton A Plus Lawn Service affiliates.com Hedge, shrub trimming, thatching, many referEntry Level—apply in ences, professional Reperson at the Mill. sults. Here today here tomorrow. Senior DisHampton is a drug free counts. P.A. only. Local workplace. All quali- call (360) 808-2146 fied applicants will receive consideration for CAREGIVER: Good loemployment without cal references. Available regard to race, color, mor nings in PA area. religion, sex, national (360)797-1247 origin, protected veteran status or disability. O l y Pe t s I n - H o m e Pe t Care provides pet & PLACE YOUR home sitting while you’re AD ONLINE away. Call for your comWith our new plimentary “Meet ‘n Classified Wizard Greet” 360-565-5251. you can see your V i s i t u s a t w w w. O l y ad before it prints! Pets.com. Our ser vice www.peninsula area is Port Angeles ondailynews.com ly.
Mowing Lawns, lots and fields. Trimming, pruning of shrubs and trees. Landscape maintenance, pressure washing, light hauling and more. FREE QU OT E S. To m 3 6 0 460-7766. License: bizybbl868ma Young Couple Early 60’s available for seasonal cleanup, weeding, trimming, mulching & moss removal. We specialize in complete garden restorations. Excellent references. 457-1213
105 Homes for Sale Clallam County 245 W. Maple St. Sweet, completely remodeled home in the heart of Sequim. Totally move-in ready with newer appliances, windows, flooring and much more. Enjoy your patio and a large backyard with Olympic Mountain views. The proper ty is completely fenced as well, and within easy walking distance to shopping, restaurants and everything downtown Sequim has to offer. MLS#291085/797437 $149,900 MaryAnn Miller (360)774-6900 TOWN & COUNTRY Affordable and Available Great first time home buyer package or investment. 3 br., 2 ba., home with recent updates: fresh paint, new flooring, roof serviced. South facing all-1-level structure with fenced front yard, sunny living room, wood burning fireplace. Separate utility room with good storage and easy access to the backyard. 2-car attached garage and carport. MLS#291117 $136,900 Ania Pendergrass 360-461-3973 Remax Evergreen ESTATE PROPERTY OPEN HOUSE Saturday and Sunday, June 27-28, 12 noon 5 p.m. 62 Cricket Lane Seq. 1.25+ acres, fully landscaped, Very private, mountain view, 2 BR, 2 bath, open floor plan with unfinished guest or mother-in-law quarters. Buyers’ reps welcome. $239,000.
Affordable Open room concept with we l l - l a i d o u t k i t c h e n . Lots of sunny Southern exposure. Nicely lands c a p e d , fe n c e d ya r d w/deck in backyard. Fruit trees and berries. Many improvements made to home over past 5 years. MLS#291018/792589 $189,720 Heidi Hansen Windermere Real Estate Sequim East (360)477-5322
Great Choice for Dad! Nicely kept and maintained 2 br condo in S h e r wo o d V i l l a g e fo r 55+, close to all services. Master bedroom has walk-in closet and bath w i t h w a l k - i n s h o w e r. Laminate wood floors, fireplace. Fenced patio. MLS#290304/749383 $190,000 Chuck Murphy Windermere Real Estate Sequim East (360)808-0873
Care free living! This 3 br., 2 ba., Townhome is located in the Fair Weather subdivision which includes professionally manicured front lawns, open space areas, sidewalks and exterior maintenance included with the monthly HOA dues of only $120. Open floor plan with 9’ ceilings, living room with propane fireplace and wide white m i l l wo r k , d i n i n g r o o m with sliding glass door to patio and kitchen with island and cherry cabinets, master suite with walk in shower. Attached garage and fully fenced in back yard. MLS#291222 $222,000 Kelly Johnson (360)477-5876 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES
KING OF THE WORLD VIEWS! T h i s ra r e wa t e r v i ew home in heart of the City has open concept living with wonderful kitchen, and living room with deck access to enjoy the views! Master suite with spectacular views. 3 br., 2.5 ba., plus office area MLS#291194 $279,000 Kathy Love 452-3333 PORT ANGELES REALTY
FSBO: Sunland - Sequim. 3Br. 2 ba. Built in 1987. 2032 sq. ft. with attached 552 sq. ft. 2 car garage. Solar heat 7KW - 7000 watt, installed 6/14, cedar siding, paver entryway, brick fireplace, walk in pantr y, utility room, 6 sky lights, formal dining room, den, large kitchen, 27’ Ushaped granite counter top, tile floor, Bleimeister cabinets, both bathrooms granite counter tops, tile floors, one has walk in shower. Sunland amenities, and more. $325,000. By appt., only. (360)683-7380 Move in ready Cute and clean 1930’s bungalow located in Pine Hill. Original character of the home was retained both inside (lath and p l a s t e r, a r c h e d d o o r ways, lights, glass door knobs) and out (stucco).Recent make over includes new paint inside and out, new roof, new floor cover ings, new bathroom fixtures, new windows, kitchen update and more. Standard city lot with fruit trees and detached garage. MLS#291185 $162,500 Quint Boe (360)457-0456 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES
LAKE SUTHERLAND BEAUTY 90’ of lake frontage complete with private dock and boat house. Northwest contemporary home with large decks perfect for entertaining. 2 br., 1.5 ba., a lovely master suite with skylights and great views of the lake. Large detached double car garage with shop. MLS#291219 $399,500 Chuck Turner 452-3333 PORT ANGELES REALTY
LARGE, FENCED BACKYARD with patio and 3 fruit trees, comes with this 2 br., 2 ba., c o n d o, c o nve n i e n t t o t ow n ! L a r g e c o m m o n area with cherry trees. Can’t beat the home, for the price! Come see TOM! MLS#290572 $125,000 Tom Blore 360-683-7814 PETER BLACK REAL ESTATE
LOT and TRAILER: 75’ x 140’ fenced corner lot. Gales Addition. 2 br., 1 ba., 12’ x 60’ mobile trailer with appliances and unfinished cabin on lot. S e p t i c s y s t e m 5 y r. $37,500. (254)421-0184.
Sunland Home Very nice Sunland home priced to sell on cozy cul de sac. Home has Corian counters, new roof, fireplace, paint and a low maintenance yard. MLS#291109 $227,000 Andrea Gilles (360)683-3564 PROFESSIONAL REAL ESTATE
Classified
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
AMMUNITION: 22 long rifle, 1000 rounds. $150. (360)460-2260
BINOCULARS: Bauschand Lomb binoculars, center focus 7x35. $200. (360)681-2198
ANTIQUE CHINA: Hutchenreuther Gelb. B O A T I N G T U B E : Towable, big slice airLarge set. $200./obo head, good condition. (360)417-0646 $60. (360)640-1978 ART: Dale Faulstich early litho with S’Klallam Tri- BOATS: (3) boats need to go, with trailers and tibal Symbol s/n. $100. tles. $200. (360)461-7365 (360)461-6263 ART: Framed “Friends of the Field”, s/n and 1st BOAT TRAILER: ‘67 for “ C r a b f e s t ” c a r t o o n . a 1 2 ’ b o a t , l i ke n ew. $150. (360)912-1783. $200. for both. 681-2968 BA R S TO O L S : L i g h t BOBBLEHEAD: Ken oak, swivel, high back. Griffey Jr., ‘13 Mariners Hall of Fame, new. $50. $100. for both. 670-3310 (360)457-5790 BASEBALL: Collection some are autographed. BOBBLEHEAD: Lou Pi$100.obo (360)775-6469 niella ‘14 Mariners Hall of Fame, new. $20. (360)457-5790 BELT SANDER: 6” wide with 9” circular disc, on a BOOKS: Harry Potter, stand, 110 volts. $175. #1-7 set, Hardcover. (360)681-5220 $69. (360)775-0855 BENCH: Bedroom, bench, floral cushion, BOOTS: Shiny toe dress brass legs, 48” X 18” X boot. New. Size 8 1/2. $40. (360)504-2160 20”. $59. 775-0855
TUESDAY, JUNE 23, 2015 B7
C A R BU R E TO R : Fo u r DRESSER: Antique mabarrel carburetor, un- hogany, 10 drawers and u s e d , fa c t o r y r e bu i l t . mirror. $200. 457-6170 $200. (360)928-0133 ENGINE: Gas, Br iggs CHAIR: Bentwood arm and Stratton, 5 HP. $75. chair, black with padded (360)681-2978 seat, unique. $30. (360)457-6431 FIREPLACE SCREEN: painted wood with coloCOFFEE TABLE: Gold- nial scene. $65. en wood 50x30. $40.obo (360)681-7579 (360)797-1179 FREE: VHS tapes, moCOLOR PRINTER: HP vies and shows recorded Photosmart #8150 with from TV. (360)681-2535 power, supply, cables, $40. (360)928-0164 F U TO N : M i xe d e a r t h colors, Approx 72” long, COMPOST TUMBLER: needs base. $25. 18 bushel compost tum(360)683-2386 bler with stand. $200. (360)797-4615 FUTON: Oak, ready to CRAB POT: Approx 2 ft. $20. (360)452-8760 DESK: Antique leather top desk. $30. 461-0940 DINNERWARE: for 9, Rose pattern, gold trim, many ser ving pieces. $95. (360)582-1042
DISC SANDER: 12”, on BENCH: Charming log BOWFLEX ULTIMATE: stand, 110 volts. $150. (360)681-5220 In great shape. $200. bench, must see! $150. (360)452-5832 (360)504-2112 DOG EXERCISE PEN: BENCH MASTER: End BOWL BLANKS: Myrtle 36” high, portable. $50. (360)683-0146 wood, ready to turn, 12 mill, with lots of bits, etc. inch diameter. $50 each. $200 obo. 460-9252 DOOR: Antique swing(360)385-9986 ing wood door with glass BIKE: Ladies 24” Huffy CAMERA: Digital, Fuji panels, unique, nice! bicycle with basket. $80. S2800 HD, 14mp, 18x $60. (360)452-8264 (360)681-5128 wide 28mm optical D R E S S E R : 3 d r aw e r BIKE: Men’s 7 speed ur- zoom. $75. 681-2535 dresser, tall. $80. ban bicycle, like new, (360)670-2946 great for Olympic Trail. CHIPPER: MTD 10hp, just serviced, needs $150. (360)808-2408 FREE: Washer/Dr yer, carb. $100. 460-6979 BIKE: Men’s bike, 18 CHAIR: Vintage, wood, works. (360)681-4135 spd Peugot Glacier, Shi- needs upholster y, set FILE CABINET: 4 drawmano gears, well main- and back. $15. er, letter size, metal. tained. $75. 681-4916 $10. (360)683-7380 (360)683-7994
KILN:Combustible, volts MISC: Ab twist exercise 2 2 0 , a m p s 2 1 , wa t t s chair, new. $25. (360)385-3659 5000, phase I, max temp 2100. $175. 457-5263 MISC: Chipper/shredder, 5hp MTD. $75. WinLAMPS: (2) large, dow, rustic, wood frame, brass. pull chain, white 4 panes. $25. 683-3806 shades. $50.ea. (360)631-9211 MISC: Leather motorcycle jacket (med), pants LASER: CrimsonTrace size 34 womens. $40 ea laser for Glock 26 and (360)460-2769 others. $150. 460-7628 MISC: Leather motorcyL A S E R : G u n l a s e r , cle saddlebags. $50. clamps on rail. $40. (360)460-2769 (360)460-2260 M I S C : S aw b a r a n d LAWN MOWER: Elec- chain, new oregon 32” tric, 18” Black & Decker, 3/8 pitch skip tooth chise bit. $85. (360)640-0556 seldom used. $100. (360)681-2747 MISC: Screen, 4 panels, stain or not, pull out douMANIFOLD: Edelbrock 40”x21”. $70. Window, ble bed. $200. 928-3371 S t r e e t m a s t e r 3 5 1 W antique, 4 paned, wood frame. $30. 683-3806 G L A S S B L O C K S : 4bbl. intake, used. $60. (360)797-1106 (32) 7.75” X 7.75” X 4” MODEL AIRPLANE: blocks. $2 each Thunderbolt P-470 hawk M A S S A G E T A B L E : comp 1964. $35.obo. (360)681-2978 Message table. $200. (360)452-6842 (360)461-0940 GRILL: Vision grill, green egg style. $200. Motorcycle Draggin (360)683-4514 MATTRESS: Full size. Jeans, Kevlar lined, 42 x Pillow top. Cream floral. 30, excellent condition. H I D E - A - B E D : G o o d Exel. cond. $100.obo $45.00 (360)-681-2800 condition. $120. (360)797-1179 (360)640-0111 NYLON BUCKLES (New),Black - For ¾” MATTRESS TOPPER: H I T C H : R e e s e 5 t h K i n g s i ze 2 ” m e m o r y Webbing,350 Mated Pair wheel trailer hitch. $25. foam with cover, clean. $150. (360)928-0164. (360)385-3659 $25. (360)912-1990 OFFICE DESK: Oak 32” H O L D I N G T A N K : MICROWAVE: Sharp II x 64”, 2 drawers $40. (360)912-1990 Portable RV 15 gal, 10” Carousel, white, excelwheels, tow hitch. Cost lent condition. $40. PA L L E T: C o r d w o o d $115. $45/firm 683-1438 (360)477-1513 p a l l e t , c u s t o m m a d e, 11x25, excellent condiJACKET: Black and red MISC: (3) fishing reels, tion. $80. (360)452-8264 suede Dale Earnhardt $15 ea. (1) fishing reel, Jr. #8 jacket. $50. $20. (2) steering wheel RECLINERS: Black imi(360)797-1106 locks. $15. 582-9683 tation leather, newer. JUICER: Jack La Lane’s MISC: Blue canopy and $65. (360)631-9211 Po w e r J u i c e r. U s e d l a d d e r ra ck fo r s m a l l R A I N BA R R E L S : ( 2 ) once. $35.00 t r u ck . $ 1 5 0 . e a c h o r with spigots. $15. each. (360)681-2800 trade. (360)461-4189 (360)681-5217
E E F R E E A D S R F Monday and Tuesdays S
PANTS: Black leather S I G M A : 7 0 - 3 0 0 m m TRUCK BUMPER: 62.5 Harley Davidson, wom- zoom lens fits Nikon with inches long with hitch. e n s M e d i u m . $ 4 9 . o r caps & hood, $85. $15. (360)683-5557 trade. (360)461-4189 (360)477-4776 TRUNK: Black with metPATIO SET: 2 chairs, SPEAKERS: (2) Fisher, al trim, 24” X 21” X 36”, love seat, glass top ta- 10” X 6.5” X 20”. $25 for vintage. $45. 683-7994 ble, nice cushions. $95. both. (360)683-7380 (360)681-7579 S P E A K E R S : “ Te c h - T V S TA N D : I k e a , 2 PATIO SET: Cedar, (4) n i c s ” . 2 0 0 w a t t s e t . large storage drawers, pieces, smoked glass ta- $100. Other sets $5 to 36x26x21. $10. (360)457-6431 ble, benches, like new. $20 each. 452-9685 $185. (360)670-3310 S T O V E : Ve r y l a r g e TV STAND: solid wood, RECLINER: Overstuffed $200. obo. 640-0111 dark finish. $60. rocker-recliner, choco(360)670-2946 TA B L E : A n t i q u e m a late brown. $60. hogany with (6) chairs (360)452-9078 TYPEWRITER TAPES: and leaves. $200. For Oliveti Panason, silROCKING CHAIR: An(360)457-6170 ver reed, 3 ea. $30 obo. tique, padded seat, spin(360)379-4134 dle back, wood ar ms. TA B L E S : ( 2 ) s m a l l round night stands or $75. (360)504-2112 end tables. $30.ea or VINTAGE PROGRAM: 1 9 6 9 S e a fa r e hy d r o ROTOTILLER: Crafts- $50 for both. 457-1389 plane race. $25. man 5HP rear tine roto(360)452-6842 tiller, good condition. TABLES: (3) Antique $50. 1940’s dining, $50. $165. (360)928-9764 Oak coffee table, $20. WALKER: With seat and S A LT a n d P E P P E R : (360)452-9685 brakes. $45. Set, “Muggsy,” 51/2”, by (360)683-6097 TENT: 3-person tent, Shawnee. $40. never used, new in box. WATER SKI: Connelly (360)683-9295 $55. (360)477-1513 solo water ski with covSARC CARD: Senior 20 er, like new, 64”. $60. TILE SAW: MK 470 wet visit card. $80. (360)670-6230 tile saw. $175 obo. (360)681-5128 (360)460-9252 WAT E R S K I : O ’ B r i e n SAW: 7 inch chop saw. TOILET: 3 piece, bed- solo water ski with cov$25.obo (360)683-2529 side toilet, never used. er, like new, 63”. $60. (360)670-6230 SEAT: Rear seat for 90 $50. (360)452-8760 D o d g e f u l l s i z e va n , TOOL BOX: Construcnice. $50. 460-6979 WIG: Long dark blonde tion size, 20” t x 17” d x wig, wor n once, paid S E W I N G M A C H I N E : 36” w.$100. $200. asking $35. Kenmore 385-17881 zig(360)683-9295 (360)681-2747 zag, excellent condition. TREADMILL: Reebok $50. (360)385-9986 RBX 500 Runs great! WINDOW: White vinyl 4’x4’ slider, two pane arSHELVES: (2) Cor ner Lots of features! $200. gon. $40. 640-0556 shelves. $20-$25.each (360)640-1656 (360)681-5217 TREES: in pots, (2) oaks WOODSTOVE: RedishSHIPS CHAIN: Large, $10. ea. Fir, hemlock, b r ow n , n ew s e a l a n d great for yard decora- cedar, hawthorne $5.ea. brick, good cond. Will deliver. $200. 461-6263 tions. $50. 457-1185 ready to plant. 928-3371
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105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 505 Rental Houses Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County
605 Apartments Clallam County
New listing! Delightful Sunland Condo with a saltwater view. Cozy contemporary 3br 3ba home with vaulted ceilings, brick fireplace, skylights, laminate wood flooring, heat pump assisted furnace for efficient heating and cooling, large covered balcony for relaxing and enjoying the views. Downstairs you’ll find a nice living area with its ow n p a t i o, f i r e p l a c e, bedroom and bath. New tasteful paint and upgrades throughout unit. Enjoy the pool, tennis cour ts, beach, clubhouse, 18 hole golf course and friendly Sunland lifestyle. MLS#291179 $239,000 Ed Sumpter Blue Sky Real Estate Sequim 360-683-3900
CENTRAL P.A.: 2 Br., 1 ba, close to Safeway, no smoking/pets. $550 mo. (360)460-5892
HOUSES/APT IN SEQUIM
A 2/2 GOLF COURSE $825/M COMPLETE LIST @
1111 Caroline St. Port Angeles Properties by
Inc.
RENTALS AVAILABLE COMMERCIAL HOMES APARTMENTS
452-1326
PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM
1163 Commercial Rentals Properties by
Inc.
RENTALS AVAILABLE COMMERCIAL HOMES APARTMENTS
452-1326
OFFICE FOR RENT O f f i c e i n d ow n t ow n Sequim Gazette building for sub-lease. 448-sq-foot, 2nd floor office for $500 a month. Perfect for accountant or other professional. Shared downstairs conference room, restroom. Contact John Brewer, publisher, (360)417-3500. OFFICE SPACE: $650 per month, 403 Kemp St. off of Mt. Pleasant. (360)457-8622
Inc.
RENTALS AVAILABLE COMMERCIAL HOMES APARTMENTS
452-1326
6025 Building Materials
6100 Misc. Merchandise
6100 Misc. Merchandise
6100 Misc. Merchandise
6100 Misc. Merchandise
TRACTOR: NEW HOLLAND TRACTOR. 2008 4WD New Holland diesel tractor with front end loader. Model T1110. Top condition, 28 hp, used only 124 hours. Easy operation, hydraulic transmission. Lots of power in a compact size. $12,000. (360)683-0745 jeffaok@hotmail.com
6050 Firearms & Ammunition GUNS: Springfield XDS 45 Cal.-3.3 with l a s e r, $ 5 0 0 . R u g e r GP100, Stainless 357 4in. with laser, $600. (360)504-3110 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: $170 full cord. (360)461-5687 FIREWOOD: $179 delivered Sequim-P.A. True cord. 3 cord special $499. Gilbert, 808-3293 or (360)452-4675 (mess) montesbg@hotmail.com or www.portangelesfire wood.com
6080 Home Furnishings
MISC: New white twin PA L O A LTO , S E Q : 1 O F F I C E S PAC E : 7 t h bed. $100, with all new B r. c a b i n , W / D, wo o d and Peabody St., $450 bedding $125. Antique and $850. 683-3300 stove. $700. 477-9678. child’s Oak three drawer desk. $125. Large anTOWNHOUSE: 1,400 sf. 2 br, 1.5 ba. $850 plus 6005 Antiques & tique picture. $125. Kenmore washer runs, Collectibles deposit, no pets. great. $125. Ber nina (360)457-6181 L L A D RO : C o l l e c t o r s. Serger Sewing Machine, assorted peices. All w o r k s g r e a t . $ 1 2 5 . 605 Apartments 7pc. s e r i a l n u m b e r s . N ew (360)460-8045. Clallam County from $100-1,000. (360)460-1804 6100 Misc. Properties by
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Merchandise
MISC: Frigidaire warming oven, stainless, TIMBER BEAMS: As- $400. Wine fridge, $100. sorted large. $2,700 for metal file cabinets, $25. Lg. black upholstered the lot. (360)808-4692 chair, $100. Johnson ruffler sewing machine, like 6045 Farm Fencing n ew, $ 1 0 0 . 1 0 s p e e d bike, $60. & Equipment (360)461-4898 FENCE RAILS: Clear old growth Cedar, 81 MISC: Hoyer lift, $450. rails at $12. each. 11’ Hospital bed, $400. Or long (plus or minus 4”) both $800. Will deliver. full sale only, cash only, (360)796-4891 or (452)354-7878 Sequim. (360)683-3212.
All you need to cash in on this opportunity are a garage sale kit from the Peninsula Daily News and a garage sale ad in classified.
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7513324
Newer Solana Model Home N ew e r S o l a n a M o d e l Home decorated to the nines. Home has granite counters, hardwood, built-ins and a cozy propane fireplace. For the gourmet cook a propane stove and hobbiest a separate place in the two car garage. MLS#282254 $339,000 WATER VIEWS Andrea Gilles From this updated 4 br., (360)683-3564 3 ba., centrally located PROFESSIONAL REAL home. Nicely landscaped ESTATE front and back yard. Wood floors throughout One of a Kind Property main level and cozy 4 br., 4 ba., home (once woodstove. Back yard is a B&B) has 3 suites, fenced with patio area granite countertops, enand plenty of room to tertaining deck overlookpark RV. Attached 1 car ing 2.33 park-like acres garage. with pond and gazebo, MLS#290866 $222,900 huge shop and outbuildJennifer Felton ings. Solar panels and (360)477-5876 generator. Irrigation waWINDERMERE ter. A must see. PORT ANGELES MLS#290308/749482 $449,500 Heidi Hansen 308 For Sale Windermere Lots & Acreage Real Estate Sequim East 5 acres, parked out to (360)477-5322 view go to: www.youtube.com/watch?v=gNBOPEN HOUSE 099awR5g. $84,500. Beautiful 3 br., 2 ba., (360)204-4572 1,906 sf.,. In Sunland L a r g e l i v i n g , d i n i n g , ACRES: 2 1/3 acres, bekitchen and sun room tween P.A. and Sequim. b r e a k fa s t b a r, f r e n c h M o u n t a i n v i ew, w e l l , doors to spacious deck, utilities. $120,000. vaulted ceilings, propane (360)457-4756 fireplace amenities: pool, beach access and caba505 Rental Houses na, tennis . MLS#290561/766083 Clallam County $284,500 Tyler Conkle P.A.: 2 Br. 1 bath, car(360)670-5978 por t, no smoking, no WINDERMERE pets. $750.+ dep. SUNLAND (360)457-7012.
683 Rooms to Rent Roomshares ROOM: Own bath, kitche n p r i ve l g e s, g a r a g e space available. $300 plus deposit. West PA. (360)452-4179
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
PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM
Seamount Estates Lovely 2,648 sf., home with brand new roof, 3 br and 2.5 ba. Large, bright kitchen with breakfast bar and beautiful granite counters. Grand stairway, gorgeous fireplace mantle, adn formal dining off living room accentuate the class of this home. Southern exposure, fenced back yard with patio. 2012 W 7th, PA. Call Brooke for an easy showing MLS#290779 $274,900 Brooke Nelson UPTOWN REALTY (360) 417-2812
HOUSES/APT IN PORT ANGELES
561329064
MOVE IN READY! 3 br., 2 ba., 1,400 Sf., 5 5 + C o n d o, C o r i a n counters, breakfast bar and dining room, fenced back yard, deck, patio, raised garden beds, 2 car garage with lots of storage space, must be owner occupied. MLS#291154/800481 $219,000 Deb Kahle (360)918-3199 WINDERMERE SUNLAND
417-2810
PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM
Lovely home set on 3 sunny acres. Huge trees with area cleared too. 3 br., 2 ba., updates, newer roof, septic, propane fireplace, open living area, skylight, office area. Shop, large deck, huge garage area. 24X24 bar n. Beautiful area. $255,000. (360)461-3980
(360)
6045 Farm Fencing & Equipment
or FA X to: (360)417-3507 Email: classified@peninsuladailynews.com
5A246724
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Larry Muckley
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS 6100 Misc. Merchandise M I S C : Ja z z y e l e c t r i c wheelchair. New batteries, $875 obo. (360)417-9522 Oak kitchen Cabinets, $1,800/obo. Ceramic top range. $190. Dishwasher. $50. Micro/hood fan. $125. Prefinished trim. $150. Available mid July. (360)461-2241
6105 Musical Instruments PIANO TUNING and repair, Gary Freel Piano Service. (360)775-5480
6115 Sporting Goods GOLF CART: Kangaroo, golf motor caddy, Hillcrest ABX, with remote and extras, great condition. $800. (new $2,300). (360)461-3331
6125 Tools MISC: Generator, Generac 3500 XL, used once. $300. A-Frame drag saw with 2 blades, and National Coil Co., buzz coil, usable. $350. 683-5614 or (253) 208-9640.
6140 Wanted & Trades WANTED: China Painte r s. I ’ m h e r e fo r t h e summer, and would like to have a painter(s) partner. (360)457-1185.
8183 Garage Sales 9820 Motorhomes PA - East M O V I N G E S TAT E SALE: Sat. 9-3 p.m., 713 E. 7th Street. Antique china cabinet, lamp, dishes; power wa s h e r ; c h a i n s aw ; small log splitter; motor scooter; dining room table; loveseat/sofa; cedar chest; 9X13 rug; lawn furniture; bar stools; microwave; tent; spor ting goods; books; odds ends; glass top coffee table; rain barrels; art. No early birds please. M O V I N G E S TAT E SALE: Sat. June 27th. 9-3 p.m., 713 E. 7th Street. Antique china cabinet, lamp, dishes; power washer; chain saw; small log splitter; motor scooter; dining room table; loveseat/sofa; cedar chest; 9X13 rug; lawn furniture; bar stools; microwave; tent; spor ting goods; books; odds ends; glass top coffee table; rain barrels; art. No early birds please.
7025 Farm Animals & Livestock PASTURE HAY $3 bale off the field. Local (206)790-0329
7035 General Pets
WANTED: Riding lawnmowers, working or not. Will pickup for free. Kenny (360)775-9779 WA N T E D : To t e G o a t . Scaffolding. 1990 Dodge full size van parts. (360)460-6979
6135 Yard & Garden RIDING LAWNMOWERS $400 to $900. Call Kenny (360)775-9779
8120 Garage Sales Jefferson County
JUST TOO CUTE MINIAU S S I E P U P P I E S : r e a d y o n Ju n e 1 7 . 6 mer les, 4 black tr is. ASDR registrable,shots, dewormed, well socialized on our hobby farm. (360)385-1981 or 500emil@gmail.com
7045 Tack, Feed & Supplies HAY: Eastern Washington Timothy hay bales, $320 a ton, delivered. Mixed loads ok. (360)531-3305
E S TAT E S A L E : Ju n e 2 5 - 2 6 - 2 7 , T h u r. , Fr i . , Sat., 9-4 p.m., Center 9820 Motorhomes Rd. Chimacum. Look for the signs, near Finriver GMC: 26’ Motorhome. Cidery. Two completely 1976. $16,500. nice furnished homes, (360)683-8530 e v e r y t h i n g m u s t g o, quality antique and gentGMC: 26’ Motorhome. ly used, tastefully de1977. $15,000. signed furniture. All in (360)683-8530 good or better condition. See Craigslist for list of i t e m s . P l e a s e d r i v e MOTORHOME: ‘96 30ft. Southwind Stor m. 51k SLOW, ample parking. miles. Custom interior, Roadmaster towing sys8182 Garage Sales tem, Banks Power Pack PA - West and other extras. Very nice cond. $18,500. MOVING Sale: Tues.(360)681-7824 Sun. Daily. 11-4 p.m., 2010 W. 10th St. Everything must go. Bedroom set, lg. roll top desk, file cabinet, TV stand with storage, furniture, Table and chairs, freezer printe r, b o o k s, q u a l i t y clothes, tools, fishing gear, misc. New items WINNEBAGO added daily. Lots of free- ‘02, BRAVE, 33’,. Class bies. A, Model 32V, Ford V10 gas engine with 2 slides, Visit our website at Onan Generator, rear www.peninsula camera, tow package, dailynews.com l eve l e r s. S l e e p s t wo, Or email us at dinner for 4, party for six, classified@ 42.8K miles, $29,800. peninsula (407)435-8157 dailynews.com NO TEXTING
9050 Marine Miscellaneous
MOTORHOME: Class A, Damon ‘95 Intruder. 34’, Diesel 230 Cummins turboed after cool, with 6 speed Allison, Oshgosh f ra m e, 8 0 k m i l e s, n o slides, plus more! $19,000./obo. BOAT: 17’ Bayliner Ca(360)683-8142 pr i Cuddy Cabin. 406 RV: ‘91 Toyota 21’.V-6, orig. hours on boat and C r u i s e c o n t r o l , ove r - m o t o r, 8 5 h p F o r c e drive, 90K miles. $9,900. ( C h r y s l e r ) o u t b o a r d , seats six, Bimini top, (360)477-4295 ve s t s, l i n e s, fe n d e r s, RV: ‘ 9 3 W i n n e b a g o. crab pot and line, head Class A, very good con- (Porta-potty),Blaupunct dition, 88k mi., 454 eng., CD player, two batteries lots of storage, full bed- w/isolator switch, nice room, high rise toilet, galvanized trailer. Ex. s e l f l eve l i n g j a c k s . c o n d . , r e a d y t o g o. $3,500. (360)932-4443 $18,000. (360)457-3979
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 ‘03, Road King Classic, anniversary edition, exc. BOAT: 19’ Fiberglass, cond. with extras. 29K trailer, 140 hp motor. ml., $8,500. (360)775-0370 $2,800. 683-3577
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
HILLCLIMB June 27-28. Gates open 7 a.m. Entrance 1 mi. up Deer Park Rd., P.A. FolBOAT: Big green dragon low signs. 1st bike up at peddle boat, fiberglass, 10 a.m. (360)417-7509. duel pedal. $4,500 firm. (360)640-2688. BOAT: ‘96 Sea Doo Jet boat. $4,500. (360)452-3213
B OAT: G l a s s p l y 1 7 ’ , good cond., excellent fishing and crabbing setup, great running 90hp Yamaha and 15hp Evinrude elec star t, power 9832 Tents & tilt, new pot puller with Travel Trailers pots. 4,800. (360)775-4082 TRAILER: ‘99 Sierra, 25’, needs TLC. $7,000/obo. 417-0803. T R AV E L T R A I L E R : Lance, ‘11 Model 2285, 28’ single slide-out, A/C, 18’ power awning, new t i r e s, m i c r owave, T V, many other upgrades. $18,000. Contact info: nkarr43@gmail.com or BOAT: Herreshoff Pea(435)-656-2093 pod Rowing Skiff, 17 ft. O A L . D e s i g n b y L . F. as modified 9802 5th Wheels Herreshoff by John Gardner. Built in 2007 in Vallejo, CA by 5TH WHEEL: ‘94 Alpen- Roland Sprague, noted l i t e. 3 4 ’ . N e e d s T L C. Naval model builder. In $ 3 , 8 0 0 o b o. M u s t b e dry storage except for sporadic use in summoved. (360)681-3225. mers of 2011 2012. Ex5TH WHEEL: Alpenlite, ter ior of hull recently ‘83, 19’ well maintained, scraped, sanded, primed e v e r y t h i n g w o r k s . and finish painted w/Pe$2,500. (808)-895-5634 t i t p r o d u c t s. R u b ra i l s c ra p e d , s a n d e d a n d NOMAD: ‘98, 25’, with varnished. $4,500. slide, good condition, (360)298-6656 ever ything works well. $6,200. (360)681-4861. BOAT HOUSE: 20’x36’ long, P.A. $2,500/as is. T E R RY: ‘ 9 6 , 2 6 ’ 5 t h 457-6107 or 775-4821 Wheel. $4,500/obo. (360)640-0111
9808 Campers & Canopies
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by Mell Lazarus
9180 Automobiles 9214 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles Classics & Collect. Buick Others Others CHEV: ‘00 SS Camaro. Super Spor t package. New, wheels, tires, battery and license. Flow master exhaust system, T.top, black leather interior , cherry red. NEVER ABUSED! 81K ml. $6,000. (360)457-9331
Robust car; great on long road trips/traveling over mountains. A/C. Get-up ‘n go supercharged engine. 185K HWY miles
360-471-8613 Kitsap
HONDA: ‘00 Valkyrie Standard model, OEM windshield, National Cruiserliner hard bags. Cruise control, Rivco center stand. 20,100 miles. Bring cash and big bike experience if you want a test ride. $4,200. (360)460-1658.
BUICK: Reatta ‘90, Conv, mint cond 106km, FORD: 1929-30 Custom $7000. Pics. (360)681Model A Roadster. Per- 6388. jimfromsequim @olympus.net fect 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 only. Teal green, black fenders vinyl top. $28,500 Real eye catche r. ( 3 6 0 ) 7 7 5 - 7 5 2 0 o r (360)457-3161.
HONDA: ‘02, 750 Shadow Spirt. $3,200./obo FORD: 1929 Model A (360)477-4355 Roadster, full fendered, all mustang running H O N D A : ‘ 0 6 1 3 0 0 gear. $18,500. 460-8610 VTXR, 7,700 ml., saddle bags, passenger seat, crash bars. Great touring bike. $4,100. (360)477-9527
H O N DA : ‘ 8 2 , A s p e n Cade, 1100A., 60K ml. Two tone brown, excellent condition, garaged. F O R D : 1 9 5 0 O r i g i n a l $1,999. (360)301-2209. Convertible. Beige interior and top on burgundy KLR: ‘05 650. 8k miles, restoration featured in extras, $3000. B u l b H o r n m a g a z i n e. (360)460-5545 Appeared in ads ran by Bon Marche. MechaniMOTORCYCLE: ‘98 cally sound and clean. Honda, 1100 ST, Red. Owner restored. (360)452-9829 $29,500. (360)775-7520 SUZUKI: ‘00 600 Kata- or (360)457-3161. na. 5k ml. $2,200. F O R D : 1 9 5 2 P i c k u p, (707)241-5977 Mustang front, 302, C4,
SUZUKI: ‘96, 1400 Spe- 9” Ford rearend. $8,500. 460-8610 cial Edition, lots of chrome beautiful bike. FORD: ‘28, Model A. 2 $2,500. (360)457-6540 door sedan. $5,500/obo. B OAT: M o n k 4 2 ’ Tr i or (360)452-644. (360)670-6160 cabin, 1961. Great live aboard, pristine. Diesel, YAMAHA: ‘05 Yamaha full electronics. $39,000. Y Z 1 2 5 , r u n s g r e a t . Boat house available. $1,300 (360)461-9054 Port Angeles. TENT TRAILER: Coach(360)457-1185 9740 Auto Service man ‘11 Clipper 126 & Parts Spor t. Pop up, Queen BOAT: Tollycraft, ‘77, bed on each end. 2 6 ’ S e d a n , w e l l Fr idge, stove, stereo, e q u i p p e d a n d m a i n - FORD: 300/CID engine furnace, hot water heat- tained classic, trailer, and 4 spd. trans. Ran SEAT: ‘69, 600D. Made in Spain, Everything reer, excellent condition. dingy and more. See at very well. $400/firm done. $9,000/obo. (360)417-5583 Ve r y l i t t l e u s e. Ta bl e 1 5 1 8 W. 1 1 t h a l l e y. (360)379-0593 with bench seats, sofa $20,000/obo. and table that folds into (360)457-9162 VW BEETLE: 1969 Conbed. Must see to apprever tible. Must sell this c i a t e ! $ 6 , 5 0 0 . C a l l DURO: ‘86 , 12’ Alumi1 9 6 9 V W C o nve r t i bl e ( 3 6 0 ) 6 4 0 - 2 5 7 4 o r num ‘81 15 hp Johnson, with a lots of spare (360)640-0403. electric motor, new batparts, manuals and spet e r y, 5 g a l l o n t a n k . cialty VW tools. This is $2,000 (360)640-1220. a restorable car, and 9050 Marine none of the legendary Miscellaneous MISC: Fiberglass, apcharm of VW’s has been prox. 500 sf. heavy cloth BOAT: ‘11, Grandy, 12’, pieces. .75/sf. (360)912- ROLL BAR: for com- lost with this rig. The rowing / sailing skiff, built 1783 or 565-6906 pact-sized truck. Very e n g i n e s t i l l r u n s, a l by the boat school in heavy duty (includes though the car hasn’t 2011. Includes the full PEDDLE Boat: on trail- supports and gaskets). b e e n d r i ve n i n t h r e e sailing package, with er, like new, $2,500. T h i s m i g h t b e j u s t years. Title clean and oars and trailer. Good (360)452-8607 what you are looking c l e a r ! N o t ra d e s j u s t shape. $4,000/obo. for! Super nice-look- cash. If you are interest(360)850-2234 i n g , g l o s s y b l a c k . ed, I can provide LOTS more details and pic$250.00. tures. $2,500. Please (360)775-6865 call (605)224-4334.
SAILBOAT: ‘04 WWP19 5hp mtr, trailer, new radio and stereo. Ready to sail, garaged. $6,200. hermhalbach@wavecable.com or (360)504-2226
• 2 ads per household per week • Run as space permits • Private parties only Mondays &Tuesdays • 4 lines, 2 days • No firewood or lumber • No pets or livestock • No Garage Sales
Deadline: Friday at 4 p.m. Ad 1
Ad 2
Name SEARAY, ‘88 Sundancer, boathoused in PA, 800 engine hr., $35,000. (541)840-1122
Address Phone No
Bring your ads to:
3A574499
Peninsula Daily News Peninsula Daily News PO Box 1330 305 West 1st St., Port Angeles Port Angeles, WA 98362 Sequim Gazette/Peninsula Daily News 147 W. Washington, Sequim or FAX to: (360) 417-3507 NO PHONE CALLS
Email: classified@peninsuladailynews.com
1930 Model A: In exceptional condition, newly rebuilt engine. $19,000. Call Jim. (360)301-4581
VW BUG: ‘79. All new tires and wheels, adorable, black. $7,500. (360)461-0088
EMAIL US AT classified@peninsula dailynews.com
9934 Jefferson BMW: ‘07 Z4 3.0 SI R o a d s t e r. 4 7 K m i l e s, County Legals w e l l m a i n t a i n e d , l i ke S A I L B OAT: R a n g e r new. $20,000. Legal Notice 23’ A fast sailing boat (360)477-4573 The Quinault Child Supcurrently at John port Services Program Wayne Marina. Boat is hereby notifies the Re“turn key” and includes spondent, Joseph Serraextra sails, marine rano, that their presence dio, depth and speed is required on July 22nd, instrument. Rigged for 2015 at 2:30 PM, for a single handing. Take hearing in the Quinault several friends along Tribal Court in Taholah, for a sail, Incl 4 HP Grays Harbor County, Ya m a h a . A s k i n g BUICK: ‘66 Skylark Cus- Washington. Failure to $3,000. appear or respond within tom Convertible, Custom (360)683-1027 paint, Ready for Sum- 60 days, from the first date of Publication, may SEA-NYMPH: ‘79, 14’ mer.$16,500. 683-3408 result in a default. For Aluminum outboard, E-Z CADILLAC: ‘59 Sedan more information, please load trailer, many extras. d e V i l l e. O r i g i n a l , l i call (360) 276-8211 ext. $750./obo(360)912-1783 c e n s e d a n d r u n s . 685. $3,259. (360)461-0527 Pub: June 9, 16, 23, 2015 Legal No:637625
RUN A FREE AD FOR ITEMS PRICED $200 AND UNDER
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
GARAGE SALE ADS Call for details. 360-452-8435 1-800-826-7714
$2800 OBO. 2003 BUICK PARK AVENUE ULTRA.
9292 Automobiles Others
9180 Automobiles Classics & Collect.
Mail to:
Momma
TUESDAY, JUNE 23, 2015 B9
Legal Notice The Quinault Child Support Services Program hereby notifies the Respondent, Jesse Martin, CADILLAC: ‘87 El Do- that their presence is rerado. V8, front wheel q u i r e d o n Ju l y 2 2 n d , drive, power steering, 2015 at 2:30 PM, for a b r a ke s , l o ck s , w i n - hearing in the Quinault dows, mirrors, seats, Tribal Court in Taholah, cruise control. Luxury Grays Harbor County, leather interior. Smoke Washington. Failure to f r e e . N e w e r t i r e s . appear or respond within 7 7 , 7 5 0 m i l e s . 60 days, from the first date of Publication, may $1,795/obo. result in a default. For (360)452-1469 more information, please LINCOLN: ‘74 Continen- call (360) 276-8211 ext. tal Mark IV. 460cc, no 685. rust or dents. $2,500. Pub: June 9, 16, 23, 2015 Good condition Legal No: 637622 (360)457-5236.
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! $23,000. Call 360-457-4635 FORD: ‘92 Thunderbird. Low mileage. $2,000. (360)461-2809 or 4610533 HONDA: ‘00 Civic Hatchback, exc. cond. $3,800. (360)582-0753. H O N DA : ‘ 0 6 A c c o r d . Clean, low mileage. $10,000 OBO cash. (360)374-5060
HONDA: ‘09 Accord EX-L Sedan, 24k ml., loaded! 4.5l i-vtec dsc v 6 , fa c t o r y d u a l ex haust, auto, alloys, sunr o o f, key l e s s, p owe r windows, locks and mirrors, power heated leather seats, cruise, tilt, AC, dual zone climate control, info center, 6 CD changer with auxillary input, dual front, side, rear airbags. $18,995 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com
THUNDERBIRD: ‘96, classic, runs great, reduced, 140K ml. $2400/obo. 775-6681.
TOYOTA: ‘05 Corolla, 105k ml. exc. cond. sun r o o f, r e a r s p o i l e r. $7,500. (360)452-7241.
9434 Pickup Trucks Others
C H E V Y : ‘ 7 6 3 / 4 To n pick-up GREAT ENGINE New 454, carb, battery, radiator, fuel pump, turbo 400, short shaft. Must take entire truck. $2,000/obo. Before 6pm (360)461-6870 C H E V Y: ‘ 8 1 , D u a l l ey crew cab, 454, auto, 2wd, 50K miles, canopy, runs great. $2,000/obo. (360)640-1220
MAZDA: ‘99 Miata, Custom leather seats, excellent condition. $6,300. (360)461-0929
CHEVY: ‘88, K1500, 4x4 Pickup, 132K mi., well maintained 5 speed. $3,500. (360)600-1817.
MINI COOPER: ‘06. 61k FORD: ‘86 F250, 4x4, 4 miles, ex. condition, au- speed, with canopy, 6.9 D i e s e l , 8 , 0 0 0 l b wa r n tomatic. $8,500. winch, 16’ custom alumi(360)461-0088 num wheels, exel. tires. Clean interior. $6,500 TOYOTA: ‘00 Tundra, obo (206)795-5943 after access bac SR5, 2WD, 4:30pm weekdays. 4.7L V8, auto, alloys, good tires, running 9556 SUVs boards, spray-in bedlinOthers er, tow, 4 doors, privacy glass, power windows, locks and mirrors, buck- CHEVY: ‘99 Suburban, et seats, center con- 4 W D , V 8 , s e a t s 8 . s o l e, c r u i s e, t i l t , a c, $3,200. (360)808-2061 CD/cassette, dual front airbags. Low miles! Ex- J E E P : ‘ 9 7 , W ra n g l e r, Sahara. Low mileage, cellent condition! recent engine work. $9,995. Some r ust, r uns well. GRAY MOTORS Removable top and 457-4901 doors. Must sell. $2900. graymotors.com In Sequim. (303)330-4801. TOYOTA: ‘99 4Runner,
l i m i t e d 4 x 4 , l e a t h e r, 3.4L V6, auto, alloys, new tires, rear locking d i f fe r e n t i a l , r u n n i n g boards, roof rack, sunroof, privacy glass, keyless, power windows, locks and mirrors, power leather seats, cruise, tilt, AC, CD/cassette, dual front airbags, only 145k miles! $7,995. GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com
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.
HONDA: ‘07 Civic LX Coupe, 55K miles, 1.8L VTEC 4 cyl, auto, rear 9730 Vans & Minivans s p o i l e r l i p, k e y l e s s , Others power windows, locks and mirrors, cruise, tilt, FORD: ‘06 Passenger AC, CD with auxiliary van. V-8, 350, Runs exinput, dual front, side cellent, good tires. and rear airbags, priced $6,500 obo. 460-2282 under kbb! immaculate condition inside and out! Awesome fuel mile9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices age! $10,495 Clallam County Clallam County GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON FOR graymotors.com CLALLAM COUNTY MAZDA: ‘02 Miata, 6 In re the Estate of Melanie Overby, Deceased. s p e e d , h a r d t o p, n ew 15-4-00181-7 PROBATE NOTICE TO brakes, timing belt, cool- NO. est car on the Peninsula. CREDITORS RCW 11.40.030 The Administrator named below has been appoint$8,500. (360)683-0146. ed as Administrator of this estate. Any person having a claim against the decedent must, before the 9931 Legal Notices time the claim would be barred by any otherwise Clallam County applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by servLEGAL NOTICES: ing on or mailing to the Administrator or the AdminSUMMONS: istrator’s attorney at the address stated below a In the superior court of copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim the State of Washinton with the court in which the probate proceedings for the of Clallam, NO: were commenced. The claim must be presented 14 2 00407 1 within the later of: (1) Thirty days after the AdminisR o n a l d W. E r i c k s o n , trator served or mailed the notice to the creditor as Plaintiff provided under RCW 11.40.020(1)(c); or (2) four vs. months after the date of first publication of the noPort of Port Angeles, et tice. If the claim is not presented within this time al, Defendants frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. The State of Washington This bar is effective as to claims against both the to the said Puget Sound decedent’s probate and nonprobate assets. M i l l s & T i m b e r C o r p. Date of First Publication: June 9, 2015 stockholders (PSM&T); Administrator: and all other persons or Stephanie Overby parties unknown claim- Attorney for Administrator: ing any right, title, es- Stephen C. Moriarty, WSBA #18810 tate, lien, or interest in Address for mailing or service: the real estate and water PLATT IRWIN LAW FIRM rights described in the 403 S. Peabody, Port Angeles, WA 98362 complaint herein: (360) 457-3327 Court of Probate Proceedings: Yo u a r e h e r e by s u m - Clallam County Superior Court moned to appear within Probate Cause Number: 15-4-00181-7 sixty days after the date Legal No. 637133 of the first publication of PUB: June 9, 16, 23, 2015 this summons, to wit, within sixty days after SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON FOR t h e 1 9 t h d ay o f M ay CLALLAM COUNTY r e t h e E s t a t e o f J o h n 2015, and defend the I n above entitled action in M. Willits, Jr., Deceased. the above entitled court, 15-4-00192-2 PROBATE NOTICE TO and answer the com- NO. plaint of the plaintiff Ro- CREDITORS RCW 11.40.030 The personal representative named below has nald W. Erickson, and serve a copy of your an- been appointed as personal representative of this swer upon the under- estate. Any person having a claim against the designed plaintiff, at his of- cedent must, before the time the claim would be fice below stated; and in barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limitacase of your failure so to tions, present the claim in the manner as provided do, judgment will be ren- in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the dered against you ac- personal representative or the personal representacording to the demand of tive’s attorney at the address stated below a copy of the complaint, which has the claim and filing the original of the claim with the been filed with the clerk court in which the probate proceedings were commenced. The claim must be presented within the of said court. 1)Plaintiff seeks quiet ti- later of: (1) Thirty days after the personal representle against PSM&Ts to tative served or mailed the notice to the creditor as land and water rights provided under RCW 11.40.020(1)(c); or (2) four just east of Nippon mill months after the date of first publication of the nosite; and to all property tice. If the claim is not presented within this time rights PSM&Ts may be frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherentitled to in Clallam wise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. County; This bar is effective as to claims against both the 2)Plaintiff seeks quiet ti- decedent’s probate and nonprobate assets. tle and fraud against the Date of First Publication: June 9, 2015 Port and city of Port An- Personal Representative: geles; etc. Patricia A. Willits Ronald W. Erickson, pro Attorney for Personal Representative: se Stephen C. Moriarty, WSBA #18810 934 W. Lauridsen Blvd. Address for mailing or service: #209 PLATT IRWIN LAW FIRM Port Angeles, WA 98363 403 S. Peabody, Port Angeles, WA 98362 C o u n t y o f C l a l l a m (360) 457-3327 County, WA.PUB: May Court of Probate Proceedings: 19, 26, June 2, 9, 16, 23, Clallam County Superior Court 2015 Probate Cause Number: 15-4-00192-2 Legal No: 633140 PUB: June 9, 16, 23, 2015 Legal No. 637135
91190150
ATTENTION ADVERTISERS: No cancellations or corrections can be made on the day of publication. It is the Advertiser’s responsibility to check their ad on the first day of publication and notify the Classified department if it is not correct. Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., is responsible for only one incorrect insertion. All advertising, whether paid for or not, whether initially accepted or published, is subject to approval or rescission of approval by Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc. The position, subject matter, form, size, wording, illustrations, and typography of an advertisement are subject to approval of Northwest Media (Washington), L.P., which reserves the right to classify, edit, reject, position, or cancel any advertisement at any time, before or after insertion. Neither Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., investigates statements made directly or indirectly in any advertisement and neither makes any representations regarding the advertisers, their products, or their services or the legitimacy or value of the advertisers or their products or services. In consideration of publication of an advertisement, the Advertiser and any advertising agency that it may employ, jointly and severally, will indemnify and hold harmless Black Press Ltd./ Sound Publishing, Inc., their officers, agents, and employees against expenses (including all legal fees), liabilities, and losses resulting from the publication or distribution of advertising, including, without limitation, claims or suits for libel, violation of privacy, copyright or trademark infringement, deception, or other violations of law. Except as provided in this paragraph, neither Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., shall be liable for any damages resulting from error in or non-publication of ads, whether paid for or not, including but not limited to, incidental, consequential, special, general, presumed, or punitive damages or lost profits. The sole and exclusive remedy against Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., for any error in, or non-publication of, an ad shall be a refund of the cost of the ad or the printing of one make-good insertion, at the discretion of the Publisher; provided that Advertiser and/or its agency has paid for the ad containing the error or which was not published; otherwise, the sole remedy shall be one make-good insertion. No claim for repetition shall be allowed. No allowance shall be made for imperfect printing or minor errors. Neither Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., shall be liable for failure to print, publish, or circulate all or any portion of an advertisement or of advertising linage contracted for, if such failure is due to acts of God, strikes, accidents, or other circumstances beyond the control of Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc. Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., shall not be liable for errors in or non-publication of advertisements submitted after normal deadlines. Any legal action arising from these terms and conditions or relating to the publication of, or payment for, advertising shall, if filed, be commenced and maintained in any court. Other terms and conditions, stated on our Advertising Rate Cards and Contracts, may apply. This service is not to be used to defraud or otherwise harm users or others, and Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., reserves the right to disclose a user’s identity where deemed necessary to protect Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., or others or to respond to subpoenas or other lawful demands for information. All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation, or discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin, or intention to make any such preference, limitation, or discrimination.” We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis.
B10
WeatherWatch
TUESDAY, JUNE 23, 2015 Neah Bay 60/49
g Bellingham 73/52
Yesterday
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Statistics for the 24-hour period ending at noon yesterday. Hi Lo Rain YTD Port Angeles 76 52 0.00 13.54 Forks 72 52 0.00 38.92 Seattle 78 55 0.00 16.46 Sequim 67 51 0.00 7.67 Hoquiam 71 56 0.00 19.76 Victoria 78 49 0.00 13.65 Port Townsend 76 47 **0.00 8.43
Olympic Peninsula TODAY Port Townsend 67/52
Port Angeles 68/61 Sequim Olympics Freeze level: 11,000 feet 69/52
Forks 75/48
Port Ludlow 72/52
NationalTODAY forecast Nation
Forecast highs for Tuesday, June 23
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Billings 86° | 57°
San Francisco 66° | 53°
Minneapolis 82° | 59°
Denver 91° | 60°
Chicago 75° | 68°
Atlanta 97° | 74°
El Paso 98° | 73° Houston 92° | 77°
Full
FRIDAY
Miami 92° | 80°
Fronts
July 8
SATURDAY
★
Low 52 Stars sprinkled among clouds
72/54 72/54 Lazy afternoon Sol whispers, in the sun “Come outside”
68/54 Summertime glows golden
Marine Conditions
CANADA
Seattle 78° | 54° Olympia 80° | 48°
Spokane 82° | 55°
Tacoma 79° | 51° Yakima 83° | 53°
Astoria 69° | 51°
ORE.
Tides
TODAY
LaPush Port Angeles Port Townsend Dungeness Bay*
© 2015 Wunderground.com
Albany, N.Y. Albuquerque Amarillo Anchorage Asheville Atlanta Atlantic City Austin Baltimore Billings Birmingham Bismarck Boise Boston Brownsville Buffalo
TOMORROW
Hi 86 101 89 62 90 93 89 87 90 86 95 83 90 76 92 74
9:18 p.m. 5:14 a.m. 12:43 p.m. 1:04 a.m.
Lo Prc Otlk 66 .02 Clr 74 Clr 66 Clr 57 PCldy 63 1.31 Cldy 75 PCldy 71 .17 Clr 71 .16 Cldy 71 Clr 53 PCldy 73 Clr 59 1.21 PCldy 57 Clr 61 .88 Cldy 80 PCldy 63 .11 Clr
THURSDAY
High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht 5:34 a.m. 6.0’ 11:59 a.m. 0.8’ 6:41 p.m. 7.0’
High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht 6:37 a.m. 5.5’ 12:57 a.m. 2.4’ 7:27 p.m. 7.0’ 12:44 p.m. 1.4’
High Tide Ht 7:46 a.m. 5.3’ 8:14 p.m. 7.2’
Low Tide 2:00 a.m. 1:35 p.m.
Ht 2.1’ 1.9’
7:46 a.m. 4.0’ 9:09 p.m. 6.7’
3:51 a.m. 3.5’ 2:05 p.m. 1.9’
9:13 a.m. 3.8’ 9:40 p.m. 6.6’
4:41 a.m. 2.8’ 2:54 p.m. 2.8’
11:31 a.m. 3.9’ 10:12 p.m. 6.6’
5:22 a.m. 3:51 p.m.
2.1’ 3.7’
9:23 a.m. 5.0’ 10:46 p.m. 8.3’
5:04 a.m. 3.9’ 3:18 p.m. 2.1’
10:50 a.m. 4.7’ 11:17 p.m. 8.2’
5:54 a.m. 3.1’ 4:07 p.m. 3.1’
1:08 p.m. 4.8’ 11:49 p.m. 8.1’
6:35 a.m. 5:04 p.m.
2.3’ 4.1’
8:29 a.m. 4.5’ 9:52 p.m. 7.5’
4:26 a.m. 3.5’ 2:40 p.m. 1.9’
9:56 a.m. 4.2’ 10:23 p.m. 7.4’
5:16 a.m. 2.8’ 3:29 p.m. 2.8’
12:14 a.m. 4.3’ 10:55 p.m. 7.3’
5:57 a.m. 4:26 p.m.
*To correct for Sequim Bay, add 15 minutes for high tide, 21 minutes for low tide.
Warm Stationary
Pressure Low
High
June 24 July 1
Nation/World
Victoria 72° | 51°
Ocean: Today and tonight, S wind to 10 kt in the late night and morning hours becoming W 10 kt in the afternoon and evenings. Wind waves 1 ft or less. SW swell 4 ft at 17 seconds.
July 15
Sunset today Sunrise tomorrow Moonrise today Moonset tomorrow
78/59 Beach-baking: Just add oil
Washington TODAY
Strait of Juan de Fuca: W wind 5 to 15 kt. Wind waves 1 or 2 ft. Tonight, W wind 10 to 20 kt. Wind waves 1 to 3 ft.
New York 92° | 73°
Detroit 80° | 70°
Washington D.C. 95° | 76°
Los Angeles 78° | 63°
Cartography by Keith Thorpe / © Peninsula Daily News
WEDNESDAY THURSDAY
Cloudy
TEMPERATURE EXTREMES for the contiguous United States:
Cold
TONIGHT
Pt. Cloudy
The Lower 48
Seattle 78° | 54°
Almanac
Brinnon 73/50
Aberdeen 71/49
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
2.1’ 3.7’
-10s
-0s
0s
Burlington, Vt. 82 Casper 95 Charleston, S.C. 97 Charleston, W.Va. 89 Charlotte, N.C. 97 Cheyenne 84 Chicago 84 Cincinnati 87 Cleveland 81 Columbia, S.C. 98 Columbus, Ohio 86 Concord, N.H. 78 Dallas-Ft Worth 90 Dayton 86 Denver 92 Des Moines 85 Detroit 84 Duluth 80 El Paso 104 Evansville 91 Fairbanks 78 Fargo 85 Flagstaff 85 Grand Rapids 82 Great Falls 74 Greensboro, N.C. 94 Hartford Spgfld 86 Helena 78 Honolulu 87 Houston 93 Indianapolis 84 Jackson, Miss. 94 Jacksonville 96 Juneau 68 Kansas City 85 Key West 91 Las Vegas 109 Little Rock 91
63 46 79 68 65 52 66 68 63 75 64 65 73 68 62 73 64 61 75 70 55 62 49 62 41 71 66 54 75 76 69 74 72 48 74 82 85 73
.41
10s
20s 30s 40s
50s 60s
70s 80s 90s 100s 110s
Cartography © Weather Underground / The Associated Press
.01 .25 .07 .06 .17 .19 .52
.19
.14 .83 .01
Cldy Clr PCldy Cldy PCldy Clr Clr Cldy PCldy Clr Cldy PCldy PCldy Cldy PCldy PCldy Rain Rain Clr PCldy Cldy Clr Clr Rain PCldy PCldy Clr Cldy PCldy PCldy Cldy PCldy Cldy PCldy Clr PCldy Clr PCldy
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
82 90 89 89 92 92 85 86 92 92 88 94 86 88 89 96 83 91 109 84 72 82 83 95 83 87 94 85 89 94 96 84 75 66 89 97 65 91
62 Clr 70 .20 PCldy 69 PCldy 78 PCldy 81 PCldy 71 Clr 65 Rain 70 .01 Rain 72 PCldy 77 PCldy 70 .29 Clr 79 PCldy 68 PCldy 73 Clr 77 PCldy 78 PCldy 56 Clr 73 Clr 87 Clr 66 PCldy 59 .61 Cldy 55 PCldy 70 .74 PCldy 70 Clr 58 .01 Clr 52 Clr 76 PCldy 57 Clr 76 .30 Clr 76 .17 Cldy 65 Clr 73 1.09 Cldy 66 Cldy 55 Clr 78 .06 Cldy 60 Clr 49 Rain 77 PCldy
à 122 in Death Valley, Calif. Ä 32 in Truckee, Calif., and West Yellowstone, Mont. 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
Sioux Falls 86 Syracuse 79 Tampa 93 Topeka 92 Tucson 105 Tulsa 89 Washington, D.C. 94 Wichita 93 Wilkes-Barre 86 Wilmington, Del. 89
64 61 78 76 82 76 78 75 62 70
.82 PCldy PCldy Cldy Clr Clr Clr PCldy Clr .03 PCldy Clr
_______ Auckland Beijing Berlin Brussels Cairo Calgary Guadalajara Hong Kong Jerusalem Johannesburg Kabul London Mexico City Montreal Moscow New Delhi Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome San Jose, CRica Sydney Tokyo Toronto Vancouver
Hi Lo 55 45 86 72 61 51 63 46 90 69 71 46 82 61 84 81 84 57 65 35 88 62 68 56 75 54 78 54 73 56 97 83 66 46 79 66 80 58 81 67 67 52 80 67 72 54 71 55
Otlk Wind/Clr Ts Sh Sh Clr Ts Ts Rain Clr Clr PCldy Cldy Ts Rain Sh Ts Cldy Sh Ts Ts PCldy Ts Wind/Sh Clr
Career, tech students honored in ceremonies PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — Port Angeles High School Career & Technical (CTE) programs showcased their students in two separate ceremonies this year. Seventy-three CTE students were honored during the Business and Marketing Awards Night and the Trade & Industry Awards — 41 business and marketing students and 32 trades and industries students. Business instructors Bernie Brabant, Lisa Joslin, Jennifer Rogers and Pam Helpenstell presented business and marketing awards for computer applications, accounting and marketing proficiencies. The following students received business department awards: ■ Computer applications: Brady Anderson, Monica Gasper, Kayla Hennings, Darian Kyniston, Bradyn Pemberton, Caro-
PORT ANGELES SCHOOL DISTRICT
Alyssa Herbert, Casey Bailey and Katelyn West, from left, were recognized as Students of the Year by Port Angeles High School’s career and technical programs. line Rooney and Katelyn West ■ Accounting: Samantha Benoff, Delanie Critchfield, Mary Dawson, Elijah Dumdie, Marissa Gasper, Silas Johnson, Kaylee
Kuchan, Darian Kyniston, Kyle LaFritz, Airel Oakley, Kylie Reidel, Emilee Spoon, Dexter Thumm, Matthew Witczak, Brady Anderson, Christopher May, Aleesha Mon Wai and
Pink Up Port Angeles
G lf
presents
S o ro p t i m i s t Te e s O ff fo r Cancer
Luciano Toscano. ■ Marketing: Charlee Aragon, Emily Basden, Hope Wegener, Delanie Critchfield, Kendra Perszyk, Alyssa Herbert, Emily Johnson, Eathen Boyer, Hayley Baxley, Micayla Weider and Madeline Boe. ■ Business and marketing honors students: Brady Anderson, Emily
Basden, Delanie Critchfield, Mary Dawson, Andrew Horbochuck, Darian Kyniston, Airel Oakley, Rozalyn Piper, Caroline Rooney, Christian Sotebeer, Luciano Toscano, Katelyn West and Matthew Witczak. The 2015 Rotary Students of the Month scholarship recipients included Charlee Aragon, Emily Basden, Kayla Hennings, Silas Johnson, Rozalyn Piper, Luciano Toscano and Katelyn West. West was recognized as Business Student of the Year. Alyssa Herbert received the honor of Marketing Student of the Year. Trade & Industry instructors Tim Branham, Mike Hansen, John Mitchell and Justin Parker presented Trades & Industry Department awards to the following students: ■ Automotive technology: Isaac Houston, Caleb Johnson and Corey Stone. ■ Computer technology: Andrew Curtis, Matthew Mitchell and Natale Toscano.
■ Technical drafting: James Gallagher, Joseph Griswold, Gabriel Secondez, Zachary Smith and Maya Wharton. ■ Machining technology: Casey Bailey, Conner Heilman, Bradley Lightfoot, Natalie McNary Ben Roberts, Trenton Teter and Brandon Woolman. ■ Woodworking technology: Devan Andrew, Tia Apple, Colby Beckstrom, Devlin Borg, Peter Butler, Shawn Flanigan Douglas Martirossian, Kaleb Sheldon, Cortney Snodgrass, Cole Tamba, Davis Treese, Kaytlin Turner, Jorden White and Austin Wolfley. Trades & Industry Awards were presented to Casey Bailey, Colby Beckstrom, James Gallagher and Brandon Woolman. The 2015 Rotary Students of the Month scholarship recipients included senior James Gallagher. Casey Bailey was recognized as Trades & Industry Student of the Year. The presentations can be viewed on the high school website, www.portangeles schools.org/pahs.
Briefly . . . Learning Credit feature, students can use the knowledge they have acquired outside the classroom to earn high school credits. To receive credit for SEQUIM — Soroptimist prior learning, students International of Sequim is work one-on-one with an accepting applications until instructor to develop an July 15 for its $2,000 conessay in which they docutinuing education scholarment the skills and knowlships for women. edge they have gained Applicants must be through work and life Sequim High School graduexperience. ates or have a legal Credit(s) are awarded address within the Sequim upon completion and School District; must have instructor review of the completed one year of postessay. secondary education; and The program also offers must be continuing their a number of classes online, education in the fall of allowing students to com2015. plete work according to Download applications their own schedule at at www.sisequim.org (click home. on “What We Do,” then Students can receive in“Awards & Scholarships”), person instruction at Penvisit www.washboard.org insula College locations in and search scholarships for Port Angeles, Sequim, “Soroptimist International Forks, Port Hadlock and of Sequim” or phone Pat Neah Bay. Willis at 360-797-1251. Students must be 21 years old to receive their Life lesson credits diploma but can begin PORT ANGELES — working toward one before Peninsula College’s HS21+ then. program offers adult learnThe program is offered ers the opportunity to earn for $25 per quarter, and their high school diploma financial aid is available. in at least 10 weeks. For more information, Through the Prior contact Hayley Taga at
Applicants sought for scholarship
Tournament Fr id ay, Ju n e 2 6
All proceeds to benefit Operation Uplift.
Shotgun Format • Peninsula Golf Course
Tee Time at Noon Soroptimist International of Port Angeles – Noon Club has teamed up with Operation Uplift, a local non-profit support group for cancer survivors, to Tee Off For Cancer.
$95 Ticket includes Green Fees, Lite Snack Per Golfer FRIDAY CELEBRATION PGC Members Hors d’oeuvres and No-Host Bar 4–6 pm $60
LONGEST DRIVE • CLOSEST TO THE PIN HOLE-IN-ONE PRIZES : 2015 GMC Sierra
3 Nights Stay & Play vacation to the TPC Las Vegas, Luxurious 4 day/3 night golf vaction. Travis Matthew, Head-to-Toe Signature outfit., Plus $500 Online Shopping Spree
For info, contact Jacob Lippold 457-6501 Prizes Sponsored by Mac Ruddell Community Fund
360-417-6512 or htaga@ pencol.edu.
Piano recital
461076227
PORT ANGELES — Students from the piano studio of Joan Quigley were presented in a spring recital recently at First Presbyterian Church, 139 W. Eighth St. Those performing solos, duets and quartets were Anthony and Kathryn Jones, Jayvyn Grief, Brody and Coen Cronk, Julianna Quarto, Faith McFall, Emily Landers, Imogen Fraser, Joe Hill, Winston and Miles Wait, Carson MordecaiSmith, Jack Clemens, Malachai Elliott, Charles and Victoria Krause, Allie Winters, Skyler Sullivan, Adam Watkins, Alisyn Boyd and Katie Cobb. Young piano students Teig Carlson, Ben Clemens, Robby Kennedy, McHenry Miller and Elizabeth Van Houck were introduced. Katie Cobb was featured in an original melody, “Seasons of Change.” Elizabeth Watkins was the guest accompanist for two duets. Summer lessons by appointment can be made via 360-477-1496. Peninsula Daily News