Monday
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Rain marches back into area forecast B10
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS October 12, 2015 | 75¢
Port Townsend-Jefferson County’s Daily Newspaper
Scam derailed by PT police
Piecing it together
Woman gets call while at station PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT TOWNSEND — A con artist picked the wrong time, with his victim in the wrong place, to work a scam on a woman he’d already bilked of $11,000. The woman, who’d been victimized by someone claiming to be with the Internal Revenue Service, received a call on her cell phone that purported to be from the Port Townsend Police Department. The only problem was that she received the call inside police headquarters. According to Officer Patrick Fudally, “as the victim was meeting with an officer at the police station to file a report, the victim’s phone began ringing with the Port Townsend Police Department phone number. “No member of the department was trying to call the victim. “The officer meeting with the victim took the phone, and the suspect identified himself as a dispatcher for the Port Townsend Police Department. When the officer identified herself the suspect quickly hung up the phone.” Police declined to identify the victim.
LARRY JEFFRYES
Five new steel sections of the Dungeness River Railroad Bridge trestle started arriving by flatbed truck last week. They are being made in Minnesota and transported to the trestle reconstruction site’s west end via East Runnion Road.
Trestle sections arrive for repair project at bridge site property at Railroad Bridge Park 2151 W. Hendrickson Road. Johnson said the project, which started when the trestle was damaged by a February storm that flooded the Dungeness River, is still on track to allow reopening the span in December. The old trestle, which is on the west BY MARK SWANSON side of the Howe railroad bridge, was PENINSULA DAILY NEWS propped up by 38 sets of five creosote poles. SEQUIM — Five of the 12 steel Contractors recently finished removtruss sections have arrived for a $1.53 million replacement of a railroad bridge ing the old creosote-covered poles, a task which began in August. trestle damaged in February flooding. The new steel structure, said JohnThe sections had arrived as of Frison, will rest on four piers. day, said Randy Johnson, habitat proSteel pilings for the new piers are gram manager for the Jamestown S’Klallam tribe, which owns the bridge being driven into the ground and the
$1.53 million effort aims to reopen span over Dungeness
first one, nearest the river, was completed last week, he said. A concrete column was poured on Friday and will sit atop the piling.
Threat to arrest Had the call continued, Fudally said, the scammer would have threatened the woman with arrest if she didn’t pay a fictitious IRS overdue debt. Fudally said it was impossible to trace the bogus call — called a “spoof” — which may have come from outside the United States. He emphasized that Port Townsend police are dispatched through Jeffcom 9-1-1 Communications and have no department dispatchers — and that any caller threatening someone with arrest on behalf of the IRS is a scammer. The woman already had paid $11,000 to the scammer before growing suspicious and visiting police.
Seismic bearings Seismic bearings which will cap the concrete columns are scheduled for delivery in early November. The bearings are designed to isolate the bridge structure from the columns so that any ground movement is not transmitted to the bridge structure. With the seismic bearings in place, the bridge sections will be bolted together. TURN
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Possible conflict raised on council hopeful But lawyer says matter is addressed BY CHARLIE BERMANT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
involves the city. “If he is appointed by the court to represent a criminal defendant on a city case filed in District Court or is retained by a private client to handle a city criminal matter in District Court the case would be prosecuted by the assistant city prosecutor,” Rosekrans wrote in an email sent to both the Peninsula Daily News and the Port Townsend/Jefferson County Leader.
PORT TOWNSEND — A former county prosecutor has raised the possibility of a conflict of interest between an attorney’s business and his serving on the City Council if elected — but that attorney and council candidate said he is already on the case. Scott Rosekrans, who served one term as Jefferson County Prosecuting Attorney from 2011 to 2015 feels, that Position 6 City ‘Chilling effect’ Council candidate David Faber “This could cause a chilling would have to recuse himself if he was involved in litigation that effect on the prosecutor’s decision
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to prosecute fearing that alienating Mr. Faber could have repercussions later on any decisions that he might have to vote on for funding the office, training for the office or personnel matters.” Rosekrans wrote that he was raising the issue because “as lawyers, we know that the appearance of impropriety is just as damaging as the actual impropriety.” Rosekrans was not saying a lawyer can’t serve on the council, but that a member of the council who was also a lawyer would have to circumvent any conflict of interest. In response, Faber said he does not personally handle criminal cases nor does he accept public
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defender positions from either the county or the city. He agreed with the need for him to pay attention to any conflict and recuse himself from any case with which he is remotely involved, but he has still contacted the Washington State Bar Association ethics hotline to check the boundaries of a possible conflict. Faber
Unable to connect As of Friday afternoon, Faber was not able to connect with the bar association, although he has traded calls with the agency several times. The bar association would only provide him with advice, he said, and would not make a
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public ruling or issue an opinion. Faber said he already addressed the issue prior to Rosekrans’ assertions, “I have been asked about this several times,” Faber said.
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MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 2015
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Tundra
The Samurai of Puzzles
By Chad Carpenter
Copyright © 2015, Michael Mepham Editorial Services
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Newsroom, sports CONTACTS! To report news: 360-417-3531, or one of our local offices: Sequim, 360-681-2390, ext. 5052; Jefferson County/Port Townsend, 360-385-2335, ext. 5550; West End/Forks, 800-826-7714, ext. 5052 Sports desk/reporting a sports score: 360-417-3525 Letters to Editor: 360-417-3527 Club news, “Seen Around” items, subjects not listed above: 360-417-3527 To purchase PDN photos: www.peninsuladailynews.com, click on “Photo Gallery.” Permission to reprint or reuse articles: 360-417-3530 To locate a recent article: 360-417-3527
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS (ISSN 1050-7000, USPS No. 438.580), continuing the Port Angeles Evening News (founded April 10, 1916) and The Daily News, is a locally operated member of Black Press Group Ltd./Sound Publishing Inc., published each morning Sunday through Friday at 305 W. First St., Port Angeles, WA 98362. POSTMASTER: Periodicals postage paid at Port Angeles, WA. Send address changes to Circulation Department, Peninsula Daily News, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. Contents copyright © 2015, Peninsula Daily News MEMBER
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Newsmakers Celebrity scoop ■ By The Associated Press
Lawyers seek 2nd Cosby deposition THE LAWYER FOR a woman who’s accused Bill Cosby of sexually abusing her at the Playboy Mansion when she was 15 says she’ll seek a second deposition of the comedian. Lawyer Gloria Allred said Saturday that Cosby appeared for a deposition in Boston on Allred Friday that lasted several hours. Allred represents Judy Huth, who claims Cosby forced her to perform a sex act on him in the 1970s. Allred says Huth will be deposed Thursday. She said a California judge will decide
in December if the testimony will be made public. Lawyers for the 78-yearold Cosby said Huth’s lawsuit is frivolous and that Huth’s former attorney attempted to extort Cosby.
Stars help Obamas Queen Latifah, Smokey Robinson and Trombone Shorty are among the performing artists who will help celebrate the arts at the White House on Wednesday. They will be joined by Usher, James Taylor, Audra McDonald and others Latifah for a PBS special hosted by President Barack Obama and his wife, Michelle. The event will mark the 50th anniversary of legisla-
tion that created the National Endowment for the Arts and the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Tidal concert Nick Jonas and rappers Rick Ross, Meek Mill and French Montana have been added to the Tidal X concert in October, concert organizers announced Friday. Previously announced artists include Tidal-owners Beyonce and Jay-Z, Beyonce as well as Prince, Nicki Minaj, Usher, Lil Wayne, Damian Marley and Thomas Rhett. The concert, “TIDAL X: 1020 Amplified by HTC,” will be held at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, N.Y., on Oct. 20 and will be livestreamed.
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS PENINSULA POLL SATURDAY’S QUESTION: Is it appropriate for parents to spank their children?
Passings By The Associated Press
RAVINDRA JAIN, 71, who overcame lifelong blindness to achieve renown in his native India and beyond as a singer and composer, scoring more than 200 Bollywood films, died Friday in Mumbai. His death, at a hospital, was caused by multiple organ failure, said his wife, Divya. Stout of Mr. Jain build with flowing black hair and often wearing wraparound sunglasses, Mr. Jain was one of India’s most celebrated musicians. Besides composing for film, he was a music director and baritone recording artist who found wide audiences performing in concert and on television music shows. Mr. Jain originally found fame after meeting the southern Indian singing star K.J. Yesudas. Together they produced a string of hits in the 1970s and ’80s. Mr. Jain once said that if he was ever to gain sight, Mr. Yesudas’s face was the first he wished to see. Ravindra Jain was born Feb. 28, 1944, in Aligarh, in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh. He was the third among seven brothers and a sister. His father was a Sanskrit authority, or pundit; his mother was a homemaker.
Hamptons on Long Island, died Monday after she was hit by a pickup truck in Bridgehampton, N.Y. Ms. Pump was struck as she crossed a street and taken to a hospital in Southampton, where she was pronounced dead, said her daughter, Sybille Ms. Pump van Kempen, a chef and a co-owner with her mother at Loaves & Fishes. Anna Heitweg Tutjer was born on April 11, 1934, on a 70-acre farm in Tarp, Germany, where her parents, Harm Tutjer and the former Sophie Johannsen, grew potatoes, rutabagas and other vegetables; raised cattle, pigs, chickens, ducks and geese; and smoked their own meats and made their own sausages. During the winters, when the business of farming slowed, the family entertained frequently.
________
LINDY INFANTE, 75, who was named the NFL’s coach of the year in 1989 when he revived the fortunes of the Green Bay Packers, and who later coached the Indianapolis Colts to the playoffs, died on Thursday in St. Augustine, Fla. The Packers announced his death on their website. LeRoy Butler, a Pro Bowl safety for the Packers who had played for Mr. Infante ________ and spoke with his wife, Stephanie, told The MilANNA PUMP, 81, a chef and a cookbook writer waukee Journal Sentinel that the cause was pneuwhose national reputation for deceptively simple gour- monia. Coaching the Packers met fare emanated from from 1988 to 1991 and the her place of business, the Loaves & Fishes Foodstore, Colts in 1996 and ’97, Mr. a humble-looking fixture of Infante had only one playoff squad: his first Colts team, high-end living in the
which lost to the Pittsburgh Steelers in a wildcard game. His overall record was 36-60, but he Mr. Infante was the victim of bad timing, losing both his headcoaching jobs in the seasons before his teams obtained two of pro football’s greatest quarterbacks. The Packers obtained Brett Favre in 1992, while the Colts drafted Peyton Manning in 1998.
Yes No
81.2% 16.1%
Undecided 2.7% Total votes cast: 1,196 Vote on today’s question at www.peninsuladailynews.com NOTE: The Peninsula Poll is unscientific and reflects the opinions of only those peninsuladailynews.com users who chose to participate. The results cannot be assumed to represent the opinions of all users or the public as a whole.
Setting it Straight Corrections and clarifications 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 Leah Leach at 360-4173530 or email her at lleach@peninsuladailynews.com.
Peninsula Lookback From the pages of the PENINSULA DAILY NEWS and Port Angeles Evening News
Board Monday night passed a resolution protesting the Completing restoration of plantations destroyed by action of the county commisthe big fire of 1939, the U.S. sioners in taking $25,000 Forest Service Monday will out of Sequim Forestry start planting 186,000 trees Funds for the Peninsula College Fisheries Program. on 265 acres of land at the Faced with a building head of the Pysht river south fork, District Ranger program and immediate need for portable classrooms Sanford M. Floe of Snider the board requested station said today. Sequim’s share of forestry Floe said the trees will include 152,000 Douglas fir monies, approximately $32,000, be placed in the and 34,000 spruce. building fund, when the The location is directly south of Pysht, in the area 1965-66 budget was adopted. swept by the great blaze 1990 (25 years ago) that covered thousands of acres of logged-off, planted A strike may be averted and timbered lands in the today when negotiators late summer of 1939. meet in what both sides say will likely be the last
1940 (75 years ago)
1965 (50 years ago) The Sequim School
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session of the six-month stalemate between the nurses union and Olympic Medical Hospital. “At this upcoming session, we intend to make a new proposal to enable us to reach a timely settlement,” a union telegram to the management said Thursday.
Laugh Lines OSCAR MAYER HAS come out with a new dating app which promises to pair up singles who love bacon, called Sizzl. Which is way better than their original name, “eHam-ony.” Seth Meyers
THE GOVERNMENT HAS unveiled a new webWANTED! “Seen Around” site that predicts your items recalling things seen on financial worth after gradthe North Olympic Peninsula. uating college. Send them to PDN News Desk, It doesn’t give you a P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles number, just tells you WA 98362; fax 360-417-3521; or email news@peninsuladaily which Starbucks you’ll be news.com. Be sure you men- working at and for how tion where you saw your “Seen long. Conan O’Brien Around.” Peninsula snapshots
Lottery LAST NIGHT’S LOTTERY results are available on a timely basis by phoning, toll-free, 800-545-7510 or on the Internet at www. walottery.com/Winning Numbers.
Looking Back From the files of The Associated Press
TODAY IS MONDAY, Oct. 12, the 285th day of 2015. There are 80 days left in the year. This is the Columbus Day holiday in the U.S., as well as Thanksgiving Day in Canada. Today’s Highlight in History: ■ On Oct.12, 1915, English nurse Edith Cavell was executed by a German firing squad for helping Allied soldiers escape from occupied Belgium during World War I. On this date: ■ In 1492 (according to the Old Style calendar), Christopher Columbus arrived with his expedition in the present-day Bahamas. ■ In 1870, Gen. Robert E. Lee died in Lexington, Va., at age 63. ■ In 1915, former President
Theodore Roosevelt, speaking to the Knights of Columbus in New York, criticized native-born Americans (as opposed to naturalized citizens) who identified themselves by dual nationalities, saying that “a hyphenated American is not an American at all.” ■ In 1933, bank robber John Dillinger escaped from a jail in Allen County, Ohio, with the help of his gang, who killed the sheriff, Jess Sarber. ■ In 1942, during World War II, American naval forces defeated the Japanese in the Battle of Cape Esperance. ■ In 1964, the Soviet Union launched a Voskhod space capsule with a three-man crew on the first
mission involving more than one crew member (the flight lasted just over 24 hours). ■ In 1973, President Richard Nixon nominated House minority leader Gerald R. Ford of Michigan to succeed Spiro T. Agnew as vice president. ■ In 1994, the Magellan space probe ended its four-year mapping mission of Venus, apparently plunging into the planet’s atmosphere. ■ In 2000, 17 sailors were killed in a suicide bomb attack on the destroyer USS Cole in Yemen. ■ In 2002, bombs blamed on al-Qaida-linked militants destroyed a nightclub on the Indonesian island of Bali, killing 202 people, including 88 Australians
and seven Americans. ■ Ten years ago: China launched its second manned space flight, during which two astronauts orbited Earth for five days. ■ Five years ago: The Obama administration announced it was lifting the six-month moratorium on deep water oil drilling in the Gulf of Mexico imposed after the BP oil spill. ■ One year ago: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention confirmed that a health care worker at the Texas hospital where Ebola victim Thomas Eric Duncan was treated before his death had tested positive for the illness in the first known case of Ebola being contracted or transmitted in the U.S.
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Monday, October 12, 2015 PAGE
A4 Briefly: Nation reported that nine quakes ranging in magnitude from 2.5 to 3.7 were recorded between 5:07 p.m. Saturday and 5:27 a.m. Sunday. No injuries or damage were reported. Geologists said damage is not likely in quakes below CLEVELAND — Two outside magnitude 4.0. investigators looking into the The latest seismic activity death of Tamir Rice have concomes after a 4.5 magnitude cluded that a Cleveland police temblor Saturday afternoon officer, Tim Loehmann, acted reasonably in deciding last year near Cushing and a 4.4 magnito shoot when he confronted the tude quake Saturday morning southwest of Medford. 12-year-old boy carrying what The Oklahoma Geological Surturned out to be a replica gun. vey has said it is likely that many Those opinrecent earthquakes in the state ions, reached have been triggered by the injecseparately by tion of wastewater from oil and Colorado prosnatural gas drilling operations. ecutor S. Lamar Sims Officer fatally shot and former FBI superviMEMPHIS, Tenn. — An offsory special duty police officer died Sunday agent Kimafter being shot multiple times, berly A. Craw- Rice the fourth Memphis police offiford, were cer to be fatally shot in slight released Saturday night by the more than four years, authoriCuyahoga County prosecutor, ties said. Timothy J. McGinty, whose Memphis Police Director office will ultimately present Toney Armstrong said 31-yearevidence in the case to a grand old Terence Olridge was taken jury to decide on possible crimi- to the Regional Medical Center nal charges. in Memphis on Sunday where The reports, which were com- he later died. missioned by the prosecutor’s Armstrong said officers got a office, come almost 11 months call around 1 p.m. about a shootafter the shooting outside a rec- ing at a home in the Memphis reation center on Nov. 22, 2014. suburb of Cordova. He said a male suspect is in Okla. earthquakes custody, but didn’t say whether CUSHING, Okla. — A series of the person has been charged. Armstrong said the investismall earthquakes have been gation is ongoing and that recorded across northern Okla“details are sketchy.” homa following two moderate The Associated Press earthquakes in the area Saturday. The U.S. Geological Survey and The New York Times
Reviews: Ohio officer had acted reasonably
No increase for 2016 Social Security benefits Retirees can blame lower gasoline prices BY STEPHEN OHLEMACHER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Inflation has been so low this year that economists said there is little chance the September numbers will produce a benefit increase for next year. Prices actually have dropped from a year ago, according to the inflation measure used for the COLA.
Probable zero increase
WASHINGTON — For just the third time in 40 years, millions of Social Security recipients, disabled veterans and federal retirees can expect no increase in benefits next year, unwelcome news for more than one-fifth of the nation’s population. They can blame low gas prices. By law, the annual cost-of-living adjustment, or COLA, is based on a government measure of inflation, which is being dragged down by lower prices at the pump. The government is scheduled to announce the COLA — or lack of one — on Thursday, when it releases the Consumer Price Index for September.
“It’s a very high probability that it will be zero,” said economist Polina Vlasenko, a research fellow at the American Institute for Economic Research. “Other prices — other than energy — would have to jump. It would have to be a very sizable increase that would be visible, and I don’t think that’s happened.” Congress enacted automatic increases for Social Security beneficiaries in 1975, when inflation was high and there was a lot of pressure to regularly raise benefits. Since then, increases have averaged 4 percent a year. Only twice before, in 2010 and
2011, have there been no increases. In all, the COLA affects payments to more than 70 million Americans. Almost 60 million retirees, disabled workers, spouses and children get Social Security benefits. The average monthly payment is $1,224. The COLA also affects benefits for about 4 million disabled veterans, 2.5 million federal retirees and their survivors, and more than 8 million people who get Supplemental Security Income, the disability program for the poor. Many people who get SSI also receive Social Security. Carol Mead of Montrose, Pa., said she and her husband were counting on Social Security COLA to help them with their finances. “My husband is working just so we can pay our bills,” said Mead, a retired land-use administrator. “He’s 70 years old, and he’s still working in a stone quarry. He’s told me a number of times that he thinks he’s going to have to work until the day he dies.”
Briefly: World Palestinians are killed, 4 Israelis suffer wounds JERUSALEM — A wave of Israeli-Palestinian violence showed no signs of abating Sunday, as three Palestinians, including a 2-year-old and a 13-year-old, were killed by Israeli forces, and four Israelis were wounded in an evening stabbing attack. The attacks have been primarily stabbings and shootings, but a Palestinian woman seriously injured herself when she detonated a gas canister Sunday, lightly wounding a police officer. The unrest erupted last month around the Jewish New Year, with clashes beginning at a contested holy site in Jerusalem and quickly spreading to other parts of the city, across Israel and into the West Bank and Gaza Strip. At least 24 Palestinians, including eight attackers, have been killed by Israeli forces, while five Israelis have been killed in attacks. The attack, which, was the first in the current round of violence to involve such an explosive device.
Merkel on refugees BERLIN — Germany will not have to raise taxes to help pay for the hundreds of thousands of refugees and other migrants who have been flooding into the country, Chancellor Angela Merkel said in an inter-
view released Sunday, and the government should have new regulations in place by November to help deal with the influx. Germany expects at least 800,000 newcomers this year if not more, but Merkel told topselling Bild newspaper in a preview of an interview to be printed in today’s edition that there would “definitely” be no tax increases to help care for them.
Dominion over hajj ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates — Saudi Prince Turki al-Faisal on Sunday rejected the idea of sharing the administration of the annual hajj pilgrimage with other Muslim nations, saying Riyadh considers it “a matter of sovereignty” and a “privilege.” The senior member of the Saudi royal family spoke to The Associated Press as his country faces mounting criticism in the wake of last Al-Faisal month’s disastrous crush of pilgrims outside the holy city of Mecca, which killed over 1,400 people, according to an AP count, making it the deadliest annual pilgrimage on record. Saudi Arabia’s regional rival Iran, which lost the largest number of pilgrims, has accused the kingdom of mismanagement and called for an independent body to oversee the hajj. The Associated Press
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
OBJECTION
TO BILL
Head of Iran’s Atomic Energy Organization Ali Akbar Salehi, top, pauses while an opponent lawmaker, bottom second right, objects to his address in an open session of parliament while discussing a bill on Iran’s nuclear deal with world powers, in Tehran, Iran, on Sunday. Iran’s official IRNA news agency reported Sunday the country’s parliament has approved an outline of a bill that allows the government to implement a historic nuclear deal reached between Iran and world powers, including the United States.
Native Americans are being recognized on Columbus Day BY MARY HUDETZ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — More cities are recognizing Native Americans on Columbus Day this year as they revive a movement to change the name of the holiday to celebrate the history and contributions of indigenous cultures around the country. As the U.S. observes Columbus Day today, it will also be Indigenous Peoples Day in at least nine cities for the first time this year,
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including Olympia. Encouraged by city council votes in Minneapolis and Seattle last year, Native American activists made a push in dozens of cities in recent months to get local leaders to officially recognize the second Monday of October as Indigenous Peoples Day. Their success was mixed. The campaigns said the federal holiday honoring Christopher Columbus overlook a painful history of colonialism, enslavement, discrimination and land grabs
that followed the Italian explorer’s 1492 arrival in the Americas. The indigenous holiday takes into account the history and contributions of Native Americans for a more accurate historical record, activists have argued. Columbus Day supporters said the holiday celebrates centuries of cultural exchange between America and Europe, commemorates an iconic explorer and honors Italian-Americans, a group that has endured its own share of discrimination.
. . . more news to start your day
West: Jimi Hendrix’s family is suing Ariz. shop owner
Nation: Mac and cheese incident spawns fundraisers
Nation: ‘Pan’ lacks magic while ‘The Martian’ soars
World: Belarusians set to give president fifth term
THE ESTATE OF Jimi Hendrix is suing a Tucson man for a guitar once owned by the legendary guitarist. The Arizona Daily Star in Tucson reported Sunday that Experience Hendrix LLC, the company that runs Hendrix’s estate, wants a Pima County Superior Court judge to order the guitar returned. According to the Oct. 2, complaint, the estate says Harvey Moltz, owner of Rainbow Guitars, is not the rightful owner of the Black Widow acoustic guitar. Estate attorney Ed McPherson says the guitar is valued between $750,000 and $1 million. The lawsuit is also seeking damages.
UCONN STUDENTS ARE trying to use an embarrassing video about macaroni and cheese to raise a little cheddar. The video of a fellow student berating food service workers who refused to sell him jalapeno-bacon mac and cheese prompted a group of students to start an online fundraiser to give the beleaguered employees a well-deserved night out. Freshman Sadie Rumsey and her friends set up a page on GoFundMe. com (https://www.gofundme.com/ vs5yvngw) to show their support for the workers abused in the video captured inside the university’s student union last week. As of Sunday, the page had collected more than $1,300.
“PAN” PRODUCED NO Neverland magic at the box office. The fantasy, which cost an estimated $150 million to produce, earned $15.5 million in its opening weekend, according to Rentrak estimates Sunday, making it one of the worst bombs of the year. Not all was bleak at the box office, though. Ridley Scott’s space adventure “The Martian” earned a solid $37 million in its second week in theaters, nabbing the top spot once more. “Hotel Transylvania 2” took second place in its third weekend with $20.3 million, bumping its total to $116.8 million. “Pan” came in at No. 3.
PRESIDENT ALEXANDER LUKASHENKO was set to win a fifth term in Sunday’s election with ease, but he said anything less than 80 percent of the vote would be a sign that his support was slipping. Both the official exit polls and the chief election official later predicted he would get even more. The authoritarian leader faced no serious competition in the election, which was boycotted by the opposition. About 100 opposition supporters held a protest march after polls closed to show their discontentment, but the demonstration ended peacefully.
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
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PA teens work to fight drug abuse with group BY ARWYN RICE PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — Four teenagers who have seen the damage drugs can inflict on a young life have founded an organization to help teens avoid or recover from drug abuse. In their first outing as the founders of “Hope After Heroin,” Makiah Sperry 17; Caitlin Balser, 16; Chante Robideau, 17; and Micah Nichols, 17, gathered trash and found 20 hypodermic needles near Hollywood Beach on Friday in an effort aided by nearly two dozen fellow students. That day, the four students had no school due to a district-wide teacher work day, and instead of spending the day relaxing with video games or going to a concert, they made posters and invited friends to a beach cleanup at Hollywood Beach. “We invited everyone we thought would benefit from it,” Nichols said Sunday.
23 students In all, 23 students from Lincoln High School, Port Angeles High School, Stevens Middle School and Franklin Elementary showed up Friday to pick up trash and locate needles and other drug paraphernalia in the rocks under City Pier, near Hollywood Beach and along the Olympic Discovery Trail to the east. “Some just showed up. We didn’t even know them,” Makiah Sperry said.
JAY CLINE/CLALLAM COUNTY FIRE DISTRICT NO. 2
TINA SPERRY
Twentythree Port Angeles students took part in a cleanup effort Friday in downtown Port Angeles. The teens found 20 syringes, which were collected by seven adult volunteers to be disposed of through Clallam County Health and Human Services, along with makeshift pipes and other items associated with drug use, discarded clothing and six full bags of trash, Makiah’s mother, Tina Sperry, said. The group will meet at 6 p.m. today at Westside Pizza, 612 S. Lincoln St., where it will hold a pizza party to celebrate its first successful cleanup and to plan for future events. Pizzas were donated by supporters and by Westside Pizza. The group said there are plans to have regular cleanup events in areas where youths congregate. The four teens, along with Tina Sperry, founded “Hope After Heroin,” through which they intend to help young people sup-
port peers recovering from drug abuse, to try to keep other teens from trying drugs at all and to help clean up the results of drug use in the community. “It’s not just heroin. It’s also meth,” Tina Sperry said Sunday.
Affected by drugs Each founder knows other young people who are either using drugs, recovering from drug abuse, in jail for drugs or who have had family members or friends whose lives have been negatively affected by drugs. That includes deaths, but fortunately not close loved ones, Makiah Sperry said. The inspiration for the project was a young man Makiah Sperry once dated, whose name she declined to share. Sperry said he was a former A student, promising athlete and “good guy,”
and his life fell apart after he began to use drugs. He spent time in “boot camp” getting clean, returned to Port Angeles and initially did well in his recovery, but began using drugs again, she said. Later this week he will be going to jail, she said. With the blessing and support of his family members, Tina Sperry took the reins of the fledgling organization, and Makiah Sperry reached out to her friends to help their peers. A lot of people write off drug users, but there are many out there who can recover and return to a sober life, Makiah Sperry said. Nichols added that there are many smart young people who are still the future of Port Angeles and need help. “They are not a lost cause. Just because you use, that doesn’t mean you are a bad person. That’s not who they are when they’re not using,” Nichols said.
Port Angeles Fire Department firefighters Mike Adamich, left, and Mark Karjalainen respond to a structure fire Sunday morning at 922 E. Georgiana St. in Port Angeles.
Morning fire leaves smoke damage in Port Angeles home PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — A Sunday morning house fire on Georgiana Street resulted in a lot of smoke damage but little from flames, according to the Port Angeles Fire Department. The resident of 922 E. Georgiana St. was not home at the time of the fire, and no one was injured, said Lt. Mike Sanders. The fire began at some time before 9 a.m., Sanders said. At about 8:56 a.m., an area resident driving through the alley between Georgiana and
Front streets behind Wells Fargo Bank noticed smoke coming from the home and called 9-1-1, he said. Sanders said five firefighters initially responded to the report of smoke with two engines and a medical unit. Six additional firefighters arrived to assist about 10 minutes later, and firefighters were able to clear the scene by about 10:30 a.m., he said. He said it was not immediately clear what caused the small fire, and the cause is under investigation.
Women share stories of surviving cancer BY CHRIS MCDANIEL PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
SEQUIM — When health care worker Ranay Yarian found a lump in her breast three years ago, it was the beginning of what she dubbed “Mr. Toad’s Wild Ride.” “I called it that because I really didn’t know what was up ahead, but I knew it would be filled with twists and turns and ups and downs,” Yarian, 60, told 235 women attending the 18th Annual Mad Hatter’s Tea in Sequim on Friday. It happened on the day of her first big speaking event as the community outreach manager for Banner MD Anderson Cancer Center of Gilbert, Ariz., she said.
Finding a lump “I hopped up in the morning, hopped in the shower and found a lump,” she said. She was diagnosed a few days later. “I got the news, and I looked at my watch and I said, ‘I don’t have time for this,’” she said. “I have a date in 10 minutes with a nice man. What
CHRIS MCDANIEL/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Cancer Survivors, standing, are given carnations during the 18th Annual Mad Hatter’s Tea held Friday afternoon at SunLand Golf and Country Club. am I going to do?” Women in hats ranging from the sublime to the ludicrous gathered at SunLand Golf & Country Club in Sequim to rally against cancer and support cancer survivors. Proceeds went to Operation Uplift of Port Angeles, which provides services to local cancer patients, and the Olympic Medical Cancer Center of Sequim. “Kicking cancer’s butt,
that is a cause!” said Jan Kummet, mistress of ceremonies. “We are about support and education and loving each other,” Kummet said. Women were there to “celebrate the heck out of people we know who have survived cancer,” she said. “We usually have a bunch of healthy ladies here who have survived cancer for a number of years,” she said. “We
love you.” Survivors are becoming more plentiful as “cancer is diagnosed earlier and treatment is improved,” she said.
Stand, be recognized Kummet asked longterm breast cancer survivors and those newly diagnosed to stand and be recognized to raucous applause. “This is why we are here,” she said.
Yarian said she has been encouraged to stay in the fight by survivors such as those at the tea who “are so resilient, and they find ways to get through this journey,” she said. Each survivor was given carnations in commemoration of her ongoing victory against the disease. Yarian’s first victory after her diagnosis was deciding what to do next. “It took me about 2.6 seconds and I drove to the restaurant and I ordered a margarita,” she said. “Then I ordered a second one and got about halfway through that.” She told her date about the diagnosis. He asked if she wanted another margarita, a shot or an entire bottle. The two are now engaged and Yarian recently completed cancer treatments and various surgeries. She told those there how she made it through the experience. “I knew that the whole cancer thing was primarily a head game and I was going to be required to put to use many of the techniques and tools I had been practicing for real, only this
time the practice was going to have greater significance,” Yarian said. “It really was an opportunity to put your money where your mouth is, baby.” The most important thing a person can do to maintain good health is to “surround yourself with people who make you feel good,” she said.
Social circle important “There have been studies that have shown your social circle is very important to your health,” saying she had wonderful family members and “friends that make me laugh. “I started living on gallows humor and started asking my friends to send me bad boob jokes. I feel laughter really is the best medicine. You just had to laugh.” She also extolled the merits of swearing, saying she had found research that said that “swearing is effective at reducing stress, especially in women.”
________ Sequim-Dungeness Valley Editor Chris McDaniel can be reached at 360-681-2390, ext. 5052, or cmcdaniel@peninsuladailynews. com.
Organist to use Baroque style at New registry aims Port Townsend concert Thursday to help ID items PENINSULA DAILY NEWS PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT TOWNSEND — With a recital called “If It Ain’t Baroque . . . !,” organist Woody Bernas will give the next Candlelight Concert at Trinity United Methodist Church, 609 Taylor St., this Thursday night. Starting at 7 p.m., Bernas will fill the place with music from the Baroque period as well as the works of modern composers to demonstrate that Trinity’s 2,000-pipe organ has the capability for it all. Doors will open at 6:30 p.m., with admission a suggested $10 donation for adults, with proceeds to benefit Port Townsend charities and Trinity’s music and historic Victorian restoration programs. Children will be admitted free, and refreshments will be served after the performance. Bernas will open the recital with Buxtehude’s Prelude and Fugue in D Major and Johann Sebastian Bach’s Air
Organist Woody Bernas will fill Port Townsend’s Trinity United Methodist Church with Baroque music — and then some — Thursday. from Orchestral Suite, also in D major. Pieces from the modern composers Hermann Schroeder, Michael Burkhardt, Gerald Near, John Leavitt and Bernas’ former teacher Marilyn Biery are also on the itinerary. The organist then will play some chorale preludes, brief compositions
based on hymn tunes that are hundreds of years old. “This concert will offer listeners a rare opportunity to travel back in time” via a sampling of music through the centuries, Bernas said. Thursday’s Candlelight Concert will be the second public performance of Trinity’s Baroque organ, which is a modern emulation of an instrument built in 1735 by Bach’s friend Gottfried Silbermann of Reinhardsgrimma, Germany. Bernas, who studied with Biery at the Cathedral of St. Paul in Minnesota, was invited in 2010 to play a series of recitals in Stockholm, Sweden. There, his performance at the Marcussen and Sons organ in St. Jacob Church was recorded and released on a CD titled “Live in Stockholm.” The recording will available for sale after his performance Thursday night. For more information about this and future Candlelight Concerts, phone 360-774-1644.
PORT ANGELES — A free online registry can help the Clallam County Sheriff’s Office recover property stolen from citizens who use the service. ReportIt allows people to record serial numbers, descriptions and images of smartphones, entertainment devices, electronics, computers, cameras and goods such as designer clothing, collectibles and items of personal worth. Should they be stolen, said Sheriff Bill Benedict, the Sheriff’s Office can use the information to help identify the property. If a stolen item is sold to a pawn or secondhand shop, the product information can be entered in the
LeadsOnline database and be immediately viewable by participating law enforcement agencies nationwide. The record also can help when filing insurance claims for stolen or lost items, Benedict said. People can access the secure service at https:// reportit.leadsonline.com. ReportIt has been discontinued by the Jefferson County Sheriff ’s Office, where Undersheriff Joe Nole said it had “cost more than we got out of it.” Nole said, however, his department could access ReportIt through participating law enforcement agencies if deputies suspect recovered items were stolen in Clallam County.
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MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 2015 — (J)
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Council: Faber apprised clients with city litigation
STEVE MULLENSKY /
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
ROYALTY CROWNED
Chimacum High School homecoming royalty, Queen Sophia Thurston and King Trevon Noel, pose on the 50 yard line of Memorial Field after being presented during halftime of the homecoming game against the Klahowya Eagles on Friday.
CONTINUED FROM A1 expects that the public will pay attention to his involve“But I have already ment. informed my clients who “The public needs to have direct dealings with keep an eye on elected offithe city that I will no longer cials, period,” he said. “Elected officials are be able to represent them if agents of the public, and if I am elected,” Faber said. Faber said he apprised you are not watching them, “a handful” of clients with you are not doing your civic litigation that involves the duties as a citizen.” city that he would need to quit their cases if elected to No direct authority the council. Faber said that as a counFaber said that any case cil member he would not have that concerns the city would any direct authority over be handled by his partner, attorneys employed by the Sam Feinson, with whom city as City Manager David he has installed a theoreti- Timmons is their supervisor. cal “firewall” that will not He could theoretically allow him to profit from or vote to cut funding as a know about any such case. result of a personal issue. With this, Feinson would “I could do that, but I am handle any criminal cases only one of seven,” he said. or cases with a connection “And that I could do it is to the city without Faber’s immaterial to the issue as knowledge, input or finan- to whether I would try.” cial benefit. Travis Keena, Faber’s Faber said he intends to opponent, said he had “no play close attention to any real problem” with Faber’s possibility of conflict, but working as an attorney, add-
ing that council members Michelle Sandoval, a realtor, and restaurant owner Kris Nelson often recuse themselves when a council matter concerns their businesses. “If Mr. Faber takes no criminal cases or civil cases where the city is an opposing party then I do not think there will be a problem and if the State Bar of Washington says there is no conflict, all the better,” Rosekrans wrote. Faber doesn’t question Rosekrans’ motives in raising the issue. “I don’t think this is a ridiculous line of questioning,” Faber said. “I think we should be asking our elected officials to respond to questions like this.”
________ Jefferson County Editor Charlie Bermant can be reached at 360385-2335 or cbermant@peninsula dailynews.com.
Trestle: 3-inch deck will be poured
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CONTINUED FROM A1 She’d been the victim of a widespread swindle. “I think the IRS scam is probably everywhere,” Fudally said. “The IRS has on their website that they’d received about 90,000 complaints and more than $5 million had been collected by the scammers since August 2014. “I’m sure the number has gone up quite a bit since then.”
Scam upon scam The initial scam starts with a bogus IRS agent demanding payment by a prepaid debit card or wire transfer, something the legitimate tax agency never asks, Fudally said. In the woman’s case, the scammer thought he could extort even more money by threatening her with immediate arrest and used an electronic device to “spoof” her caller identification software to show the actual number of Port Townsend police. “The Port Townsend Police Department wants to remind everyone never to provide personal information over the phone,” Fudally said. “The Port Townsend Police Department will not try to collect fines or assist in tax collection. “If someone calls stating they are a Port Townsend police officer or a local dispatcher, you can verify this by asking for their name and then calling our dispatch center at 360-344-9779.”
A three-inch-thick cement deck will be poured on top of each section before the bridge is opened to the public, Johnson said. The smooth cement deck should be ideal for pedestrians, cyclists and skaters, he said. The new desing also improves passage for salmon, he added. The replacement trestle structure will allow logs and fish to pass beneath with fewer obstructions as the Dungeness River’s path moves seasonally. The steel sections are manufactured by Wheeler Lumber LLC, a Minnesota firm that specializes in metal, fiberglass and timber prefabricated bridges, and transported to Sequim on flatbed trucks.
Nordland Construction They will be installed by Nordland Construction, contractors for the Jamestown S’Klallam tribe. Funding for the replacement project came from a state Recreation and Conservation Office Salmon Recovery Funding Board grant. Several other sources of funding also will be used, including tribal insurance coverage payments, tribal transportation funding, a Bureau of Indian Affairs grant, a state Floodplains by Design grant and a contribution from the Peninsula Trails Coalition. Additionally, a First Federal
LARRY JEFFRYES
Five new steel sections of the Dungeness River Railroad Bridge trestle started arriving by flatbed truck last week. Community Foundation grant of $100,000 will be used to re-deck the Howe truss bridge portion of the crossing. When the trestle was damaged last February, engineers assessed the older wooden struc-
ture. The tribe elected to replace, not fix, the trestle section. The design and engineering work was funded by a $172,000 grant from the state Salmon Recovery Fund Board. Johnson said the final struc-
ture should be an “exceptionally fine bridge,” useful for both people and fish.
________ Reporter Mark Swanson can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 5054, or mswanson@peninsuladailynews.com.
Senate to look at other areas of immigration enforcement PENINSULA DAILY NEWS NEWS SERVICES
WASHINGTON — The House schedule is yet to be announced for the week of Oct. 19, while the Senate that week will take up a bill dealing with sanctuary cities and other areas of immigration enforcement.
Contact legislators (clip and save) “Eye on Congress” is published in the Peninsula Daily News every Monday when Congress is in session about activities, roll call votes and legislation in the House and Senate. The North Olympic Peninsula’s legislators in Wash-
Death Notices Howard Thomas Faulkner
ington, D.C., are Sen. Maria Cantwell (D-Mountlake Terrace), Sen. Patty Murray (D-Seattle) and Rep. Derek Kilmer (D-Gig Harbor). Contact information — The address for Cantwell and Murray is U.S. Senate, Washington, D.C. 20510; Kilmer, U.S. House, Washington, D.C. 20515. Phone Cantwell at 202224-3441 (fax, 202-2280514); Murray, 202-2242621 (fax, 202-224-0238); Kilmer, 202-225-5916. Email via their websites: cantwell.senate.gov; murray. senate.gov; kilmer.house.gov. Kilmer’s North Olympic Peninsula is located at 332 E. Fifth St. in Port Angeles. Hours are 9 a.m. to noon Tuesdays and from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesdays and Thursdays. It is staffed by Judith Morris, who can be contacted at judith.morris@ mail.house.gov or 360-7973623.
April 17, 1948 — Sept. 20, 2015
State legislators
Forks resident Howard Thomas Faulkner died of a heart attack in Port Angeles. He was 67. Services: There will be a private Celebration of life at a later date. Harper-Ridgeview Funeral Home, Port Angeles, is in charge of arrangements. www.harper-ridgeview funeralchapel.com
Jefferson and Clallam counties are represented in the part-time state Legislature by Rep. Kevin Van De Wege, D-Sequim, the House majority whip; Rep. Steve Tharinger, D-Sequim; and Sen. Jim Hargrove, D-Hoquiam. Write Van De Wege and Tharinger at P.O. Box 40600 (Hargrove at P.O. Box
Eye on Congress 40424), Olympia, WA 98504; email them at vandewege. kevin@leg.wa.gov; tharinger.steve@leg.wa.gov; hargrove.jim@leg.wa.gov. Or you can call the Legislative Hotline, 800-5626000, from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Mondays through Fridays (closed on holidays and from noon to 1 p.m.) and leave a detailed message, which will be emailed to Van De Wege, Tharinger, Hargrove or to all three. Links to other state officials: http://tinyurl.com/ pdn-linksofficials.
Learn more Websites following our state and national legislators: ■ Followthemoney. org — Campaign donors by industry, ZIP code and more ■ Vote-Smart.org — How special interest groups rate legislators on the issues.
A yes vote was to kill a Democratic attempt to abolish the panel. Kilmer voted no. ■ Planned Parenthood Investigation: The House on Oct. 7 created, 242-184, a select committee to pursue GOP charges that Planned Parenthood has engaged in misconduct or illegality in performing abortions and supplying fetal tissue to medical researchers. A yes vote was to establish the investigative panel. (H Res 461). Kilmer voted no. ■ Grace Period For Lenders: The House on Oct. 7 approved, 303-121, a fourmonth grace period, ending next Feb. 1, in which homemortgage lenders could not be prosecuted for violating a new Consumer Financial Protection Bureau rule to streamline and add transparency to home-buying. Critics said the bill undercuts one’s right to sue errant lenders. A yes vote was to pass HR 3192. Kilmer voted yes.
■ Benghazi Investigation: The House on Oct. 7 voted, 240-183, to stand by its Select Committee on Benghazi despite comments by Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy that the GOP is using it as an instrument to lower Democrat Hillary ■ Exempting Seniors, Clinton’s presidential poll Military Personnel: The numbers. House on Oct. 7 defeated,
■ Repeal of OilExport Ban: The House voted, 261-159, to end a ban on the export of domestically produced crude oil that was enacted in 1975 to help America achieve energy independence, but which foes say is outdated given the prolific level of oil production in the U.S. A yes vote was to send HR 702 to the Senate. ■ 2016 Military BudKilmer voted no. get: The Senate on Oct. 7 approved, 70-27, the confer■ Drilling on Tribal ence report on a bill autho- Lands: The House voted, rizing $604.2 billion for the 254-187, to clear the way for U.S. military in fiscal 2016. oil and gas extraction on Democrats faulted the Native American and bill over its shift of $38 bil- Alaska Native tribal lands lion in routine military by steps such as limiting spending to a war fund in court reviews of energy order to evade sequester projects and waiving cerspending caps. tain environmental rules. A yes vote was to send A yes vote was to send HR 1735 to the White HR 538 to the Senate. House and a likely presiKilmer voted no. dential veto. Cantwell and Murray ■ 2016 Energy, Water voted yes. Budget: The Senate failed, 49-47, to reach 60 votes ■ Gun Background needed to advance a HouseChecks: The House passed bill that would blocked, 244-183, a parlia- appropriate $35.4 billion for mentary tactic by Demo- energy, water and nuclear crats to bring to the floor a programs in fiscal 2016. bill now stranded in two A yes vote was to committees that would advance the bill over Demogreatly expand criminal cratic arguments that GOP background checks on com- leaders favor retaining the mercial gun sales. sequester’s spending caps A yes vote was to keep on domestic but not defense the bill (HR 1217) off the programs. House floor. Cantwell and Murray Kilmer voted no. voted no. 185-240, an attempt by Democrats to exempt homemortgage loans obtained by seniors, students, veterans and active-duty military personnel from the provisions of HR 3192 (above). A yes vote was to adopt the motion, which, had it prevailed, would have immediately amended the bill. Kilmer voted yes.
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Stuff happens, like climate change WITH BOTH CHINA and India having just announced major plans to curb their carbon emissions, the sound you hear is a tipping point tipping. Heading into the United Nations climate Thomas L. summit meetFriedman ing in Paris in December, all the world’s largest industrial economies are now taking climate change more seriously. This includes the United States — except for some of the knuckleheads running to be our next president, which is not a small problem. When, at CNN’s GOP presidential debate, the moderator Jake Tapper read statements from Ronald Reagan’s secretary of state George Shultz (who drives an electric car powered by solar panels on his home’s roof) about how Reagan urged industry to proactively address ozone depletion, and why Shultz believes we should be just as proactive today in dealing with climate change, he got the usual know-nothing responses. Sen. Marco Rubio said, “We’re not going to destroy our economy the way the left-wing govern-
ment that we are under now wants to do,” while Gov. Chris Christie opined of Shultz, “Listen, everybody makes a mistake every once in awhile.” They sure do, and it’s not Shultz, who has been wisely and courageously telling Republicans that the conservative thing to do now is to take out some insurance against climate change because if it really gets rocking, the results could be “catastrophic.” Hurricane Sandy — likely amplified by warmer ocean waters — caused over $36 billion in damage to Christie’s own state, New Jersey, in 2012. But hey, stuff just happens. There was a time when we could tolerate this kind of dumbas-we-wanna-be thinking. But it’s over. The next eight years will be critical for the world’s climate and ecosystems, and if you vote for a climate skeptic for president, you’d better talk to your kids first because you will have to answer to them later. If you have time to read one book on this subject, I highly recommend the new Big World, Small Planet, by Johan Rockstrom, director of the Stockholm Resilience Center, and Mattias Klum, whose stunning photographs of ecosystem disruptions reinforce the urgency of the moment.
Rockstrom begins his argument with a reminder that for most of the earth’s 4.5 billionyear history, its climate was not very hospitable to human beings, as it oscillated between “punishing ice ages and lush warm periods” that locked humanity into seminomadic lifestyles. It’s only been in the past 10,000 years that we have enjoyed the stable climate conditions allowing civilizations to develop based on agriculture that could support towns and cities. This period, known as the Holocene, was an “almost miraculously stable and warm interglacial equilibrium, which is the only state of the planet we know for sure can support the modern world as we know it.” It finally gave us “a stable equilibrium of forests, savannahs, coral reefs, grasslands, fish, mammals, bacteria, air quality, ice cover, temperature, freshwater availability and productive soils.” It “is our Eden,” Rockstrom added, and now “we are threatening to push earth out of this sweet spot,” starting in the mid1950s, when the Industrial Revolution reached most of the rest of the globe and populations and middle classes exploded. That triggered “the great acceleration” of industrial and farming growth, which has put
Peninsula Voices Department, Jefferson Mental Health Services, the Only one solution? YMCA and others to effecDuring his 18 years of tively combine scarce service as our Jefferson County Public Hospital Dis- resources for service and trict 2 [Jefferson Healthcare health improvement within our county. Hospital] commissioner, While Russell’s opponent Chuck Russell has focused states that we should focus on ensuring that the highon pushing through a Washest-quality health care is ington state single-payer available for all. Although Russell believes system, he has not provided details on how or even that a single-payer system, something like a super Medi- where we would receive our health care or its cost. care, is probable, he works Russell works on Jefferwithin and works to improve the current payment systems son Healthcare’s plans to prepare for any reality the to maximize benefits for all future may hold. our district residents. With Russell’s help, we Russell spearheaded can keep our high-quality, efforts to provide Veterans locally controlled health care Affairs health services available right here at home. locally, which should soon Anthony F. “Tony” become reality. De Leo, Russell supports joint Port Hadlock efforts with the Jefferson De Leo is a Jefferson County Public Health
For Russell
OUR
all of Earth’s ecosystems under stress. The impacts now are obvious: “climate change, chemical pollution, air pollution, land and water degradation . . . and the massive loss of species and habitats.” The good news is that in this period, many more of the world’s have-nots have escaped from poverty. They’ve joined the party. The bad news, says Rockstrom, is that “the old party” cannot go on as it did. The Earth is very good at finding ways to adapt to stress: oceans and forest absorb the extra CO2; ecosystems like the Amazon adapt to deforestation and still provide rain and fresh water; the Arctic ice shrinks but does not disappear. But eventually, we can exhaust the planet’s adaptive capacities. We’re sitting on these planetary boundaries right now, argues Rockstrom, and if these systems flip from one stable state to another — if the Amazon tips into a savannah, if the Arctic loses its ice cover and instead of reflecting the sun’s rays starts absorbing them in water, if the glaciers all melt and cannot feed the rivers — nature will be fine, but we will not be. “The planet has demonstrated an impressive capacity to main-
tain its balance, using every trick in its bag to stay in the current state,” explains Rockstrom. But there are more and more signs that we might have reached a saturation point. Forests show the first signs of absorbing less carbon. The oceans are rapidly acidifying as they absorb more CO2, harming fish and coral. Global average temperatures keep rising. This is what will greet the next president — a resilient planet that could once absorb our excesses at seemingly no cost to us, suddenly tipping into a saturated planet, sending us “daily invoices” that will get bigger each year. When nature goes against you, watch out. “For the first time, we need to be clever,” says Rockstrom, “and rise to a crisis before it happens,” before we cross nature’s tipping points. Later will be too late. We elect a president who ignores this science at our peril.
________ Thomas Friedman is a three-time Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist for The New York Times. His column appears in the Peninsula Daily News on Mondays. Contact Friedman via www. facebook.com/thomaslfriedman.
READERS’ LETTERS, FAXES AND EMAIL
Healthcare hospital commissioner.
For Mark Ozias Clallam County commissioner candidate Mark Ozias has the sincere desire, work ethic and ability to provide the common sense and “dignity for all” leadership that Clallam County needs. After watching http:// tinyurl.com/pdn-mcentire 2015, the video of Jim McEntire’s re-election campaign kickoff, I have to say the Republicans offer only fear-mongering, divide-andconquer tactics and ridicule with mud-slinging. Please vote for Mark Ozias for county commissioner. It is a vote for integrity and intelligence. Cathe Muller, Sequim
Link-up: mass murder, social media THE FIRST DETAILS about the mass killer at the community college in Roseburg, Ore., were that he was a young man, lonely and full of hate. Of course he was. They all are. Lonely young men full Froma of hate have Harrop been with us since there were lonely young men. The modern phenomenon of their acting out their madness on a large scale started almost 50 years ago, when Charles Whitman climbed the University of Texas Tower and shot to death 16 people down below. There have been similar assaults against innocents ever since, but what accounts for the current rapid pace of what used to be rare, horrific events?
One change might be the growth of social media, creating an online community to ease the loneliness of these mentally ill time bombs — and perhaps endorse their perverse fantasies. The community lets the killers know that after the deed, which usually includes their death, they will have lots of people following them. Christopher Harper-Mercer, who slaughtered nine at Umpqua Community College, had made an online reference to Vester Lee Flanagan, who murdered two former colleagues from a Roanoke, Va., TV station while they were on the air. Flanagan had referenced Dylann Roof, a young white man accused of murdering nine people at an African-American church in Charleston, S.C. Flanagan was enraged at Roof and then copied him. In between, there was John Russell Houser, a rare older mass shooter, 59, who posted his politi-
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cal ravings online before killing two and wounding nine others at a movie theater in Lafayette, La. And he might have been copying James Holmes, who killed 12 and injured 70 at a movie theater in Aurora, Colo. The natural response after these multiple shootings is to blame lax gun control. The appalled father of HarperMercer went on TV and did just that. Politicians agreed or not, depending on their fear of the National Rifle Association. Yes, bans on weapons of war and gun sales to the mentally ill are desperately needed. Looking back at these massacres, most of the weaponry was legally obtained. But perhaps as dangerous as the flood of arms are the fumes of paranoia spread by the NRA and other peddlers of gun mania. What better audience for the instant-empowerment-of-guns message than depressed, lonely men.
Ours seems to be the only culture that uses guns for psychotherapy, as was well-portrayed in the movie “American Sniper.” One creepy similarity between Harper-Mercer and Adam Lanza, who slayed 26 at an elementary school in Newtown, Conn., was that their mothers took them out shooting. Certainly in Lanza’s case, the mother bizarrely thought she could channel her boy’s sick obsession with guns into a bonding thing. Both mothers had left lying around the house the guns their deranged sons used. In the meantime, these lonely men find companionship, however imaginary, in these online communities of gun worship, places that often validate their paranoiac thoughts (Many also seek refuge in violent video games.) What they desperately need is real community to offer reality checks and interface with mental health professionals.
NEWS DEPARTMENT Main office: 305 W. First St., P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362 ■ MICHAEL FOSTER, managing editor; 360-417-3531 mfoster@peninsuladailynews.com ■ LEE HORTON, sports editor; 360-417-3525; lhorton@peninsuladailynews.com ■ DIANE URBANI DE LA PAZ, features editor; 360-452-2345, ext. 5062 durbanidelapaz@peninsuladailynews.com ■ General news information: 360-417-3527 From Jefferson County and West End, 800-826-7714, ext. 5250 Email: news@peninsuladailynews.com News fax: 360-417-3521 ■ Sequim office: 147 W. Washington St., 98382; 360-681-2390 CHRIS MCDANIEL, 360-681-2390, ext. 5052, cmcdaniel@peninsuladailynews.com ■ Port Townsend office: 1939 E. Sims Way, 98368; 360-385-2335 CHARLIE BERMANT, 360-385-2335, ext. 5550, cbermant@peninsuladailynews.com
Some law enforcement is trying to withhold the perpetrators’ names to deprive the criminals of the celebrity they crave. These officers fully understand the motive, but their good efforts can’t go far. The curious public does want to know names and the killers’ grievances, however crazy, and media will provide them. The bigger concern is the ugly public seething online, honoring killers past and certifying the most twisted worldviews. Social media have some very dark corners that encourage mass bloodshed, and what can we possibly do about it?
________ Froma Harrop is a columnist for the Providence (R.I.) Journal. Her column appears Mondays. Contact her at fharrop@gmail. com or in care of Creators Syndicate Inc., 737 Third St., Hermosa Beach, CA 90254.
HAVE YOUR SAY We encourage (1) letters to the editor of 250 words or fewer from readers on subjects of local interest, and (2) “Point of View” guest opinion columns of no more than 550 words that focus on local community lifestyle issues. Please — send us only one letter or column per month. Letters and guest columns published become the property of Peninsula Daily News, and it reserves the right to reject, condense or edit for clarity or when information stated as fact cannot be substantiated. Letters published in other newspapers or websites, anonymous letters, letters advocating boycotts, letters to other people, mass mailings and commercial appeals are not published. We will not publish letters that impugn the personal character of people or of groups of people. Include your name, street address and — for verification purposes — day and evening telephone numbers. Email to letters@peninsuladailynews.com, fax to 360-417-3521, or mail to Letters, Peninsula Daily News, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. Sunday RANTS & RAVES 24-hour hotline: 360-417-3506
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MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 2015
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Briefly . . . ‘Kids Create Art’ Saturday in Sequim SEQUIM — The Sequim Library is bringing back the “Kids Create Art” program starting Saturday. These introductory art classes will take place from 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. every third Saturday of the month through May at the library, 630 N. Sequim Ave. Led by local artists, each Kids Create Art session — recommended for ages 7 to 12 — offers children an opportunity to explore various artistic media. All classes in the series are free, but with class sizes limited to 20 attendees, preregistration is required. To register, visit the Sequim Library events calendar at www.nols.org, phone 360-683-1161 or email youth@nols.org. All materials will be provided. This Saturday’s session, “Pastels and Pumpkins,” will be led by artist Carrie Rodlend. Rodlend will share the world through an artist’s eye and teach the process of drawing or painting in fun, easy steps. On Nov. 21, Eva Kozun will offer young artists an opportunity to celebrate World Hello Day with a sunflower painting project. Each participant will paint a sunflower to take home as well as one for the “garden” display in the library’s children’s area. Rodlend will return for the Dec. 19 session, “Winter Solstice Sun and Shadows.” With this session, she will work with math, tempera paint, shapes and shadows.
resources and available programs. The panelists are Sandy Boughner, owner of Home Instead Senior Care; Celia Fry, Certified Aging in
PORT TOWNSEND — AAUW Port Townsend will host a “Caring for Our Aging Population” program during a meeting at the Elks Lodge, 555 Otto St., from 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. Saturday. The program will feature a panel discussion on the decisions facing individuals and their families as they experience changes in health and/or abilities during the aging process. The panelists will review the relative costs for various residential options for seniors, including remaining at home, and provide their perspectives on how to plan for potentially difficult life changes and care decisions. Led by moderator Eileen Baratuci, the five panel members are health care professionals and consultants who work with the elder population and are familiar with local
AAUW Port Townsend and its affiliate, the University Women’s Foundation of Jefferson County, is free and open to the public. For more information
on AAUW projects and membership, visit http:// pt-wa.aauw.net or phone Anne Englander at 360390-5896. Peninsula Daily News
Miracle-Ear Hearing Centers are looking for qualified people to test their lastest product, The Miracle-Ear® RIC for FREE*! Here’s the catch: You must have difficulty hearing and understanding in background noise, and your hearing must fall in the range of the hearing aid. People that are selected will evaluate Miracle-Ear’s latest advanced digital hearing solution – the Miracle-Ear RIC. You will be able to walk in to our office and walk out hearing†! Candidates will be asked to evaluate our instruments for 30 days (riskfree*). At the end of the 30 days, if you are satisfied with the improvement in your hearing and wish to keep the instrument, you may do so at tremendous savings. But this is only for a limited time! You must schedule your appointment by October July 24,16th, 2015.2015 Don’t wait!
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manager at Victoria Place in Port Townsend; and Joni Williams, geriatric case manager for seniors living at home. The program, hosted by
WANTED
YMCA wears pink PORT ANGELES — The Olympic Peninsula YMCA, 302 S. Francis St., will offer a chance for the community to wear pink and participate in a breast cancer awareness fundraiser Sunday, Oct. 18. The event features cycling, dancing and yoga, each for a half-hour, starting at 10:30 a.m. Bring water and a yoga mat for this event. Children 12 and older are welcome. Children must be large enough to fit on a bike comfortably and mature enough to participate in the classes successfully, according to a news release. Registration is $20 per person; register between now and Saturday, as only 30 spaces are available. All funds raised will go to Operation Uplift. Playcare will be provided from 10:15 a.m. to 12:45 p.m. during this event. Photos will be take for the YMCA’s Facebook page. For more information or to register, contact Mikki Reidel, health and wellbeing coordinator, at 360452-9244.
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Monday, October 12, 2015 SECTION
CLASSIFIEDS, COMICS, WEATHER In this section
B
Seahawks melt down in Cincy Grading Seattle’s loss to Bengals BY NICK PATTERSON THE [EVERETT] DAILY HERALD
Here’s how the Seattle Seahawks grade out in their 27-24 overtime loss to the Cincinnati Bengals on Sunday:
OFFENSE Despite not having Marshawn Lynch, the Seahawks had a big game on the ground, going for 200 yards rushing, with Thomas Rawls picking up 169 of those. The much-maligned offensive line performed better, both in run blocking and pass protection, for most of the game. However, after going ahead 24-7 Seattle managed just 53 yards on six possessions, including three three-and-outs, as the offense disappeared with the game on the line. Grade: C-
DEFENSE Seattle got its first interception of the season, scored a defensive touchdown, got to Cincinnati quarterback Andy Dalton for four sacks and had a Bengals offense averaging 30-plus points per game looking befuddled. However, the Seahawks wilted in the fourth quarter and overtime, coughing up a 17-point fourth-quarter lead as they offered little resistance down the stretch. Grade: C-
SPECIAL TEAMS The Seahawks were terrific on kickoff coverage in the first half behind Kelcie McCray. But punt returner Tyler Lockett let a couple balls bounce that the Bengals were able to down at the 2-yard line. Then Seattle gave up a couple lengthy punt returns to Pacman Jones in the fourth quarter and overtime, which set Cincinnati up for short fields. Grade: C TURN
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GRADES/B2
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Seahawks running back Thomas Rawls (34) is stopped after attempting to leap for yardage during the second half of Seattle’s 27-24 loss to Cincinnati on Sunday.
Seattle can’t hold onto 17-point lead, falls in OT BY JOE KAY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
CINCINNATI — A Seattle Seahawks team known for closing ’em out is having trouble in the final moments. Andy Dalton led the Cincinnati Bengals from a 17-point deficit to a 27-24 overtime victory Sunday, a collapse that matched the biggest in Seattle’s history. It was as mystifying as it was historic. The two-time defending NFC champions are known for not letting leads slip away at the end.
“It’s extremely frustrating knowing how talented we are and how poised we can be in those moments, and then to not finish, to not pull it out.” SEAHAWKS RECEIVER DOUG BALDWIN Regarding Seattle’s late-game struggles “That’s why I’m baffled a little bit,” coach Pete Carroll said. “What’s startling is that it’s not happening. We’ve had to be terrific in this mode for years to be able to do what we’ve done.” The Seahawks (2-3) have lost in overtime at St. Louis, lost at Green Bay and now lost in overtime at Cincinnati. They needed
a defensive play late Monday night to hold on for a 13-10 win over Detroit. “It’s extremely frustrating knowing how talented we are and how poised we can be in those moments, and then to not finish, to not pull it out,” receiver Doug Baldwin said. Their inability to stop Dalton had a lot to do with it.
Rangers drop league showdown
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Preps
Neah Bay lights up Tulalip
Quilcene falters after Harrison leaves game BY MICHAEL CARMAN PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
QUILCENE — The wave of “Oh, no’s” that traveled up and down the Quilcene sideline foreshadowed a tough second half in a 28-8 loss to defending SeaTac League champion Evergreen Lutheran. Eli Harrison, the Rangers’ senior quarterback and an AllState defensive back last season, lay face-down on the field after taking a knee to the head while making a tackle in the second quarter of Saturday’s game. Harrison walked off on his own power and cleared mandatory concussion protocols administered by EMTs on the sideline, but his play was off for the remainder of the first half, and he left in an ambulance at the beginning of the second half.
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
MARYSVILLE — Cameron Buzzell caught the opening kickoff and was off to the races. So was Neah Bay. Buzzell took the ball 87 yards for a touchdown, giving the Red Devils an 8-0 lead over Tulalip Heritage less than 15 seconds into the game. They scored 42 more points in the first quarter to erase any miniscule of doubt that ever existed in Saturday’s Northwest Football League matchup at Quil Ceda Stadium at Marysville-Pilchuck High School. Neah Bay cruised through the final three quarters, adding three more scores to win 70-12.
Dynamic duo
Easy decision Quilcene coach Byron Wilson said Harrison, who came into the game already battling a fever, “didn’t look right” in the locker room at halftime, so the decision to send him for further evaluation was a no-brainer. “I’ll lose a game before I unnecessarily risk one of my kids,” Wilson said. “His health matters more to me and this team than putting him out there to try and win. That’s way down the list of priorities.” Harrison had helped the Rangers to an 8-6 halftime lead, guiding the offense down and scoring a touchdown on a naked
Trailing 24-7 at the start of the fourth quarter, Dalton threw for a touchdown, ran for another and led the Bengals (5-0) on a 69-yard drive without a timeout. Mike Nugent tied it with a 31-yard field goal on the final play of regulation. Seattle punted twice in overtime, giving the Bengals a chance to pull it out. Nugent’s deflection off the upright ended it with 3:36 left in overtime, leaving Cincinnati 5-0 for the first time since 1988, the last time it went to the Super Bowl.
STEVE MULLENSKY/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Quilcene quarterback Eli Harrison breaks away from Evergreen Lutheran’s Ryan Lorette but loses a piece of his uniform. bootleg from 5 yards out on their opening drive, and then bullying across on the 2-point conversion for an 8-0 lead “I don’t think Evergreen was ready for us to start the game,” Wilson said. “We came out and showed them something on that first drive.” The Rangers defense bent in the first half against repeated runs from Eagles running back Jacob Lawrence, but held when
needed, stuffing Evergreen Lutheran on a goal-line stand and picking up another turnover on downs inside the Quilcene red zone. Lawrence ran for 109 yards on 21 carries in the first half, finally breaking through and scoring on a 24-yard run with 57 seconds to go before halftime. The Rangers had one golden opportunity for a score slip through a receivers’ hands on a wheel route in the final seconds
of the half, and went to the locker room up 8-6. It was a different game altogether in the second half, one completely dominated by the Eagles. Evergreen Lutheran relied on a heavy diet of Lawrence, with the big back taking direct snaps and gashing the Rangers defense for 188 yards on 15 carries and two TDs in the second half. TURN
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RANGERS/B3
Buzzell and fellow junior Cole Svec combined for nine of the Red Devils’ 10 touchdowns. Svec touched the ball eight times on offense and scored six touchdowns. He carried seven times for 121 yards and five TDs and caught one pass from quarterback Rwehabura Munyagi Jr. for a 19-yard score. Svec also had an interception on defense. Buzzell touched the ball six times total — four catches, one run, one kickoff return — and reached the end zone three times. Buzzell gained 116 yards on his catches, including touchdowns of 65 ad 45 yards, and took his one carry 35 yards. TURN
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PREPS/B3
B2
SportsRecreation
MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 2015
Today’s
Latest sports headlines can be found at www. peninsuladailynews.com.
Scoreboard Calendar Today Boys Tennis: Kingston at Port Angeles, 4 p.m.; Klahowya at Chimacum/Port Townsend, at Chimacum, 4 p.m.; Sequim at Coupeville, 4 p.m. Volleyball: Crosspoint at Quilcene, 6 p.m.
Tuesday Girls Soccer: Aberdeen at Forks, 6 p.m.; Chimacum at North Mason, 6:45 p.m.; Port Angeles at North Kitsap, 6:45 p.m.; Kingston at Sequim, 6:45 p.m. Volleyball: Crescent at Neah Bay, 5 p.m.; Port Townsend at Chimacum, 6:15 p.m.; Port Angeles at North Kitsap, 6:15 p.m.; Kingston at Sequim, 6:15 p.m.; Hoquiam at Forks, 7 p.m. Cross Country: Port Townsend at Bill Kehoe Invitational, at Saint Martin’s University (Lacey), 4 p.m.
Wednesday Boys Tennis: Chimacum/Port Townsend at Coupeville, 4 p.m.; Olympic at Sequim, 4 p.m. Men’s Soccer: Edmonds at Peninsula College, 4 p.m. Women’s Soccer: Edmonds at Peninsula College, 2 p.m.
Preps Football Saturday’s Scores Evergreen Lutheran 28, Quilcene 8 Mt. Rainier 32, Decatur 20 Naselle 50, Mary Knight 0 Neah Bay 70, Tulalip Heritage 12 Rainier 50, Tacoma Baptist 9 Rainier Beach 46, Franklin 0 Squalicum 12, Ferndale 7 Taholah 46, Twin Valley 0 Yelm 25, Evergreen (Vancouver) 18
AP Poll - How Fared Class 4A 1. Camas (6-0) beat Battle Ground 42-6. 2. Lake Stevens (6-0) beat Monroe 42-14. 3. Gig Harbor (6-0) beat Timberline 51-0. 4. Gonzaga Prep (6-0) beat University 28-6. 5. Skyline (5-1) lost to Graham-Kapowsin 38-34. 6. Graham-Kapowsin (6-0) beat Skyline 38-34. 7. Olympia (6-0) beat Stadium 44-6. 8. Richland (5-1) beat Kennewick 35-7. 9. University (5-1) lost to Gonzaga Prep 28-6. 10. Monroe (4-2) lost to Lake Stevens 42-14. Class 3A 1. Eastside Catholic (6-0) beat Blanchet 54-6. 2. Bellevue (4-1) beat Juanita 42-14. 3. Lincoln (6-0) beat North Thurston 41-0. 4. Blanchet (5-1) lost to Eastside Catholic 54-6. 5. Lakes (5-1) lost to Auburn Mountainview 46-42. 6. O’Dea (5-1) beat Bainbridge 45-8. 7. Sumner (6-0) beat Auburn 42-21. 8. Glacier Peak (5-1) beat Mountlake Terrace 43-3. 9. Auburn Mountain View (5-1) beat Lakes 46-42. 10. Mt. Spokane (5-1) beat Mead 30-14. Class 2A 1. Tumwater (6-0) beat Centralia 49-6. 2. Prosser (6-0) beat Toppenish 55-0. 3. Ellensburg (6-0) beat Wapato 69-0.
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
4. Squalicum (6-0) beat Ferndale 12-7. 5. Hockinson (6-0) beat Ridgefield 17-7. 6. Archbishop Murphy (6-0) beat Granite Falls 66-6. 7. Olympic (6-0) beat Kingston 46-7. 8. Cheney (6-0) beat Moscow, Idaho, 48-0. 9. Clarkston (5-1) beat Pullman 47-27. 10. Burlington-Edison (3-3) lost to Lynden 34-16. Class 1A 1. Royal (6-0) beat River View 76-0. 2. King’s (6-0) beat South Whidbey 49-14. 3. Zillah (6-0) beat Goldendale 35-14. 4. Cascade Christian (4-1) idle. 5. Connell (5-1) beat Kiona-Benton 47-6. 6. Hoquiam (6-0) beat Montesano 10-6. 7. Mount Baker (5-1) beat Lynden Christian 38-22. 8. Port Townsend (6-0) beat Coupeville 44-0. 9. Freeman (4-2) lost to Colville 20-14, 2OT. 10. Tenino (5-1) beat Aberdeen 38-7. Class 2B 1. Lind-Ritzville/Sprague (6-0) beat Liberty (Spangle) 32-7. 2. Pe Ell/Willapa Valley (6-0) beat Toutle Lake 49-0. 3. North Beach (6-0) beat Chief Leschi 60-0. 4. Napavine (4-2) lost to Toledo 27-13. 5. Okanogan (5-1) beat Brewster 61-14. 6. Brewster (4-1) lost to Okanogan 61-14. 7. Toledo (5-1) beat Napavine 27-13. 8. Raymond (5-1) beat South Bend 49-14. 9. Northwest Christian (Colbert) (4-2) beat Wilbur-Creston 64-8. 10. LaConner (5-1) beat Concrete 35-18. Class 1B 1. Liberty Christian (6-0) beat Sunnyside Christian 102-34. 2. Neah Bay (4-0) beat Tulalip Heritage 70-12. 3. Touchet (5-0) beat Pomeroy 54-20. 4. Almira/Coulee-Hartline (5-1) beat Pateros, forfeit. 5. Evergreen Lutheran (5-0) beat Quilcene, 28-8.
Football Bengals 27, Seahawks 24, OT Seattle 7 Cincinnati 7
3 14 0 0 —24 0 0 17 3 —27 First Quarter Cin—Eifert 14 pass from Dalton (Nugent kick), 11:02. Sea—Kearse 30 pass from Wilson (Hauschka kick), 6:32. Second Quarter Sea—FG Hauschka 24, :00. Third Quarter Sea—Rawls 69 run (Hauschka kick), 8:38. Sea—Wagner 23 fumble return (Hauschka kick), 6:41. Fourth Quarter Cin—Eifert 10 pass from Dalton (Nugent kick), 12:18. Cin—Dalton 5 run (Nugent kick), 3:38. Cin—FG Nugent 31, :00. Overtime Cin—FG Nugent 42, 3:36. A—65,004. Sea Cin First downs 16 27 Total Net Yards 397 419
Go to “Nation/World” and click on “AP Sports”
Rushes-yards 30-200 31-109 Passing 197 310 Punt Returns 2-8 5-93 Kickoff Returns 1-21 4-87 Interceptions Ret. 1-32 1-0 Comp-Att-Int 15-23-1 30-44-1 Sacked-Yards Lost 4-16 4-21 Punts 8-50.9 6-48.8 Fumbles-Lost 0-0 1-1 Penalties-Yards 10-112 7-50 Time of Possession 30:35 40:49 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Seattle, Rawls 23-169, Wilson 3-21, F.Jackson 2-5, R.Smith 2-5. Cincinnati, Bernard 15-80, Dalton 7-18, Hill 8-13, Burkhead 1-(minus 2). PASSING—Seattle, Wilson 15-23-1-213. Cincinnati, Dalton 30-44-1-331. RECEIVING—Seattle, Baldwin 3-70, Graham 3-30, F.Jackson 3-29, Kearse 2-38, Lockett 2-29, Willson 2-17. Cincinnati, Eifert 8-90, Green 6-78, Sanu 5-69, M.Jones 5-61, Bernard 5-21, Hill 1-12. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.
National Football League AMERICAN CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF New England 4 0 0 1.000 149 N.Y. Jets 3 1 0 .750 95 Buffalo 3 2 0 .600 124 Miami 1 3 0 .250 65 South W L T Pct PF Indianapolis 3 2 0 .600 99 Tennessee 1 3 0 .250 102 Houston 1 4 0 .200 97 Jacksonville 1 4 0 .200 93 North W L T Pct PF Cincinnati 5 0 0 1.000 148 Pittsburgh 2 2 0 .500 96 Cleveland 2 3 0 .400 118 Baltimore 1 4 0 .200 123 West W L T Pct PF Denver 5 0 0 1.000 113 San Diego 2 2 0 .500 96 Oakland 2 3 0 .400 107 Kansas City 1 4 0 .200 117 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East W L T Pct PF N.Y. Giants 2 2 0 .500 102 Dallas 2 3 0 .400 101 Washington 2 3 0 .400 97 Philadelphia 2 3 0 .400 117 South W L T Pct PF Atlanta 5 0 0 1.000 162 Carolina 4 0 0 1.000 108 Tampa Bay 2 3 0 .400 110 New Orleans 1 4 0 .200 103 North W L T Pct PF Green Bay 5 0 0 1.000 137 Minnesota 2 2 0 .500 80 Chicago 2 3 0 .400 86 Detroit 0 5 0 .000 83 West W L T Pct PF Arizona 4 1 0 .800 190 St. Louis 2 3 0 .400 84 Seattle 2 3 0 .400 111 San Francisco 1 3 0 .250 48
PA 76 55 105 101 PA 113 91 135 145 PA 101 75 132 137 PA 79 110 124 143 PA 82 131 104 103 PA 112 71 148 143 PA 81 73 142 138 PA 90 113 98 110
Thursday’s Game Indianapolis 27, Houston 20 Sunday’s Games Chicago 18, Kansas City 17 Green Bay 24, St. Louis 10 Buffalo 14, Tennessee 13 Cincinnati 27, Seattle 24, OT Atlanta 25, Washington 19, OT Tampa Bay 38, Jacksonville 31 Philadelphia 39, New Orleans 17 Cleveland 33, Baltimore 30, OT Arizona 42, Detroit 17 Denver 16, Oakland 10 New England 30, Dallas 6 San Francisco at N.Y. Giants, late. Open: Carolina, Miami, Minnesota, N.Y. Jets Monday’s Game Pittsburgh at San Diego, 5:30 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 15 Atlanta at New Orleans, 5:25 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 18 Kansas City at Minnesota, 10 a.m. Miami at Tennessee, 10 a.m. Washington at N.Y. Jets, 10 a.m. Arizona at Pittsburgh, 10 a.m. Cincinnati at Buffalo, 10 a.m. Chicago at Detroit, 10 a.m. Denver at Cleveland, 10 a.m. Houston at Jacksonville, 10 a.m. Carolina at Seattle, 1:05 p.m. Baltimore at San Francisco, 1:25 p.m. San Diego at Green Bay, 1:25 p.m. New England at Indianapolis, 5:30 p.m. Open: Dallas, Oakland, St. Louis, Tampa Bay Monday, Oct. 19 N.Y. Giants at Philadelphia, 5:30 p.m.
College Football The AP Top 25 The Top 25 teams in The Associated Press college football poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Oct. 10, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote, and previous ranking: Record Pts Pv 1. Ohio St. (27) 6-0 1,411 1 2. Baylor (13) 5-0 1,390 3 3. TCU (3) 6-0 1,354 2 4. Utah (16) 5-0 1,350 5 5. Clemson (1) 5-0 1,260 6 6. LSU 5-0 1,231 7 7. Michigan St. 6-0 1,139 4 8. Florida 6-0 1,075 11 9. Texas A&M (1) 5-0 1,046 9 10. Alabama 5-1 1,034 8 11. Florida St. 5-0 937 12 12. Michigan 5-1 894 18 13. Mississippi 5-1 803 14 14. Notre Dame 5-1 766 15 15. Stanford 4-1 662 16 16. Oklahoma St. 6-0 614 21 17. Iowa 6-0 520 22 18. UCLA 4-1 487 20 19. Oklahoma 4-1 342 10 20. Northwestern 5-1 317 13 21. Boise St. 5-1 260 25 22. Toledo 5-0 237 24 23. California 5-1 204 23 24. Houston 5-0 121 NR 25. Duke 5-1 114 NR Others receiving votes: Temple 96, Memphis 59, Arizona St. 27, Mississippi St. 19, Georgia 16, Texas Tech 10, BYU 8, Southern Cal 5, W. Kentucky 5, Kentucky 4, Penn St. 4, Navy 3, North Carolina 1.
SPORTS ON TV
Today 8:50 a.m. (27) ESPN2 Soccer UEFA, Montenegro vs. Russia, Euro 2016, Qualifier (Live) 10 a.m. (306) FS1 Baseball MLB, Kansas City Royals at Houston Astros, American League Division Series, Game 4 (Live) 11:30 a.m. (27) ESPN2 Soccer UEFA, Spain vs. Ukraine, Euro 2016, Qualifier (Live) 1 p.m. (306) FS1 Baseball MLB, Toronto Blue Jays at Texas Rangers, American League Division Series, Game 4, if necessary (Live) 1:30 p.m. or 3 p.m. (28) TBS Baseball MLB, St. Louis Cardinals at Chicago Cubs, National League Division Series, Game 3 (Live) 5 p.m. or 5:30 p.m. (28) TBS Baseball MLB, Los Angeles Dodgers at New York Mets, National League Division Series, Game 3 (Live) 5 p.m. NBA TV Basketball NBA, New Orleans Pelicans at Chicago Bulls, Preseason (Live) 5:15 p.m. (26) ESPN Football NFL, Pittsburgh Steelers at San Diego Chargers (Live) 7 p.m. (320) PAC12WA Soccer NCAA, San Diego State vs. UCLA (Live)
Baseball MLB Postseason DIVISION SERIES (Best-of-5; x-if necessary) American League Houston 2, Kansas City 1 Thursday: Houston 5, Kansas City 2 Friday: Kansas City 5, Houston 4 Sunday: Houston 4, Kansas City 2 Monday: Kansas City at Houston (McCullers 6-7), 10:07 a.m. (FS1) x-Wednesday: Houston at Kansas City, 5:07 p.m. (FS1) Texas 2, Toronto 0 Thursday: Texas 5, Toronto 3 Friday: Texas 6, Toronto 4, 14 innings Sunday: Toronto (Estrada 13-8) at Texas (Perez 3-6), late. x-Monday: Toronto (Dickey 11-11) at Texas, 10:07 a.m. or 1:07 p.m.(FS1) x-Wednesday: Texas at Toronto, 1:07 or 5:07 p.m. (FS1) National League All games televised by TBS St. Louis 1, Chicago 1 Friday: St. Louis 4, Chicago 0 Saturday: Chicago 6, St. Louis 3 Monday: St. Louis (Wacha 17-7) at Chicago (Arrieta 22-6), 1:37 or 3:07 p.m. Tuesday: St. Louis (Lynn 12-11) at Chicago (Hammel 10-7), 1:37 or 5:07 p.m. x-Thursday, Oct. 15: Chicago at St. Louis, 1:37 or 5:07 p.m. New York 1, Los Angeles 1 Friday: New York 3, Los Angeles 1 Saturday: Los Angeles 5, New York 2 Monday: Los Angeles (Anderson 10-9) at New York (Harvey 13-8), 5:07 or 5:37 p.m. Tuesday: Los Angeles at New York, 5:07 p.m. x-Thursday, Oct. 15: New York at Los Angeles, 5:07 p.m.
USC asks Sarkisian to take leave of absence THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
LOS ANGELES — University of Southern California coach Steve Sarkisian is taking an indefinite leave of absence after athletic director Pat Haden determined that the troubled coach is “not healthy.” Haden announced the decision in a hastily called news conference Sunday after Sarkisian didn’t show up for practice. “I think it’s the right thing for our team, and I’ve always got to do what’s right for our team and for our school,” Haden said. Offensive coordinator Clay Helton will take charge of the Trojans (3-2, 1-2 Pac-12), who have lost two of their last three games. USC visits No. 14 Notre Dame (5-1) on Saturday. Haden wasn’t specific about the reasons for Sarkisian’s absence, only saying that “it was
very clear to me” that the secondyear USC coach was unwell. Haden asked Sarkisian to take a leave during a phone conversation. Sarkisian publicly apologized before the season after he appeared to be intoxicated while making an unsteady public statement at the Salute to Troy pep rally. He announced he would be getting unspecified treatment, but didn’t believe he had a drinking problem, blaming his appearance on combining alcohol and medication. Sarkisian is 12-6 during his short tenure leading the talented Trojans, who were dropped from the AP Top 25 after losing 17-12 to unranked Washington last Thursday. Sarkisian had been on the road recruiting during the long weekend, but apparently wasn’t in con-
dition to lead practice Sunday, according to Haden. Haden informed the players of the change in a team meeting. “[It was] clear the team had a great deal of concern about the health of Coach Sarkisian,” Haden said. “So did the staff have that concern for him, and it was also very apparent to me in the room of the support that Clay has from our team and his staff.” Helton begins his second stint as USC’s interim coach. He led the Trojans to a Las Vegas Bowl victory in 2013, a calendar year in which the Trojans had four different head coaches. “It’s a very unique honor to get it [this way],” Helton said. “Fortunately or unfortunately, I have been in this situation before, and once again am very fortunate to have a group of first-
class kids that are very talented and want to do something special here.” Sarkisian, a former BYU quarterback who played in the CFL, was an assistant under Pete Carroll on the Trojans’ great teams of the previous decade. Coaching alongside Lane Kiffin, Sarkisian ran USC’s offense before getting hired by the University of Washington to take over a winless program in 2009. Sarkisian rebuilt the Huskies into a regular bowl team, but couldn’t lift them among the Pac12’s elite. The Torrance, Calif., native left Washington to return home after Haden fired Kiffin five games into the 2013 season and then hired Sarkisian over interim coach Ed Orgeron. Helton coached the Trojans for one game after Orgeron quit in disappointment. Sarkisian kept
Helton on his new staff, which includes five coaches who worked with Sarkisian at Washington. Sarkisian went 9-4 in his first season at USC, losing a handful of big games but showing promise in the final year of the school’s NCAA-mandated scholarship restrictions. In the first recruiting cycle after the sanctions ended, Sarkisian and his staff signed the nation’s consensus top class last February. The Trojans were ranked No. 8 in the preseason AP Top 25 and picked to win the Pac-12 in a media poll, but the talent-laden team has been unimpressive since rising to No. 6 in the rankings last month. USC gave up 41 points in its first loss to Stanford last week, and the offense was inept throughout its five-point loss to the Huskies.
Hawks: Dalton leads rally Grade: Haunting CONTINUED FROM B1 It was the second time Cincinnati had a 17-point deficit in the fourth quarter and won, according to STATS. The Bengals also did it at Baltimore in 2004 for a 27-26 victory. Cincinnati overcame an 18-point deficit to beat Arizona 24-21 in the 1997 season. The 17-point collapse matched the biggest in Seattle history. The Seahawks also blew such games in 2003 against Baltimore and 2004 against St. Louis, losing in overtime as well. The Seahawks looked to be in good shape after scoring a pair touchdowns during a 2-minute span of the third quarter.
Undrafted rookie running back Thomas Rawls ran 69 yards for a touchdown, part of a career-best 169-yard game. Bobby Wagner then returned a fumble 23 yards for a touchdown, handing a 24-7 lead to the NFL’s second-ranked defense. Unlike Monday night, when Kam Chancellor stripped the ball from Detroit’s Calvin Johnson to preserve the 13-10 win, it couldn’t come up with the big play at the end. Dalton was 30 of 44 for 331 yards with two touchdowns, an interception and a season-high four sacks. His 11-yard TD pass to Tyler Eifert on the game’s opening drive ended Seattle’s streak of 20 defensive possessions without allowing
a touchdown. That was all the Bengals managed until Dalton — who leads the NFL in fourth-quarter passer rating — started the big comeback. Russell Wilson was 15 of 23 for 213 yards with a touchdown, a tipped interception and four sacks. His 30-yard pass to Jermaine Kearse was the first touchdown the Bengals had allowed before halftime this season. NOTES: Wagner had a strained chest muscle, but finished the game. ■ Wilson was sacked four more times, bringing the season total to 22. ■ Earl Thomas got the Seahawks’ first interception of the season.
CONTINUED FROM B1 Seahawks up nights. They had what could have been a seasondefining victory — on the road COACHING against an undefeated team — It appeared the Seahawks’ all but wrapped up, leading 24-7 coaching staff made the adjustment of the game when it shifted and having the ball to start the fourth quarter. cornerback Richard Sherman But in what’s become a worryaway from his usual left side and onto Cincinnati star receiver A.J. ing trend, the Seahawks were Green full-time, rendering Green unable to finish — Seattle a non-factor the rest of the game. couldn’t hold fourth-quarter But Seattle’s offensive play leads in any of its three losses calling after going ahead 24-7 this season. couldn’t exactly be called creLosing this game isn’t fatal, ative, and once again the but the nature of the loss may be. Seahawks struggled to get tight Grade: D end Jimmy Graham involved. ________ Grade: C-
OVERALL This one will keep the
The Daily Herald of Everett is a sister paper of the PDN. Sports writer Nick Patterson can be reached at npatterson@ heraldnet.com.
SportsRecreation
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 2015
B3
Packers defense backs Rodgers in win over Rams THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
GREEN BAY, Wis. — Aaron Rodgers threw for two touchdowns and 241 yards, but his impressive string of not being intercepted at Lambeau Field ended in the Green Bay Packers’ 24-10 win over St. Louis on Sunday. Rodgers was 19 of 30 for 241 yards with long scoring strikes to receivers Ty Montgomery and James Jones. But NFL-record streaks of 587 pass attempts and 49 touchdown passes at home without an interception for Rodgers ended in the first quarter on linebacker James Laurinaitis’ diving pick of a tipped ball for the Rams (2-3). Rodgers threw another interception in the second quarter before losing a fumble in the third. Relentless pressure on quarterback Nick Foles helped keep the Packers (5-0) unbeaten. Foles threw a career-worst four interceptions, two in the fourth quarter inside the Packers 10.
Cardinals 42, Lions 17 DETROIT — Carson Palmer threw for three touchdowns, while Matthew Stafford was benched after throwing a third interception. The Cardinals (4-1) have a two-game lead in the NFC West. The Lions (0-5) have the dubious distinction of being the NFL’s only winless team and are off to their worst start since becoming the league’s only 0-16 team in 2008. Palmer was poised and efficient, completing 11 of 14 passes for 161 yards, with a 14-yard pass to Darren Fells, an 18-yard connection to John Brown, and a 2-yard strike to Larry Fitzgerald for scores. Stafford simply struggled, getting picked off on passes well short of receivers and missing at least one wide-open option. He was replaced in the third quarter by Dan Orlovsky. Orlovsky played on the 0-16 Lions.
Falcons 25, Redskins 19, OT ATLANTA — Robert Alford returned an interception 59 yards for a touchdown, keeping the Falcons unbeaten. The Redskins had the first possession of OT, and Kirk Cousins moved the team to midfield. When wide receiver Ryan Grant slipped on a pass route, Alford caught Cousins’ pass and was left with open field down the
Forte running past safety Husain Abdullah in the end zone for the go-ahead score.
NFL Roundup Falcons’ sideline for the touchdown. The Falcons (5-0) overcame two interceptions and a lost fumble by Matt Ryan. Freeman had 27 carries for 153 yards and the touchdown. The Redskins (2-3) were denied their attempt for their first backto-back wins in almost a year — since Weeks 7 and 8 in 2014.
Eagles 39, Saints 17 PHILADELPHIA — Sam Bradford overcame two red-zone interceptions and threw for 333 yards and two touchdowns, Fletcher Cox forced two fumbles on sacks. Ryan Mathews and DeMarco Murray each rushed for touchdowns to help the Eagles (2-3) break out of their offensive slump. They snapped a three-game losing streak at home that dated to last season. Drew Brees had three turnovers leading to 17 points for Philadelphia, and the Saints fell to 1-4 a week after an overtime win against Dallas.
Browns 33, Ravens 30, OT BALTIMORE — Travis Coons kicked a 32-yard field goal in overtime and Josh McCown threw for a team-record 457 yards. Cleveland (2-3) had lost 13 of the previous 14 meetings between these AFC North foes, but in this one the Browns rallied from a 12-point deficit to leave the Ravens (1-4) alone in the division cellar. Playing its second straight overtime game, Baltimore went three-and-out on the first possession of the extra session. McCown then used more than seven minutes to move the Browns 51 yards before Coons kicked his fourth field goal with 6:43 left in OT. McCown completed 36 of 51 passes with two touchdowns in becoming the first quarterback in Browns history with three straight 300-yard games. He broke the team record of 444 yards passing set by Brian Sipe on Oct. 25, 1981, against the Baltimore Colts. Joe Flacco ran for two 1-yard touchdowns and threw for a score, but fell to 13-2 against Cleveland.
Patriots 30, Cowboys 6 ARLINGTON, Texas — Tom Brady threw for two touchdowns, with a 1-yard plunge for another score, and the Patriots pulled away from a powerless Dallas offense missing Tony Romo and Dez Bryant. Brady guided two long touchdown drives in the second half after getting sacked five times before halftime, including once each by Greg Hardy and Rolando McClain in their returns from four-game suspensions. The 38-year-old Brady joined Peyton Manning and Fran Tarkenton as the only NFL quarterbacks to get off to 4-0 starts at least four times. The Cowboys (2-3) lost their third straight without Romo and his top receiver, and backup Bran-
Bills 14, Titans 13
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Green Bay’s Clay Matthews celebrates after sacking Rams quarterback Nick Foles. The Packers won 24-10. don Weeden lost his 11th in a row for only 43 yards. as a starter.
Broncos 16, Raiders 10 OAKLAND, Calif. — Chris Harris Jr. returned a fourth-quarter interception 74 yards for a touchdown and the Broncos overcame a shaky day from Peyton Manning. Manning was intercepted twice by 1998 draft classmate Charles Woodson and failed to lead the Broncos (5-0) to an offensive touchdown for the second time in five games this season. But Denver’s defense made sure it didn’t matter, getting a third defensive touchdown of 2015. Derek Carr threw for 249 yards and one touchdown for the Raiders (2-3), but was done in by the interception midway through the fourth quarter with Oakland in position for a possible go-ahead field goal. The Raiders added a late 50-yard field goal by Sebastian Janikowski following a 48-yard pass interference penalty on Bradley Roby, but Denver recovered the onside kick. Manning finished 22 for 35 for 266 yards, was sacked twice and had two interceptions. Denver ran
Bears 18, Chiefs 17 KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Jay Cutler led the Bears to a pair of fourth-quarter touchdowns, the second an alert toss to Matt Forte with 18 seconds left. Kansas City (1-4) lost star running back Jamaal Charles to a potentially season-ending right knee injury. Chicago (2-3) trailed 17-3 early in the third quarter when Charles went down while trying to make a cut. The preliminary diagnosis was a torn ACL and Charles will have an MRI exam Monday. The Bears quickly seized the momentum. After Robbie Gould’s second field goal got them going, Cutler led an 88-yard drive that he capped with a 22-yard strike to Marquess Wilson with 3:05 left. The 2-point conversion came up short, but the Bears defense responded by forcing a quick three-and-out. With help from a pass interference call on Chiefs rookie Marcus Peters, the Bears quickly moved downfield. That’s when Cutler took a snap from the shotgun, dropped the ball, picked it up and spotted
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Tyrod Taylor threw a touchdown pass, ran for another and even caught a pass in rallying the Bills. With their top two running backs and top wide receiver injured, Taylor ran for 77 yards as the Bills (3-2) snapped a fivegame skid against Tennessee. Taylor ran for a 22-yard TD late in the third quarter after a 26-yard run that was Buffalo’s biggest play of the game. Taylor also scrambled for 24 more on third-and-23 from the Bills 7, jumpstarting an 80-yard drive he capped with a 2-yard TD pass to Chris Hogan. Taylor caught a 4-yard pass from Hogan to set up that TD. The Titans (1-3) blew a second straight double-digit lead at home.
Buccaneers 38, Jaguars 31 TAMPA, Fla. — Doug Martin ran for 123 yards and scored three touchdowns, helping Jameis Winston rebound from his worst pro performance. The Bucs (2-3) snapped an 11-game home losing streak that dated to December 2013, the same month the Jaguars (1-4) began an equally agonizing road skid that now stands at 12. Winston threw for 209 yards and one touchdown without an interception, redeeming himself after turning the ball over five times in a 14-point loss to Carolina last week. Blake Bortles passed for 303 yards and four TDs, but also threw an interception that set up a Bucs touchdown.
Peninsula men fall into first-place tie Rangers: Loss PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
BELLINGHAM — Peninsula College’s men’s and women’s soccer teams are both tied for first place in the Northwest Athletic Conference North Division. For the Peninsula women, that means they kept pace with Everett by defeating Whatcom 6-0 on the road Saturday. The fist-place tie for first isn’t such great news for the Peninsula men, who were unable to capitalize on scoring chances in a 3-0 loss to Whatcom. The Pirates (6-1-2, 8-2-3) and Orcas (6-1-2, 7-2-2) are now equal in the North standings with 20 points apiece. Whatcom tallied goals in the 15th, 52nd and 82nd
College Soccer minute on Peninsula backup goalkeeper Josh Heckenlively. Heckenlively, a freshman, made six saves in the game, which is a seasonhigh for the Pirates this season. Nick Johnson, who leads the NWAC with six shutouts, has made five saves on three occasions.
Scoreless again Peninsula has failed to score a goal in two consecutive matches, following a scoreless tie with Skagit Valley on Wednesday. The Pirates will look to get off the schneid Wednesday at home against
Edmonds (3-4-2, 3-6-3) at 4 p.m. at Wally Sigmar Field. The Tritons have allowed 24 goals this season, the second-most in the division.
Women’s Match Peninsula 6, Whatcom 0 Manaia Siania-Unutoa had an easier outing than Heckenlively. The Peninsula women’s goalkeeper recorded her eighth shutout of the season — which is tied for the conference lead — without making a save. Audrey Barham put the Pirates on the board early with a goal in the third
minute off an assist by Kameryn Jury-Hale. Barham also scored Peninsula’s fifth goal of the game in the 57th minute. Elizabeth Hornsey added a goal in the 30th minute and Ellie Small scored in the 32nd to give the Pirates a 3-0 lead at halftime. Myu Ban scored in the 52nd minute and Barham netted her second goal five minutes later to extend the lead to 5-0. Lexi Krieger finished off the scoring in the 91st minute. Next up for the Pirates (8-1-0, 13-1-0) is a threegame home stretch that begins against Edmonds (3-6-0, 4-7-1) on Wednesday at 2 p.m.
Preps: Lummi next for Neah CONTINUED FROM B1 Phillip Greene III scored Neah Bay’s other TD on a 14-yard run in the fourth quarter. Munyagi completed 7 of 11 passes for 141 yards and three TDs. Roland Gagnon added an interception for the Red Devils’ defense. Tulalip Heritage (1-1, 1-4) receiver Robert Miles Jr. caught seven passes for 199 yards and two touchdowns. Next up for Neah Bay (1-0, 4-0), ranked second in Class 1B, is a showdown with Lummi (2-0, 4-2) at home Friday. Neah Bay 70, Tulalip Heritage 12 Neah Bay Tulalip
50 6
0 6
14 0
6— 70 0— 12
First Quarter NB—Buzzell 87 kickoff return (Svec run) NB—Svec 22 run (pass failed) NB—Buzzell 65 pass from Munyagi (Buzzell pass from Munyagi) NB—Svec 6 run (Buzzell pass from Munyagi) NB—Svec 29 run (Doherty pass from Munyagi) NB—Svec 19 pass from Munyagi (pass failed) TH—Miles 54 pass from Enick (pass failed) NB—Buzzell 45 pass from Munyagi (run failed) Second Quarter TH—Miles 74 pass from Enick (pass failed) Third Quarter NB—Svec 7 run (pass failed) NB—Svec 28 run (Doherty pass from Munyagi) Fourth Quarter NB—P. Greene 14 run (run fails) Individual Stats Rushing—NB: Svec 7-121, P. Greene 9-73, McGee 3-57, Buzzell 1-35, Tyler 1-4, Tyree 5-2, Halttunen 1-(-2), Knaus 2-(-5). Passing—NB: Munyagi 7-11-0, 141. Receiving—NB: Buzzell 4-116, Doherty 2-6, Svec 1-19.
son and moved ahead of the Roughriders by one game in the Olympic League standings. Matt Richards won Friday’s No. 1 singles showdown with Port Angeles’ Janson Pederson 6-2, 6-2 Raymond Lam also won a singles match for Sequim. Kenny Soule was the Riders’ only singles winner. He defeated Tim Porter in the No. 2 match 6-1, 6-2. “With a few exceptions, the team seemed off their feed as they sleepwalked through their matches and Boys Tennis never really got going,” Port Sequim 5, Angeles coach Gil Stockton Port Angeles 2 said of the Riders. “The bright play came SEQUIM — The Wolves got revenge for a loss to from Kenny Soule and the their rivals earlier this sea- doubles team of Keenen
Leslie and Kale Mehew.” Stockton awarded the game ball to Leslie and Mehew for winning the No. 3 doubles match against Logan Habner and Casey Chapman 7-5, 7-6. Port Angeles (1-7, 3-7) hosts Kingston (5-4, 6-4) today, while Sequim (2-7, 3-8) plays at Coupeville (3-1, 4-2). Sequim 5, Port Angeles 2 Singles No. 1: Matt Richards (S) def. Janson Pederson (PA) 6-2, 6-2. No. 2: Kenny Soule (PA) def. Tim Porter (S) 6-1, 6-2. No. 3: Raymond Lam (S) def. Hayden Woods (PA) 6-2, 6-4. Doubles No. 1: Justin Porter/Stephen Prorok (S) def. Kyler Mabrey/Tyler Nickerson (PS) 6-1, 6-1 No. 2: Dillon Leibert/Blake Wiker (S) def. Wes Duncan/Devun Wahlsten (PA) 6-1,6-3. No. 3: Keenen Leslie/Kale Mehew (PA) def. Logan Habner/Casey Chapman (S) 7-5, 7-6. No. 4: Thomas Hughes/Damon Little (S) def. Dan Basden/Jadon Seibel (PA) 6-4, 6-3.
CONTINUED FROM B1 “There’s a reason that kid ran for 1,600 yards last year,” Wilson said. “He runs with good pad level and is a load to take down.”
Eagles take over The Eagles scored on their first three drives after halftime, while Quilcene was forced to punt on each series in the second half. “Losing Eli obviously was hard on our kids. Emotionally, we just let down and played with no passion and no fire in the second half,” Wilson said. “We started to play like one person was going to make the tackle on him [Lawrence], and the other guys running to the play would let up and he’d break the tackle and go for big yards. “We did a good job of gang-tackling him and limiting the yards after the initial hit in the first half, but that was all out the window after halftime.” The Rangers were down to their third-string quarterback Andy Johnston after the injury to Harrison and an injury earlier this season to backup Juan Rogers. Quilcene also was missing lineman Robert Comstock and back Olin Reynolds. “We were pretty limited in who we could move around on the line and
“Losing Eli obviously was hard on our kids. Emotionally, we just let down and played with no passion and no fire in the second half.” QUILCENE COACH BYRON WILSON what type of plays we could run in the second half,” Wilson said. Quilcene totaled just 6 yards of total offense after halftime. “You know, it’s all right,” Wilson said. “Eli is going to be fine, and what’s our record [5-1]? We will be 6-1 after next week.” The Rangers (1-1 in league) host Muckleshoot (0-2, 0-4) on Saturday. Evergreen Lutheran 28, Quilcene 8 Evergreen Lutheran 0 6 22 0— 28 Quilcene 8 0 0 0— 8 First Quarter Q—Harrison 5 run (Harrison run) Second Quarter EL—Lawrence 24 run (pass failed) Third Quarter EL—Lorette 18 pass from Parker (Leitzke run) EL—Lawrence 37 run (run failed) EL—Lawrence 49 run (Wiles pass from Parker) Individual Stats Rushing—EL: Lawrence 36-297, Parker 5-56, Leitzke 7-46, Birsching 1-10, Lorette 1-4. Q: Prater 15-97, Elkins 7-21, Harrison 8-10, Johnston 6-(-14). Passing—EL: Parker 2-5-1, 34. Q: Johnston 1-20, 9; Harrison 0-2-1, 0. Receiving—EL: Lorette 2-34. Q: Elkins 1-9.
________ Sports reporter Michael Carman can be contacted at 360-4522345, ext. 5250 or at mcarman@ peninsuladailynews.com.
peninsuladailynews.com
B4
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 2015
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Fun ’n’ Advice
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Dilbert
❘
❘
Classic Doonesbury (1985)
Frank & Ernest
Garfield
❘
❘
DEAR ABBY: I am a college sophomore and have been dating my boyfriend, “Evan,” for nearly a year. I am planning to take a semester abroad at the beginning of my junior year. Recently, Evan confessed that if I leave, our relationship would have to end. He asserts that being away from me for more than three months would be too painful and scary, not knowing if I was all right. He has some anxiety issues, for which I have urged him to consider therapy. Should I end this relationship now, or continue to see if Evan changes his mind? There’s a possibility, depending on program availability and class requirements, that I might not even be able to go. I don’t want to break any hearts or inflict any pain. Evan is my best friend, and I’m scared of losing him. Ambitious Student in Maryland
by Lynn Johnston
❘
by G.B. Trudeau
Rose is Rose
❘
❘
DEAR ABBY I have a few investments and a Van Buren small inheritance that, when combined, give me an income of $60,000 a year. So I don’t need more money. Although I did look for another job for two years, I haven’t tried for the past two. I tell my friends I’ve decided to retire. They keep telling me I need to find a job because I need something to keep me busy. I remind them that I have enough money for everything I need. Friends have started telling me I might have a “problem” and should think about counseling. I see no need for it, but have decided to get an outside opinion. So, Abby, should I see a counselor about my lack of interest in finding a new job? Out of Work in Texas
Abigail
Dear Student: Gather your courage and tell Evan that you love him and want him to be your best friend forever, but that the semester abroad is an opportunity to grow. By the way, your absence will provide Evan with one, too, if he chooses to avail himself of it. You are right that he needs to work on his anxiety issues. It would be a huge mistake to let them stand in the way of your having the experience of a lifetime if you are lucky enough to get it. There are worse things than being alone, and one of them is being attached to a partner who would hold you back.
by Bob and Tom Thaves
by Jim Davis
Red and Rover
Dear Out of Work: There are reasons people work besides the financial one. Social stimulation is important, too. I am glad you have the money to support yourself now, but what if something unplanned or catastrophic happens in the future that jeopardizes your nest egg? Fifty is young to “retire.” The counseling you’re considering should be used to determine why you lack the motivation to continue being a contributing member of society. This might be the “problem” your friends are hinting at.
Dear Abby: I am 50, own my home and am debt-free. I have friends but have never dated anyone. This doesn’t bother me, although many of my close friends joke with me about being a “50-year-old virgin.” My problem is, four years ago I lost my job. by Brian Basset
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Forget about what everyone else is doing and concentrate on your own responsibilities. Completing tasks should be your goal, along with bringing about personal changes that will improve your relationship with someone you love. 3 stars
will come from an unusual source. Be gracious and do your part to show that you are worthy of what’s being offered. Your concern and help will be appreciated. Don’t hold back when you can make a difference. 4 stars
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Network, socialize and let your voice be heard. A proactive approach to life and love will result in success and happiness. Don’t waste time trying to figure out the impossible. Take the path that welcomes you with open arms. 3 stars
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Before getting involved in any sort of partnership, do a background check. Someone will offer you only the positive aspects of a deal and expect you to make an instant decision. Trust your intuition and protect your assets, reputation and position. 3 stars
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Problems will arise if you exaggerate or underestimate the extent of a job. Use your insight and intelligence to figure out the best route to take before you begin a venture that may be too much to handle on your own. 5 stars
ZITS ❘ by Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Give-and-take will help you avoid criticism. As long as you keep things equal and do your share, you will be given greater opportunities and support. Don’t let emotions take over or you will say something you will regret. 2 stars LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Something you least expect
❘
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 ❘
by Pat Brady and Don Wimmer
Dennis the Menace
B5
Semester abroad offers couple a chance to grow
by Scott Adams
For Better or For Worse
MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 2015
Pickles
❘
by Brian Crane
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Don’t let the past haunt you or cause you to make a poor decision. Change may be needed, but before you decide to let your emotions lead the way, consider past experience and the outcome of similar situations. Consider your motives. 3 stars SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): A chance to advance is in the stars. Don’t sit back -do everything you can to connect with the right people and show the unique ways in which you can make a valuable contribution. Spontaneity will capture others’ attention. 3 stars
The Family Circus
❘
by Eugenia Last
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Don’t brag, overdo it or make unrealistic promises. Take a stance and live up to the expectations you set and the commitments you make. Listen to what others want and find a way to accommodate without complaint. 4 stars CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Avoid anyone who exhibits instability. Go it alone and put everything you’ve got into your own ideas and plans. Romance will improve your personal life and lead to a positive lifestyle change. Problems with travel plans and communications are prevalent. 2 stars AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Look ahead and gauge what you should be doing in order to prepare for the future. Someone you least expect will surprise you with information that will change your mind about someone. Follow your intuition and avoid making mistakes. 5 stars PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): A chance to explore new avenues, meet new people and try new things will surface. Don’t let negativity or someone’s demands stand between you and the people you want in your life. Love is highlighted. 3 stars
by Bil and Jeff Keane
Classified
B6 MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 2015
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Peninsula MARKETPLACE Reach The North Olympic Peninsula & The World
NOON E N I L D A E D on’t Miss It! D
IN PRINT & ONLINE
Place Your Ad Online 24/7 PLACE ADS FOR PRINT AND WEB:
Visit | www.peninsuladailynews.com Call: 360.452.8435 or 800.826.7714 | Fax: 360.417.3507 In Person: 305 W. 1st St., Port Angeles s Office Hours: Monday thru Friday – 8AM to 5PM s
T O DAY ’ S H O T T E S T N E W C L A S S I F I E D S !
FIREWOOD: $179 delivered Sequim-P.A. True cord. 3 cord special $499. (360)582-7910 www.portangelesfire wood.com
3010 Announcements Single male, retired, 72, 5’6”, 185 lbs, non smoke r. S e e k i n g fe m a l e friend, 60-68, Port Ang e l e s / Po r t To w n s e n d Area. (360)582-7970
3023 Lost LOST: Keys, around Sequim post office on 10/8. Military dog tags, ID. (360)582-9471 LOST: Still missing. Dog Golden Ret. mix, old, Palo Alto Rd, Sequim. Has Collar with tags, chipped. (360)681-4450.
MEDICAL ASSISTANT Seeking full time medical assistant, certified or WA state registered eligible. Benefits. Exp. preferred. Correctional Officer 1 Send resume to 1112 Permanent & On-Call Caroline St., Por t Anpositions available now geles, WA 98362 at Clallam Bay & Olympic Corrections Center. Pay s t a r t s a t $ 3 , 1 2 0 The Kala Point Ownmonthly, Plus full bene- ers’ Association has part-time openings for fits. Closes 10/18/2015 a Clubhouse Attendant Apply on-line: as well as an Office www.careers.wa.gov. Suppor t person. See For further information full ad online at please call Laura www.peninsuladailyat (360)963-3208 EOE news.com. DISPATCHER: Full time needed for prominent local family owned HVAC Company. Strong computer & time management skills, ability to w o r k i n d e p e n d e n t l y, multi phone lines, multitasking and customer relations with a friendly disposition is a must. Wage DOE. Please submit cover letter & res u m e t o j o b @ a l l we a therhc.com No phone calls or drop in’s please.
4026 Employment General
7 CEDARS RESORT IS NOW HIRING FOR THE FOLLOWING PT/FT POSITIONS: • Deli/Espresso Cashier/Attendant • Gift Shop Cashier (on call) • Line Cook PT Napolis • Porter PT • Table Games Dealer • Totem Rewards Casino Ambassador • Wine Bar Server Fo r m o r e i n fo r m a t i o n and to apply online, please visit our website at
www.7cedars resort.com
FAMILY SERVICE WORKER Olympic Community Action Early Childhood Services is hiring for the following position: Head S t a r t Fa m i l y S e r v i c e Wor ker. 30 hours per week, with benefits. App l i c a t i o n ava i l a bl e a t OlyCAP, 823 Commerce Loop, Por t Townsend, WA (360) 385-2571; 228 W. First St., Por t Angeles, WA (360) 4524 7 2 6 , a n d w w w. o l y cap.org. Closes when filled. EOE.
ACCEPTING APPLICAT I O N S fo r C A R R I E R RO U T E Po r t A n g e l e s 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 delivery Monday-Friday and Sunday. Apply in person 305 W 1st St, or send resume to tsipe@peninsuladaily- FLOORING INSTALLnews.com. NO PHONE ER: Contractor looking CALLS PLEASE. for installer and helpers. BARTENDER: Experi- Experience helpful. (360)531-3640 ence required. Apply in person. Downriggers 115 E. Railroad Ave.
CAREGIVERS: Our new management team is dedicated to serving the needs of our residents at Sherwood Assisted Living. We are looking for caring and compassionate caregivers to become a part of our new team and join our mission of enhancing the l i ve s o f a g i n g a d u l t s throughout our community. We have a variety of shifts available with c o m p e t i t i v e p ay a n d benefits. Find out more about this fulfilling career opportunity. Apply at 550 W Hendrickson Road or call Casey, the Staff Dev e l o p m e n t M a n a g e r, (360)683-3348 ENROLLMENT SPECIALIST Enroll people into health insurance through Healthplanfinder. CRHN.ORG/JOBS recruit@crhn.org
LOG TRUCK DRIVER Experienced (360)460-9920 San Juan Villa MemoryCare is hiring Housekeeper Caregiver If you possess the compassion, desire and maturity to work in a dementia community, this could be for you. Our homelike atmosphere helps residents have the best possible quality of life. We are offering a variety of shifts: part or full time. We encourage applicants with experience but will also provide Home Care Aide t ra i n i n g t o q u a l i f y i n g candidates. If you have a love and compassion for our elders, have high standards, and are willing to learn, please call us or come in for an application and interview. (360) 344-3114. 112 Castellano Way in Port Townsend, WA. Support Staff To wor k with adults w i t h d eve l o p m e n t a l disabilities, no experie n c e n e c e s s a r y, $ 1 0 . 5 0 h r. A p p l y i n person at 1020 Caroline St. M-F 8-4 p.m.
Accepting new clients. Loving, caring, energetic women looking to c a r e f o r e l d e r l y, disabled, and/or home bound clients. Can do shopping, errands, cooking and cleaning, transpor tation to appointments and most anything that is needed. Flexible schedules. Full or Par t time ava i l a bl e. C e r t i f i e d . Call or leave message at 360/460-5276 Alterations and Sewing. Alterations, mending, hemming and some heavyweight s ew i n g ava i l a bl e t o you from me. Call (360)531-2353 ask for B.B.
DISTINCTIVE and PRISTINE Describes This Gently Lived In Home. 2 BD, 2 BA, Den, 1730 SF w/ Newer Siding and Roof, E x t e n s i ve O a k H a r d wood Floors, New Kitche n F l o o r i n g , Va u l t e d Great Room and Skylights, Meticulously Maintained Landscaping. MLS#855036/291999 $275,000 Team Schmidt lic# 115329 (360)683-6880 WINDERMERE SUNLAND
Level 5 acre parcel Located just west of Joyce near fishing, camping and hunting. Power, water and phone in at the road. Buyer will need to purchase a Crescent Water share. Owner will consider financing with a sufficient down payment. C C & R ’s i n c l u d e n o manufactured homes under 1200 sq ft, no single wide manufactured homes, all homes must be less than 8 years old upon installation and all vehicles must be currently licensed. MLS#292008 $54,500 Kelly Johnson (360)477-5876 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES
NEW PRICING! Reasonably priced building site, community beach and boat launch privileges, manufactured or mobile allowed, power and water on road, septic needed, approved soils evaluation on file. MLS#765011/290546 $24,500 Terry Peterson Entertaining lic# 107780 Made Easy! (360)683-6880 2BR, 2BA, 1741 SF in WINDERMERE Cedar Ridge. Open conSUNLAND cept living/dining room extends out to the 135 NOW YOU SEE IT S F c o v e r e d o u t d o o r If this catches your eye, room. Granite counters wait until you see the in the kitchen and mas- rest of this home. It has ter bath. it all! An amazing unobMLS#290532/764020 structed view in front, $299,500 and Olympic Mountains Alan Burwell in the back – Even by a #17663 winery. 3287 SF home Windermere w/ attached 2 car garReal Estate age, 4.89 acres, Sequim East 4BR/4BA/1Office, Gour360-460-0790 met Kitchen w/Commer-
A Plus Lawn Ser vice. Hedge, shrub trimming, thatching, many references, professional results. Here today here tomorrow. Senior DisGREAT FOR counts. P A only. Local ENTERTAINING call (360) 808-2146 Recent improvements and beautifully redone Blagdon’s kitchen! Mature landConstruction LLC. scaping with multiple Residential and Com- outdoor living spaces on mercial remodeling li- 2.34 acres. Views of the censed BLAGDCL855L4 Olympic Mountains and B o n d e d a n d I n s u r e d lights of Victoria. 4 BDR, Clallam and Jefferson 2.5 BA, 2 fireplaces and County. (360)460-4566 a n a t t a c h e d r e n t a bl e guest suite with private FALL YARD CLEAN UP bath and deck. Adjacent Tr i m m i n g , w e e d i n g , to award winning Camahauling, pruning, mow- raderie Cellars winery. ing. Reasonable rates. Orchard, berries, raised (360)683-7702 bed garden and pond. MLS#290612/768697 Housekeeping, caregiv$464,900 ing, waitressing, nanny. Doc Reiss references upon re360-461-0613 quest. (360)912-4002 or TOWN & COUNTRY jotterstetter44 @gmail.com INVITING HOME ON 13th FAIRWAY Young Couple Early 60’s 3 bd 2 ba 2049 sf, large available for seasonal bright rooms, two pancleanup, weeding, trim- tries, pull-out cabinets, ming, mulching & moss newer dishwasher, new removal. We specialize carpet, finished 570 sf in complete garden res- on lower level, spacious torations. Excellent ref- s t o ra g e s p a c e w / g o l f erences. 457-1213 cart parking, large Chip & Sunny’s Garden decks, stone patio, low Tr a n s f o r m a t i o n s . L i - maintenance yard. c e n s e # C C MLS#854885/291990 CHIPSSG850LB. $315,000 Deb Kahle lic# 47224 105 Homes for Sale (360)683-6880 Clallam County WINDERMERE SUNLAND Call It Home Located in a nice area. Mountain View! Great view of the Straits. Well maintained 3 bed, 2 G o l f a l m o s t a t y o u r bath, 1248 sq. ft. home b a c k d o o r. W h e n y o u with vaulted ceilings. walk in, you know this is Nicely landscaped 1/2 the one. 1804 SF home acre mtn. view lot. Priw/ attached 2 car garage vate backyard with garwith additional storage, den shed & area to park 3BR/2BA, Nicely Land- an RV. Insulated 2 car scaped. garage. Great location in MLS#291244 $305,000 a quiet neighborhood Staci Politika with nearby shopping. UPTOWN REALTY MLS#291201 $179,000 (360)417-9880 Jean Irvine UPTOWN REALTY Carrie Blake (360)417-2797 Park Area Beautiful 3br, 2ba home RARE NO BANK with detached 1br, 1ba BEACHFRONT g u e s t h o u s e, p r i va t e Level property with outpatio, fenced in back standing views of the yard, & wonderful land- San Juan Islands & Mt. scaping. Features in- Baker. Community boat clude Italian marble en- launch & airstrip. Power try & fireplace surround, in the street, community granite counter tops in water available. Septic kitchen & baths, formal design done. Fishing, dining room, family room crabbing and clamming w / p r o p a n e f i r e p l a c e , right out your front door. master w/ double sinks, MLS#291374/811682 2 car garage plus 13 X $299,950 33 ft workshop. Carol Dana MLS#291957 $349,900 #109151 Tom Blore Windermere 360-683-7814 Real Estate PETER BLACK Sequim East REAL ESTATE 360-461-9014
cial Appliances, DETACHED 4000 SF shop, with endless possibilities. A dream shop! MLS#282329 $699,500 Staci Politika UPTOWN REALTY (360)417-9880 One of a kind! Generously sized 2 bedroom / 1 bathroom home situated on three rural lots. Bright and spacious living room with large dual pane windows. Kitchen with skylight, ample counter space and convenient built in desk/work space. Bedrooms with built ins for additional storage. Bathr o o m w i t h t u b / s h owe r combo and built in linen cabinets. Fully fenced in yard with chicken coop, garden space and fire pit. Detached 1 car garage/workshop. Zoned Urban Neighborhood Commercial - perfect for a home based business or office. MLS#292007 $115,000 Terry Neske (360)477-5876 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES
Ready to move? Delightful 2 br 1.5 ba home on a large lot in historic Dungeness. Great location for a nice relaxed lifestyle. Walk or ride your bike down to the waterfront. Shop at Nash’s for some healthy produce. This single wide mobile home is in great condition. Private well and brand new septic system. Large park like yard and a lot of room for pets! MLS#290378 $115,000 Ed Sumpter Blue Sky Real Estate Sequim 360-683-3900 Vibrant Downtown Building With incredible improvements and fully updated/remodeled 2448 sq ft space. Main level is currently used by 2 businesses, both have easy access to basement which has same sq ft as upstairs thus more possibilities to create and operate another business. Income-generating, great location with price just reduced! MLS#282232 $299,000 Ania Pendergrass 360-461-3973 Remax Evergreen
P.A.: 2.48 acres, with 14 x 70 mobile, covered decks front and back, newly painted inside and out lots of upgrades inside, county maintained t o t h e d r i ve w ay. D r y Creek water. $127,500. (360)775-9996 View acreage! Gorgeous views from this 1.2 acre parcel in O’Brien M e a d ow s s u b d i v i s i o n . The property is set back from O’brien Road with ample privacy and southern exposure. PUD power & water to the propert y. S e l l e r h a s c l e a r e d potential building sites on the property with separate areas for a home, pole barn and a horse s t a bl e o r RV s t o ra g e. Level easy access driveway roughed in off O’Brien Road. Views and souther n exposure opened up while still maintaining privacy. MLS#291991 $69,900 Kelly Johnson (360)477-5876 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES
WA I T I N G F O R YO U ! This quality 2364 sf home was remodeled in 2006 to include a family room w/fireplace & home office/ hobby room. Fantastic landscaping on 1 acre w/large deck, gazebo and cottage wor kshop. Act now and you can enjoy the holidays in your new home! MLS#291284 $389,000 Beth McHugh (360)683-0660 Mark N. McHugh REAL ESTATE
Properties by
Inc.
The VACANCY FACTOR is at a HISTORICAL LOW
C O R N E R L OT: We s t side of Por t Angeles, area of newer homes, West 10th and Madeline Streets. $55,000/obo. (360)460-3694
311 For Sale Manufactured Homes BEAVER: Manufactured Homes for Sales. 3 Homes for sale at Lake Pleasant Mobile Home and RV Park in Beaver. Offering newer 3, 2 and 1 b r. M a nu fa c t u r e d homes available with recent upgrades. All in excellent condition and move in ready. Prices range from $29,950 to $46,950. Financing available OAC Call (360) 808-7120. Homes cannot be moved.
505 Rental Houses Clallam County SEQ: 941 E. Alder, 3 br., 2 bath, recently rem o d e l e d , n o smoke/pets. $1,150, dep. (360)460-8291.
in Port Townsend Shipyard • Heavy Duty 480 V Power • Bridge Cranes • High Efficiency HVAC
INVESTMENT PROPERTIES are in
• 7,000 sf bldg, shop & office like new
DEMAND!
452-1326
• 2,400 sf bldg plus boat storage • 300 & 70 Ton Travel lift service to door Call Mark: 360-531-1080
(360)
417-2810
HOUSES/APT IN PORT ANGELES
A 1BD/1BA $625/M
H 2BD/1BA $700/M H 2BD/1BA $750/M A 2/1 TOWNHOUSE $775/M H 2BD/1BA $875/M H 3BD/1.5 $1150/M
The VACANCY FACTOR is at a HISTORICAL LOW
INVESTMENT PROPERTIES are in
DEMAND!
452-1326
1163 Commercial Rentals TWO OFFICES IN DOWNTOWN SEQUIM GAZETTE BUILDING FOR SUB-LEASE 448-sq-ft for $500 mo., 240-sq-ft for $350 mo. Perfect for accountant or other professional. S h a r e d c o n fe r e n c e room, restroom, wired for high-speed Internet. Contact John Brewer, publisher, (360)417-3500
Email: burn@olympus.net
6055 Firewood, Fuel & Stoves
FIREWOOD: $179 delivered Sequim-P.A. True cord. 3 cord special $499. (360)582-7910 www.portangelesfire wood.com
6065 Food & Farmer’s Market
TUNA: FV St. Jude Dungeness Seaworks blast bled tuna. $2.50 lb. off the boat. West end of PA marina. (360)460-7048.
6075 Heavy Equipment
• 6 plus view offices
Water and Mountain View Acreage! H 3BD/2BA $1250/M 4.84 scenic acres located on a gated road between Por t Angeles & H 3BD/2BA $1700/M Sequim. Gorgeous water & mountain views plus H 4BD/3BA $1800/M seasonal stream. PropHOUSES/APT erty was surveyed and IN SEQUIM h a s m a r ke d c o r n e r s. Perk test registered and H 2BD/2BA $1600/M on file. Fence runs along south border. Nice priCOMPLETE LIST @ vate area! 1111 Caroline St. MLS#291598 $159,900 Port Angeles Jean Irvine UPTOWN REALTY (360)417-2797 SEQ.: 3 br., 2 bath, 2 car gar. $975, f/l/d. Open Nov. 1. (360)460-0380. Welcome Home Large kitchen and floor plan, 4BR/3BA home. SEQ: 740 Spencer Farm Covered porch, SW & R d . 3 B r . , 2 b a . n o city views. Fenced back p e t s / s m o k i n g . $ 1 0 5 0 yard. Recessed lighting plus dep. (360)460-8291 and big bright windows. Family room with pro605 Apartments pane FP, comfy bay window seating and built in Clallam County surround sound. MLS#291989/854848 $385,000 Rick Patti Brown Properties by #119519 #119516 Windermere Inc. Real Estate Sequim East 360-460-0790
308 For Sale Lots & Acreage
PRIME LOCATION
For Lease
5A1415409
Native American preference for qualified candidates.
Employment Opportunities • RN-Per Diem, all areas • RN-Cancer Center • RN-Clinics • Physical Therapist • Pharmacy Tech • Medical Assistant • Plant Operator • Housekeeper • ERT • C.N.A. • Financial Svs. Rep • Applications Analyst • Quality Systems Analyst • Accountant For details on these and other positions and to apply, visit www.olympic medical.org.
4080 Employment Wanted
Centrally located in Port Angeles, freshly updated kitchen includes all new c a b i n e t s a n d l ayo u t , Master Bedroom remodeled including a 2 person deep jetted tub with a s p a l i ke fe e l , f u l l y fenced backyard, and fresh paint job to the exterior and near a large city park. MLS#291844 $199,000 Jarod Kortman 360-912-3025 Remax Evergreen
591423628
LOST: VHF radio, handheld. Freshwater Bay boat launch 10/3. (360)452-5679
4026 Employment 4026 Employment 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 505 Rental Houses 1163 Commercial Clallam County General General Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Rentals
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BALE WAGON: Stackliner 1033. Pull type, new tires, new par ts, field ready, works excellent. 50 hp tractor min @540 rpm, 3 bales wide by 7 bales high, 11’ 7” equipment height. $10,000. (360)683-4295, ext.”0”.
6080 Home Furnishings
BEDROOM SET: Queen size, traditional style, mattress and bed frame, with lighted headboard, triple dresser with mirror matching chest of drawers, 2 night stands. $400. (360)681-6267.
Inc. COFFEE TABLE: Cus-
The VACANCY FACTOR is at a HISTORICAL LOW
INVESTMENT PROPERTIES are in
DEMAND!
452-1326
t o m b ra s s, o a k , r o p e ship’s wheel. 42” D, 16” H, 1/2” Glass top. Mancave/boat ready. $800. (360)457-4576.
MISC: Large wood desk, $25. Antique sewing machine, $175. Large ent e r t a i n m e n t c e n t e r, $800. (360)457-9038
MISC: Mission style entertainment center, oak const. cherry finish, outstanding cond., $250. Antique oak claw foot table, round, with 2 leaves, beautiful cond. $375. (360)683-8796
SOFA: Leather, charc o a l g r e y, ex c e l l e n t , gently used. $495. 6817996
6025 Building Materials Electrical Building Supplies: Electrical control panel par ts. $4$150. (360)452-6580
6045 Farm Fencing & Equipment Case 888 Excavator. 1989-1990 Case 888 w/less than 100 hours p r o - r e bu i l t hy d f u e l pumps. 8876 hrs, 6 cyl t u r b o. R u n s g r e a t ! Tex t 3 6 0 - 4 7 7 - 2 1 3 4 . Cashier’s check payment at pickup. $25k
TA B L E : D i n i n g t a bl e and hutch, seats 10. Beautiful inlaid wood. With large lighted hutch. Original price was $3,000. Now $500. Moving, so it needs to go. $500. U-haul 360-681-8017
6100 Misc. Merchandise
6050 Firearms & Ammunition
Garage and Shop D o o rs : N ew r e m o d e l plans changed-sell at cost call for sizes and $ RIFLE: Springfield M1A install also avail. 360custom ‘Scout Rifle’, all 732-4626 G.I. parts, N.M. upgrade w / e x t r a s , e x c e l l e n t . MISC: Ridged 8000 watt generator, electric start. $1,695. (360)452-4803 $800/obo. 2 theater type popcorn machines. WANTED: 12 gauge $100/ea., new cases of shot gun, single shot. beer bottles, 12 22 oz. (360)928-3642 case, 24 12 oz. case. $10 per case. (6) 7’ foldWE BUY FIREARMS ing tables, $20 ea. (2) 15 CASH ON THE SPOT gal. oak barrels, $100 ~~~ ANY & ALL ~~~ ea. (360)477-6188 TO P $ $ $ PA I D I N CLUDING ESTATES 6125 Tools AND OR ENTIRE COLLECTIONS Call (360)477-9659 UTILITY TRUCK BODY: For 1/2 or 3/4 ton Pick Excel. cond. $2,100 6055 Firewood, up. obo. (360)344-4141
Fuel & Stoves
6140 Wanted WOOD STOVE: Jotul, & Trades certified clean burn, 26” wood. $1,200/obo. WANTED TO BUY: Ce(360)928-3483 dar Shakes and beer GAS STOVE: Regency kegs. (360)925-9645 Classic C34 direct vent. Beautuful with all gold WANTED: Wood-Mizer trim. Comes with vent hydraulic sawmill. Have and 250 gal. tank and all cash. (360)276-4870 pipes except chimney Peninsula Classified cap. $3500 firm. 360-452-8435 (360)565-0392
Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS 1 Frozen treat shown on its package with syrup 5 Computer storage media 10 Sunscreen letters 13 Maxwell House decaf brand 15 From Taiwan, say 16 On the __ vive: alert 17 *Strapless handbag 19 www address 20 “Whoops!” 21 “Get this away from me” 23 Former great 26 Carolyn who created Nancy Drew 27 “Aha!” 28 Home __: Lowe’s rival 32 Old Russian autocrat 33 Neglect, as duty 35 “Ten-hut!” reversal 37 “Oh yeah? __ who?” 38 *Party favors holder 41 Physique, briefly 44 __ Field: Brooklyn Dodgers’ home 46 Piano practice piece 48 Sagan’s sci. 50 Wined and dined 53 Frosty flakes 54 Physical therapy, briefly 56 “Better luck next time!” 58 Pizza seasoning 61 Like much fall weather 62 Very angry 63 Warning in a roller coaster, and a hint to the first words of the answers to starred clues 68 Org. for shrinks 69 Fur fortunemaker 70 “Everything all right?” 71 Introverted 72 Start of a wish 73 Texter’s goof
A I R F I LT E R : I n d o o r, powerful, electrostatic, perfect/like new. $110 obo. (360)775-5248 AIR MATTRESS: Coleman, twin, double high, electric air pump. $35. (773)390-4112 AIR RIFLE: Crossman with 4K scope and pellets, never used. $50. (360)681-4275 AIR SCISSORS: 20,000 RPM, 1/4’ coupler, safety trigger, blade in 2”. $50. (360)683-6180 AIRSOFT: WE glock 19, g a s bl o w b a ck p i s t o l , new, price firm. $150. (360)460-7628
Classified
Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Lewis
Monday, October 12, 2015 B7 By DaviD Ouellet HOW TO PLAY: All the words listed below appear in the puzzle — horizontally, vertically, diagonally and even backward. Find them, circle each letter of the word and strike it off the list. The leftover letters spell the WONDERWORD. WHO HAS BLUE EYES? Solution: 7 letters
A N N I S T O N O R F E C A Z 10/12/15
By Ron Toth and C.C. Burnikel
DOWN 1 PC undo key 2 65-Down’s lass 3 Bearded antelope 4 Bavarian “fest” month 5 Novelist du Maurier 6 Ames sch. 7 “What can I help you with?” iPhone app 8 __ cow: big income producer 9 Go furtively 10 *Runner-on-third play 11 Dog Chow maker 12 Coffeemaker insert 14 Workout woe 18 Cleared weeds, say 22 Nero Wolfe and Sam Spade, briefly 23 Snake’s sound 24 “Off the Court” author Arthur 25 *Carpe diem 29 Blue Ribbon brewer 30 Horseplayer’s letters 31 Herbal brew 34 CIA Cold War foe
Saturday’s Puzzle Solved Friday’s Puzzle Solved
L A W R E N C E L V I S N O G
N S E N A O E N M M M A C A I A C J N L A A E D R R M N T E Y I H D R I Y D L D A E Y A G E K E O E Y D x O F H ◯ ◯ ◯ Y L L E
G N R N D N A N E J L I R T N
I A I A E N A S I S R L U E H
V I L J A M C D E F A O C B A
A L Y T W H B R N Y E J C A A
L U N E A U P R E A F R M Z L
I J N N T Y T I A E R R A I E
R I E L E A L Y T D S I I L T
© 2015 Universal Uclick www.wonderword.com Download the Wonderword Game App!
A R D N E K E R R A T O K A D
10/12
Adriana, Amanda, Angelina, Anniston, Avril, Brad, Butler, Dakota, Damon, Deschanel, Diaz, Ealy, Elizabeth, Elvis, Eminem, Fox, Gyllenhaal, Jake, Jared, Jennifer, Jenny, Jolie, Julianne, Kendra, Kerr, Lavigne, Lawrence, Leto, Lima, Marilyn, McCarthy, McCurdy, Miranda, Monroe, Newman, Pitt, Presley, Reese, Seyfried, Taylor, Zac Efron, Zooey Yesterday’s answer: Whiplash 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.
SITOH ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.
TAMEL ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
36 Mellow, as wine 39 NFL official 40 Consumed 42 Smell 43 Damp at dawn 45 Blow one’s own horn 47 “The Waste Land” poet 48 Kitchen allures 49 High-ranking angel 51 “Play another song!”
B I K E R AC K : fo r c a r, CABLE PULLER: 4 ton, h o l d s 3 b i k e s , u s e d new, Haul Master. $25. o n c e. $ 2 0 . ( 3 6 0 ) 4 5 7 (509)366-4353 9631, ask for Sylvia. CANNING JARS: Quart BIKE: Vintage Raleigh size with rings, 7 dozen Record, 12 sp., 26” sport available. $10. per. training model. $175/obo (360)582-0180 (360)461-0780 C A N O P Y: A l u m i n u m , B I N O C U L A R S : 7 x 5 0 , fits samll pickup 6x4x5, Emerson, new with carry sliding windows. $125. pouch. $15. (360)681-4275 (509)366-4353 CARD TABLE: With (4) BINOCULARS: Barska, folding chairs. $25. 12-60x70 zoom, 120 (360)582-9769 ft.=/1000 yds at 12x. $65. (360)582-0180 CAR RAMPS: $10. (360)457-4383 BIRD CAGES: Decorative, victorian themed, CAR RIMS: Chrome, 17 must see. $20.-$50. in, like new. $140. (360)379-2902 (360)460-0067
A M M O : B ox o f 9 m m BIRDHOUSE: Haunted, Lugar 124 gr. (40) bul- handmade with extras. lets. RWS brand. $12. $15. (360)457-3274 (360)457-9631 BOOKCASES: (2) 6’ X A R M O I R E : Fo r s m a l l 3 0 ” X 1 2 ” . $ 1 5 e a c h . T V, 7 0 ” x 2 4 ” X 2 4 ” , (1) 6’ X 30” X 15”. $20. white, adjustable (360)797-1282 shelves. $20. 797-1282 BOOKCASES:(2) Oak, ART: Buzz Aldrin auto- 3’x6’h. $30.each. graph on USPS postal (360)457-0843 sheet COA. $200. BOOKS: Harr y Potter, (360)461-7365 h a r d c o ve r, # 1 - 7 s e t . ART: Thomas Kinkade $69. (360)775-0855 print, “Painter of Light”, nice mat and frame. $20. B O OT S : H i p wa d e r s, size 11. $35. (360)681-7579 (360)809-0697 ART: T. Quinn’s original “Friends of the Field”, B O OT S : l a d i e s 6 . 5 , a n d “ 1 s t C r a b F e s t . new, medium heel, high top. $25. (360)457-8368 $200. (360)461-7365
CD PLAYER: Multi disc, accessor y for Bose wave system, graphite. $150. (360)681-7579
B I K E : 1 0 s p e e d , BRASS LAMPS: (2) owC RO S S ROA D S S P E - ver 30” high, includes 20” shades. $45.each. CIALIZED, XL seat. $75. (360)631-9211 457-0843
DECANTERS: (16) Wild turkey decanters, first edition #1 included. $120. (360)683-1065
CHAINSAW: Craftsman, 18” bar, older model, older model, extras. $75. (360)582-0150 C H A I N S AW : Po u l a n 18”, gas, 42cc. $60. (949)232-3392 CHAIR: Black leather, with ar ms, reclines, swivels, metal base. $125. (360)681-7996 CHAIR: X Rocker video game chair, never used. $50.obo. 457-6118
CHRISTMAS DISHES: B A S K E T B A L L h o o p B O OT S : L a d i e s 6 . 5 , Ser vice for 8, ser ving and stand, great shape. new, medium heel, low pieces Poinsettia pattern. $40. (206)550-2094 top. $15. (360)457-8368 $30. (360)417-7580.
10/12/15
52 Singer Celine 55 Persian faith that promotes spiritual unity 57 Perfume giant 59 Poet Ogden 60 Not fooled by 64 George Bush’s org. 65 2-Down’s fellow 66 Dance for teens in socks 67 Fight ender, briefly
ELAGIO
BEMLIN
Yesterday's
DISHWASHER: Bosch, GOLF: Clubs, used, put- LIGHTS: (9) sets of LED built in, very quiet. $150. Icicle Christmas lights, ter to driver. $1. each. (360)452-4254 8”-16”. $12.each. (360)457-2856 (949)541-0371 D O G R A M P : L i g h t GREETING CARDS: weight, folding, new. $50 Laser gloss, half-fold for LIGHTS: Wide Variety of (360)683-0146 laser printers, 98 ct. $35. LED Christmas lights. $10. (949)541-0371 (360)457-3274 DOLLS: Collectible, Victorian themed, must see. GUITAR: Ibanes electric MAGAZINE RACK: $8. $20 - $40. (360)582-9769 with Peavey amp. $140. (360)379-2902 (360)457-4383 M AG A Z I N E S : M o r e DOZER BLADE: Craftthan 100. Bicycling, mtn man model #486, with IRON: Electric, General biking, adventure biking. Mills, Betty Crocker retmanual,48” blade. $175. $20. (360)477-4835 ro, side rest, in box. $10. (360)457-6584 (360)683-7161 MASSAGE TABLE DRESSER: Antique. Excellent condition LAMP: 1960’s bottle, $200. (360)461-0940 $200. (360)461-3311 Seagram’s V.O. Canadian Whiskey. $45/obo DRESSER: Maple. $85. (360)452-6842 MATTRESS PAD: King (360)640-0111 size, magnetic. $75. (360)461-3311 DRILL: Cordless set, LAMP: Antique copper, Makita Brushless & im- w i t h t w o h a n d l e s , unique. $40. M AT T R E S S : Q u e e n pact driver. Exel. cond. (360)670-3310 s i z e w i t h b ox s p r i n g . $200. (360)460-2260 $75.obo. (360)457-6118 DW 364: Saw 17.25”, LASER LEVEL: Bosch 120 V. $75. 457-6584 spot laser level, new in MIRROR: Mission 29”, box. $150. 460-2260 opens to 54” w, 40” h. ELECTRIC SPRAYER: $150. (360)683-0146. Tractor tow. $200. L E A F B L OW E R : g a s (360)477-2491 p owe r e d , S t i h l , g o o d N a i l G u n : S e n c o 1 5 condition. $50. gauge finish nailer, 18 FAN: Industrial, 6 ft ped(360)504-2039 volts, 2 batterys. New. estal stand, adjustable, $200. (360)460-5762 heavy duty. $45. LEAF BLOWER: Home(360)670-3310 lite ZR series, made in N AU T I C A L C H A RT: U.S.A. $70. NOAA, 19357 “Oauh”, a FA X M AC H I N E : L i ke (360)809-0697 few scribbles. $15. new. 10+ rolls of paper (360)683-1065 included. $35. LEAF BLOWER: Sears (360)928-9954 Craftsman, electric, 2 N I N T E N D O : G a m e Cube, 2 controllers, FIREPLACE SCREEN: speed. $20. (206)550-2094 memory card, adapter. beautiful, 3 panel glass. $30. (360)460-8979 $150. (720)635-4473 LEATHER JACKETS Two jackets Gramercy PAINTING: 24” x 30”, F R E E : T i r e, M u s t a n g John Ashford $40 ea. oil, earth colors, trees, very good condition. (360)681-3339 water, wood frame. $10. (360)417-7580 (360)683-7161 L I F T C H A I R : P r i d e , FRIDGE: 21cf, beige, PAINT REMOVER: Portbeige, excellent condiside by side, water and tion, for tall individual. er cable, model 7403. ice dispensers. $195. $55. (360)477-3834 $200.obo. 452-6073 (360)460-0067
E E F R E Eand Tuesdays A D SS R F Monday D
Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: FORGO HUSKY LENGTH GLANCE Answer: He’d planned to cut the tree down without any problems, but his plans — FELL THROUGH
PATIO SET: (7) pieces, R OA S T E R : H a m i l t o n table, umbrella, stand, Beach, 22 quar t, like new. $25. (4) chairs. $50. (949)232-3392 (360)452-4636
TIRES: Studded, on wheels, P205/70r15, fits B u i c k C e n t u r y. $200.firm.(360)565-0392
PELLET RIFLES: (2) RUG: Octagon, 50” diolder Sherman, 22 cal. ameter, brown, floral, $75. (360)963-2122 multi color. $79. (360)775-0855 PICTURE: Huskey S t a d i a u m . 2 4 ” x 1 9 ” , SCREEN: Chinese ant i q u e , r o o m d i v i d e r. signed. $35/obo. $200. (360)461-0940 (360)452-6842
TOASTER OVEN: Oster. $15. (360)582-1292
PLANT: Jade, in deco- S H O E S : S e a h a w k s , rative pot, approx 10 yrs new, size 11, Reebok old, 3x3 with 2” trunk. NFL logo. $40. $100.obo. 452-7447 (360)912-1441
TOW I N G M I R R O R S : Slides over existing mirr o r, f i t s G M C / C h ev y, new. $40. 460-8979
PLANT POTS: over 60, SHOP CABINET: Rollvarious sizes, must take ing , with lots of storage, new casters, 37x20x27. all. $10. (360)775-1166 $35. (360)797-1106 POOL: 9x16x46, with w o o d d e c k , l a d d e r , SHOP HEATER: Koeb r i n g D a r t # D B 1 5 0 D, pump, skimmer. $200. 150,000 BTU. $120. (360)344-3445 (360)452-2468 POOL VACUUM: Pool B l a s t e r , c a t f i s h r e - SHOP SMITH: Multic h a r g e a b l e v a c u u m . tiered platform with table saw and other parts. $50. (360)344-3445 $85. (360)631-9211 RANGE: Elec. stove-top drop in, very good cond. SKIL ROUTER: 11 amp #1825 with sign craft kit. $200.firm $80. (360)452-2468 (360)565-0392
TRAILER FENDERS: (2) for boat trailer, good condition. $20. (360)808-6009
REMOTE EXTENDER: S k i l s aw : 7 1 / 4 i n c h . thru wall/room to room, Mag77 Lt. New. $125. (3) pc set, $25. (360)460-5762 (360)775-5248 SOFA: Teal and cream. RIFLE: Mauser 95 Lar- $125.obo. bine stock altered. $200. (360)640-2921 (360)379-4134 S TA P L E R : B o s t i t c h , RIMS: (2) Dodge 16” Wide Crown, with case steel, 8 lug with hub- of staples. $69. caps, great condition. (360)477-3834 $50. (360)452-9685 TABLE: Wood. RIMS: (3) VW 15” with $100.obo tires and hubcaps. $50. (360)640-2931 for all. (360)452-9685 TELEPHONES: Main ROLL AWAY: $90. line, plus (3) satellites. (360)640-0111 $25. (360)457-8106
M ail to : Peninsula Daily News PO Box 1330 Port Angeles, WA 98362
TO O L S E T: B l a c k & Decker 24V, drill, trim saw, batter y,case and more. $75. 797-1106
TRAILER HITCH: Equalizing and stabilizi n g h i t c h , a n t i - sw ay. $125.obo. 452-3039 TREADMILL: Wor ks great! $75.obo. (360)452-6073 UNIFORM: US Navy summer shore patrol uniform, size small. $75. (360)379-4134 VISE: Rock Island large, 12”, older bench vise, cost $300. asking $50. (360)683-8796 WEDDING GOWN: New satin, size 6-8 with veil $85 (360)681-3339. WHEEL BARREL: wood, like new, kept indoors, never used. $150. (360)582-1292 WINE CELLAR: Haier, (24) bottle, adjustable thermostat. $75. (720)635-4473
B rin g yo u r ad s to : Peninsula Daily News 305 West 1st St., PA
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o r FA X to : (360)417-3507 Email: classified@peninsuladailynews.com
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B8 MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 2015
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
D •I •R •E •C •T •O •R •Y
TREE SERVICE
ROOFING
TRACTOR
LAWN CARE
TREE SERVICE
MAINTENANCE
EXCAVATING/SEPTIC
No job too small!
Larry’s Home Maintenance
ANTHONY’S TREE SERVICE
Jami’s
GEORGE E. DICKINSON
All your roofing needs 551012185
LIC # QUALIHS851DT
Lic.#FLAWKTS873OE
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In s id e , O u ts id e , A ny s id e
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LOW RATES!
(360) 477-1805
allgone1274@gmail.com Port Angeles, WA 360-775-9597
“AFFORDABLE HOME IMPROVEMENTS” We Do It All All Carpentry, Kitchen & Bath Tile • Stone • Laminate • Hardwood
360-477-1935 • constructiontilepro.com DONARAG875DL
30 YEAR CRAFTSMEN
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HOME IMPROVEMENTS 24608159
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13 Years Experience Veteran Owned & Operated
Port Angeles, WA www.peninsulachimneyservices.com
YARD MAINTENANCE
Every Home Needs “A Finished Touch”
ALLGONE ROOF CLEANING & MOSS REMOVAL ERIC MURPHY
Sweeping • Water Sealing Caps • Liners • Exterior Repair Serving the Olympic Peninsula
Free Estimates • Senior Discounts Licensed • Bonded • Insured
LAWNCARE
ROOF CLEANING
CHIMNEY SERVICES
Interior/Exterior Painting & Pressure Washing Reg#FINIST*932D0
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Lic#3LITTLP906J3 • ThreeLittlePigs@Contractor.net
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PAINTING
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PENINSULA CHIMNEY SERVICES, LLC
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MASONRY
Please call or visit our showroom for lowest prices on:
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YOUR LOCAL FULL-SERVICE DEALER & PARTS SOURCE
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AA
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We Offer Complete Yard Service
Washington State Contractors License LANDSC1963D2
APPLIANCES
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Mr MANNYs
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360-683-8328
ND New Dungeness Nursery .com Landscape Design & Construction. Open 7 Days • Mon-Sat 10-5 p.m. Sun 10-4 p.m. 4911 Sequim Dungeness Way (in Dungeness, just past Nash’s)
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Visit our website: www.dickinsonexcavation.com Locally Operated for since 1985
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Larry Muckley
Serving Jefferson & Clallam County
FAST SERVICE!!
• Licensed
CONSTRUCTION, INC.
Excavation and General Contracting
• Site Prep • Utilities • Septic Systems • Roads/Driveways
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360-979-6498
(360)
Grounds Maintenance Specialist • Mowing • Trimming • Pruning • Tractor Work • Landscaping • Spring Sprinkler Fire Up • Fall Cleanup and Pruning
360-461-7180 flawktreeservice@yahoo.com Show us Any written estimate and we will match or beat that estimate!
PAINTING
I Fix Driveways,
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Ross Holloway
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Experienced yard Josh Schrenk, Owner/ maintenance, General Contractor painting, mowing, WA Lic. OLYMPRG851LE carpentry, tree trimming. 360-640-5550
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HOLIDAY specials
2015 Holiday TV Programming
2015 Holiday
gift guides
HolidayTV |
Good Things
2015 incclud des FU ULLL COLO OL R pho hoto
HolidayTV
from
GREAT STOCKING STUFFER! Spritz the bowl before you go and no one else will every know. Poo-Pourri, a blend of essential oils, traps embarrassing odors at the source. Comes in several different scents and sizes.
Red-nosed revelry “Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer” has captured the hearts of audiences for ages, and now as the Christmas TV special celebrates its milestone 50th anniversary, we shine a light on the illustrious history of the most famous reindeer of all.
Viking Sew & Vac, 707 E. First St., Port Angeles; 360-457-3077
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COLORFUL CERAMICS: Delight someone on your list with the finest ceramic dinnerware and accessories made in Boleslawiec, Poland. Each piece of Polish pottery is safe in the microwave, oven, dishwasher and freezer. Choose from many beautiful patterns for that just-right gift; $12.87 to $140. WHERE: Swain’s General Store, 602 E. First St., Port Angeles; 360-452-2357 or www.swainsinc.com
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Classified
Peninsula Daily News 8120 Garage Sales 9820 Motorhomes Jefferson County ESTATE SALE : Fr iSat., 8-2 p.m., 309 Cosgrove in PT. Must empty 2-level house!. Huge estate sale full of vintage curiosities and collectibles. antiques, mid - mod couch, bistro dining set, dressers, armchairs, kitchenware, washer/dryer, fridge, books, TOOLS, 2 spinning wheels, Blue Danube china, Chelsea clocks, Big Eye spotting scope, dressers, desk, jewelr y, 3 hospital beds, lots more!
BOUNDER: ‘95, 70,000 miles, blue book value, $10,300 selling for $7500 o.b.o. runs great. (360)797-4211
9832 Tents & Travel Trailers ‘02 27’ Shasta Camp trailer : Never used, in storage, $12,000 obo. 1995 Nomad, 18 ft. in storage, $4000 (360)765-3372
STORAGE UNIT SALES: Quilcene MiniStorage, 294700 HWY 101, Quilcene, WA will sale units #6, 10, 36 & C A R G O T R A I L E R : 38 to the highest sealed 2012 Wells Cargo Vbidder on October 16, F r o n t 6 x 1 4 C a r g o 2015. The units will be Tra i l e r. L o a d e d a n d opened for viewers at ex c e l l e n t c o n d i t i o n , 9:00 am till 10:30 am. must see. Less than Winner of the sealed 7000 miles. More Info bids will have 10 days to at http://bit.ly/1hzVZj5 remove contents. For $ 4 , 9 9 9 . C a l l R i k more information contact (360)460-2472. Jean Morris @360-3013 3 7 7 o r m o r r i s h j e - CARGO TRAILER: Inan@gmail.com. terstate, enclosed, 16’, tandem axels, extra in8183 Garage Sales ter ior insulation, side door, 2 rear doors, only PA - East 500 miles, excellent condition. $4000. Self Storage Auction @ (509)366-4353 Craver’s Rent A Space, 612 N. Larch Ave, PA, FLEETWOOD: ‘00, 26’, on Thurs. 10/15 @ 1:00 Slideout. $6.900. PM. Units include #88, (360)452-6677 89, 119, 219, 291, 316, 360, 453, 486. Attend- T E N T T R A I L E R : ‘ 0 8 ees must check in, cash R o c k w o o d Fr e e d o m . only sales. For more in- Sleeps 8, tip out, stove, formation visit us on FB gas/elec. fridge, furnace, or call 425-984-4175 toilet with shower, king and queen beds with 7025 Farm Animals heated mattresses. Outside gas bbq and show& Livestock er. Great cond. $6,495. (360)452-6304 BULL: 4 yr. old Registered polled Hereford TRAILER: 24x8.5’ enbull, gentle, throws ex- closed concession/car. cellent calves. $2,500. Heat and air, $8,500. (360)452-9822 (360)683-1260
9050 Marine Miscellaneous FIBERFORM: ‘78, 24’ Cuddy Cabin, 228 Mercruiser I/O, ‘07 Mercury 9.9hp, electronics, d o w n r i g g e r s . $11,000/obo 775-0977
FORD: ‘70, 500, 4dr.,3 speed stick, 302, new ex h a u s t , n ew t i r e s / wheels. $2,650/obo (360)452-4156 or (360)681-7478
SHAMROCK CUDDY 20’ 302 CIPCM, inboard, 15 hp 4 stroke, Honda kicker, fish finder, GPS, Scotty elec. downr iggers, load r ite trailer, very clean. $8,500. (360)452-7377
HONDA: ‘09 Accord EX-L Sedan - 3.5L iVTEC DSC V6, Factory dual exhaust, automatic, alloy wheels, sunr o o f , k e y l e s s e n t r y, power windows, door locks, and mirrors, power heated leather seats, cruise control, tilt, air conditioning, dual zone climate control, information center, 6 cd changer with aux input, dual front, side, and rear airbags. 24K ml. $17,995 vin# 1hgcp36879a027678 Gray Motors 457-4901 graymotors.com
SKI BOAT: ‘73 Kona. 18’ classic jet ski boat. 500 c.i. olds. engine. B e r k l e y p u m p . To o much to mention, needs upholstry. $2500. (209)768-1878
9817 Motorcycles HARLEY DAVIDSON: ‘ 0 4 L o w R i d e r. 3 7 0 0 miles, loaded, $8,500. (360)460-6780 H A R L E Y DAV I D S O N : ‘06, XL1200 Spor tster. $5,900. (360)452-6677 H A R L E Y DAV I D S O N ‘93, Wide glide, black with chrome. $10,500 /obo. (360)477-3670. Harley Wide Glide: ‘93 well maintained Low miles, custom paint extras. $6,800 TEXT 360300-7587 H/D, ‘05 Dyna Wide Glide, blk with lots of chrome, lots of aftermarket stuff + extras. $9,500. (360)461-4189. H O N DA : ‘ 8 3 V F 7 5 0 , $1,500. (360)457-0253 evenings.
TRAILER: ‘89, 25’ Hi-Lo Voyager, completely re- H O N DA : ‘ 9 6 X R 6 5 0 L conditioned, new tires, Dual Sport. $2,400. (360)683-8183 AC, customized hitch. HORSE: 9 yr old AQHA $4,750. (360)683-3407. K AWA S A K I : ‘ 0 6 N o mare, green broke, calm and level headed. Would TRAILER: ‘99 Sierra, mad. Very clean. Lots of make a good 4-H pro- 2 5 ’ , n e e d s T L C . extras. $6,000 obo. Mike at (360)477-2562 ject. $2000. with tack. $6,000/obo. 417-0803. Please leave message. (360)670-5307 TRAILER: Bulldog , dou- SUZUKI: ‘08 Burgman ble axle 16’ flat bed trail- Executive 650. 9k mi. Incl. extra windshield, er, with ramps. $1,400. GPS and misc. accesso(360)460-2855 7035 General Pets ries. $4,500. (360)681-2779 UTILITY TRAILER: 16’, ramps, tandem axle, current license. $2,250. 9180 Automobiles (360)460-0515
7030 Horses
Classics & Collect.
1 9 3 0 R o a d s t e r. 1 9 3 0 Ford Model A Roadster pickup truck. Beautiful 5TH WHEEL: 2000, For- teal green exterior with est Ranger, 24’, 6 berth, black fenders and interior and customized vinyl slide out, A/C. $6500. conver tible top. 1986 (360)797-1458 Nissan running gear rec e n t l y t u n e d u p. R e ALPENLITE: ‘93 5th ceived many trophies; wheel, 24’. New hot s t i l l g e t s s t a r e s. A p water heater, fridge, p r a i s e d a t $ 3 0 , 0 0 0 ; stove, toilet, twin mat- priced at $22,500 to tresses (2), shocks. sell. Call 360-775-7520 R o o f r e s e a l e d , i n - or 457-3161. cludes 5th wheel tailgate and 5th wheel hitch. $7,000. (360)452-2705
9802 5th Wheels
American Akita Puppies 4M/4F born 9/13. $1500 (S/N) (253)927-0333 LABRADOODLE PUPPIES: $700 obo. Chocolate colored. 3 females 3 males. Mother labradoodle and father is akc standard poodle.vet checked. , dewor mer. Va c c i n a t i o n s . R e a d y now. Penny (360)670-5728
9820 Motorhomes
37’ Diesel pusher 300 Cummins 6 Speed Allison Trans. 6500 Watt Gen, 2 Slides, levelers Awnings, day & night shades corin counters, 2 each AC TVs Heaters, tow Package,excellent cond. Call for more det a i l s $ 3 9 , 0 0 0 . O B O. (360)582-6434 or (928)210-6767
ALLEGRO: ‘85 Motorhome. 27’, 454 Chevy, engine runs great, auto. trans., 31K original miles, Sleeps 6-8. New refrigerator , battery and brakes. Air conditioned, Onan generator. $6,000 obo. (360)460-1207.
CHEVY: Motorhome, “89 Class C 23’ 41K. New tires, electrical convertor, high output alternator. Captain’s chairs and s o fa . L a r g e f r i g a n d freezer. Lots of storage. Outstanding condition. $9,750/OBO (360)797-1622 MOTORHOME: Damon ‘95 Intruder. 34’, Cummins Diesel, 2 air conditioners, satellite dish, rebuilt generator, all new f i l t e r s a n d n ew t i r e s $17,000/obo. (360)683-8142
TIFFIN: ‘04, Phaeton, 40’, diesel, 4 slides, full kitchen, W/D, enclosed shower, 2nd vanity in br., auto jacks, duel AC, generator, inverter, pullout basement storage, back up camera, lots of i n s i d e s t o ra g e, gr e a t condition. $59,950. Sequim. (720)635-4473.
Forest River: Sierra Lite, ‘00, 21’ clean, 8’ slide, sleeps 6, everything in excellent condition. $6,000. BMW: ‘07 Z4 3.0 SI (360)452-2148 R o a d s t e r. 4 7 K m i l e s, ROCKWOOD, ‘10, 5th w e l l m a i n t a i n e d , l i ke wheel, 26’, many extras, new. $17,999. (360)477-4573 b e l o w b o o k va l u e @ $23,000. (360)457-5696. CADILLAC: ‘84 El Dorado Coupe 62K ml., exc. 9808 Campers & cond. 4.1L V8, $8,500. (360)452-7377 Canopies CAMPER: ‘88 Conastoga cab-over. Self contained, great shape. $2,000. 683-8781 CAMPER: Outdoorsman, bed, refrigerator, CADILLAC: ‘85, Eldorastove. $1,500. do Biarritz, clean inside (360)912-2441 and out. 109k ml. $4,500. (360)681-3339. MAZDA: ‘88, RX 7, convertable, nice, fresh motor and tans. $7,000. (360)477-5308
TRUCK CAMPER: ‘08 Northstar TC650 pop-up slide in truck camper. This camper is in EXCELLENT/like new condition. Asking $13,500 O B O, s e r i o u s bu ye r s only please. I can be reached @ (253)861-6862
9050 Marine Miscellaneous BOAT: 10’ Spor t Cat, ‘97, Fiberglass, electric trolling motor, oars, battery and charger, load ramp. $650. (360)681-4766 BOAT: 16’ Sunrunner. 120hp Mercruiser, Lorance finder/plotter, marine radio, rod holders, life jackets, boat hook, t e n d e r s, ex . p r o p. a l l manuals, dual batteries, nice cover and Canton downrigger, Calkins trailer. All ready for fishing. $2,200 obo, (360)4775430 B OAT: ‘ 7 4 L i g h t n i n g sailboat, 19’. On trailer. $1000 obo. 460-6231 BOAT: ‘88 Invader, 16’, 1 6 5 H P M e r c r u i s e r, open bow, low hours. $2,900. (360)452-5419.
9292 Automobiles 9434 Pickup Trucks Momma Others Others
V O L K S WA G O N : ‘ 7 8 Beetle convertable. Fuel injection, yellow in color. $9000. (360)681-2244 VW: ‘85 Cabriolet, convertable., Red, new tires / b a t t e r y, 5 s p. $1,900/obo (360)683-7144 VW: Karmann Ghia, ‘74. $4,500. (360)457-7184
9292 Automobiles Others 1 WEEK ONLY! Whole Sale Prices All must go, all need repairs, all sold as-is N15275C 85 Nissan ex-cab truck $1286 U31212A 99 Chev Tahoe $2863 U31271C 93 Ford Ranger $1581 U31365A 84 Chev Van $1389 TN15293C 90 GMC 2500 tr uck $1389 N13387B 02 Ford Windstar Van $2975 P31296A 95 GMC Jimmy 4wd $1704 N14265G 00 Ford Windstar Van $1953 PRICE FORD (360)457-3333
B O AT : S e a r a y, 1 8 ’ , 135hp Mercury. $8,000 obo. (360)457-3743 or DODGE: ‘73, Dart, good condition, runs well, (360)460-0862 bench seat, 88K ml. C-Dory: 22’ Angler mod- $5,000. (360)797-1179. el, 75hp Honda, 8hp Nissan, E-Z load trailer, like FORD: ‘01 Crown Vicnew. $16,500/obo 452- toria, LX, 113K ml., origi4143 or 477-6615. nal owner. $3,900. (360)461-5661 DURA: ‘86 , 14’ Aluminum ‘81 15 hp Johnson, FORD: ‘91 Thunderbird electric motor, new bat- Sport. High output 5 liter t e r y, 5 g a l l o n t a n k . V- 8 , Au t o m a t i c, r u n s $2,000. (360)640-1220. good. $995. 460-0783
Monday, October 12, 2015 B9
❘
by Mell Lazarus
CHEV: ‘02, Avalanche 1/2 ton, 5.3 L, tow pkg, 4x4, air bags. leather, excellent in and out. 84k mi., $12,500/obo. (907)209-4946 or (360)504-2487
FORD: ‘03 F150 Super Cab XLT 4X4 - 4.6L V8, Flowmaster exhaust, 5 s p e e d m a nu a l , a l l oy wheels, good tires, running boards, tow ball, soft tonneau cover, tinted windows, 4 doors, keyless entr y, power windows, door locks, and mirrors, cruise control, tilt, air conditioning, alpine cd stereo, dual front airbags. 89K ml. $10,995 vin# 1ftrx18w03nb91900 Gray Motors 457-4901 graymotors.com
9556 SUVs Others
9730 Vans & Minivans 9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices Others Clallam County Clallam County
CHEVY: (2) Suburbans. CHEV: ‘03 Astro Cargo ‘87 and ‘83. $500 ea. Va n , 1 0 2 , 0 0 0 m i l e s , SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON FOR CLALLAM COUNTY, In re the Estate of Barbara (360)928-9436 $4,500 o.b.o. Bridgeford, Deceased, No. 15-4-00333-0 PRO(360)477-8591 BATE NOTICE TO CREDITORS RCW 11.40.030. CHEVY: ‘91 Suburban, 4x4, 3rd row seats, lift- CHEVY: ‘06 Uplander, The Administrator named below has been appointed, straight body, good nice cond. 92K miles. ed as Administrator of this estate. Any person having a claim against the decedent must, before the tires, 141k miles, trans- $6,800. (360)683-1260 time the claim would be barred by any otherwise mission leak, needs work. $1800.obo. Leave CHRYSLER: ‘98 Mini- applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in van, great shape, clean. the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by servFORD: ‘05 F150 Lariat. message. ing on or mailing to the Administrator or the Admin$3400. (360)477-2562 (360)808-3802 HONDA CIVIC: ‘04 Hy- 5.4, 4x4, like new. Sunistrator’s attorney at the address stated below a brid, one owner, excel., roof and bed slide. 83K D O D G E : ‘ 0 6 G r a n d copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim cond., $6500. 683-7593 miles,$13,500. 683-1260 C H E V Y : ‘ 9 9 , Ta h o e , Caravan SE Minivan - with the court in which the probate proceedings 4x4, 4 dr. all factory opwere commenced. The claim must be presented HYUNDAI: ‘92 Sonata, FORD: ‘08 F150 Su- tions. $3,500. (360)452- 3.3L V6, automatic, new tires, privacy glass, key- within the later of: (1) Thirty days after the Adminisl o w m i l e s , 5 s p. d e - perCrew Lariat 4X4 - 4156 or (361)461-7478. less entry, power win- trator served or mailed the notice to the creditor as pendable. $1,250. 5.4L 3V V8, automatic, dows, door locks, and provided under RCW 11.40.020(1)(c); or (2) four (360)775-8251 20 alloy wheels, running GMC: ‘98 Jimmy SLE, mirrors, stow-n-go seat- months after the date of first publication of the noboards, tow package, Great Deal. White, one ing, cruise control, tilt, tice. If the claim is not presented within this time JAGUAR: ‘83, 350 Che- backup sensors, bedlin- owner, good condition, vy engine and transmis- er, folding hard tonneau 213K miles, V6, 4WD, a i r c o n d i t i o n i n g , c d frame, the claim is forever barred, except as othersion, many new par ts. cover, power rear slider, 4-speed Auto trans. with stereo, dual front air- wise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the $1,500/obo. (360)452- privacy glass, sunroof, over drive, towing pack- bags. 88K ml. $7,495 decedent’s probate and nonprobate assets. Date of 4156 or (360)681-7478. keyless entr y, alar m, age, PS/PB, Disc ABS vin# First Publication: October 5, 2015; Administrator: power windows, door brakes, AC, $2250 o.b.o. 1D4GP24R76B754432 Sheryl Ann Bridgeford; Attorney for Administrator: MAZDA: ‘01 Miata. Sil- locks, and mirrors, pow- Call (206) 920-1427 GRAY MOTORS Christopher J. Riffle, WSBA #41332; Address for ver w/beige leather in- e r p r o g r a m m a b l e 457-4901 mailing or service: PLATT IRWIN LAW FIRM, 403 terior. 53K mi. $8,000. memory heated leather KIA: ‘08 Rondo LX V6, graymotors.com S. Peabody, Port Angeles, WA 98362, (360) 457(360)808-7858 seats, adjustable ped- low miles. Auto., loaded 3327; Cour t of Probate Proceedings: Clallam als, cruise control, tilt, runs great. $6800/obo. County Superior Court; Probate Cause Number: SMART CAR: ‘09 23k (360)460-1207 air conditioning, auto9931 Legal Notices 15-4-00333-0. miles, Barbus, loaded, matic climate control, 6 Clallam County Pub: October 5, 12, 19, 2015 Legal No: 661206 $9,500. (360)344-4173 cd stereo, dual front airTOYOTA: ‘14 Prius C. bags. 24K ml. File No.: 7037.106752 Grantors: Northwest Trustee Services, Inc. JPMorgan $23,995 1200 miles, like new, Chase Bank, National Association Grantee: Catherine Renee Bailey, who also vin# with warranty. $16,900. appears of record as Catherine R. Bailey, as her separate estate Ref to DOT 1ftpw14v38fb04743 (360)683-2787 Auditor File No.: 2010-1247352 and modified on 8/13/2014 under recording GRAY MOTORS no. 2014-1311172 Tax Parcel ID No.: 08-31-33-340050 Abbreviated Legal: 457-4901 TOYOTA : ‘ 9 8 C a m r y, PTN SE4 SW4 S8-T31N-R33W WM CLALLAM CO. WA Notice of Trustee’s graymotors.com 217K ml. 2 owner car. Sale Pursuant to the Revised Code of Washington 61.24, et seq. THIS NO$3,700/obo. FORD: ‘08 Ranger. 4 TICE IS THE FINAL STEP BEFORE THE FORECLOSURE SALE OF YOUR (360)928-9645 door, 4x4 with canopy, HOME You have only 20 DAYS from the recording date of this notice to pursue mediation. DO NOT DELAY. CONTACT A HOUSING COUNSELOR OR V W: ‘ 1 3 J e t t a T D I , 4 stick shift. $16,000. (360)477-2713 AN ATTORNEY LICENSED IN WASHINGTON NOW to assess your situation door, diesel, sunroof, GPS, 75K miles. NISSAN: ‘03 Murano SL and refer you to mediation if you are eligible and it may help you save your F O R D : F - 3 5 0 S u p e r AWD. 146K miles. Runs home. See below for safe sources of help. SEEKING ASSISTANCE Housing $24,000. (320)232-5436 Duty ‘03, Dually V-10 G r e a t . Ju s t d e t a i l e d . counselors and legal assistance may be available at little or no cost to you. If VW: ‘86 Cabriolet, con- Auto, cruise, incredible Service record available you would like assistance in determining your rights and opportunities to keep ver tible. Wolfberg Edi- A / C , 1 1 f t s e r v i c e Has floor mats plus car- your house, you may contact the following: The statewide foreclosure hotline tion, all leather interior, box,1,600lb Tommy Lift, go area divider and cov- for assistance and referral to housing counselors recommended by the Housnew top. Call for details. all top quality, runs per- er roof rack and trailer ing Finance Commission Telephone: Toll-free: 1-877-894-HOME (1-877-894fect always maintained hitch. $7,000. $4,000. (360)477-3725. 4 6 6 3 ) . W e b s i t e : h t t p : / / w w w. d f i . w a . g o v / c o n s u m e r s / h o m e o w n e r with syn oil, set up to Call 360 477-2619 for ship/post_purchase_counselors_foreclosure.htm The United States Departtow anything but never more info. ment of Housing and Urban Development Telephone: Toll-free: 1-800-5699434 Pickup Trucks has. Truck belonged to 4287. Web site: http://www.hud.gov/offices/hsg/sfh/hcc/fc/index.cfm?webLisOthers the owner of a elevator tAction=search&searchstate=WA&filterSvc=dfc The statewide civil legal aid LONG DISTANCE company so it’s had an No Problem! hotline for assistance and referrals to other housing counselors and attorneys CHEV: ‘95 3/4 ton, 4x4 easy life. 162K miles Telephone: Toll-free: 1-800-606-4819. Web site: http://nwjustice.org/whatex. cab, long bed. with uses no oil, truck needs Peninsula Classified clear. I. On November 13, 2015, at 10:00 AM. inside the main lobby of the nothing. $8,500. canopy. $3,000. Sequim 1-800-826-7714 Clallam County Courthouse, 223 East 4th Street in the City of Port Angeles, (360)477-6218 Sequim (425)220-1929 State of Washington, the undersigned Trustee (subject to any conditions imposed by the Trustee) will sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder, 9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices payable at time of sale, the following described real property “Property”, situated in the County(ies) of CLALLAM, State of Washington: The southeast quarClallam County Clallam County Clallam County ter of the southwest quarter of Section 33, Township 31 North, Range 08 West, W.M., Clallam County, Washington; except that portion conveyed to GeFile No.: 7037.106106 Grantors: Northwest Trustee Services, Inc. JPMorgan rald Thompson and Dorothy Thompson, husband and wife, by deed recorded Chase Bank, National Association Grantee: Ernest M. Cashman and Cindy B. under Clallam County Recording No. 301189; and except that portion conCashman, husband and wife Ref to DOT Auditor File No.: 20041147237 Tax veyed to Jay B. Skewes and Anna Grace Skewes, husband and wife, by deed Parcel ID No.: 04-30-22-560030 Abbreviated Legal: LT3 SAWBY ACRES V12 recorded under Clallam County Recording No. 398763; and except that portion P1, CLALLAM CO., WA Notice of Trustee’s Sale Pursuant to the Revised conveyed to Jay B. Skewes and Anna Grace Skewes, husband and wife, by Code of Washington 61.24, et seq. THIS NOTICE IS THE FINAL STEP BE- deed recorded under Clallam County Recording No. 407809; and except that FORE THE FORECLOSURE SALE OF YOUR HOME You have only 20 DAYS portion conveyed to Gordon D. Wyllie and Jo Anne Wyllie, husband and wife, from the recording date of this notice to pursue mediation. DO NOT DELAY. by deed recorded under Clallam County Recording No. 494201 and except CONTACT A HOUSING COUNSELOR OR AN ATTORNEY LICENSED IN that portion conveyed to Albert V. Kanig and Vivian I. Kanig, husband and WASHINGTON NOW to assess your situation and refer you to mediation if wife, by deed recorded under Clallam County Recording No. 555432. Situate you are eligible and it may help you save your home. See below for safe in Clallam County, State of Washington. Commonly known as: 90 Bishop sources of help. SEEKING ASSISTANCE Housing counselors and legal assis- Road Port Angeles, WA 98363 which is subject to that certain Deed of Trust tance may be available at little or no cost to you. If you would like assistance in dated 01/08/10, recorded on 01/11/10, under Auditor’s File No. 2010-1247352 determining your rights and opportunities to keep your house, you may contact and modified on 8/13/2014 under recording no. 2014-1311172, records of the following: The statewide foreclosure hotline for assistance and referral to CLALLAM County, Washington, from Catherine Renee Bailey, an unmarried housing counselors recommended by the Housing Finance Commission Tele- person, as Grantor, to Olympic Peninsula Title, as Trustee, to secure an oblip h o n e : To l l - f r e e : 1 - 8 7 7 - 8 9 4 - H O M E ( 1 - 8 7 7 - 8 9 4 - 4 6 6 3 ) . We b s i t e : gation “Obligation” in favor of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., h t t p : / / w w w . d f i . w a . g o v / c o n s u m e r s / h o m e o w n e r - solely as nominee for M&T Bank, its successors and assigns, as Beneficiary, ship/post_purchase_counselors_foreclosure.htm The United States Depart- the beneficial interest in which was assigned by Mortgage Electronic Registrament of Housing and Urban Development Telephone: Toll-free: 1-800-569- tion Systems, Inc. as nominee of M&T Bank, its successors and assigns to 4287. Web site: http://www.hud.gov/offices/hsg/sfh/hcc/fc/index.cfm?webLis- JPMorgan Chase Bank, National Association, under an Assignment/SuccestAction=search&searchstate=WA&filterSvc=dfc The statewide civil legal aid sive Assignments recorded under Auditor’s File No. 2013-1288757. *The Tax hotline for assistance and referrals to other housing counselors and attorneys Parcel ID number and Abbreviated Legal Description are provided solely to Telephone: Toll-free: 1-800-606-4819. Web site: http://nwjustice.org/what- comply with the recording statutes and are not intended to supplement, amend clear. I. On November 13, 2015, at 10:00 AM. inside the main lobby of the or supersede the Property’s full legal description provided herein. II. No action Clallam County Courthouse, 223 East 4th Street in the City of Port Angeles, commenced by the Beneficiary of the Deed of Trust is now pending to seek State of Washington, the undersigned Trustee (subject to any conditions im- satisfaction of the Obligation in any Court by reason of the Grantor’s or Borposed by the Trustee) will sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder, rower’s default on the Obligation secured by the Deed of Trust. III. The Benefipayable at time of sale, the following described real property “Property”, situat- ciary alleges default of the Deed of Trust for failure to pay the following ed in the County(ies) of CLALLAM, State of Washington: Lot 3 of Sawby amounts now in arrears and/or other defaults: Amount due to reinstate as of Acres, as per Plat thereof recorded in Volume 12 of Plats, Page 1, Records of 06/30/2015. If reinstating after this date, please contact NWTS for the exact reClallam County, Washington. Situate in Clallam County, State of Washington. instatement amount. Monthly Payments $10,744.79 Lender’s Fees & Costs Commonly known as: 71 Jenifer Court Sequim, WA 98382 which is subject to $211.96 Total Arrearage $10,956.75 Trustee’s Expenses (Itemization) Trusthat certain Deed of Trust dated 12/08/04, recorded on 12/15/04, under Audi- tee’s Fee $750.00 Title Report $792.40 Statutory Mailings $11.70 Recording tor’s File No. 20041147237, records of CLALLAM County, Washington, from Costs $28.00 Postings $80.00 Total Costs $1,662.10 Total Amount Due: Ernest M Cashman and Cindy B Cashman, Husband and Wife, as Grantor, to $12,618.85 Other known defaults as follows: IV. The sum owing on the ObligaClallam Title Company, a Washington Corporation, as Trustee, to secure an tion is: Principal Balance of $249,146.53, together with interest as provided in obligation “Obligation” in favor of Washington Mutual Bank, a Washington cor- the note or other instrument evidencing the Obligation from 11/01/14, and such poration, as Beneficiary, the beneficial interest in which was assigned by Fed- other costs and fees as are due under the Obligation, and as are provided by eral Deposit Insurance Corporation, as Receiver of Washington Mutual Bank statute. V. The Property will be sold to satisfy the expense of sale and the Obto JPMorgan Chase Bank, National Association, under an Assignment/Suc- ligation as provided by statute. The sale will be made without representation or cessive Assignments recorded under Auditor’s File No. 2013-1292549. *The warranty, express or implied regarding title, possession, encumbrances or Tax Parcel ID number and Abbreviated Legal Description are provided solely condition of the Property on November 13, 2015. The default(s) referred to in to comply with the recording statutes and are not intended to supplement, paragraph III, together with any subsequent payments, late charges, advances amend or supersede the Property’s full legal description provided herein. II. No costs and fees thereafter due, must be cured by 11/02/15 (11 days before the action commenced by the Beneficiary of the Deed of Trust is now pending to sale date), to cause a discontinuance of the sale. The sale will be discontinued seek satisfaction of the Obligation in any Court by reason of the Grantor’s or and terminated if at any time before 11/02/15 (11 days before the sale date), Borrower’s default on the Obligation secured by the Deed of Trust. III. The the default(s) as set forth in paragraph III, together with any subsequent payBeneficiary alleges default of the Deed of Trust for failure to pay the following ments, late charges, advances, costs and fees thereafter due, is/are cured and amounts now in arrears and/or other defaults: Amount due to reinstate as of the Trustee’s fees and costs are paid. The sale may be terminated any time af06/30/2015. If reinstating after this date, please contact NWTS for the exact re- ter 11/02/15 (11 days before the sale date), and before the sale by the Borrower, Grantor, any Guarantor or the holder of any recorded junior lien or encuminstatement amount. Monthly Payments $12,360.88 Lender’s Fees & Costs brance paying the entire balance of principal and interest secured by the Deed ($988.88) Total Arrearage $11,372.00 Trustee’s Expenses (Itemization) Trus- of Trust, plus costs, fees, and advances, if any made pursuant to the terms of tee’s Fee $1,125.00 Statutory Mailings $12.18 Recording Costs $14.00 Post- the obligation and/or Deed of Trust, and curing all other defaults. VI. A written ings $80.00 Total Costs $1,231.18 Total Amount Due: $12,603.18 Other notice of default was transmitted by the Beneficiary or Trustee to the Borrower known defaults as follows: IV. The sum owing on the Obligation is: Principal and Grantor at the following address(es): NAME AND ADDRESS Catherine Balance of $200,816.19, together with interest as provided in the note or other Bailey aka Catherine R Bailey aka Catherine Renee Bailey 90 Bishop Road instrument evidencing the Obligation from 07/01/14, and such other costs and Port Angeles, WA 98363 Unknown Spouse and/or Domestic Partner of Cathefees as are due under the Obligation, and as are provided by statute. V. The rine Bailey aka Catherine R Bailey aka Catherine Renee Bailey 90 Bishop Property will be sold to satisfy the expense of sale and the Obligation as pro- Road Port Angeles, WA 98363 by both first class and certified mail, return revided by statute. The sale will be made without representation or warranty, ex- ceipt requested on 05/26/15, proof of which is in the possession of the Truspress or implied regarding title, possession, encumbrances or condition of the tee; and on 05/27/15 Grantor and Borrower were personally served with said Property on November 13, 2015. The default(s) referred to in paragraph III, to- written notice of default or the written notice of default was posted on a congether with any subsequent payments, late charges, advances costs and fees spicuous place on the real property described in paragraph I above, and the thereafter due, must be cured by 11/02/15 (11 days before the sale date), to Trustee has possession of proof of such service or posting. VII. The Trustee, cause a discontinuance of the sale. The sale will be discontinued and terminat- whose name and address are set forth below, will provide in writing to anyone ed if at any time before 11/02/15 (11 days before the sale date), the default(s) requesting it a statement of all costs and trustee’s fees due at any time prior to as set forth in paragraph III, together with any subsequent payments, late the sale. VIII. The effect of the sale will be to deprive the Grantor and all those charges, advances, costs and fees thereafter due, is/are cured and the Trus- who hold by, through or under the Grantor of all their interest in the Property. tee’s fees and costs are paid. The sale may be terminated any time after IX. Anyone having any objection to the sale on any grounds whatsoever will be 11/02/15 (11 days before the sale date), and before the sale by the Borrower, afforded an opportunity to be heard as to those objections if they bring a lawGrantor, any Guarantor or the holder of any recorded junior lien or encum- suit to restrain the sale pursuant to RCW 61.24.130. Failure to bring such a brance paying the entire balance of principal and interest secured by the Deed lawsuit may result in a waiver of any proper grounds for invalidating the Trusof Trust, plus costs, fees, and advances, if any made pursuant to the terms of tee’s sale. X. NOTICE TO OCCUPANTS OR TENANTS - The purchaser at the the obligation and/or Deed of Trust, and curing all other defaults. VI. A written Trustee’s Sale is entitled to possession of the property on the 20th day follownotice of default was transmitted by the Beneficiary or Trustee to the Borrower ing the sale, as against the Grantor under the Deed of Trust (the owner) and and Grantor at the following address(es): NAME AND ADDRESS Ernest anyone having an interest junior to the Deed of Trust, including occupants who Cashman aka Ernest M Cashman 71 Jenifer Court Sequim, WA 98382 Cindy are not tenants. After the 20th day following the sale the purchaser has the Cashman aka Cindy B Cashman 71 Jenifer Court Sequim, WA 98382 by both right to evict occupants who are not tenants by summary proceedings under first class and certified mail, return receipt requested on 05/28/15, proof of Chapter 59.12 RCW. For tenant-occupied property, the purchaser shall prowhich is in the possession of the Trustee; and on 05/29/15 Grantor and Bor- vide a tenant with written notice in accordance with RCW 61.24.060. The trusrower were personally served with said written notice of default or the written tee’s rules of auction may be accessed at www.northwesttrustee.com and are notice of default was posted on a conspicuous place on the real property de- incorporated by this reference. You may also access sale status at www.northscribed in paragraph I above, and the Trustee has possession of proof of such westtrustee.com and www.USA-Foreclosure.com. Date Executed: Northwest service or posting. VII. The Trustee, whose name and address are set forth Trustee Services, Inc., Trustee Authorized Signature 13555 SE 36th St. Suite below, will provide in writing to anyone requesting it a statement of all costs 100 Bellevue, WA 98006 Contact: Heather L. Smith (425) 586-1900. (Bailey, and trustee’s fees due at any time prior to the sale. VIII. The effect of the sale Catherine R TS# 7037.106752) 1002.280766-File No. Legal No: 661248 will be to deprive the Grantor and all those who hold by, through or under the PUB: October 12, November 2, 2015 Grantor of all their interest in the Property. IX. Anyone having any objection to the sale on any grounds whatsoever will be afforded an opportunity to be heard as to those objections if they bring a lawsuit to restrain the sale pursuant to RCW 61.24.130. Failure to bring such a lawsuit may result in a waiver of any proper grounds for invalidating the Trustee’s sale. X. NOTICE TO OCCUPANTS OR TENANTS - The purchaser at the Trustee’s Sale is entitled to possession of the property on the 20th day following the sale, as against the Grantor under the Deed of Trust (the owner) and anyone having an interest junior to the Deed of Trust, including occupants who are not tenants. After the 20th day following the sale the purchaser has the right to evict occupants who are not tenants by summary proceedings under Chapter 59.12 RCW. For tenant-occuCall 360-452-4507 or 800-826-7714 pied property, the purchaser shall provide a tenant with written notice in accordance with RCW 61.24.060. The trustee’s rules of auction may be accessed at www.peninsuladailynews.com www.northwesttrustee.com and are incorporated by this reference. You may also access sale status at www.northwesttrustee.com and www.USA-Foreclosure.com. Date Executed: Northwest Trustee Services, Inc., Trustee Authorized Signature 13555 SE 36th St. Suite 100 Bellevue, WA 98006 Contact: Heather L. Smith (425) 586-1900. (Cashman, Ernest M and Cindy B TS# 7037.106106) 1002.279879-File No PUB: October 12, November 2, 2015 Legal No: 661255
Get home delivery. Peninsula Daily News
B10
WeatherWatch
MONDAY, OCTOBER 12, 2015 Neah Bay 54/49
Bellingham 60/51 g
➡
Olympic Peninsula TODAY Port Townsend 61/49
Port Angeles 59/49
BREEZY
Olympics Snow level: 9,500 feet
Forks 60/48
Sequim 63/48
Port Ludlow 64/49
National forecast Nation TODAY
Yesterday Statistics for the 48-hour period ending at noon yesterday. Hi Lo Rain YTD Port Angeles 65 44 1.69 19.87 Forks 61 46 1.79 55.74 Seattle 70 51 2.02 24.67 Sequim 70 45 0.13 9.53 Hoquiam 63 49 2.10 30.12 Victoria 62 54 0.03 17.53 Port Townsend 66 43 **0.20 10.47
Forecast highs for Monday, Oct. 12
Last
New
First
Sunny
Billings 74° | 42°
Minneapolis 58° | 57°
San Francisco 79° | 57°
Chicago 74° | 60°
Denver 76° | 47°
Los Angeles 91° | 71°
Miami 89° | 72°
➡
Fronts
Low 49 The evening sky weeps
WEDNESDAY
CANADA Victoria 59° | 49°
Ocean: S wind 20 to 30 kt. Wind waves 4 to 6 ft. W swell 9 ft at 12 seconds building to 13 ft at 12 seconds in the afternoon. Morning rain likely then rain in the afternoon. W wind 5 to 15 kt becoming E after midnight. Wind waves 2 ft or less. W swell 12 ft at 13 seconds subsiding to 10 ft at 12 seconds after midnight.
Seattle 64° | 51° Olympia 66° | 45°
Spokane 67° | 41°
Tacoma 65° | 49° Yakima 70° | 38°
Astoria 67° | 48°
ORE.
TODAY
© 2015 Wunderground.com
Sunset today Sunrise tomorrow Moonrise tomorrow Moonset tomorrow
Hi 61 77 82 50 61 71 65 89 64 87 73 90 90 61 88 59
Albany, N.Y. Albuquerque Amarillo Anchorage Asheville Atlanta Atlantic City Austin Baltimore Billings Birmingham Bismarck Boise Boston Brownsville Buffalo
TOMORROW
6:31 p.m. 7:30 a.m. 8:06 a.m. 7:04 p.m.
Lo 38 52 58 39 53 58 38 59 40 65 50 44 56 48 69 48
Prc
Otlk Clr PCldy Clr .02 Cldy .64 PCldy Cldy Clr Clr Clr Clr Clr Clr Clr PCldy Clr Clr
WEDNESDAY
High Tide Ht 12:45 a.m. 7.6’ 12:49 p.m. 8.4’
Low Tide Ht 6:47 a.m. 1.4’ 7:17 p.m. 0.4’
High Tide Ht 1:23 a.m. 7.6’ 1:18 p.m. 8.5’
Low Tide Ht 7:19 a.m. 1.7’ 7:51 p.m. 0.1’
High Tide Ht 2:00 a.m. 7.6’ 1:46 p.m. 8.5’
Low Tide 7:50 a.m. 8:25 p.m.
Ht 2.0’ 0.0’
Port Angeles
3:32 a.m. 6.0’ 2:57 p.m. 6.4’
9:04 a.m. 3.2’ 9:27 p.m. 1.1’
4:11 a.m. 6.2’ 3:20 p.m. 6.4’
9:40 a.m. 3.6’ 9:57 p.m. 0.6’
4:51 a.m. 6.3’ 10:17 a.m. 3:46 p.m. 6.3’ 10:29 p.m.
4.0’ 0.3’
Port Townsend
5:09 a.m. 7.4’ 10:17 a.m. 3.6’ 4:34 p.m. 7.9’ 10:40 p.m. 1.2’
5:48 a.m. 7.6’ 10:53 a.m. 4.0’ 4:57 p.m. 7.9’ 11:10 p.m. 0.7’
6:28 a.m. 7.8’ 11:30 a.m. 5:23 p.m. 7.8’ 11:42 p.m.
4.5’ 0.3’
Dungeness Bay*
4:15 a.m. 6.7’ 9:39 a.m. 3.2’ 3:40 p.m. 7.1’ 10:02 p.m. 1.1’
4:54 a.m. 6.8’ 10:15 a.m. 3.6’ 4:03 p.m. 7.1’ 10:32 p.m. 0.6’
5:34 a.m. 7.0’ 10:52 a.m. 4:29 p.m. 7.0’ 11:04 p.m.
4.0’ 0.3’
LaPush
Warm Stationary
Pressure Low
High
Monday Oct 20 Oct 27
Nation/World
Washington TODAY
Strait of Juan de Fuca: E wind to 10 kt.Wind waves 1 ft or less. A chance of morning rain then afternoon rain.W wind to 10 kt.Wind waves 1 ft or less.
Tides
FRIDAY
60/43 62/43 62/48 Heat from the More sun makes And sometimes sun skin seeps people sigh squint their eye
59/45 And clouds cover the sky
Marine Conditions
THURSDAY
Nov 3
*To correct for Sequim Bay, add 15 minutes for high tide, 21 minutes for low tide.
-10s
-0s
0s
10s
20s 30s 40s
50s 60s
70s
80s 90s 100s 110s
Cartography © Weather Underground / The Associated Press
Burlington, Vt. Casper Charleston, S.C. Charleston, W.Va. Charlotte, N.C. Cheyenne Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Columbia, S.C. Columbus, Ohio Concord, N.H. Dallas-Ft Worth Dayton Denver Des Moines Detroit Duluth El Paso Evansville Fairbanks Fargo Flagstaff Grand Rapids Great Falls Greensboro, N.C. Hartford Spgfld Helena Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Jackson, Miss. Jacksonville Juneau Kansas City Key West Las Vegas Little Rock
53 85 79 68 65 83 65 67 63 75 66 57 84 67 85 72 65 67 82 72 38 83 69 63 81 63 63 87 91 90 68 71 83 54 72 87 93 77
à 106 in Death Valley, Calif. Ä 25 in Mount Washington, N.H.
Atlanta 76° | 54°
El Paso 87° | 63° Houston 91° | 71°
Full
New York 74° | 55°
Detroit 74° | 54°
Washington D.C. 76° | 48°
Cartography by Keith Thorpe / © Peninsula Daily News
TUESDAY
Cloudy
TEMPERATURE EXTREMES for the contiguous United States:
Cold
TONIGHT
Pt. Cloudy
The Lower 48
Seattle 64° | 51°
Almanac
Brinnon 62/53
Aberdeen 64/53
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
39 Cldy Los Angeles 100 74 64 Clr Louisville 70 46 61 1.03 Cldy Lubbock 78 62 48 Clr Memphis 73 48 54 .69 PCldy Miami Beach 90 76 51 Clr Midland-Odessa 76 63 51 Clr Milwaukee 65 55 42 Clr Mpls-St Paul 74 58 44 Clr Nashville 71 45 59 1.40 Cldy New Orleans 79 61 42 Clr New York City 65 53 35 Clr Norfolk, Va. 66 61 65 Clr North Platte 87 42 43 Clr Oklahoma City 79 58 56 Clr Omaha 78 54 55 Clr Orlando 88 71 45 Clr Pendleton 86 54 54 Clr Philadelphia 66 47 60 PCldy Phoenix 95 76 44 Clr Pittsburgh 64 40 26 Cldy Portland, Maine 56 42 52 Clr Portland, Ore. 72 53 40 Clr Providence 63 43 50 Clr Raleigh-Durham 65 52 52 Clr Rapid City 88 50 54 .04 PCldy Reno 88 55 37 PCldy Richmond 62 45 50 Clr Sacramento 88 57 79 PCldy St Louis 71 54 60 Clr St Petersburg 85 76 44 Clr Salt Lake City 85 69 46 Clr San Antonio 92 67 64 .03 Cldy San Diego 96 73 47 .04 Rain San Francisco 71 60 54 Clr San Juan, P.R. 93 80 80 PCldy Santa Fe 75 44 74 Clr St Ste Marie 60 52 49 Clr Shreveport 80 51
.05
.29 .18
.39
Clr Clr Clr Clr Cldy Clr Clr Clr Clr Clr Clr PCldy Clr Clr Clr PCldy PCldy Clr PCldy Clr PCldy Cldy PCldy Cldy Clr Clr Clr Clr Clr PCldy Clr Clr PCldy PCldy Clr PCldy Clr Clr
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 Syracuse Tampa Topeka Tucson Tulsa Washington, D.C. Wichita Wilkes-Barre Wilmington, Del.
80 56 87 74 91 76 65 77 63 66
55 38 74 60 67 60 47 59 38 42
Clr PCldy .11 PCldy Clr PCldy Clr Clr Clr Clr 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 Otlk 65 54 PCldy 79 48 Clr 48 32 PCldy 52 34 PCldy 94 70 Clr 63 40 PCldy 84 60 PCldy 81 73 AM Sh 83 63 Ts 88 58 Clr 83 50 Clr 57 43 Clr 77 48 Clr 72 54 Clr 41 29 Snow/Rain 96 74 Hazy 58 38 PCldy 90 72 PCldy 72 55 Clr 80 62 PM Ts 70 63 Sh 73 56 PCldy 68 53 PCldy 57 48 Cldy/Rain
Briefly . . . All other questions can be mation and stories from this directed to the public affairs special birding hotspot. office at 360-257-2286. Gatchet is a member of the American Birding Association (ABA), Oregon Audubon program Birding Association, WashPORT TOWNSEND — ington Ornithological SociCOUPEVILLE — There The Admiralty Audubon ety and Olympic Audubon. will be field carrier landing Society will offer a commuHe has written articles practice operations for air- nity program, “Birds of the for the ABA and was a concraft stationed at Naval Air Lower Rio Grande,” at the tributing author to Birds of Port Townsend Community Station Whidbey Island at Idaho. the outlying field in Coupe- Center, 620 Tyler St., at 7 p.m. Thursday. ville this week. Discussion group The event is free and On Wednesday, flights are SEQUIM — The open to the public. scheduled in the afternoon. Sequim Great Decisions One of the world’s preThe schedule is subject Discussion Group will meet mier birding destinations to change to meet mission at the Sequim Library, 630 is Texas’s Lower Rio requirements. N. Sequim Ave., from Grande Valley, a subtropiComments, including noise complaints, can be 10 a.m. to noon Friday. cal area boasting 540 bird directed to the station’s com- species, according to a The day’s topic is “Improvment line at 360-257-6665 or news release. ing Humanitarian Aid: How via email at comments. to Make Relief More Efficient Presenter John Gatchet NASWI@navy.mil. will share bird photos, infor- and Effective.”
Whidbey flights set for Wednesday
New members are welcome to the free talk. The suggested background reading for this discussion is two articles from Foreign Affairs magazine’s July/August edition, published by the Council on Foreign Affairs: ■ “Improving Humanitarian Aid.” ■ “Regime Change for Humanitarian Aid.” For more information, contact John Pollock at 360-683-9622 or jcpollock@ olypen.com, or visit www. tinyurl.com/pdn-great decisions.
Scandia fall fest PORT TOWNSEND — The annual Scandinavian fall festival will be held at Blue
Heron Middle School, 3939 San Juan Ave., from 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Saturday. This free event focuses on Scandinavian traditions, including a bake sale, Nordic arts and crafts, peasoup lunch, homemade pies, a kids’ corner, live Scandinavian music, Leikkaringen dancers, Nordic knits and jewelry. There will be vendor booths and live demonstrations. For more information, phone Kari Mathews at 360-531-4512, email daughtersofnorway45@ gmail.com or visit www. facebook.com/TheaFoss lodge45.
Family history CHIMACUM — Jeffer-
son County Genealogy Society will meet at the Tri-Area Community Center, 10 West Valley Road, for a presentation, “Getting the Most From FamilySearch.org.” The event is from 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. Saturday. FamilySearch.org is a free website for researching family history. Mary Kathryn Kozy, a lecturer for the past 10 years, returns to share her “how-to-detective-work” while using this large and varied website. This opportunity is free and open to the public. Donations are accepted. For more information, visit www.wajcgs.org. Peninsula Daily News
Ocean View Cemetery UPDATE!
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