PDN20150601C

Page 1

Monday

Championship runs

Showers in today’s forecast for Peninsula A8

Counties combine for 5 state track and field titles B1

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS June 1, 2015 | 75¢

Port Angeles-Sequim-West End

Eye on Olympia

Peninsula’s close-up

Pols: Accord can be reached Legislators meet for budget deal BY PAUL GOTTLIEB PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

CHRIS MCDANIEL/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Scott A. Capestany, right, the creator, lead writer, executive producer and director of the proposed television series “Rainforest,” speaks to Jamestown S’Klallam Tribal Council Chairman Ron Allen, center, and Jerry Allen, CEO of 7 Cedars Casino, about potential locations for filming in Blyn.

Creator sets his sights on local spots for TV pilot ‘Rainforest’ episode is expected to be filmed in summer BY CHRIS MCDANIEL PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

BLYN — Filming for the pilot of a new television show, “Rainforest,” is expected to begin in several North Olympic Peninsula locations this summer. The show’s creator, lead writer, executive producer and director, Scott A. Capestany, is currently finalizing loca-

tions in Port Townsend, Forks, Port Angeles, Sequim and at Lake Quinault. Specific dates for filming the pilot have not been determined. Capestany is the founder of Capestany films and has previously produced several TV series, including Harbor Island, Northwest Waters TV and Island Getaways TV.

ested,” Capestany said. A TV pilot is a standalone episode of a series used to sell the show to networks for broadcast. Capestany met with Jamestown S’Klallam tribal leaders last week at the 7 Cedars Casino to flesh out an agreement in which the tribe will allow filming on reservation land and provide historic advisors to ensure authenticity in the Seattle base pilot and the potential series to follow. Authenticity is important to CapesCapestany Films is based in Seattle tany, who said he has “a desire to weave and has a satellite office in Beverly into my fictional story of the rain forest Hills, Calif. an authentic Native American compoAfter completion, “I am going to presnent.” ent the pilot during pilot season next TURN TO PILOT/A6 year to all of the people who are inter-

OLYMPIA — The do-or-die second special legislative session that continues today could end within two weeks by producing a two-year state operating budget agreement, state Rep. Steve Tharinger of Sequim and state Sen. Jim Hargrove of Hoquiam predicted. Hargrove will be among eight House and Senate party caucus leaders who will meet at 10 a.m. today with Gov. Jay Inslee in the governor’s conference room to begin hammering out a timeline to reach a pact, Hargrove said Friday, the first day of the new session. Democrats Hargrove, Hargrove Tharinger and state Rep. Kevin Van De Wege of Sequim represent the 24th District that includes all of Clallam and Jefferson counties and most of Grays Harbor County. Lawmakers earlier this year adjourned their regular 105-day session and returned for a special session that by last Thursday failed to reach an agree- Tharinger ment. But about $400 million in extra revenue contained in a recent state forecast may help ease the way to a budget proposal satisfactory to both chambers. TURN

TO

BUDGET/A5

Hundreds gather in PA for Duck Derby race But grand-prize winner elsewhere BY ARWYN RICE PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — The winner of the 26th annual Great Olympic Peninsula Duck Derby wasn’t on hand Sunday for the race at Lincoln Park, but more than 300 people showed up to cheer on 25,488 little rubber ducks. Robbie McNamara of Bremerton was named grand-prize winner as one of his ducks entered the winner’s tube first, and he will receive his choice of a 2015 Toyota Tacoma pickup truck or a Toyota Corolla sedan, donated by Wilder Toyota.

McNamara was not immediately reached by telephone by race organizers Sunday afternoon. Irwin Dental, winners of the $500 grand prize for the Bub and Alice Olsen Very Important Duck Race, donated their winnings back to the Olympic Medical Center Foundation, said Bruce Skinner, foundation executive director. The duck pond at Lincoln Park was very low, Skinner noted, and the chute from the large dump truck that serves as the starting box for the ducks was long. When the cannon sounded, the ducks slowly slid down the chute

INTRODUCING...

ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT

— except for one small duck that stubbornly clung to the very top of the truck’s plastic-lined bed. Eventually it shook free and joined its fellows at the edge of the pond to the cheers of the crowd. Firefighters from Port Angeles Fire Department sprayed water from fire hoses at the ducks, bouncing ducks in all directions, from the back of the pack into the front, and from the center to all sides. The tiny ducks, each with a number on a small metal plate on their undersides, were pushed DAVE LOGAN/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS across the pond by the fire hoses Jerry Hendricks hands off the first-place duck to Naomi until the ducks were funneled Kuykendall of Port Angeles, which she immediately put into a clear tube at the end.

into a bag and took to the Duck Derby trailer for

TURN

Delicious crispy fish, fries, hush puppies and coleslaw!

TUESDAY NIGHT 561233501

FISH FRY $ EVERY TUESDAY FROM 3PM-9PM!

TO

THAT’S RIGHT...

ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT!

11

99

BlackBearDiner.com

531233498

1471 E. Washington St. • Sequim • (360) 504-2950

DUCKS/A6 verification and identification Sunday.

INSIDE TODAY’S PENINSULA DAILY NEWS 99th year, 129th issue — 2 sections, 16 pages

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

B5 B4 A7 B4 A6 B4 A3 A2 B6

*PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT

SPORTS SUDOKU WEATHER WORLD

B1 A2 A8 A3


A2

UpFront

MONDAY, JUNE 1, 2015

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Tundra

The Samurai of Puzzles

By Chad Carpenter

Copyright © 2015, Michael Mepham Editorial Services

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

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

Advertising is for EVERYONE! To place a classified ad: 360-452-8435 (8 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday through Friday); fax: 360-417-3507 You can also place a classified ad 24/7 at peninsuladailynews. com or email: classified@ peninsuladailynews.com Display/retail: 360-417-3540 Legal advertising: 360-4528435 To place a death or memorial notice: 360-452-8435; fax: 360417-3507 Toll-free from outlying areas for all of the above: 800-826-7714 Monday through Friday

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

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

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

Audit Bureau of Circulations

The Associated Press

Newsmakers Celebrity scoop ■ By The Associated Press

Iglesias cuts fingers at Mexico show ENRIQUE IGLESIAS WAS recovering Sunday after some of his fingers were sliced when he grabbed a drone during a concert in Tijuana, Mexico. A representative for the singer said in a statement to The Associated Press that Iglesias was “semiIglesias treated” after the accident at the side of the stage to stop the bleeding Saturday night. He was advised to end the show but went on to perform for an additional 30 minutes. “During the show, a drone is used to get crowd shots, and some nights Enrique grabs the drone to give the audience a Point of View shot. Something went wrong, and he had an accident,” the statement read. “He decided to go on and continued playing for 30 minutes while the bleeding continued throughout the show.” Concertgoers at Plaza de Toros de Playas posted photos on social media of Iglesias, 40, with blood all over his white T-shirt. “He was rushed to the airport where an ambulance met him. He was then put on a plane to L.A. to see a specialist,” the

SOLUTION TO SUNDAY’S PUZZLE

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

HAPPY

TO SING

“Happy” singer, Pharrell Williams, performs on stage at Morocco’s biggest music event, the Mawazine Festival, in Rabat, Morocco, on Saturday. She rescheduled the tour due to production delays and said Azalea it would Azalea nixes tour take Iggy Azalea has canplace this fall. celed her U.S. tour for a Representatives from second time. Azalea’s record label, Def The “Fancy” rapper Jam, and tour promoter, tweeted Friday “as u may know, the tour is cancelled.” AEG, didn’t return emails She added that she’s “so seeking comment. Azalea didn’t offer any sad and sorry to let my details about the second fans down.” cancellation. Azalea announced in Azalea said she’s still March that The Great Escape Tour would not kick committed to her upcoming off in April. festival performances. statement read. Iglesias’ show for 12,000 fans is part of his Sex and Love World Tour. His website says his next show is in July in Mexico City.

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS PENINSULA POLL FRIDAY/SATURDAY QUESTION: Should voters elect Superior Court judges, or should the judges be appointed outside the political process? Elected

64.6%

Appointed

27.5%

Undecided

7.9%

Total votes cast: 851 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

Passings By The Associated Press

BEAU BIDEN, 46, son of Vice President Joe Biden and two-time attorney general for the state of Delaware, has died. The lawyer died Saturday of brain cancer, less than two years after being diagnosed. Mr. Biden Mr. in 2013 Biden was hospitalized earlier this month at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center. At the time, the vice president’s office declined to say why he was being treated. Mr. Biden also suffered a mild stroke in 2010. He announced last year that he would not seek a third term as attorney general and instead planned to run for governor in 2016. In addition to serving as attorney general, Mr. Biden was a member of the Delaware National Guard.

________ L. TOM PERRY, 92, Mormon leader and member of the faith’s highest governing body, has died from cancer.

Mr. Perry died Saturday surrounded by his family at his Salt Lake City home, Mr. Perry church spokesman in March Eric Hawkins said in a statement. Mr. Perry was diagnosed with cancer in late April after being hospitalized with breathing trouble. He began receiving radiation treatment and briefly returned to work as a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, a group modeled after Jesus Christ’s apostles that serves under the church president and his two counselors. On May 29, church officials announced the cancer

Laugh Lines

had spread aggressively, reaching Mr. Perry’s lungs. Perry was the oldest member of the church’s top 15 leaders and was the quorum’s second-most senior member. He wrote a book in the mid-1990s titled Living with Enthusiasm. Mr. Perry spoke regularly at church conferences and was one of four leaders to meet with President Barack Obama during his recent Utah trip.

Seen Around Peninsula snapshots

THREE-YEAR-OLD BOY CARRYING a clipboard while grocery-shopping with his mom. On the clipboard are several pages of food photos along with the food items’ printed names, each with a big box to check when that item was found. The boy delights in the experience . . .

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

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

1940 (75 years ago) Improving spring weather brought out crowds of visitors to both Lincoln and Jessie Webster parks in Port Angeles over the weekend. City Park Supervisor D.D. McMullen reported that there were numerous picnic parties as well as smaller groups, and the tennis courts and other facilities at Lincoln Park were kept busy. McMullen said the flowers at Lincoln Park are now at their best. Numerous new flowers were planted there last week by Schlager Brothers.

1965 (50 years ago)

A petition requesting stricter dog control measures in Port Angeles was THREE SOUTHWEST presented to the City AIRLINES baggage hanWANTED! “Seen Around” dlers are accused of smug- items recalling things seen on the Council. North Olympic Peninsula. Send Mayor Charles Willson gling drugs in luggage. them to PDN News Desk, P.O. Box said a leash law is curOfficials became suspi1330, Port Angeles WA 98362; fax rently under study. cious when every single 360-417-3521; or email news@ Currently, only unlione of the Southwest bags peninsuladailynews.com. Be sure made it to its destination. censed dogs can be picked you mention where you saw your Conan O’Brien “Seen Around.” up by Humane Society offi-

cer George Norris. Licensed dogs have to be declared “nuisances” before legal action is taken.

1990 (25 years ago) Six winners have been selected for the 1990 Olympic Peninsula Telephone Directory’s children’s art and essay contest. The contest was open to fourth-, fifth- and sixthgrade children living on the North Olympic Peninsula. The students were asked to submit essays and/or black-and-white drawings addressing the theme: “Why I Like Living in the Olympic Peninsula Area.” The art winners were Kody Hutley of Sequim, first place; Jay Belfield of Sequim, second; and Michael Hooper of Port Angeles, third. The essay contest was won by Pierre Romeo of Forks, first place; Patrick Drum of Sequim, second; and Tony Romeo of Forks, third.

Looking Back From the files of The Associated Press

TODAY IS MONDAY, June 1, the 152nd day of 2015. There are 213 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: ■ On June 1, 1915, the T.S. Eliot poem “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock” was first published in Poetry: A Magazine of Verse in Chicago. On this date: ■ In 1533, Anne Boleyn, the second wife of King Henry VIII, was crowned as Queen Consort of England. ■ In 1792, Kentucky became the 15th state of the union. ■ In 1796, Tennessee became the 16th state. ■ In 1813, the mortally wounded commander of the USS

Chesapeake, Capt. James Lawrence, gave the order, “Don’t give up the ship” during a losing battle with the British frigate HMS Shannon in the War of 1812. ■ In 1933, in a bizarre scene captured by news photographers, Lya Graf, a female circus dwarf, sat in the lap of financier J.P. Morgan Jr. during a recess of a Senate hearing on the stock market crash of 1929. ■ In 1943, a civilian flight from Portugal to England was shot down by Germany during World War II, killing all 17 people aboard, including actor Leslie Howard. ■ In 1980, Cable News Network made its debut. ■ In 1990, President George

H.W. Bush and Soviet leader Mikhail S. Gorbachev signed the foundation of a landmark treaty for the first-ever cuts in strategic nuclear missiles and a pact to slash chemical weapons stockpiles. ■ In 2009, Air France Flight 447, an Airbus A330 carrying 228 people from Rio de Janeiro to Paris, crashed into the Atlantic Ocean with the loss of everyone on board. ■ Ten years ago: Paul Wolfowitz began a five-year term as head of the 184-nation World Bank. Wolfowitz resigned the post in 2007 amid controversy over the generous compensation he’d arranged for his girlfriend, bank employee Shaha Riza. Dutch voters rejected the Euro-

pean Union constitution. ■ Five years ago: Attorney General Eric Holder said federal authorities had opened criminal and civil investigations into the BP oil spill. A divided U.S. Supreme Court ruled 5-4 that criminal suspects had to explicitly invoke their right to remain silent and that simply remaining silent was not sufficient to stop police questioning. ■ One year ago: Freed American soldier Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl entered the Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Germany, a day after he was released by the Taliban in exchange for five Guatanamo terrorism detainees. Bergdahl was later charged with desertion.


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Monday, June 1, 2015 P A G E

A3 Briefly: Nation Travel ban on ex-detainees is extended WASHINGTON — Qatar has agreed to temporarily extend travel bans on five senior Taliban leaders who were released last year from the prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, in exchange for Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl, a senior U.S. official said Sunday. The official said the ban would remain in place until diplomatic talks for a longer-term solution are completed. The restrictions had been Bergdahl due to expire today under a May 2014 exchange for Bergdahl. U.S. officials said Friday the Obama administration was closing in on an agreement with Qatar to extend the restrictions for six months that could be announced this weekend. It was not immediately clear why that agreement had not been finalized. The official said the U.S. remains in “close contact” with Qatari authorities “to make sure these individuals do not pose a threat to the United States.”

No indictment in death SCOTT, La. — A grand jury has declined to indict Louisiana police officers who held a man down, with sheriff’s deputies officers on top of him, while he said, “I can’t breathe.” The Advertiser also quoted the FBI as saying it did not find

anything the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Unit could prosecute. Thirty-year-old Robert Minjarez Jr. was declared dead five days after his arrest by Carencro and Scott police and Lafayette Parish sheriff’s deputies in March 2014. The coroner’s report said the main cause of death was “compressional asphyxia due to facedown physical restraint by law enforcement officers.” The report said several officers remained wholly or partly on top of Minjarez after his hands and legs were cuffed, and he repeatedly said he couldn’t breathe. The grand jury met Wednesday.

Crane loses load NEW YORK — A massive air-conditioning unit being lifted by a crane to the top of a Manhattan office building broke free Sunday, fell 28 stories and landed in the middle of Madison Avenue, injuring 10 people, officials said. Two were construction workers while the others were pedestrians and occupants of passing cars, Mayor Bill de Blasio said. All were struck by debris that caused minor injuries; they were treated at hospitals. Police said the emergency call came in around 10:45 a.m. Officers who responded to the high-rise building a short walk from Grand Central Terminal found that the crane’s payload had broken free as it was heading to the top of the 28-story building. It plummeted to the street, shattering parts of the building facade composed of widening, stepped edges on the lower floors. The Associated Press

Report: Ex-Nazis given Social Security millions Law ends benefits paid to former members of Hitler’s Third Reich Yet after Rinkel departed, the U.S. Social Security Administration kept paying her widow benefits, which began after her husTHE ASSOCIATED PRESS band died, because there was no WASHINGTON — Elfriede legal basis for stopping them until Rinkel’s past as a Nazi concentra- late last year. tion camp guard didn’t keep her from collecting nearly $120,000 in 133 suspected recipients American Social Security beneRinkel is among 133 suspected fits. Rinkel admitted to being sta- Nazi war criminals, SS guards, tioned at the Ravensbrueck camp and others that may have particiduring World War II, where she pated in the Third Reich’s atrociworked with an attack dog trained ties who received $20.2 million in by the SS, according to U.S. Jus- Social Security benefits, according to a report to be released later tice Department records. She immigrated to California this week by the inspector general and married a German-born Jew of the Social Security Administrawhose parents had been killed in tion. The Associated Press obtained the Holocaust. She agreed to leave the U.S. in a copy of the report. The payments are far greater 2006 and remains the only woman the Justice Department’s Nazi- than previously estimated and hunting unit ever initiated depor- occurred between February 1962 tation proceedings against. and January 2015, when a new

BY RICHARD LARDNER, DAVID RISING AND RANDY HERSCHAFT

law called the No Social Security for Nazis Act kicked in and ended retirement payments for four beneficiaries. The report does not include the names of any Nazi suspects who received benefits. But the descriptions of several of the beneficiaries match legal records detailing Rinkel’s case and others. The large amount of the benefits and their duration illustrate how unaware the American public was of the influx of Nazi persecutors into the U.S., with estimates ranging as high as 10,000. Many lied about their Nazi pasts to get into the U.S. and even became American citizens. They got jobs and said little about what they did during the war. Americans were shocked in the 1970s to learn their former enemies were living next door. Yet the U.S. was slow to react. It wasn’t until 1979 that a special Nazi-hunting unit, the Office of Special Investigations, was created within the Justice Department.

Briefly: World city by a suicide bomber and attackers firing rocket-propelled grenades. The Boko Haram militant group is suspected in the attacks that followed Friday’s inauguration of President GENEVA — U.S. Secretary of Muhammadu Buhari, who said State John Kerry has delayed he is moving the headquarters his trip back to the United for the Nigerian military’s fight States to stay in a Swiss hospital overnight after breaking his against the extremists to Maiduguri from the capital of Abuja. leg in a bicycle crash Sunday. Sunday’s blast came from State explosives concealed in bags of Department charcoal at the Gamboru marspokesman ket, said trader Jafar Aminu. John Kirby said that after Palestinian boycott further consultation, it was JERUSALEM — Israel faces decided it was an “international campaign to sensible for blacken its name” aimed at Kerry to delegitimizing its very existence remain in the Kerry regardless to its policies, Prime hospital for Minister Benjamin Netanyahu observation overnight. said Sunday. Kerry, 71, had to scrap the The international community rest of a four-nation trip that disproportionately singles out included an international conthe Jewish state for condemnaference on combating the tion while remaining silent on Islamic State group. major conflicts and human Kerry broke his leg after a rights abuses in other countries, bicycle crash when he struck a he said. curb. Netanyahu made the comments Sunday at a meeting of Blast injures four his new Cabinet just two days after a Palestinian proposal to MAIDUGURI, Nigeria — A bomb wounded four people Sun- suspend Israel from world footday in a market in Maiduguri, a ball was dropped at the last moment. day after 30 people were killed The Associated Press in the northeastern Nigerian

Kerry delays his return to U.S. after bike injury

COMPETITOR GROUP

STILL

VIA

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

RUNNING STRONG

Harriette Thompson starts the Suja Rock ‘n’ Roll Marathon in San Diego on Sunday. Thompson, of Charlotte, N.C., is a two-time cancer survivor who dealt with the loss of her husband and a staph infection in her legs while training for this year’s race. At age 92 years and 65 days, Thompson is the oldest woman to ever complete a marathon. Her time was 7 hours, 24 minutes, 36 seconds. Her son Brenny Thompson is behind her in the purple shirt.

Sun shines a bright light on flood damage across Texas weeks of rain and flooding that have made Texas a place of extremes: severe drought condiTHE ASSOCIATED PRESS tions earlier in the year that have DALLAS — Most of Texas was given way to unprecedented rainset to get its first period of fall in some areas. extended sunshine in weeks, allowing surging rivers to recede 31 killed in storms as emergency-management offiAt least 31 people have been cials turn their attention to cleanup efforts in such places as killed in storms that began in Houston, where damage esti- Texas and Oklahoma over Memorial Day weekend. mates top $45 million. Twenty-seven of the deaths Parts of the state were finally beginning to recover Sunday from have been in Texas, and at least BY ALLEN REED DAVID WARREN

AND

Quick Read

10 people were still missing over the weekend. The plentiful sun forecast for much of the state this week was expected to allow engorged rivers such as the Trinity in North and East Texas, the Brazos southwest of Houston and Nueces in South Texas to flush massive volumes of water into the Gulf of Mexico. More than 10 inches of rain has fallen during the last 30 days across nearly the entire central and eastern portion of the state.

. . . more news to start your day

Nation: Komodo dragon bites worker at Omaha zoo

Nation: ‘San Andreas’ shakes up U.S. box office

World: Giant cross rises in Christian-minority nation

World: 2,600 killed since Egypt’s Morsi overthrown

AN OMAHA ZOO worker was bitten by a large Komodo dragon Sunday and treated at a local hospital. The female worker was taken from the Henry Doorly Zoo and Aquarium to a hospital after the 12:30 p.m. incident. Later in the afternoon, the zoo said in a statement the worker had been released and should recover fully. The zoo said earlier media reports that the worker was critically injured were incorrect. The animal involved was a juvenile Komodo dragon. The zoo said the animal is about 4-feet-long and weighs about 10 pounds.

DWAYNE “THE ROCK” Johnson out-muscled the competition at domestic movie theaters as the earthquake epic “San Andreas” hauled in an estimated $53.2 million over the weekend. It was Johnson’s biggest debut for a non-sequel as the top-billed actor, according to box office tracker Rentrak. The action star helped the movie over-perform on the West Coast despite fears audiences in earthquakeprone regions would stay away, said Dan Fellman, president of domestic distribution for Warner Bros. “Aloha,” the maligned romantic comedy from director Cameron Crowe, opened in sixth place with $10 million.

NOW TOWERING OVER the violent port city of Karachi, Pakistan, where Islamic militant attacks and gangland shootings remain common, is an uncommon sight in this Muslim-majority country: a 140-foot Christian cross. The cross, being built by a businessman who said the idea came to him in a dream, is rising as Christians here often face discrimination. A tiny minority of Pakistan’s 180 million people are Christians who eke out livings in menial jobs like garbage collection. Christians have faced mob violence in blasphemy cases, which often turn out to be false allegations over personal disputes.

AT LEAST 2,600 people were killed in violence in the 18 months after the military overthrew Mohammed Morsi, Egypt’s first freely elected president in 2013, nearly half of them supporters of the Islamist leader, the head of a statesanctioned rights body said Sunday. Mohammed Fayeq, head of the National Council for Human Rights, told reporters that the 2,600 included 700 policemen and 550 civilians who were killed in the period between June 30, 2013, and Dec. 31, 2014. The council is a nominally independent group sanctioned by the government. It has no judicial or law enforcement powers.


A4

PeninsulaNorthwest

MONDAY, JUNE 1, 2015

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Garden club PA Library exhibit to fete convention Elwha restoration project blooms in PA BY DIANE URBANI DE LA PAZ

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Groups from across state to converge on downtown PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — The Washington State Federation of Garden Clubs will gather at the Red Lion Hotel this week for its 82nd annual convention. The convention, with the theme “Gardening from the Mountains to the Sea,” opens Tuesday evening and concludes Friday at the hotel, 221 N. Lincoln St. Registration for the event closed May 20, but the vendor room will be open free to the public from 9 a.m. to noon and 1 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Wednesday though Friday. Local artists and businesses will offer floral design and garden products for sale.

Five regional clubs The Olympic Peninsula District of the federation is made up of five regional garden clubs: Bogachiel Garden Club in Forks, Nordland Garden Club on Marrowstone Island, Port Angeles Garden Club, Sequim Prairie Garden Club and Tri-Area Garden Club in Port Hadlock, Chimacum and Irondale. The district is an affiliate of the National Garden

PORT ANGELES — In the “Elwha: A River Reborn” series, we get to revisit and re-enjoy one of the biggest events in Olympic Peninsula history. The program, with its seven events and a concurrent exhibition opening today at the Port Angeles Library, is a look at the Elwha River restoration — and “what a great and cool project it is,” said Noah Glaude, the library manager who’s bringing the series here from Seattle’s Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture. All of these activities, starting Wednesday and continuing through the summer, are free at and around the library, 2210 S. Peabody St. They offer a sweeping view of the three-year, $325 million project, from the viewpoints of science as well as art.

Club Inc. The national organization includes 50 state garden clubs and the national capital area, with nearly 6,000 member garden clubs and nearly 200,000 members, according to a news release. Outgoing State President Brynn Tavasci and President-elect Terry Critchlow will attend, along with representatives from the 14 state club districts. Co-chairwomen Mary Lou Paulson and Mary Lou Waitz assisted in the organization of the event with support from district garden clubs, the state Federation of Garden Clubs and North Olympic Peninsula communities. Events include a kickoff dinner Tuesday and a concert featuring Mark Pearson of The Brothers Four. Workshops, lectures by state and local speakers and the installation of state officers are among the events planned for the convention. For more information, visit www.wagarden clubs.com.

Exhibition

Motorcyclists sent to Seattle hospital after U.S. 101 crash PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

BRINNON — A motorcycle wreck on Dosewallips Road off U.S. Highway 101 near Brinnon has led to a motorcyclist and his passenger being taken by helicopter to Harborview Medical Center in Seattle for serious injuries, according to the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office. The conditions of the motorcyclists were not available Sunday. At about 5:12 p.m. Saturday, a large group of motorcyclists were traveling eastbound on Dosewallips Road near Milepost 2, when the lead motorcyclist was unable to negotiate a curve and left the road, said

Sgt. Mark Apeland. The male driver suffered face and possible head injuries while his female passenger had a possible broken hip, Apeland said. Both were taken by helicopter to Harborview for treatment of serious injuries, he said. Apeland said the names of the pair have not been released because the wreck is under investigation as a possible vehicular assault. Investigators believe alcohol may have been involved, Apeland said. Harborview Medical Center policy does not allow release of medical conditions unless the name of a patient is known.

Judge erases suspensions from student preacher’s school record THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

EVERETT — An Everett high school student suspended three times for preaching and handing out Christian booklets has had those penalties removed from his record by a federal judge. Cascade High School senior Michael Leal filed suit against Everett Public Schools last November, say-

ing his constitutional right of free speech was being infringed. Though Leal’s suspensions were expunged, The Daily Herald of Everett reported that U.S. District Court Judge Thomas Zilly on Friday also upheld the school district’s policy that limits when and where students can hand out printed materials.

SHOP

551303126

Brighten Up Your Home With New Cushions 119 E. Washington St., Sequim Hours Mon - Fri 10 - 5 • Sat 11 - 5 • 681-4431

Find today’s hottest trends in downtown Sequim!

Trendy Styles for Every Girl!

The library’s “A River Reborn” exhibit is the series’ cornerstone. It explores the damremoval project through first-person accounts, photographs and text on freestanding banners, Glaude noted, so visitors can follow the Elwha’s passage through the 20th century into the 21st. The exhibit opens today and will stay through Aug. 29. It’s stunning, Glaude said, “to look back and see all the change that’s happened.” The first live presentation, titled “Free at Last,” comes to the library at 6:30 p.m. Wednesday. Its highlights include short time-lapse and flythrough videos over the Elwha. Olympic National Park geomorphologist Andrew Ritchie, the creator of the videos, will provide discussion.

KEITH THORPE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Sediment flows out of the mouth of the Elwha River into the Strait of Juan de Fuca in 2012 as the river cuts through nearly a century of silt. An exhibit at Port Angeles Library will look at the entire timelime of the river from the dams’ removals to restoration efforts along old lake beds. Ritchie has cruised above the river in a Rite Bros. plane, camera attached, and used the resulting photographs to construct what he calls a virtual fly-through. He’ll also show some time-lapse images of the river’s restoration including, of course, the removals of the Elwha and Glines Canyon dams. In these videos, it’s one frame per day of the process, “so time passes pretty quickly,” Ritchie said.

Scheduled events As spring passes into summer, the library’s “Elwha: A River Reborn” series will also include these free, public events. ■ June 11, 6:30 p.m.: In “Half Empty or Half Full? A Balanced Rationale About Dam Removal,” scientist Dennis Dauble, a member of the Humanities Washington Speakers Bureau, will share several case studies of dam removal projects around the country. ■ June 18, 6:30 p.m.: “The Return of the River,” a documentary film about the

BY ANDY HOBBS MCCLATCHY NEWS SERVICE

OLYMPIA — Four years after a tsunami devastated Japan’s coast, debris still washes up on Pacific beaches — and winds up in the hands of state wildlife officials. The debris comes with an environmental threat: invasive species and parasites that have hitched a ride across the Pacific Ocean. Another barnacleencrusted Japanese skiff has made its way to the state Department of Fish and Wildlife’s aquatic invasive species unit near Tumwater in Thurston County. The 25-foot boat was recovered off a remote shore near LaPush and arrived in two halves last week at the department’s yard a few miles south of Olympia. The unit’s goal is to

How’s the fishing? Michael Carman reports. Fridays in

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

remove marine debris and prevent the spread of invasive marine life. Last Thursday morning, coordinator Allen Pleus and technician Nancy Franco combed the boat’s crevices for biological samples that will be shipped to experts throughout the nation for analysis.

Third to be sampled The boat is the third such project to reach the unit this year. Despite the faded Japanese characters painted on the hull, the department has not confirmed the boat as debris from the 2011 tsunami. The same goes for a 30-foot boat found recently near Long Beach. To qualify as tsunami debris, the Japanese consulate requires registration numbers or other means for formal identification, Pleus said. Nearly 40 such projects passed through the state unit last year, said Pleus, who has seen everything from docks and boats to tires and refrigerators in

the years since the tsunami. Some debris has been colonized by dozens of species that not only survived the trip, but were thriving when discovered. He described one boat that likely floated near Hawaii and picked up the tropical striped beakfish, which eventually acclimated to the Pacific Northwest’s colder waters while harbored safely inside. The boat recovered near Long Beach had more than 25 pink barnacles from Japan that were still alive. “These become their own ecosystems in the ocean,” he said. “What’s not natural is that they’re on man-made objects that don’t disintegrate.”

9.0 earthquake The tsunami was the result of a 9.0-magnitude earthquake March 11, 2011, off the coast of Japan. It was the most powerful earthquake ever to have hit Japan and was one of the strongest ever recorded worldwide. The earthquake triggered a tsunami that

551304358

ACCESSORIES BOUTIQUE

(In JCPenney Plaza)

551296486

KAROL’S

The U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration reports that the bulk of debris is still dispersed north of Hawaii and east of Midway Atoll. Beach users who find tsunami-related debris are asked to email Disaster Debris@noaa.gov or call the WDFW’s Aquatic Invasive Species Unit at 360-9022700. The department suggests taking a photo and noting the location of the debris. The state Health Department reports that it’s highly unlikely the debris will be radioactive from the Fukushima meltdown.

Paulina Paola Pasha

Original & Hand-Picked Jewelry • Rocks • Art • Gems & Minerals Tools Supplies Equipment • Citizen Watches • Jewelry Repair • Batteries • Classes Landing Mall, Suite 211 • Port Angeles 360-797-1225

Still floating

Store Hours: Open Monday thru Saturday 9:00 am to 5:30 pm 130 West Front St. • Port Angeles

452-3741

551272201

1/2 Price

destroyed much of Japan’s northern coast and caused meltdowns at the Fukushima nuclear power plant. Nearly 16,000 people died in the catastrophe, according to the Japanese government, which reported that the tsunami swept nearly 5 million tons of debris out to sea. Much of the debris was believed to have sunk.

With a Variety of Sizes and Colors to Choose From

When You Want Style With Comfort! (360) 683-8784 #6 609 W. Washington St., Sequim

________ Features Editor Diane Urbani de la Paz can be reached at 360452-2345, ext. 5062, or at diane. urbani@peninsuladailynews.com.

Spring into Style...

Salt Water Pearl Earrings 14k Gold Yellow Posts

Canadian Made Since 1991

tures the 6:30 p.m. opening reception for the summer Art in the Library exhibit. The show features Lower Elwha Klallam tribe artwork, to be on display at the library from July 9 through Oct. 6. ■ July 19, 9 a.m.: Washington State Poet Laureate Elizabeth Austen invites everyone on a short, meditative hike on the Smokey Bottom (formerly West Lake Mills) Trail and a brief, guided writing session in response to the hike. No previous writing or hiking experience is needed, but participants must be at least 18 years old. Space is limited, so registration is required and will open June 15. For more about the “Elwha: A River Reborn” program, phone the Port Angeles Library at 360-4178500, visit the North Olympic Library System website at www.nols.org, or follow NOLS on Facebook.

Tsunami debris still washing up on coast four years later

EZZE WEAR Collection

activists, scientists, tribal members and politicians who sought to change the Elwha’s fate, will be shown; filmmaker John Gussman will answer questions afterward. ■ June 24, 6:30 p.m.: Olympic National Park restoration ecologist Joshua Chenoweth will discuss “Jump-Starting Recovery: Revegetating the Elwha,” and how more than 200,000 native trees and shrubs have been planted since late 2011 along the Elwha’s banks. ■ June 29, 6:30 p.m.: Guidebook author Craig Romano will talk about hiking in the Elwha Valley. Drawing from his book, Day Hiking: Olympic Peninsula, he’ll survey trails for family outings or multi-day adventures. ■ July 10, 7 p.m.: The library’s Summer Art Blast will feature Lower Elwha Klallam tribal member and artist Roger Fernandes, with a welcoming song and stories of the Lower Elwha. The Elwha tribe’s drum group also will share songs and rhythms during this art party, which also fea-


PeninsulaNorthwest

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

MONDAY, JUNE 1, 2015

A5

Meter still running on Olympia’s overtime session, he said. Another rank-and-file House member, Rep. Lillian Ortiz-Self, D-Mukilteo, also claimed several weekend days.

Special session has already cost more than $100,000 BY MELISSA SANTOS MCCLATCHY NEWS SERVICE

OLYMPIA — State lawmakers’ failure to reach a budget deal has cost taxpayers $108,000 in overtime costs so far — and the bills are still rolling in. During the Legislature’s 30-day special session that ended Thursday, lawmakers claimed nearly $90,000 in per diem payments to cover their daily session expenses, according to a review of legislative records by McClatchy News Service. Lawmakers requested an additional $18,000 in mileage reimbursements for driving to and from meetings at the Capitol. Those numbers are incomplete and sure to grow because the Senate’s expense records weren’t available for the final four days of the special session, and the House is still calculating members’ payments for the past two weeks. Lawmakers began a second overtime session Friday that will add even more costs.

$120 daily expenses On top of their salaries, state lawmakers can claim per diem payments of $120 a day during legislative sessions to cover expenses such as food and lodging in Olympia. State law says a legislator is entitled to receive the payments for days “in which he or she is actually engaged in legislative business.” Exactly what that means is open to interpretation, said Bernard Dean, deputy

chief clerk of the state House of Representatives. During the special session, some members of the House and Senate claimed per diems even on weekends and other slow workdays when rank-and-file members weren’t required to be in Olympia. Four senators and four representatives claimed their $120 payments on multiple Saturdays and Sundays. Meanwhile, some leaders involved in continuing budget negotiations at the Capitol took less than they were entitled to — or rejected the per diem payments entirely. Ten senators accepted no per diem payments during the special session, while 18 House members claimed no per diem during the weeks for which records were available. Members who declined per diem payments included legislative leaders such as House Speaker Frank Chopp, D-Seattle; Senate budget writer Andy Hill, R-Redmond; and Senate Floor Leader Joe Fain, R-Auburn. “As a rule, I don’t take per diems during special session. I just think we should have gotten our job done, and it’s my own little personal punishment,” said Hill, a former Microsoft software engineer who chairs the Senate Ways & Means Committee. Others who accepted per diem payments on weekends said they rely on the daily allowance to pay ongoing costs such as rent for a secondary residence

Congress heads back to D.C. after week off PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Eye on Congress

NEWS SERVICES

WASHINGTON — Congress returns to the nation’s capital after a week’s recess State legislators for Memorial Day. Jefferson and Clallam Contact legislators counties are represented in (clip and save) the part-time state Legisla“Eye on Congress” is ture by Rep. Kevin Van published in the Peninsula De Wege, D-Sequim, the Daily News every Monday House majority whip; Rep. Tharinger, when Congress is in session Steve D-Sequim; and Sen. Jim about activities, roll call votes and legislation in the Hargrove, D-Hoquiam. Write Van De Wege and House and Senate. The North Olympic Pen- Tharinger at P.O. Box 40600 insula’s legislators in Wash- (Hargrove at P.O. Box ington, D.C., are Sen. Maria 40424), Olympia, WA 98504; Cantwell (D-Mountlake Ter- email them at vandewege. race), Sen. Patty Murray kevin@leg.wa.gov; tharinger. (D-Seattle) and Rep. Derek steve@leg.wa.gov; hargrove. jim@leg.wa.gov. Kilmer (D-Gig Harbor). Or you can call the LegContact information — The address for Cantwell islative Hotline, 800-562and Murray is U.S. Senate, 6000, from 8 a.m. to 4:30 Washington, D.C. 20510; p.m. Mondays through FriKilmer, U.S. House, Wash- days (closed on holidays and from noon to 1 p.m.) ington, D.C. 20515. Phone Cantwell at 202- and leave a detailed mes224-3441 (fax, 202-228- sage, which will be emailed 0514); Murray, 202-224- to Van De Wege, Tharinger, 2621 (fax, 202-224-0238); Hargrove or to all three. Links to other state offiKilmer, 202-225-5916. Email via their websites: cials: http://tinyurl.com/ cantwell.senate.gov; murray. pdn-linksofficials. senate.gov; kilmer.house.gov. Kilmer’s North Olympic Learn more Peninsula is located at 332 E. Websites following our Fifth St. in Port Angeles. Hours are 9 a.m. to noon state and national legislaTuesdays and from 1 p.m. tors: ■ Followthemoney. to 4 p.m. Wednesdays and org — Campaign donors by Thursdays. It is staffed by Judith Morris, who can be industry, ZIP code and more ■ Vote-Smart.org — contacted at judith.morris@ mail.house.gov or 360-797- How special interest groups rate legislators on the 3623. issues.

S

No requirement

MCCLATCHY NEWS SERVICE

The domed legislative building in Olympia has already hosted one special session of the Legislature and will do likewise with a second as budget talks have stalled adjournment. in Olympia. Those expenses don’t go away just because meetings and floor actions at the Capitol slow down during special sessions, said Sen. Brian Dansel, R-Republic. “For me, it’s actually easier to stay here than drive back and forth,” said Dansel, a former Ferry County commissioner who lives more than seven hours’ drive from Olympia.

Two senators Dansel was one of two senators who accepted per diem payments for every day of the special session, including weekends. The other was Sen. Bob Hasegawa, D-Seattle. Both senators collected $3,120 in per diem payments for the first 26 days of the special session, the most of any of their Senate colleagues. Neither chairs a committee or is directly involved in

CONTINUED FROM A1 “The improved revenue picture makes it easier because the numbers are not so far apart,” Tharinger said Friday. Hargrove said sticking points between the Republican-controlled Senate and Democratic-controlled House include spending of marijuana tax proceeds and a gap between the chambers of about $500 million in overall spending. “There are some $500 million in resources the Senate is using that are problems that are causing issues elsewhere that still leaves you a little too far apart,” said Hargrove, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Ways and Means Committee. “That doesn’t mean you are not going to get it done. “I think the motivation is to get the big pieces hammered out — higher education policy, labor police, which resources will be used.” But interviews last week with Hargrove and Tharinger revealed a fissure between the two Democrats over marijuana proceeds.

Unrealistic forecasts? Tharinger called the Senate’s forecast unrealistic, while Hargrove retorted that they are in line with credible data. The Senate released a no-new-taxes budget last week. Van De Wege said the

AN INDEPENDENT LIVING RESIDENCE

Income Limits Apply.

360-681-3800 TDD 711

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

House, where many lawmakers favor a capital gains tax to raise revenue, will release its proposal today. “Negotiators have made progress here,” he said Friday, adding details are not typically made public at this stage. But Hargrove said the capital gains tax doesn’t have a chance in the Senate.

accommodation by June 30, Tharinger said. Unlike Congress, the state Legislature cannot pass continuing budget resolutions. “The fiscal year ends at the end of June, or else the state has to shut down,” Tharinger said. Tharinger said once an operating budget is agreed upon, lawmakers will move onto capital spending.

Key hurdle

Approval expected

A key hurdle is fulfilling the state Supreme Court’s edict in what’s known as the McCleary decision. The ruling, the result of a lawsuit, demands that the Legislature provide primary funding for education. Sequim native Stephanie McCleary, a Chimacum School District employee, was the lead plaintiff in the lawsuit. Van De Wege said the Legislature will fulfill the court’s edict. “Whether the court agrees with that is another story, because everyone here wants to meet it,” he added. The Legislature has little choice but to find some

He expects approval of $23.8 million for the allied Health and Early Childhood Center at Peninsula College and $10 million for Port Angeles waterfront environmental cleanup that includes the city’s precarious bluff landfill and polluted Port Angeles Harbor. Also in line for an aye vote, Tharinger said, is $2.8 million for Fort Worden State Park improvements ________ in Jefferson County and $1.5 million for a state Senior Staff Writer Paul Gottlieb Department of Natural can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. Resources building in Forks. 5060, or at pgottlieb@peninsuladaily A transportation operat- news.com.

Late night or early morning flight? Ask us about special hotel rates!

It’s Not Rocket Science!

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

For Reservation & More Info Call

551298375

WWW . SUNCRESTSRLIVING . COM

ing budget that includes money for ferries and ongoing projects was approved by both chambers and is expected to be signed by Inslee. The Senate budget proposal included an increase in $12 million in marijuana tax money that would be returned to municipalities, according to The Associated Press. But Tharinger, vice chair of House Finance Committee, said the Senate budget contains marijuana revenue forecasts “that are really a wild guess.” But those revenue assumptions “are pretty much accepted across the board,” Hargrove responded. “It’s how it will be spent that’s the issue. “The House spends it more on things that Initiative 502 says it should be spent on,” he said. The 2012 ballot measure legalized recreational marijuana and taxed it for health care and substanceabuse prevention and education. “The Senate budget took virtually all of it and basically put it toward the general good.”

Self-Service Dog Wash +MJX 'IVXM¿ GEXIW Available

360-477-2883

(360)417-0700 800-457-4492 www.dungenessline.us

peninsuladailynews.com

551320676

Kitchens, extra storage, daily meal, housekeeping, activities, transportation and utilities (except telephone and TV)

Rodne claimed $1,800 in per diems during the first 15 days of the special session, or the full $120 for each of the days for which the House provided records. So did Rep. Jim Moeller, D-Vancouver, and Rep. Timm Ormsby, D-Spokane. “There is not a day that goes by that I am not doing some legislative work,” said Rodne, who said he has been in Olympia “several days a week” during the special session. He, too, maintained a second residence in the capital throughout the special

JIM HARGROVE State senator

531254853

• Port Angeles • Port Townsend • Kingston • SeaTac Airport • Greyhound

THE LUXURIES...

Rodne per diems

“There are some $500 million in resources the Senate is using that are problems that are causing issues elsewhere that still leaves you a little too far apart. That doesn’t mean you are not going to get it done.”

Now Serving...

HOUSING WITH ALL

are “on a 24-hour-leash” to return to the Capitol to vote on short notice. Rep. Jay Rodne, R-North Bend, said he and other members also carry out legislative business in their home districts, even if they are away from Olympia during special sessions.

Budget: Bipartisan bickering

UNCREST VILLAGE AFFORDABLE

the ongoing budget negotiations. Hasegawa said he is unable to do his regular job as a union construction operating engineer while the Legislature is in session, and relies solely on his legislative salary of $42,106 and the per diem to cover all his expenses. “I’m always down here, and always available if not here,” said Hasegawa, who said he was in Olympia four to five days a week during the first special session. Other senators who took per diem payments for most days of the special session, including most weekends, were Republican Sens. Michael Baumgartner of Spokane and Doug Ericksen of Ferndale. Hill, who doesn’t take per diems, said he understands that maintaining regular jobs for many members is difficult during special sessions since members

Dean, the House deputy chief clerk, said there’s no requirement that House members have meetings scheduled in Olympia on days they collect per diem. Contrary to the rules set for most state employees, lawmakers don’t actually have to be away from home or traveling to claim their $120 daily allowance, Dean said. “They don’t have to be here to be conducting legislative business necessarily,” Dean said, noting that some lawmakers may participate in conference calls from afar or meet with constituents in their districts. “We don’t make a judgment or validate the extent to which they’re conducting legislative business,” Dean said. House Majority Leader Pat Sullivan, D-Covington, said the per diem helps ensure that people who aren’t rich can still afford to serve in the Legislature. Sullivan, who said he doesn’t have another job outside his work as a legislative leader, collected per diem on weekdays — but not weekends — during the special session. “If this is truly a citizen legislature, where we’re expecting people to come down here and serve, then there has to be some kind of ability to do so,” Sullivan said. “Some of the members don’t actually make a lot outside of Olympia.”

Open Tues - Sunday 10-7

Between Sequim and Port Angeles Hwy 101 & Lake Farm Road www.stinkydogubathe.com Our mission is to improve your dog’s life through cleanliness. Boarding by Appointment.


A6

PeninsulaNorthwest

MONDAY, JUNE 1, 2015

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Olympic National Park fee Pilot: Through hikes go into effect today tribal viewpoint CONTINUED FROM A1 PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

OLYMPIC NATIONAL PARK — New fee structures go into effect today at Olympic National Park. The National Park Service is increasing fees at the 131 parks throughout the nation that charge entrance fees. The new fee structure is the first increase at Olympic National Park since 2006. The day use fee will be $20 for cars, trucks or RVs, or $10 for motorcycles. Annual passes cost $40 per vehicle. The annual wilderness pass is now $35 per person. Day fees were increased by $5, while annual fees were increased by $10. Camping fees increase from $15 to $22 and from $10 to $18. An $5 overnight wilderness-use permit is discontinued, but the nightly

wilderness fees are increased from $2 to $5. Recreational vehicle sewage dump fees doubled, from $5 to $10. In the 2015-16 winter, the park will charge $7 for adults and $3 for youths ages 6-15 for ranger-led snowshoe hikes. The park offers free or discounted access to children 15 and younger, people 62 and older, and members of the military.

Project funding The new fees are expected to generate revenue to fund a backlog of projects and spruce up parks before the National Park Service’s 2016 centennial celebration. Park officials expect to receive about 30 percent more annually from fees after the increase. In 2014, the park took in $2.6 mil-

lion in fee revenue. Thirty percent of that would be $780,000; however, “every year, fee revenue fluctuates a little bit,” Olympic National Park spokeswoman Barb Maynes said. The park retains 80 percent of fee revenues; the remaining 20 percent supports projects in parks that do not charge fees, including the Lincoln Memorial and National Mall. Park officials have said the fee increases must be used in areas that have direct connection to park visitors, such as visitor center exhibits, roadway work or work on the park’s six sewage treatment plants. Additional fee increases will take place in 2016 and 2017. Olympic National Park has $23 million in “critical deferred maintenance” projects as part of a total of $200 million in maintenance projects identified, officials have said.

Lucky ducks win prizes at derby THE 26TH ANNUAL Great Olympic Peninsula Duck Derby winners are: ■ Truck or car from Wilder Toyota — Robbie McNamara of Bremerton ■ $1,000 cash from 7 Cedars Casino — unnamed Westport employee ■ $500 cash from 7 Cedars Casino — Krista Mitchell of Port Angeles ■ $250 value Washington State Fair rodeo or concert tickets and admission for four — Wendy Leskinovitch of Port Angeles ■ $200 gift certificate to Washburn’s General Store — Rodrigo Hernandez of Sequim ■ $150 gift certificate to Mobuilt RV — Mark Halvorsen of Clallam Bay ■ $150 gift certificate to Forks Outfitters — Vince Tejera of Port Angeles ■ $150 five cases of Bedford’s sodas — Jim Cammack of Port Angeles ■ Two one-way tickets from Port Angeles to SeaTac Airport — Peninsula Children’s Clinic ■ $100 gift certificate for dinner for two at LD’s Woodfire Grill — Karen and Frank Johns of Port Angeles ■ $100 gift certificate to Baskin Robbins — Sara Gagnon of Port Angeles ■ $100 gift certificate to Necessities & Temptations — F.M. Sarrazin of Beaver ■ $100 gift certificate to Bella Italia — Margaret Trople of Port Angeles ■ $100 gift certificate to Double Eagle Steak and Seafood or Stymies Bar and Grill — Michael McAleer of Sequim ■ $100 gift certificate to Haggen Northwest Fresh Food — Curtis Price of Forks ■ $100 gift certificate to Safeway — Sofie’s Florist Inc. of Sequim ■ $100 gift certificate to

Participants and race officials watch as ducks float across the pond at Lincoln Park in Port Angeles on Sunday during the Great Olympic Peninsula Duck Derby. DAVE LOGAN/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Thomas Building Center — Steve Zenovic of Port Angeles ■ $100 gift certificate to Swain’s General Store — Judy Playter of Port Angeles ■ $100 gift certificate to Amazon.com — Lane Wolfley of Port Angeles ■ $100 gift certificate to Applebee’s Bar and Grill — Tom Blore of Sequim ■ $100 gift certificate to Bob’s Chevron — Marty Marchant of Port Angeles ■ $100 gift certificate to Lovell’s Roadrunner 76 — The Downtown Hotel in Port Angeles ■ $100 value Craftsman drill combo — Jeanne Labrecque of Port Angeles ■ $100 value pedicure and manicure with Laurie Rinehart and five tanning sessions — Shirley Mullikin of Sequim ■ $50 gift certificate to Fiesta Jalisco — Cathy Collins of Sequim ■ $250 26th Annual Duck Race Anniversary Prize — Jan Smith of Port Angeles ■ $50 gift certificate to the Dotted Box — John Pritchard

of Neah Bay ■ $50 gift certificate to the Silver Spruce Coffee Company — unnamed Westport employee ■ $50 gift certificate to H2O Waterfront Bistro — Jennifer Zaccardo ■ $50 gift certificate to Dockside Grill — Robert Klein of Port Angeles ■ $50 gift certificate to Jim’s Pharmacy — Emily Pearce of Seattle ■ $50 gift certificate to Bada Bean Coffee — Marisa Bleck of Port Angeles ■ $50 gift certificate to Dynasty Chinese Restaurant — Dick and Jen Manning of Port Angeles ■ $50 gift certificate to Mariner Cafe — Paris Lazore of Sequim ■ $50 gift certificate to Angeles Millwork and Lumber — Gina Amick of Port Angeles ■ $50 gift certificate to Hartnagel Building Supply — Melodee Moore of Sequim ■ $50 gift certificate to Chestnut cottage — Dan O’Sullivan of Port Angeles

■ $50 gift certificate to Home Depot — Lindsay Littlejohn of Portland ■ $50 gift certificate to Next Door Gastropub — Maralyn Hillhouse of Joyce ■ $50 gift certificate to The Oak Table — Connie Hutchison of Port Angeles ■ $50 gift certificate to Fanaticus Sports Grill — Mark Fischer of Port Angeles ■ $50 gift certificate to J.C. Penney — John Wahl of Port Angeles ■ $25 gift certificate to Applebee’s and $25 gift certificate to Black Bear Diner — Alan Lynn of Port Angeles ■ $100 cash from 7 Cedars Casino — Jim Bennett of Forks

Bub and Alice Olsen Very Important Duck Race ■ $500 Irwin Dental of Port Angeles ■ $250 Jennifer Fisher of Sequim ■ $100 Steven Collins of Sequim

Duck: ‘Dead’ fowl add to race CONTINUED FROM A1 Bill Rinehart, of Rinehart Consulting of Port Angeles, an accounting firm who oversees the system of determining the winning duck and keeping it secure, reached in for the first duck that appeared and put it in a clear plastic bag marked with a large No. 1. “I’ve been doing this for more than 20 years,” Rinehart said.

Gambling Commission The race is governed by the Washington State Gambling Commission, which routinely audits the group’s method of determining the winner.

The system worked smoothly Sunday, organizers said. As Rinehart took the allimportant grand-prize winner, a line of children, mostly from the Port Angeles High School wrestling team and their siblings, followed with bags to take the next ducks in line — 44 winning ducks in total. Rinehart walked the No. 1 duck, still in the clear plastic bag, to a trailer where the booklets of duck sales tickets were kept. There, Rinehart stood at the door of the trailer and read off the numbers on the bottom of the ducks, while a crew inside the trailer sought those numbers from the carefully ordered book-

‘Dead duck’

bered than there are prizes, he said, to allow for dead ducks. Skinner said each year there are a hundred or more of the nearly 26,000 ducks that aren’t sold, and often there are one or two that show up in the winner’s group. Those ducks are skipped, and the next duck in line moves up one. When all 44 prize winners were identified, Skinner took the list to announce the winners on a stage set up for the event while Rinehart continued monitoring the paperwork inside the trailer. Proceeds benefit the Olympic Medical Center Foundation and the Sequim Rotary Club’s charitable projects.

At number 40, Rinehart discovered he had a “dead duck.” A dead duck is a duck whose number has not been sold, Skinner explained. All of the ducks are put into the truck jumbled, whether they are sold or not, so that last-minute sales have neither advan________ tage nor disadvantage in Reporter Arwyn Rice can be placement in the truck, he reached at 360-452-2345, ext. said. 5070, or at arice@peninsuladaily More ducks are num- news.com.

Teaser Capestany began efforts to film a proof of concept or teaser for the show in January 2014. It can be viewed online at http://tinyurl. com/PDN-Teaser. The pilot episode, to be filmed in high definition, follows a core group of characters drawn to the interior of the Quinault Rain Forest in the Olympic Mountains in search of ancient Native American artifacts and lore. The expedition is inspired when fictitious character Dr. Riley Stone, a professor at the University of Washington specializing in Native American history and archeology, is tipped off by a teenage girl about a potential Native American legend hidden in the rain forest. Along with billionaire financier and global explorer Devin Grace, Stone assembles a group of explorers and scientists to investigate an uncharted region of the rain forest rumored to contain ancient treasures of a lost civilization. Riley encounters Henry Paxton, a member of the S’Klallam tribe who warns the team they could be meddling with powers not of this world and “will stop at nothing to protect the sacred lands of the rain forest and what may or may not exist,” Capestany said. As the team sets out on their adventure, bizarre and unexplained events begin to unfold. A member of the party witnessing these strange happenings is a priest who begins questioning his deeply held convictions

Washington films Capestany, a native of Washington, said he is a proponent of bringing major film productions to the state and is actively involved in supporting state Senate Bill 6027 — referred to as “Keep Film In Washington.” The bill doubles the size of the state’s productionincentive program over the next two years to $7 million and increases the fund incrementally each year until it reaches $10 million in 2019. The sunset date for the program would also be extended to 2022. “Washington state ranks at the very bottom of the states for film-incentive programs, [which] is why not a lot of large scale film productions are made here,” he said. “Our mission here at Capestany Films . . . is to hopefully change that and bring projects like this on a larger scale with more budget and bring bigger names.” Capestany is seeking area businesses interested in sponsoring his show, with the possibility of being featured in the series if it successfully sold to a major network. Capestany will also need background actors when filming starts. Information about acting and sponsorship opportunities will be posted online this summer at http://tinyurl.com/PDNRainforestTV.

________ Sequim-Dungeness Valley Editor Chris McDaniel can be reached at 360-681-2390, ext. 5052, or cmcdaniel@peninsuladailynews. com.

Death Notices Paul Raymond Schuman April 23, 1950 — May 28, 2015

Paul Raymond Schuman of Albuquerque, N.M., died of heart failure in Sequim. He was 65. Services: Memorial service will be at 10:30 a.m. Monday, June 1, at St. Matthew Lutheran Church, 132 E. 13th St., Port Angeles, with Pastor Patrick Lovejoy officiating. Drennan-Ford Funeral Home, Port Angeles, is in charge of arrangements.

www.drennanford.com.

George Porter Guill April 1, 1920 — May 29, 2015

Port Angeles resident George Porter Guill died of age-related causes at Olympic Medical Center. He was 95. His obituary will be published later. No services are planned. Drennan-Ford Funeral Home, Port Angeles, is in charge of arrangements. www.drennanford.com.

Volunteer Needed!

Cat. Orange and white young male. West side of Port Angeles.

531256067

Sliding Screens • Screen Doors Window Screens • Custom Screens Roll away Screens • Solar Screens Pet Screens • Screen Rooms

360-452-5978 551571

360.681.2442 #PENIN*961CF

220 Carlsborg Rd. Sequim, WA

551327435

FOUND:

lets, and the young volunteers lined up 75 ducks on the ground outside the trailer. With a PDN reporter present, he carefully read the number on the duck: “8844642,” he said twice. A volunteer handed Skinner the booklet holding the matching ticket with the name of the purchaser: McNamara.

“That component, now, is going to be told the through the eyes of the S’Klallam tribe and their historians. We are working with their team of storytellers. We are just honored to have that partnership,” Capestany said. Jerry Allen, CEO of the casino, said “I think this is really a compliment to the tribe that Scott wants to do something like this.” “We are excited to be part of it. There were a lot of choices. When you think about the number of tribes that circle this peninsula and the fact that we were able to put this together, we are very, very flattered.” Capestany said he will also be working with the Quileute Tribe, the Rainforest Resort Village at Lake Quinault, Lake Quinault School District and the Lake Quinault Lodge. He is also in talks with the Forest Service and National Park Service. Quinault Rain Forest is located in Olympic National Park and Olympic National Forest.

“We have a man whose background is science but now he is a man of faith, and his faith is challenged on this journey,” Capestany said, noting there are several other characters that make the story unique. The structure of storytelling for the adventure drama will be similar to the popular ABC television series “Lost,” Capestany said. “We are sending the audience on these wild goose chases, but what you are really going to find is what is important to these characters. What are they finding amongst themselves in the rain forest? That is going to be the real story.” After meeting with the S’Klallam tribe last week, Capestany traveled to Hollywood where he will spend the next several weeks working with actors. “We are in the packaging phase right now where we are presenting our creative material along with our entire pilot production and series production to Hollywood actors,” as well as actors living in Washington, Capestany said.

Help improve local senior services. Olympic Area Agency on Aging (O3A) has a Clallam County vacancy on O3A’s Advisory Council. O3A coordinates services for seniors and adults with disabilities in Clallam, Grays Harbor, Jefferson & Pacific Counties. The Advisory Council focuses on aging and long term care services in all four counties. For information contact Carol Ann at 866-720-4863; or email laaseca@dshs.wa.gov. Monthly meetings are in Shelton; mileage reimbursement and lunch included.


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Monday, June 1, 2015 PAGE

A7

Why Mideast is in such a mess And why the fight against Islamic State isn’t America’s fight

T

HE ARAB WORLD IS A pluralistic region that lacks pluralism — the ability to manage and embrace differences peacefully. As such, the Middle East’s pluralistic charThomas L. acter — Sunnis, Shiites, Friedman Kurds, Christians, Druze, Alawites, Jews, Copts, Yazidis, Turkmen and an array of tribes — has long been managed by iron fists from above. But after we removed the fists in Iraq and Libya, without putting a new bottomup order in place, and the people themselves tried to remove the fists in Syria and Yemen without putting a new live-and-let-live order in place, a horrifying war of all against all has exploded. The fighting has laid bare just how much the past 60 years of predatory leadership in that region failed at human development and citizenship building. The whole Arab world package, with its artificially straight-line borders, was held together by oil and brute force. In the wreckage, people are falling back on the only identities they think might keep them safe: tribe and sect. It is a measure of how far things have unraveled that many Iraqi Sunnis prefer the lunatic Islamic State, or ISIS, than to fight and die for a pro-Iranian Shiite-led government in Baghdad. I have never seen it this bad. The Middle East analyst Simon Henderson captured the disintegration well in an essay in The Wall Street Journal in March, writing: “The violent chaos in Yemen isn’t orderly enough to merit being called a civil war.” The fundamentalist mind-set seems to be taking hold everywhere.

T

HE MIDDLE EAST MEDIA Research Institute recently posted a video from last month of Sheikh Ahmad Al-Naqib, a lecturer on education at Mansoura University north of Cairo, criticizing ISIS, but he added: “There is no doubt that they are much better than the criminal Rafidites [Shiites], who kill the Sunnis because of their Sunni identity.” Otto Scharmer, an economist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology who works with communities trapped in perpetual conflicts, defines the main fea-

ONLINE . . . ■ Should the U.S. continue directly fighting the Islamic State? Take today’s Peninsula Poll at www.peninsuladaily news.com.

tures of the fundamentalist mind-set by its opposites: What is the opposite of an open mind? he asks. “You are stuck in one truth.” What is the opposite of an open heart? “You are stuck in one collective skin; everything is us-versus-them and, therefore, empathy for the other is impossible.” And what is the opposite of an open will? “You are enslaved to old intentions that originate in the past and not from the present, and so you cannot open up to any emerging new opportunities.” If that zero-sum mind-set continues to prevail, you can only weep for the future of this region when there is much less oil, much less water and many more kids. It will be a freak show.

F

OR NOW, I SEE ONLY TWO ways coherent self-government can re-emerge in Libya, Iraq, Yemen and Syria: If an outside power totally occupies them, snuffs out their sectarian wars, suppresses the extremists and spends the next 50 years trying to get Iraqis, Syrians, Yemenis and Libyans to share power as equal citizens. Even that might not work. Anyway, it’s not going to happen. The other is just wait for the fires to burn themselves out. The Lebanese civil war ended after 14 years by reconciliation-through-exhaustion. All sides accepted the principle of “no victor/no vanquished,” and everyone got a piece of the pie. That’s how Tunisia’s factions managed to find stability: no victor/no vanquished. We cannot effectively intervene in a region where so few share our goals. For instance, in Iraq and Syria, both

BOB ENGLEHART/CAGLE CARTOONS

Iran and Saudi Arabia have acted as “arsonists” and “firefighters.” First, Iran pushed the Iraqi Shiite government to crush the Sunnis. When that produced ISIS, they sent pro-Iranian militias to put out the fire. Thanks a lot. And Saudi Arabia’s long promotion of the puritanical, anti-pluralistic, antiwomen, Wahhabi brand of Islam helped to shape the thinking of ISIS and the Sunni fundamentalists who joined them. The Saudis, too, are arsonists and firefighters. Indeed, ISIS is like a missile that got its guidance system from Saudi Arabia and its fuel from Iran. U.S. policy now should be “containment, plus amplification.” Let’s help those who manifest the will to contain ISIS, like Jordan, Lebanon, the United Arab Emirates and the Kurds in Iraq, and amplify any constructive things that groups in Yemen, Iraq, Libya or Syria are ready to do with their power, but we must not substitute our power for theirs. This has to be their fight for their future. If the fight against ISIS is not worth it

to them, it surely can’t be for us.

I

WAS BEHIND A CAR LAST weekend that had a Virginia license plate bearing the motto “Fight Terrorism.” Sorry, but I don’t think that should be on any state’s license plate. We’ve spent more than a decade of lives and treasure trying to “fight terrorism” to fix a part of the world that can’t be fixed from the outside. It has been a waste. I wish it had worked. The world would be better for it. But it didn’t. And the beginning of wisdom is admitting that and stop throwing good money after bad. We need to stop being the “United States of Fighting Terrorism.” If Virginians need a license plate motto, how about: “Contain and Amplify Abroad. Build Virginia at Home.”

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

Hazards of centralized food production AN OUTBREAK OF bird flu has forced American farmers to kill millions of egg-laying chickens, 32 million in Iowa alone — hence the rise in egg prices. But why so many? Because our Froma Harrop eggs are now produced by a handful of gigantic farms. When one of their birds gets sick, the farmers have to kill them all. This concentration of egg production wasn’t always the case. In the 1970s, there were about 10,000 commercial egg companies, according to The Wall Street Journal. Today there are fewer than 200. Bird flu aside, depending on a few farms, mainly in the Midwest, for most of our eggs doesn’t make much sense. Eggs can be laid anywhere in the country. That includes backyards in Denver, New York and Des Moines. So many urbanites have taken

up chicken husbandry that cities are setting down strict rules for the activity. Poultry farming in dense neighborhoods is problematic. More on that later. But every city has farms nearby that could supply eggs. The reason a few industrial farms dominate the business is that bigger is cheaper. “Our customer base is demanding the lowest cost possible, and that causes us to put 6 million chickens on one farm,” an executive at Rose Acre Farms told the Journal. Some consumers care greatly about where their eggs, as well as apples, come from. The more local the better. But fast-food chains and warehouse stores gravitate to the lowest prices. The restaurants don’t necessarily buy eggs as most of us know them. McDonald’s uses eggs in liquid form for many of its dishes (though the Egg McMuffin, the McDonald’s website clearly states, is made with “a freshly cracked, Grade A egg”). Interesting that the concept of “food miles” — the distance American produce travels before

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS JOHN C. BREWER PUBLISHER AND EDITOR ■

360-417-3500

john.brewer@peninsuladailynews.com

REX WILSON EXECUTIVE EDITOR 360-417-3530

rex.wilson@peninsuladailynews.com

STEVE PERRY ADVERTISING DIRECTOR 360-417-3540

steve.perry@peninsuladailynews.com

MICHELLE LYNN CIRCULATION DIRECTOR 360-417-3510

michelle.lynn@peninsuladailynews.com

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

reaching the table — was pioneered at Iowa State University’s Leopold Center for Sustainable Agriculture. Researchers there found that California onions sold in Des Moines typically journey over 1,700 miles. Produce trucked from outside the state uses between four and 17 times more fuel than that grown locally.

And Iowa hardly lacks for farmland. As drought strikes California’s agricultural kingdom, concerns are rising about its ability to “feed the nation.” Meanwhile, more Americans are wondering why all their carrots must come from there. The water crisis enhances their arguments for local agriculture. About backyard chicken farming: This is not a job for squeamish city people. Chickens smell, and their coops must be cleaned. Hens reach a point when they can no longer lay eggs. Are urban farmers emotionally equipped to turn a “pet” into Sunday dinner — or to provide retirement facilities for a hen past her prime? Also, sooner or later, something gruesome is going to happen to one of the chickens. A dog may get at it. Or the chicken comes down ill. Neighbors may object to the clucking and the odors. They have a point. The desire to connect more closely with our food sources is a

NEWS DEPARTMENT Main office: 305 W. First St., P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362 ■ LEAH LEACH, managing editor/news, 360-417-3531 lleach@peninsuladailynews.com ■ MICHAEL FOSTER, news editor; 360-452-2345, ext. 5064 mfoster@peninsuladailynews.com ■ LEE HORTON, sports editor; 360-417-3525; lhorton@peninsuladailynews.com ■ DIANE URBANI DE LA PAZ, features editor; 360-452-2345, ext. 5062 durbanidelapaz@peninsuladailynews.com ■ General news information: 360-417-3527 From Jefferson County and West End, 800-826-7714, ext. 5250 Email: news@peninsuladailynews.com News fax: 360-417-3521 ■ Sequim office: 147 W. Washington St., 98382; 360-681-2390 CHRIS MCDANIEL, 360-681-2390, ext. 5052, cmcdaniel@peninsuladailynews.com ■ Port Townsend office: 1939 E. Sims Way, 98368; 360-385-2335 CHARLIE BERMANT, 360-385-2335, ext. 5550, cbermant@peninsuladailynews.com

good one. But the idea of raising chickens in small backyards is more romantic than the reality. In densely packed areas, growing silent lettuce, tomatoes and string beans may be more neighborly than raising living, squawking farm animals. Better to patronize your local egg producer. That would bring both fresher eggs and help boost your local farmer. Meanwhile, there’s no point in stressing over buying food products from elsewhere in the country, especially those needing special climates (avocados) or wideopen spaces (beef). Without our food distribution system, produce sections up north would be pretty dull in February. Moderation in all obsessions is the way to go.

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

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


A8

WeatherWatch

MONDAY, JUNE 1, 2015 Neah Bay 55/50

Bellingham 65/53 g

Olympic Peninsula TODAY P.M. BREEZY SHOWERS

Port Angeles 59/52

SHOWERS Port

Townsend 61/52

Sequim Olympics Snow level: 9,000 feet 63/52

SH

Forks 62/51

OW

Port Ludlow 63/53

Yesterday

ER

Statistics for the 24-hour period ending at noon yesterday. Hi Lo Rain YTD Port Angeles 61 49 0.00 13.41 Forks 60 49 0.00 38.81 Seattle 73 53 0.00 16.24 Sequim 64 49 0.00 7.42 Hoquiam 60 51 0.00 19.38 Victoria 66 52 0.00 13.47 Port Townsend 66 45 **0.00 7.97

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

National TODAY forecast Nation Forecast highs for

Monday, June 1

Sunny

TEMPERATURE EXTREMES for the contiguous United States:

Billings 84° | 59°

San Francisco 65° | 54°

Minneapolis 70° | 46°

Denver 85° | 53°

Chicago 61° | 49°

Last

New

First

Los Angeles 76° | 59°

Miami 87° | 75°

Cartography by Keith Thorpe / © Peninsula Daily News

Fronts Cold

TONIGHT

Low 52 Drippy dreamtime

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY THURSDAY

59/51 Clouds lay across region

57/52 Showers ease dry stretch

Marine Conditions

60/51 64/55 Spattering may Sun, clouds accompany sun continue dance

CANADA Victoria 67° | 53° Seattle 66° | 55°

Ocean: S wind 15 to 25 kt easing to 10 to 15 kt. Wind waves 2 to 4 ft subsiding to 1 to 2 ft. W swell 3 ft at 10 seconds. A chance of showers. Tonight, SW wind to 10 kt. Wind waves 1 ft. W swell 3 ft at 13 seconds.

Olympia 63° | 52°

Tacoma 64° | 55° Yakima 76° | 59°

Astoria 58° | 52°

ORE.

TODAY High Tide

Spokane 74° | 59°

Ht

© 2015 Wunderground.com

Sunset today Sunrise tomorrow Moonrise today Moonset tomorrow

Hi 87 82 69 70 79 85 83 87 88 76 85 59 80 88 88 82

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

TOMORROW

9:06 p.m. 5:17 a.m. 8:06 p.m. 5:43 a.m.

Lo Prc Otlk 69 .40 Rain 60 PCldy 51 PCldy 49 Clr 60 .01 Cldy 69 Rain 67 PCldy 64 .11 PCldy 69 PCldy 52 Cldy 67 Rain 46 .02 Rain 59 PCldy 66 .25 Rain 69 .80 Cldy 48 .54 Rain

WEDNESDAY

1:04 p.m. 6.7’

Low Tide Ht 6:43 a.m. -0.9’ 6:32 p.m. 2.5’

High Tide Ht 12:24 a.m. 8.6’ 1:46 p.m. 6.9’

Low Tide Ht 7:22 a.m. -1.3’ 7:13 p.m. 2.5’

High Tide Ht 1:01 a.m. 8.7’ 2:28 p.m. 7.0’

Low Tide 8:01 a.m. 7:55 p.m.

Ht -1.6’ 2.5’

Port Angeles

1:23 a.m. 6.5’ 4:25 p.m. 6.4’

8:43 a.m. -0.9’ 9:00 p.m. 5.3’

1:56 a.m. 6.4’ 5:02 p.m. 6.7’

9:17 a.m. -1.4’ 9:44 p.m. 5.5’

2:32 a.m. 6.4’ 9:54 a.m. 5:39 p.m. 7.0’ 10:31 p.m.

-1.7’ 5.6’

Port Townsend

3:00 a.m. 8.0’ 9:56 a.m. -1.0’ 6:02 p.m. 7.9’ 10:13 p.m. 5.9’

3:33 a.m. 7.9’ 10:30 a.m. -1.5’ 6:39 p.m. 8.3’ 10:57 p.m. 6.1’

5:32 a.m. 7.4’ 12:35 a.m. 8:37 p.m. 8.9’ 12:31 p.m.

6.1’ 8.9’

Dungeness Bay*

2:06 a.m. 7.2’ 5:08 p.m. 7.1’

2:39 a.m. 7.1’ 9:52 a.m. -1.4’ 5:45 p.m. 7.5’ 10:19 p.m. 5.5’

3:15 a.m. 7.1’ 10:29 a.m. 6:22 p.m. 7.7’ 11:06 p.m.

-1.7’ 5.6’

LaPush

9:18 a.m. -0.9’ 9:35 p.m. 5.3’

Warm Stationary

Pressure Low

High

June 16 June 24 June 2

Nation/World

Washington TODAY

Strait of Juan de Fuca: W wind 15 to 25 kt. Wind waves 2 to 4 ft. A chance of showers. Tonight, W wind 20 to 30 kt. Wind waves 3 to 5 ft.

Tides

FRIDAY

June 9

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

-10s

-0s

Burlington, Vt. 88 Casper 76 Charleston, S.C. 86 Charleston, W.Va. 87 Charlotte, N.C. 87 Cheyenne 66 Chicago 68 Cincinnati 85 Cleveland 83 Columbia, S.C. 90 Columbus, Ohio 85 Concord, N.H. 89 Dallas-Ft Worth 76 Dayton 87 Denver 72 Des Moines 64 Detroit 83 Duluth 55 El Paso 90 Evansville 85 Fairbanks 73 Fargo 59 Flagstaff 77 Grand Rapids 70 Great Falls 70 Greensboro, N.C. 86 Hartford Spgfld 87 Helena 70 Honolulu 86 Houston 91 Indianapolis 84 Jackson, Miss. 87 Jacksonville 81 Juneau 76 Kansas City 61 Key West 86 Las Vegas 102 Little Rock 84

0s

10s

20s 30s 40s

à 115 in Death Valley, Calif. Ä 25 in Grand Marais, Minn.

Atlanta 83° | 65°

El Paso 99° | 67° Houston 88° | 66°

Full

New York 66° | 62°

Detroit 66° | 47°

Washington D.C. 89° | 73°

S

Aberdeen 61/53

Cloudy

Seattle 66° | 55°

Almanac

Brinnon 66/55

Pt. Cloudy

The Lower 48

50s 60s

70s 80s 90s 100s 110s

Cartography © Weather Underground / The Associated Press

48 .91 Rain Los Angeles 47 PCldy Louisville 65 PCldy Lubbock 65 Rain Memphis 67 Cldy Miami Beach 49 Cldy Midland-Odessa 42 .39 Rain Milwaukee 69 .03 Cldy Mpls-St Paul 56 1.88 Rain Nashville 68 Cldy New Orleans 66 .38 Cldy New York City 67 .01 Rain Norfolk, Va. 59 .23 PCldy North Platte 67 .01 Cldy Oklahoma City 53 Cldy Omaha 50 .01 Clr Orlando 50 .90 Rain Pendleton 35 Cldy Philadelphia 66 PCldy Phoenix 55 .47 Cldy Pittsburgh 46 Clr Portland, Maine 43 Cldy Portland, Ore. 43 PCldy Providence 48 .49 Cldy Raleigh-Durham 47 .39 Cldy Rapid City 67 Cldy Reno 68 Rain Richmond 49 .01 Cldy Sacramento 74 PCldy St Louis 69 .57 Cldy St Petersburg 61 1.36 Cldy Salt Lake City 66 .28 Rain San Antonio 67 .94 PCldy San Diego 50 PCldy San Francisco 56 .06 Cldy San Juan, P.R. 79 PCldy Santa Fe 77 Clr St Ste Marie 68 .22 Rain Shreveport

77 87 73 85 88 79 51 64 85 86 85 85 65 73 71 92 86 87 105 82 84 78 85 88 66 93 88 89 75 92 85 88 71 64 87 77 58 82

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

59 Cldy Sioux Falls 62 40 Cldy 69 .12 Cldy Syracuse 87 52 1.55 Rain 55 Cldy Tampa 89 75 .83 Rain 68 1.07 Rain Topeka 62 58 PCldy 75 .37 Cldy Tucson 102 70 Clr 60 .14 PCldy Tulsa 68 60 Cldy 41 .37 Clr Washington, D.C. 90 74 PCldy 44 PCldy Wichita 69 60 Cldy 65 .30 Cldy Wilkes-Barre 86 70 .12 Rain 72 .29 Rain Wilmington, Del. 84 68 Cldy 71 Rain _______ 69 PCldy 41 PCldy Hi Lo Otlk 56 PCldy 63 54 Sh 47 PCldy Auckland Beijing 90 62 PCldy 70 Cldy 62 49 Rain 60 Cldy Berlin 60 49 PCldy 70 Cldy Brussels 85 65 Clr 80 Clr Cairo 72 49 PCldy 65 .07 Rain Calgary Guadalajara 86 61 Ts 64 Rain 87 79 Ts 57 Cldy Hong Kong 83 58 Clr 66 Rain Jerusalem 72 43 Clr 69 PCldy Johannesburg 83 49 Clr 49 Cldy Kabul 59 54 PCldy 58 PCldy London 71 51 Ts 68 PCldy Mexico City 62 49 Rain 55 PCldy Montreal Moscow 67 45 Cldy 54 .09 Cldy 104 81 Ts 77 PCldy New Delhi 63 49 PCldy 62 PCldy Paris Ts 69 .74 PCldy Rio de Janeiro 76 69 80 58 Cldy 62 Cldy Rome Ts 53 Rain San Jose, CRica 82 66 61 47 Clr 78 .35 Cldy Sydney 81 67 Wind/PCldy 52 PCldy Tokyo 55 46 Sh 38 Clr Toronto Vancouver 67 55 Sh 67 .98 Cldy

Briefly . . . The meeting is to let parents and guardians know how they can become more involved in the education process and help plan the graduation event June 16. Graduating students and those who have received their GED and are younger than 22 are also welcome to attend and help plan their graduation ceremony. For more information, phone 360-452-8471, ext. 7431.

Chaplain graduates from training PORT ANGELES — Clallam County Sheriff’s Office Chaplain Andy Pursley recently graduated from the Police and Fire Chaplain Training Academy. The academy partners with the Washington State Criminal Justice Training Commission and provides 44 hours of classroom training, 12 hours of direct contact experience and three hours of seminar training at the commission’s site in Burien. Pursley serves the West End of Clallam County and assists deputies and residents in times of crisis. Chaplains serve as a resource for Sheriff’s Office personnel when dealing with accidental deaths, suicides, suicidal subjects, serious accidents, drug and alcohol abuse, and other such situations that may arise. Chaplains also provide counseling, spiritual guidance and insight for agency personnel and their families.

Marine swap PORT ANGELES — The ninth annual Marine Swap Meet and Indoor

Clallam County Sheriff’s Office chaplain Andy Pursley, center, recently graduated from Police and FIre Chaplain Training Academy. With him are chaplains Tim Richards, left, and Ed Evans. Yard Sale will take place at the Port Angeles Yacht Club, 1305 Marine Drive, from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, June 13. This event is an opportunity to find or sell marine-related equipment at the outdoor swap meet or purchase some household “treasures” offered by the Yacht Club Ladies at the indoor yard sale. Seller spaces for the outdoor swap meet are available for $10. No seller spaces are available for household items at the indoor sale. Coffee and doughnuts will be available. For more information about reserving an outdoor

space, email swapmeet@ payc.org or phone 360-4610602 or 619-884-4599.

Lower Elwha meet PORT ANGELES — Parents, grandparents and legal guardians of Native American students in the Port Angeles and Crescent school districts are invited to the Native American education committee meeting in the Johnson O’Malley Library/Education Building, 2851 Lower Elwha Road (behind the tribal center), at 5 p.m. Thursday.

peninsuladailynews.com

Got Septic?

Need a Septic Inspection?

DO IT YOURSELF & SAVE MONEY

Learn how clallam.net/Septics201DIY

All gravity septic systems must be inspected every three years. All other systems inspected annually. Pumping is NOT the same as an inspection. For more information, contact or visit us online at

www.clallam.net/septic

551325761

Clallam County Environmental Health (360) 417-2506

Location change SEQUIM — Effective Aug. 1, Olympic Community Action Programs (OlyCAP) will partner with the Shipley Center, 921 E. Hammond St., as the new

location for the Sequim Senior Meals Program. This is the first change in venue for the meals program in more than 20 years. Starting in August, meals will be served Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Fridays at 4:30 p.m. for a $5 donation from each guest. Reservations can be made by calling 360-6838491 before 3 p.m. the day before. For additional information or help making a reservation, phone 360-6838491. There will be no change in the senior meals schedule for June and July while the transition to the new venue is made.

Prevention summit FORKS — Mathew A. Poteet will be the keynote speaker at the Youth Prevention Summit at the Peninsula College Forks Extension Site, 481 S. Forks Ave., from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Friday. The millennial generation and its viewpoint are the focus of the summit. Digital citizenship, nonviolent communication skills, leadership and prevention of alcohol, tobacco and drug abuse will be among the many topics. The event is free, and space is limited to 100. For more information, email lgrasseth@co.clallam. wa.us or phone 360-5652608. Peninsula Daily News


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Monday, June 1, 2015 SECTION

CLASSIFIEDS, COMICS In this section

B State Tennis

Sequim doubles takes eighth PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

SEATTLE — The Sequim tennis doubles team of Karen Chan and Cheyenne Sokkappa finished eighth at the girls Class 2A state tournament Saturday at Nordstrom Tennis Center at the University of Washington. Chan and Sokkappa fell 3-6, 7-6(6), 6-2 to W. F. West’s Kyla Richards Isabel Vander Stoep in their final match. “They did really well. Way better than anyone expected before the tournament,” Wolves coach Justine Wagner said. “They didn’t play doubles together one time until the league tournament but they blossomed during the postseason. “They both have a very lighthearted attitude and didn’t get upset with each other. Their skills complement each other, too: Cheyenne has a huge overhead serve and Karen is very consistent.” Sokkappa and Chan advanced to the fifth/eighth-place match by defeating Lauren McDevitt and Cailin O’Malley of Selah 6-4, 6-1 earlier Saturday. The Sequim duo started the tournament with a 6-0, 6-2 loss to Taylor Harris and Simone Hall of Sehome on Friday, but bounced back to stay alive for a medal with a three-set triumph, 6-4, 6-7, 6-3, against Pullman’s Alexa Yadama and Lizzie George.

DAVE SHREFFLER (3)/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Sequim’s boys 4x400-meter relay, Oscar Herrera, back left, Jason Springer, Alex Barry and Miguel Moroles (1718) second a school record while winning the school’s first relay state championship.

‘Man, that was fun’ Area teams finish with a flourish

Pederson loses two Port Angeles singles player Janson Pederson dropped two matches and was eliminated from the 2A boys tournament Friday. Pederson fell 6-0, 6-0 in his opening match to Selah’s Jared Kieser. He was bounced from the bracket 6-1, 6-1 by Sehome’s Brady Anderson. “Janson ran into a couple of buzzsaws his first two rounds,” Port Angeles coach Gil Stockton said. “Janson played hard, with quiet determination, but was simply outclassed by players who have focused on tennis from an early age. “For a young man who took up tennis as a freshman . . . to reach the state championship as a junior attests to his character and athletic ability. “This was a terrific experience to get under his belt and, as he will progress this coming year, he looks forward to a better result his next opportunity.”

Sounders win on late goal by Barrett

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

TACOMA — The North Olympic Peninsula had a stellar finish the state track and field championships. Two more state championships were won in the last hour of the Class 1A and 2A state meets, bringing the total earned by the area over the weekend to five. Overall, the Peninsula’s eight track and field teams combined to win 40 medals at the 1B, 1A and 2A meets. Medals are won by the top eight finishers in each event. Sequim’s boys 4x400-meter relay finished the 2A state meet with a stunning championship at Mount Tahoma High School on Saturday, and Port Townsend senior Ryan Clarke added another state championship to a successful high school sports career by winning the boys

Miguel Moroles, left, ran the first leg of the 4x400 relay. Oscar Herrera, right, waits for the baton before running the fourth and final leg. 3,200-meter run at the 1A meet at Eastern Washington University in Cheney. Sequim’s 4x400 relay was historical and dramatic. “Man, that was fun,” Sequim coach Brad Moore said. “We took people by surprise.” Miguel Moroles, Jason Springer, Alex Barry and Oscar Herrera broke a 28-year-old school 4x400 relay record with a time of 3 minutes, 22.53 seconds.

The previous 4x400 relay record of 3:23.27 was run by Jared Wilson, Shawn Kendall, Dan Dove and Mark Adams in 1987. The 10 points earned from the win gave the Wolves 35 points and a fourth-place team finish, which is the best finish by a boys team in school history and tied for the best in overall school history. The 4x400 state title was the

TURN

TO

TRACK/B3

Rangers roll to third-place finish PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

BY MARK MOSCHETTI THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SEATTLE — Chad Barrett scored 30 seconds into secondhalf stoppage time to give the Seattle Sounders a 2-1 comeback victory over the New York Red Bulls on Sunday. Marco Pappa tied it for the Sounders (8-3-2) in the 69th minute. Seattle defender Tyrone Mears helped set up the winning goal. Playing near the goal line, he floated a ball across the penalty area. Clint Demsey got a left foot to it and sent it toward the far post, where Barrett was waiting unmarked to tip it in off his right toe. Barrett has three goals this season. Pappa scored for the second time in two games, deking around defender Chris Duvall to put a 12-yard shot from the left side. Lloyd Sam scored in the 36th minute for New York (4-35). He has four goals this season.

first ever won by a Sequim boys or girls relay team. It also gave Barry two at this year’s state meet — he also won the javelin Friday — making him the first in school history to do so. “We’ve never had a kid win two in one [state meet],” Moore said. “Alex stands alone in that respect.

LONNIE ARCHIBALD/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Quilcene’s Sammy Rae (4) is greeted at home after hitting a home run in the Rangers’ second-round win over Naselle.

YAKIMA — Quilcene won its third consecutive state softball trophy by placing third at the Class 1B state tournament at Gateway Sports Complex. The Rangers won fourthplace trophies in 2013 and 2014. After opening the tournament Friday with a 3-2 loss to eventual runner-up Almira-Coulee-Hartline, Quilcene finished the tournament, and its season, with three straight wins. First they beat Naselle 13-4 on Friday and Sunnyside Christian 6-4 on Saturday to set up a matchup with six-time defending champion Colton late Saturday afternoon. The Rangers saved their best game for the Wildcats, defeating them 10-4 to secure third place, the best fastpitch softball finish in school history. “We came out and hit them in mouth right away, and they never recovered,” Quilcene coach Mark Thompson said. “I am so proud of how we responded to everything thrown our way over the last week. “We may not have won first, but I am convinced we can beat anybody in these playoffs.” TURN

TO

RANGERS/B3


B2

SportsRecreation

MONDAY, JUNE 1, 2015

Today’s

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

SPORTS ON TV

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

Scoreboard Baseball

Today

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

1 p.m. (47) GOLF NCAA, Division I Championship, Individual Stroke Play (Live) 5 p.m. (26) ESPN Baseball MLB, Milwaukee Brewers at St. Louis Cardinals (Live) 5 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Softball NCAA, Division I Tournament, National Championship (Live) 7 p.m. (25) ROOT Baseball MLB, New York Yankees at Seattle Mariners (Live) 8 p.m. (311) ESPNU Baseball NCAA, Division I Tournament, Regional (Live)

SPORTS PIC OF THE DAY

Indians 6, Mariners 3, 12 innings Sunday’s Game Seattle ab r hbi ab r hbi Kipnis 2b 5 1 2 1 AJcksn cf 6011 CSantn dh 5 0 2 0 S.Smith rf 6010 Brantly lf 6 0 1 1 Cano 2b 4001 Raburn rf 3 1 1 1 N.Cruz dh 4010 DvMrp ph-rf 3 0 2 2 Seager 3b 3000 Moss 1b 7 1 4 0 WCastll c 5000 YGoms c 5 0 2 0 Morrsn 1b 4110 Aviles 3b 2 0 0 0 BMiller ss 1100 Chsnhll ph-3b2 2 1 0 Weeks ph 1000 Bourn cf 6 0 2 1 CTaylr ss 1000 JRmrz ss 6 1 1 0 Blmqst ph-ss 1 0 0 0 Ackley lf 1 1 1 0 Ruggin ph-lf 3 0 0 0 Totals 50 618 6 Totals 40 3 5 2 Cleveland

Cleveland 000 002 010 003—6 Seattle 000 030 000 000—3 E—Aviles (4). DP—Seattle 3. LOB—Cleveland 17, Seattle 8. 2B—Kipnis 2 (16), Moss (11), Jo.Ramirez (6), S.Smith (11), N.Cruz (7). HR—Raburn (3). SB—C.Santana (3). S— Aviles. SF—Kipnis, Cano. IP H R ER BB SO Cleveland 1 Salazar 5 /3 4 3 3 4 5 2/ Hagadone 0 0 0 0 3 0 R.Webb 1 0 0 0 0 1 B.Shaw 2 0 0 0 0 3 Allen 1 1 0 0 0 1 McAllister W,1-2 1 0 0 0 2 0 A.Adams S,1-1 1 0 0 0 0 1 Seattle Happ 5 8 2 2 1 2 2/ Wilhelmsen H,2 0 0 0 0 3 2 2 Furbush H,7 /3 1 0 0 0 0 Ca.Smith H,10 1 3 1 1 0 2 2/ Beimel BS,1-2 0 0 1 0 3 0 Rodney 1 1 0 0 1 0 Lowe 2 1 0 0 1 2 Leone L,0-4 1 2 3 3 3 1 Happ pitched to 2 batters in the 6th. WP—Salazar, McAllister. PB—W.Castillo. Balk—Salazar. Umpires—Home, Alan Porter; First, Mark Ripperger; Second, Pat Hoberg; Third, Jeff Kellogg. T—4:36. A—32,112 (47,574).

Tuesday Midnight (306) FS1 Soccer FIFA, New Zealand vs. United States, U-20 World Cup, Group A (Live) N.Y. Mets (deGrom 5-4) at San Diego (Cashner 2-7), 7:10 p.m. Pittsburgh (G.Cole 7-2) at San Francisco (Vogelsong 4-2), 7:15 p.m. Tuesday’s Games L.A. Dodgers at Colorado, 12:10 p.m., 1st game Cincinnati at Philadelphia, 4:05 p.m. Toronto at Washington, 4:05 p.m. Chicago Cubs at Miami, 4:10 p.m. Milwaukee at St. Louis, 5:15 p.m. L.A. Dodgers at Colorado, 5:40 p.m., 2nd game Atlanta at Arizona, 6:40 p.m. N.Y. Mets at San Diego, 7:10 p.m. Pittsburgh at San Francisco, 7:15 p.m.

Basketball NBA Playoff Glance

RELAY

RECORD-HOLDERS

Neah Bay’s 4x100-meter relay team, second from left, Elisha Winck, Cole Svec, Cameron Buzzell and Chris Martinez won a Class 1B state championship and set a new meet record in the event at Eastern Washington University in Cheney on Saturday. With them are Neah Bay head coach Andrew Winck, far left, and assistant coach Shane DePoe, far right.

Indians 4, Mariners 3 Saturday’s Game Seattle ab r hbi ab r hbi Kipnis 2b 4 0 0 0 AJcksn cf 5020 Aviles 3b 4 1 1 0 S.Smith dh 5 1 1 0 Brantly cf-lf 4 0 1 0 Cano 2b 4122 Raburn lf 2 0 0 0 N.Cruz rf 3000 Bourn ph-cf 1 0 0 0 Seager 3b 3020 Swisher dh 2 1 0 1 Morrsn 1b 4010 YGoms c 4 0 0 0 Zunino c 4010 Moss 1b 3 1 1 0 BMiller ss 3110 Sands rf 1 1 1 2 Ackley lf 3011 DvMrp ph-rf 1 0 1 1 Weeks ph 1000 JRmrz ss 4 0 1 0 Blmqst lf 0000 Totals 30 4 6 4 Totals 35 311 3 Cleveland

Cleveland 120 001 000—4 Seattle 002 000 100—3 DP—Cleveland 1, Seattle 1. LOB—Cleveland 5, Seattle 9. 2B—Moss (10), Seager 2 (11), B.Miller (8). HR—Sands (1), Cano (2). CS— Dav.Murphy (1), A.Jackson (4). SF—Swisher. IP H R ER BB SO Cleveland Marcum W,2-0 51/3 5 2 2 3 5 Rzepczynski H,7 1/3 1 0 0 0 0 McAllister H,3 1 3 1 1 1 1 Hagadone H,4 1 1 0 0 0 1 Allen S,11-12 11/3 1 0 0 0 1 Seattle Elias L,2-2 51/3 5 4 4 4 3 2/ Wilhelmsen 0 0 0 0 3 1 Furbush 1 0 0 0 0 1 Lowe 1 0 0 0 0 1 Beimel 1 0 0 0 1 0 Umpires—Home, Jeff Kellogg; First, Alan Porter; Second, Mark Ripperger; Third, Pat Hoberg. T—3:04. A—32,287 (47,574).

American League West Division W L Houston 31 19 Los Angeles 26 24 Texas 25 25 Seattle 24 25 Oakland 19 33 East Division W L New York 26 24 Tampa Bay 25 25 Baltimore 23 25 Toronto 23 28 Boston 22 28 Central Division W L Kansas City 29 18 Minnesota 29 19 Detroit 28 23 Cleveland 23 26 Chicago 22 26

Pct GB .620 — .520 5 .500 6 .490 6½ .365 13 Pct GB .520 — .500 1 .479 2 .451 3½ .440 4 Pct GB .617 — .604 ½ .549 3 .469 7 .458 7½

Saturday’s Games Minnesota 3, Toronto 2 Tampa Bay 3, Baltimore 0 Houston 3, Chicago White Sox 0 Texas 8, Boston 0 Kansas City at Chicago, ppd., rain L.A. Angels 8, Detroit 6 N.Y. Yankees 5, Oakland 3 Cleveland 4, Seattle 3 Sunday’s Games Tampa Bay at Baltimore, late. Chicago White Sox at Houston, late. Toronto at Minnesota, late. Kansas City at Chicago Cubs, late. Boston at Texas, late.

N.Y. Yankees at Oakland, late. Cleveland at Seattle, late. Detroit at L.A. Angels, late. Today’s Games Toronto (Dickey 2-5) at Washington (Zimmermann 4-2), 4:05 p.m. Minnesota (Pelfrey 4-1) at Boston (Buchholz 2-6), 4:10 p.m. Baltimore (U.Jimenez 3-3) at Houston (Oberholtzer 0-0), 5:10 p.m. Tampa Bay (Colome 3-1) at L.A. Angels (Richards 4-3), 7:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Pineda 6-2) at Seattle (F.Hernandez 8-1), 7:10 p.m. Tuesday’s Games Toronto at Washington, 4:05 p.m. Oakland at Detroit, 4:08 p.m. Minnesota at Boston, 4:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox at Texas, 5:05 p.m. Baltimore at Houston, 5:10 p.m. Cleveland at Kansas City, 5:10 p.m. Tampa Bay at L.A. Angels, 7:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Seattle, 7:10 p.m.

National League West Division W L Los Angeles 29 19 San Francisco 30 21 Arizona 23 25 San Diego 24 27 Colorado 21 26 East Division W L Washington 28 21 New York 27 23 Atlanta 24 25 Miami 20 30

Pct GB .604 — .588 ½ .479 6 .471 6½ .447 7½ Pct GB .571 — .540 1½ .490 4 .400 8½

Philadelphia St. Louis Chicago Pittsburgh Cincinnati Milwaukee

19 32 Central Division W L 32 17 25 22 26 23 21 27 16 34

.373

10

Pct GB .653 — .532 6 .531 6 .438 10½ .320 16½

Saturday’s Games Colorado 5, Philadelphia 2 Arizona 7, Milwaukee 3 Miami 9, N.Y. Mets 5 Cincinnati 8, Washington 5 L.A. Dodgers 5, St. Louis 1 Kansas City at Chicago, ppd., rain Atlanta 8, San Francisco 0 Pittsburgh 5, San Diego 2 Sunday’s Games Miami at N.Y. Mets, late. Washington at Cincinnati, late. Colorado at Philadelphia, late. Arizona at Milwaukee, late. L.A. Dodgers at St. Louis, late. Kansas City at Chicago Cubs, late. Atlanta at San Francisco, late. Pittsburgh at San Diego, late. Today’s Games Toronto (Dickey 2-5) at Washington (Zimmermann 4-2), 4:05 p.m. Chicago Cubs (Hammel 3-2) at Miami (Urena 0-1), 4:10 p.m. Milwaukee (Garza 2-7) at St. Louis (Jai.Garcia 1-1), 5:10 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Kershaw 3-3) at Colorado (K.Kendrick 2-6), 5:40 p.m. Atlanta (A.Wood 3-2) at Arizona (Bradley 2-2), 6:40 p.m.

FINALS (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Golden State vs. Cleveland Thursday: Cleveland at Golden State, 9 p.m. Sunday, June 7: Cleveland at Golden State, 5 p.m. Tuesday, June 9: Golden State at Cleveland, 6 p.m. Thursday, June 11: Golden State at Cleveland, 6 p.m. x-Sunday, June 14: Cleveland at Golden State, 5 p.m. x-Tuesday, June 16: Golden State at Cleveland, 6 p.m. x-Friday, June 19: Cleveland at Golden State, 6 p.m.

Hockey NHL Playoff Glance CONFERENCE FINALS EASTERN CONFERENCE Tampa Bay 4, N.Y. Rangers 3 Saturday, May 16: N.Y. Rangers 2, Tampa Bay 1 Monday, May 18: Tampa Bay 6, N.Y. Rangers 2 Wednesday, May 20: Tampa Bay 6, N.Y. Rangers 5, OT Friday, May 22: N.Y. Rangers 5, Tampa Bay 1 Sunday, May 24: Tampa Bay 2, N.Y. Rangers 0 Tuesday, May 26: N.Y. Rangers 7, Tampa Bay 3 Friday: Tampa Bay 2, N.Y. Rangers 0 WESTERN CONFERENCE Chicago 4, Anaheim 3 Sunday, May 17: Anaheim 4, Chicago 1 Tuesday, May 19: Chicago 3, Anaheim 2, 3OT Thursday, May 21: Anaheim 2, Chicago 1 Saturday, May 23: Chicago 5, Anaheim 4, 2OT Monday, May 25: Anaheim 5, Chicago 4, OT Wednesday, May 27: Chicago 5, Anaheim 2 Saturday: Chicago 5, Anaheim 3 FINALS (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Tampa Bay vs. Chicago Wednesday: Chicago at Tampa Bay, 5 p.m. Saturday: Chicago at Tampa Bay, 4:15 p.m. Monday, June 8: Tampa Bay at Chicago, 5 p.m. Wednesday, June 10: Tampa Bay at Chicago, 5 p.m. x-Saturday, June 13: Chicago at Tampa Bay, 5 p.m. x-Monday, June 15: Tampa Bay at Chicago, 5 p.m.

Lightning proving they belong Johnson makes history BY FRED GOODALL THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

TAMPA, Fla. — The NHL playoffs have been a roller coaster of excitement, punctuated by a pair of Game 7s over the weekend to decide the Stanley Cup finalists. It’ll be Tampa Bay vs. Chicago in the best-of-seven series that begins Wednesday night, with the tradition-rich Blackhawks aiming for a third title in six years. Some might say it would be better theater or more interesting to have New York represented on the sport’s biggest stage rather than one of the league’s smaller markets, but don’t sell the Eastern Conference champion Lightning short when it comes to hockey appeal. The NHL is not only alive in the football-crazed South, it’s thriving on the west coast of Florida, where an entertaining band of young stars and a hot goalie have packed Amalie Arena game after game while barreling through three other Original Six franchises to reach the Cup final for the second time. While the Blackhawks have Jonathan Toews and Patrick Kane, the Lightning feature twotime NHL goal-scoring champion Steven Stamkos and the youthful, but dynamic “Triplets” line of Tyler Johnson, Ondrej Palat and

NHL Nikita Kucherov, who are rapidly making names for themselves. You can debate whether Tampa Bay or the New York Rangers, the team the Lightning eliminated to make the Cup final, would be better for television ratings. There’s no argument, though, over whether the Lightning belong. They proved that by winning in what second-year coach Jon Cooper describes as a “multitude of ways.” By scoring in bunches to give two of the NHL’s top goalies — Montreal’s Carey Price and New York’s Henrik Lundqvist — fits. By overcoming a 3-2 series deficit to oust Detroit in the first round. And, with Ben Bishop joining Patrick Roy (2002) and Tim Thomas (2011) as the only goalies to have two Game 7 shutouts in the same postseason. “You shine the light bright on our guys, and they’ll just put on sunglasses and walk right through it,” Cooper said. “It’s unreal how they respond, and it starts with our goaltender.” The Lightning are the first team since the 1988 Boston Bruins to make the Stanley Cup Final after being swept in the opening round of the previous

year’s playoffs. Tampa Bay beat Calgary in seven games to win its only NHL championship in 2004. “I am really proud of what we accomplished,” defenseman Anton Stralman said. “It’s not over yet. We definitely want to take another step.” Regular-season success doesn’t always carry over to the playoffs. But in Tampa Bay’s case, going unbeaten against Montreal and the Rangers en route to compiling best record in franchise history, gave the Lightning confidence they could do well against Price and Lundqvist when the stakes were raised. They beat Price twice on the road during the second round, then defeated Lundqvist three times at Madison Square Garden, including 2-0 in Game 7, to win the conference final. The Lightning split a pair of games against Chicago this season. “Our guys have this attitude that we did it before, why can’t we do it now?” Cooper said. “This is a special group. We’ve known that all year,” Bishop said. “We said after [eliminating Rangers], we still haven’t accomplished anything yet. You’re four wins away,” the 28-year-old goaltender said. “That’s going to be probably the hardest four wins of all of our careers. We know there is a lot ahead of us.”

with 10th win at Dover THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

DOVER, Del. — Jimmie Johnson took the congratulatory call from his boss, then flipped the phone for a selfie. The six-time series champ and crew chief Chad Knaus sandwiched the 60-pound trophy and smiled for a familiar photo. “You’ve only got 10 of ’em,” a fan yelled at the victory lane celebration. Johnson said: “We’ll keep them coming!” Johnson had already mastered the Monster Mile like no other driver. His latest win earned him a slice of NASCAR history that etched his name in the same class as five Hall of Fame drivers. With his No. 48 Chevrolet on cold tires, Johnson got hot down the stretch Sunday to win at Dover International Speedway and become the fifth driver with 10 or more Sprint Cup victories at a single track. “It was cool to have a track that I enjoyed so much turn into a track I could win at,” Johnson said. “We’ve been able to keep that feeling going for a lot of years.” Unlike his other nine Dover wins when he led at least 175 laps in each race, Johnson led only 23 laps for this perfect 10. Johnson

has 10 wins in 27 career starts on the concrete mile track. He needed five extra laps beyond the scheduled 400 because a late accident brought out the caution. He has four wins this season, 74 in his career and has won at least four times in a season 11 times. On deck, Johnson could catch Earnhardt for seventh on the career wins list with 76. “It’s right there in front of me, so I look at it and think, wow, this is incredible,” Johnson said. “Yes, it’s a priority for me and something I want to do. But I’m almost in shock that we’re there. Seventy-four race wins, 10 here, you can’t dream that big.” Johnson drank a beer in victory lane and took a quick call from team owner Rick Hendrick. “I know what I’m capable of and felt just fine doing it,” Johnson said. “And, I’ve got a great rhythm. I’ve got great support at home.” No active driver owns a track like Johnson does Dover. The Hendrick Motorsports driver swept Dover in 2002 and 2009 and also won races in 2005, 2010, 2012, 2013 and 2014. Kevin Harvick was second, followed by Kyle Larson, Kasey Kahne and Aric Almirola.


SportsRecreation

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

MONDAY, JUNE 1, 2015

B3

Track: Clarke now has a state track title, too CONTINUED FROM B1 “What a great way to end his high school career. Miguel, too — he’s great young athlete. “You couldn’t have written it any better for those two senior athletes.” Moroles opened the relay with a strong leg, giving the Wolves the lead before he handed the baton to junior Jason Springer. Springer held the lead until right before he handed off to Barry. Barry then retook the lead. “He came off that second turn and he just went right by that guy,” Moore said. “That gave Oscar a couple-step lead.” Lynden’s Trent Postma nearly overcame Herrera in the final leg, Moore said, but “Oscar just said, ‘No.’” Both Barry and Herrera ran sub-50-second splits. Barry was questionable to even run the relay after injuring his ankle during the triple jump Friday. Because he was checked by trainers Friday, he also had to be approved by them to compete Saturday. Once he was approved, he convinced Sequim assistant B.J. Schade, who convinced Moore to stick with Barry. “He said, ‘He’s going to give us something special,’” Moore said of Shade. “And he was right. “Whatever [the injury] was — I don’t even know for sure — it didn’t slow him down.” The Wolves also defied convention and ran a faster time in the final than in the preliminaries. In fact, they were more than 2 seconds faster. They ran a 4:34.65 and ranked fourth in the preliminaries. Their time in the finals would have won the 3A 4x400 state championship and would have placed them fourth in 4A. In the final event of the 2A meet, the Sequim girls 4x400 relay (Waverly Shreffler, Gretchen Happe, Mercedes Woods and Heidi Vereide) moved up three spots from the preliminaries to claim fifth. “I thought we could finish anywhere from fourth to eighth,” Moore said. “Then they ran such a great race. They competed, and they competed fantastically. “Salute to Coach Schade for making sure those kids were ready.”

Shreffler, a junior, also placed fourth in the girls 800-meter run after making the transition from the 400. “She ran what I thought was really a smart race,” Moore said. “She’s going to be a much better 800 runner next year. “Gosh, I think she’ll run a lot faster from this year to next year. “I’m excited for what lies ahead.” Hererra earned medals in both hurdles, placing sixth in the 110 and fourth in the 300H. “In the 300, he made a great charge for that,” Moore said. “He beat the guy [Grandview’s Steven Razo, who placed fifth] to the finish to snag that fourth place away from him.”

PA double-double Also late Saturday, Port Angeles’ Peter Butler and Gracie Long both medaled in their respective 3,200 races. Butler placed eighth in the boys 3,200 and Long was sixth in the girls 3,200. Thursday night, Butler, a senior, finished seventh in the boys 1,600, while Long, a freshman, took eighth in the girls 1,600. After looking through the school’s record books, longtime Port Angeles coach Bob Sheedy believes Butler and Long are the first Roughriders to medal in the 1,600 and 3,200 at the same state meet. Long set freshman school records in the 1,600 (5:16.50) and 3,200 (11:23.03) records this season, and nearly broke the freshman high jump record. Long fell one spot shy of placing at state in the high jump as well. “Her ninth-place tie at state in the high jump is just phenomenal,” Sheedy said.

Clarke a champ again

DAVE SHREFFLER (2)/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Sequim junior Waverly Shreffler placed fourth in the girls 400 and helped the Wolves 4x400 finish fifth. “But o n e m o r e night of sleep seemed to help. For the 3,200, he still Clarke wasn’t at his best, but he was good enough for the day.” Repeating what happened at the state cross country meet in the fall, Clarke, a senior, also beat out Northwest’s Graham Peet for the 3,200 state championship. Forks’ three state participants fell short of winning medals, although senior Kari Larson ran her best 800-meter time of the season to take ninth. “Four years of coming here, and we wanted ti so bad for her,” Spartans coach Pam Gale said. “But she’s so great. She was handing out water to every 3,200 runner. She put on one of those volunteer jackets and was right in there. “She’s just like the best of the best.” Larson also sang the national anthem during Saturday’s opening ceremonies. “It was so wonderful. It was absolutely wonderful,” Gale said. “I told her: out of all my track memories, that will be one be one of my favorites.”

After placing fourth in the 3,200 in 2014 and winning the cross country state championship in the fall, Ryan Clarke looked like one of the favorites to win the 3,200 at this year’s 1A state track and field meet. Then he got sick early last week. He still managed to earn a seventh-place medal in the 1,600 Friday morning. “In the 1,600, he still looked really flat,” Port Class 1B meet Townsend coach Ian Fraser The North Olympic Pensaid.

Port Angeles’ Peter Butler earned medals in the 1,600 and 3,200. insula earned six more medals late Saturday afternoon at the 1B championships. The area’s three 1B schools, Clallam Bay, Crescent and Neah Bay, accounted for 23 of the Peninsula’s 40 medals. Elisha Winck, who won the triple jump Friday and helped Neah Bay’s 4x100 relay take first and set a meet record, took fourth in the long jump to earn his third medal of the meet. “It’s just an incredible

feeling. I can’t even describe the euphoria I felt from him winning the triple jump,” said Andrew Winck, Neah Bay’s first-year coach and Elisha’s father. Winck was in third place in the long jump until Clallam Bay eighth-grader Clayton Willis surpassed him to place third, earning his second medal of the meet (he also placed sixth in the high jump). The two state championships are Neah Bay’s first in track and field since Rob

Moss won the javelin in 1984. “I think Neah Bay’s always obviously had the talent to win those, but the interest in track was pretty low,” Andrew Winck said, adding that Cole Svec and Chris Martinez, two of the four 4x100 relay winners, were in their first full seasons of high school track (the other two, Elisha Winck and Cameron Buzzell, had competed at state before). Andrew Winck also credited assistant coach Shane DePoe and girls coach Janelle Strine for the Red Devils’ track and field rebirth this season. Faye Chartraw won medals in the shot put (third) and discus (sixth) for the Neah Bay girls.

Future of relays The Red Devils’ 4x100meter relay, with one sophomore (Vonte Aguirre) and three eighth-graders (Hannah Olson, Amanda Gagnon and Cheyanna Svec), took ninth, one spot shy of reaching the medal round. That sets up the Neah Bay girls’ relays for a bright future, and some highly anticipated showdowns with Clallam Bay’s girls, who medaled in all three relays at state with a cast of young runners. Marissa May, Kendra Anderson, Inga Erickson and Molly McCoy finished the Bruins’ meet with a fifth-place finish in the 4x400 relay lat Saturday. The Clallam Bay girls previously took fifth in the 4x100 and sixth in the 4x200. Crescent’s 10 medals were the most earned by an area school at this year’s state meets. Ryan Lester and Ashara Dodson earned two of those medals apiece. Lester placed seventh in the girls triple jump Saturday, ahead of Dodson (ninth) and Clallam Bay’s Jennica Maines (13th). Lester earlier earned a fourth-place medal in the 110-meter hurdles. Dodson placed seventh in the javelin Saturday, adding to her fourth-place finish in the discus. Teammate McKenzie Brannan took ninth in the javelin. Crescent senior captain Martin Waldrip closed out his high school sports career by winning eighth-place medal in the boys 3,200.

Rangers: Rae fans final batter Mariners outlasted by Cleveland 6-3 in extra innings

CONTINUED FROM B1 Quilcene’s first inning started with a leadoff single by Alex Johnsen. Erin Macedo followed with another single, and she and Johnsen scored on Katie Bailey’s two-run double. In the second inning, Sammy Rae’s two-run single scored Bailey Kieffer and Alex Johnsen, both of whom had reached on singles. The fourth-inning scoring came on a two-out rally. Katie Bailey walked, Allison Jones singled and Jodan Cawyer reached on a fielding error that scored Bailey. Allie Speer then hit an RBI double, which was followed by an Alexis Gray RBI single. “Allie Speer was huge for us this weekend. She symbolizes our ‘next player up’ mentality, stepping into the lineup for an injured Megan Weller,” Thompson said. “For that fact, so was Katie Love at third and Bailey Kieffer at the DP position.” Sammy Rae’s RBI double and Katie Bailey’s RBI triple in the fifth inning provided insurance for the Rangers. Rae’s final at-bat of her high school career was a double that just missed going over the fence. Her final pitch struck

BY GREGG BELL MCCLATCHY NEWS SERVICE

LONNIE ARCHIBALD/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Quilcene pitcher Sammy Rae closed out her standout softball career by helping the Rangers earn their third straight state trophy. out the Wildcats’ No. 9 hitter to end the game. “A prolific career where words really can’t do justice. Samantha is a rare player who elevates her game when the pressure is on,” Thompson said. “I am proud of her, we are all going to miss her, and she is going to go on and be successful at whatever she pursues.” Earlier Saturday, the Rangers ensured their third

straight state trophy with a close 6-4 win over Sunnyside Christian. “Hitting up and down the lineup — eight players with a hit — and a 12-strikeout performance by Samantha Rae were the difference,” Thompson said. Quilcene took a 5-1 lead with a two-run sixth inning that resulted from two Sunnyside Christian errors and an Alexis Gray’s RBI single. “We came to play in this

game,” Thompson said. “Sunnyside Christian is a quality opponent, but our players were not going to be denied.” The Rangers finish the season with a 20-2 record. Quilcene 10, Colton 4 Quilcene 2 2 0 3 3 0 0 — 10 13 3 Colton 0 0 1 0 0 0 3 — 4 7 2 WP- Rae; LP- Schultheis Hitting Statistics Quilcene: Johnsen 3-4, 3 R; Madeco 3-5, 2 RBI; Rae 3-5, 2B, RBI; Bailey 2-4, 2B, 3B, 3 RBI; Jones 2-5; Kieffer 2-4; Speer 1-4, 2B, RBI; Alexis Gray 1-4, RBI.

SEATTLE — Using seemingly every reliever back to Bobby Ayala ultimately did in the Seattle Mariners. After using four relievers to get the Mariners through innings six, seven and eight oSunday, Seattle manager Lloyd McClendon basically ran out of them by the 12th. That was when Dominic Leone walked the leadoff man then allowed a one-out double off the glove of first baseman Logan Morrison. With no options to use other than a starter on an already-depleted staff, McClendon and the Mariners watched Leone (0-4) allow Cleveland’s Michael Brantley to single home the go-ahead run and David Murphy single home two more. That sent Seattle to a 6-3 loss in front of 32,112 on a long (four hours and 36 minutes) Little League Day and Felix Hernandez Poster Day at Safeco Field. The Mariners (24-26) took the way long way to avoid reaching .500 for the fifth time this season. They will try to get back to one game within it today with major-league wins

leader Felix Hernandez (8-1, 1.91 ERA) starting against the New York Yankees. Fernando Rodney pitched the ninth inning in a non-save situation, but it was the usual Fernando Rodney Experience. The high-wire closer allowed a double to Brandon Moss, who went 4 for 5, then walked Yan Gomes with one out. But Rodney got Lonnie Chisenhall to fly out and Michael Bourn to line out, keeping the game tied. Seattle had zero base runners from the sixth inning until Seth Smith’s double off the glove of Murphy at the right-field wall with two outs in the 10th inning. Robinson Cano then grounded out to end that threat. Nelson Cruz walked leading off the 11th and got to second one out later on a wild pitch. But Wellington Castillo grounded out and pinch-hitter Willie Bloomquist lined out to send the game onward. The Mariners have relied on the home run for nearly half its runs this season — 88 of its 183 runs, 48.1 percent, entering Sunday. That was the most in the major leagues.


B4

Fun ’n’ Advice

MONDAY, JUNE 1, 2015

Dilbert

Elders need good dental care, too

by Scott Adams

For Better or For Worse

Classic Doonesbury (1982)

Frank & Ernest

Garfield

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

DEAR ABBY: My mother has Alzheimer’s. She has been in a nursing home for 10 years. I feel sorry for her because she can’t verbalize that her teeth are killing her, but I can see the pain in her face and hear her grind her teeth. When I asked her if her teeth hurt, she rubbed my arm up and down, which I took to mean yes. I asked for her to be seen by a doctor, but at this time, we have to wait at least six weeks to see one. Something I would like people to know is there is little dental care available in nursing homes. Because of improved dental care by the general public, many more people arrive in nursing homes with their teeth intact than they used to. This sounds good, but the problem is that patients often refuse to allow anyone to assist them with oral hygiene. Eventually, they may become too frail to withstand the stress of surgery or other treatment that comes with failing teeth. As I understand it, not many dentists are willing to shoulder the extra challenge of caring for this “difficult” population or the red tape of getting paid for the care of patients in nursing homes. It is very important to take care of our teeth as we age. Once we or our loved one enters a nursing home, we need to continue their dental hygiene to the best of our abilities. We can help overworked staff by encouraging our loved ones to brush and floss. Take them out for a checkup every six months. I can’t stand a toothache for a day. I wouldn’t wish that pain on anyone, especially someone with Alzheimer’s who cannot ask for help. I wish I had been more aware. Please let the public know how important this is. Nancy C. in West Virginia

by Lynn Johnston

by G.B. Trudeau

by Bob and Tom Thaves

by Jim Davis

DEAR ABBY ple are keeping their teeth longer. Van Buren We now know that a healthy mouth is important for good overall health, no matter what your age. In addition to dentists, there are now dental hygienists in many states who can provide care for people in nursing homes and homebound patients. Some specialize in treating the developmentally disabled and “difficult” populations. Specially licensed dental hygienists can provide services outside of the dental office in the states that allow it, and can refer the patient to a dentist for further service. In the United States, individual states determine the scope of practice for providers, which includes what types of services dental hygienists may provide in that state. Several states are currently working to expand their oral care workforce and improve access to care — in part to meet the growing aging population who are retaining their teeth. In West Virginia, dental hygienists are permitted to deliver care in nursing homes and a variety of other settings. If you have additional questions, the American Dental Hygienists’ Association (adha.org) can provide further state-specific information on this subject.

Abigail

________ 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.

Dear Nancy: As you noted, peo-

The Last Word in Astrology ❘ Red and Rover

Rose is Rose

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Don’t overspend. Be selective regarding the people you hang out with. Negativity will influence the way you do things as well as your attitude. Keep in mind that if you are positive and fun to be with, you’ll get a good response. 3 stars

by Brian Basset

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Emotional issues will surface. You can’t avoid the inevitable. Face personal and partnership matters head-on and put them behind you so you can move forward with peace of mind. Take advantage of a chance to get ahead. 3 stars

by Pat Brady and Don Wimmer

by Hank Ketcham

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Someone will give you reasons to put your guard up. Don’t take part in useless arguments. Take on the projects and hobbies that you will get the most out of. Gravitate toward the people you love and avoid those who are demanding or negative. 4 stars

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): An opportunity is apparent. Buying or selling investments, property or possessions will bring high returns. A change in the way you live will help to stabilize your life. Keep your personal aspirations a secret for now. 3 stars CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Go over all the information you have collected. You are likely to discover a good reason not to make a snap decision. An important relationship needs a little tender loving care. Enjoy the moment and love the one you are with. 3 stars

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): You are in the LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. driver’s seat. Take hold of 22): Visit a friend or conwhatever situation you face nect with someone who has and turn it into a winning something interesting to enterprise. Making positive offer you philosophically, changes at home will add intellectually or emotionally. to your comfort and your Love is in the stars, and assets. Explore new possitalking about your dreams bilities, but avoid excess. will lead to plans you can 2 stars look forward to. 4 stars CANCER (June 21-July PISCES (Feb. 19-March 22): Stop taking on everySCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 20): Check out a deal that one else’s responsibilities 21): Don’t let money matintrigues you. It will turn out and start doing the things ters get you down. Not all to be different than that make you happy and your assumptions are accu- expected, and is possibly bring you satisfaction. Let rate. Refuse to waste time the ideal choice for you go of the past and concen- worrying. Put your time into given your personal situatrate on your family, pets getting a project or invest- tion. Love is on the rise, and friendships. A practical ing strategy off the ground, and romance will give a idea will solve a financial and your troubles will sub- boost to your happiness. 5 stars matter. 5 stars side. 3 stars GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Use your persuasive ability to get what you want. There is business to take care of, so don’t waste any time. Aggressive action will pay off and help you make a lasting impression on others. Stay focused and productive. 3 stars

ZITS ❘ by Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

Dennis the Menace

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): With a couple of changes, everything will fall into place. With discipline, you will make headway bringing about the changes that will improve your work, community and personal situations. Don’t let emotional issues slow you down or hold you back. 2 stars

by Eugenia Last

Pickles

by Brian Crane

The Family Circus

by Bil and Jeff Keane


Classified

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

MONDAY, JUNE 1, 2015 B5

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

SCRIPTURES ONLY Seeks Contacts 797-1536 or 417-6980

CNA: Ideally available for all shifts, including weekends. Apply in person at Park View Villas, 8th & G Streets, P.A.

3020 Found FOUND: Cat. Orange and white young male. West side of Por t Angeles. (360)452-5978 F O U N D : C AT. S m a l l , young, friendly black and white female, 5/26 near Laurel and 9th. (360)452-3799

FOUND: Maroon colored Liz Claiborne bag. (360)452-9594

3023 Lost LOST: Cat, 9 year old S i a m e s e. Fa i r c h i l d Heights Apt. area. (360)565-6376 LOST: Cat. Grey, long h a i r. H u n t R d . , P. A . 5/57, Chip REWARD (360)775-8256 LOST: Dog. Chocolate lab. Miller Peninsula, 5/26. REWARD. (360)461-6227

4026 Employment General

7 CEDARS CASINO FULL TIME SYSTEM ADMINISTRATOR LEVEL 1

7 Cedars Resor t is now hiring for the following positions: Busser/Host, Cocktail Server, Cook, Deli/Espresso Cashier, Groc e r y C a s h i e r, D i s h wa s h e r, G r o u n d s Ke e p e r, L i n e C o o k , Prep Cook, Pro Shop Team Member, Food and Beverage Ser vers, System Administrator I, Table Games Dealer, Valet Attend a n t . Fo r m o r e i n fo and to apply online, please visit our website at. www.7cedarsresort.com 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@peninsuladailynews.com. NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE. BAKER: Long term, experienced, apply in person at Chimacum Cafe, 9253 Rhody Dr., Chimacum.

The Department of Corrections is seeking a highly motivated & qualified individual for the per manent position of Fiscal Technician 2 at Clallam Bay Corrections C e n t e r. Pay s t a r t s a t $2,241 Monthly, plus full benefits. Apply online. Closes 6/14/2015 www.careers.wa.gov.

4080 Employment Wanted

All your lawn care needs. Mowing, edging, pruning, hauling. Reasonable rates. (360)683-7702 CAREGIVER 3 0 Ye a r s ex p e r i e n c e, available for private in home health care, weekdays. (360)797-1247 Shipping and Warehouse Operations Clerk Multi carrier shipping experience preferred, highly organized with strong problem solving skills, Strong attention to details, working knowledge of ERP systems, ability to lift over 50 lbs. Full-time, Monday - Fr iday 7-3:30 p.m. Medical / Dental / Vision / Retirement benefits. LOVE OF FISHING A HUGE PLUS Resume accepted by email ONLY: employment@fishpacbay.com

PRIVATE HOME: Priva t e h o m e , p r i va t e room, 35 yrs experience, 24 hour loving care for senior lady. (360)461-9804.

Delightful Home Corner lot with southfacing deck. 3 Br., 2 ba and office. Formal LR + den. Kitchen with abundant counter and cabinet space. Oversized garage with cabinets, loft space, telephone and half BA. Boat/RV park105 Homes for Sale ing. MLS#290687/772671 Clallam County $184,000 Carolyn & Robert .26 Acre Lot! Dodds 3 B r. , 2 b a r a m b l e r, Windermere 1,998 sf. open concept Real Estate home loaded with speSequim East c i a l fe a t u r e s ! L o ve l y kitchen has beautiful Great Location brick and tile work, gar- Beautiful 2 Br., 2 ba, den window and large home with an open floor pantry. Awesome master plan. Great kitchen with bath has gorgeous tile, island and pantry. Living jetted tub and double area with access to the headed open shower. patio and fenced in back Great room has stone yard. Large bedrooms, f i r e p l a c e a n d bu i l t - i n and attached 2 car gardesk. Covered patio has age. 8 skylights. Garage is MLS#282244 $160,000 heated, making it Tom Blore useable as a shop. 360-683-7814 MLS#290754 $234,900 PETER BLACK Brooke Nelson REAL ESTATE UPTOWN REALTY (360) 417-2812 GREAT MOUNTAIN VIEWS Centrally located one 1,897 sf., home convenlevel iently located between 3 Br., one level home Sequim and Por t Anwith large living room fea- geles on nearly a 1/2 turing a wood stove in- A c r e. S p a c i o u s O p e n sert, kitchen with wall ov- floor plan with vaulted en, plenty of cabinets for ceilings, skylights and a storage and access to wonderful country kitchthe private patio - great en. This house is ideal for summer bbqs and en- for enter taining. Large tertaining! Formal dining fenced back yard with a room with lots of natural deck and hot tub. Defilight through the large nite Must See! picture window. Three MLS#290596/767938 bright and cheery bed$259,900 rooms with large closets. Mark Macedo Home is heated by an (360) 477-9244 energy efficient heat TOWN & COUNTRY pump. Fully fenced in southern exposure back GREAT VIEW FOR yard is great for a large YOU garden. One car attached Top of the hill custom 4 garage. Br., 2.5 ba. house on a MLS#290977 $165,000 “shy” acre overlooking Kelly Johnson the city, the harbor, the (360) 477-5876 spit, and beyond featurWINDERMERE ing wide hallways/doors PORT ANGELES and an open, flowing floor plan. Includes boCharacter, Quality and nus room that could be Views ? office, gym, storage or Built in 1949, 2 Br., 1.5 you name it. But you ba., 1,116 sf main living m ay n eve r l e ave t h i s area, 570 sf basement awesome deck. l ev e l f i n i s h e d , 1 - c a r MLS#290759 $539,000 basement garage, new Dick Pilling vinyl windows, newer UPTOWN REALTY roof, updates to plumb(360) 417-2811 ing and electric, nice interior design! Here’s the One! MLS#290989$179,000 Great sight built 2007 Team Thomsen home in desirable DiaUPTOWN REALTY mond Point, with addi(360) 808-0979 tional out buildings, half acre of elbow room and Cozy 3-bedroom community features inbungalow cluding 3 private beachWith fireside library and es. Wood floors, great views of Victoria. Near room ties in the kitchen, Olympic National Park dining and family room. headquarters and trails. Great price, great time! Tucked mid-block, away MLS#282390/724772 from the street. Very pri$234,500 vate organic yard and Chuck Murphy garden retreat, deerWindermere fe n c e d w i t h d e ck a n d Real Estate shed. “Back to Eden” low Sequim East maintenance organic vegetable and berry garPool Party d e n , r e s i s t s w e e d s , Invite your friends over pests, drought and con- to enjoy this home and tinually makes its own pool just in time for sumcompost tea. mer! Nice 3 Br., 2 ba MLS#291030 $167,500 one story home lies on Quint Boe 2.19 acres. There is a (360) 457-0456 large attached garage WINDERMERE plus a big three bay pole PORT ANGELES barn. The yard is fenced and has many fruit tree Need A 3 BR and a garden area. and A Den? There are new laminate A lot of house for the wood floors and carpet m o n ey. B u i l t i n 1 9 9 9 throughout the house. with 1,782 sf. Open flow Kitchen has had recent plan into kitchen, eating upgrades such as new area, and great room. cabinetr y and counter Very nice deck off the tops. This home is close back and raised garden to town, the Discovery beds. Two outbuildings. Trail and all the shopMLS#290716/773661 ping in Sequim! $179,900 MLS#290854 $379,000 Sheryl Burley Ed Sumpter Windermere Blue Sky Real Estate Real Estate Sequim Sequim East 360-683-3900

Young Couple Early 60’s available for seasonal cleanup, weeding, trimming, mulching & moss removal. We specialize For further information in complete garden resp l e a s e c a l l L a u r a a t torations. Excellent ref(360)963-3208 EOE erences. 457-1213

WANTED: Line cooks, bar tenders and dishwashers, exper ienced DENTAL HYGIENIST 8-5p.m., Tue. and Wed. only. Apply in person: Please contact 360-437- H2O 222 N. Lincoln St. 9392 ask for Beth or Port Angeles. email resume to: pldentistry@gmail.com WELDER / FABRICATOR DRIVING ROUTES For in shop, structural Clean driving record, lift- steel and ornamental ing involved. Apply in s t e e l f a b r i c a t o r i n person: Olympic Springs Carlsborg, WA. Self253 Business Park Loop s t a r t e r a n d a bl e t o Carlsborg, WA 98324. work unsuper vised when required. Must have a valid driver’s liFRONT DESK: Kristin cense and good drivManwaring Insurance ing record. Must be (KMi) seeks FT Front detail oriented. Good Desk/Office Coordinacommunication skills tor for fast- paced enrequired. Experience vironment. Successful required. FT. Wages candidate is outgoing, DOE. Email resume to has proven customer K a t e @ A l l fo r m We l d service, phone, coming.com or fax to puter/data entry, and (360)681-4465. No excellent multi-tasking phone calls. skills; works well independently and as part of a team. Prior benefit i n s u r a n c e ex p p r e - 4040 Employment Media ferred. Benefits available. Apply at fullcirclehr.com. EOE LIFESTYLES EDITOR The Daily World at AberHOUSEKEEPERS: Part d e e n , Wa s h . , h a s a n Time positions. Apply in opening for a Lifestyles person: Sequim Quality editor. We are looking Inn, 134 River Rd. Se- for someone who has an eye for design and a quim. knack for finding the stoM E D I C A L BAC K O F - ries and trends that shed F I C E . P r i m a r y c a r e . light on what life is like in Send resume to: Robert our community. The secL . S c o t t , M D, 8 1 4 S. tion also includes ar ts Peabody, Port Angeles, and entertainment news. The ideal candidate will WA 98362. have a bright, lively writPAINTER: Local body ing style, a talent for soshop looking for experi- cial media and be skilled enced painter, FT, paid in InDesign. Magazine on commission. Send re- experience would also be a plus. Aberdeen is sume to: on the Washington Peninsula Daily News Coast, an hour from the PDN#234/Painter Port Angeles, WA 98362 Olympic Rain Forest and two hours from Seattle. P L U M B E R : J o u r n e y - This is a full-time posim a n / r e s i d e n t i a l l eve l tion. Benefits include, c o n s t r u c t i o n e x p . a but are not limited to, must. (360)683-8336. paid vacation, medical, vision, dental and life insurance and a 401(K) p l a n w i t h a c o m p a ny match. Send a cover letter, resume and writing and design samples to: Program Specialist 4 hr@soundpublishing.com Chemical Dependency P e r m a n e n t p o s i t i o n To learn more about us, please visit us on the available now at Clallam web at www.soundpuBay Corrections Center Salary: $3819-$5010 mo blishing.com. The Daily Plus Benefits. Apply on- World is an equal opportunity employer. line: www.careers.wa.gov. For further information please call Laura at (360)963-3208 EOE

A Plus Lawn Ser vice. Comprehensive service including thatching and edging with professional Results. Here today here t o m o r r ow. B o o k n ow. Senior Discounts. P A only. Local call (360) 808-2146

Mowing Lawns, lots and fields. Trimming, pruning of shrubs and trees. Landscape maintenance, pressure washing, light hauling and more. Free quotes. Tom 360-4607766. License: bizybbl868ma

Come see the incredible v i ew s f r o m t h i s h i g h bank waterfront home with over 2,400 sf. of living space. This triplewide manufactured home has had a complete remodel inside and out. New roof, vinyl siding and garage door on the outside, to laminate flooring, new cabinetry and ceramic tile in bathrooms, granite tops in kitchen and new paint throughout on the inside. Plus much more. Great vacation rental history. Turn-key opportunity, or ye a r r o u n d l i v i n g fo r yourself. MLS#290699 $359,900 Larry Cross John L. Scott Real Estate (360)460-4300

One of a kind recreational lakefront property on the nor thside of ever popular Lake Crescent. The home is large enough to be an all season dwelling. 50’ of water front, dock, and a 2 car detached garage. 3 Br., 1.5 ba, fireplace, greatroom concept. .62 acres MLS#271906 $749,000 Margaret Womack (360)461-0500 Remax Evergreen Price Improvement! High quality 2,577 sf., 3 Br., 3 ba home with 3 car garage on 1.20 water and mountain view acres located between Port Angeles & Sequim. Spacious kitchen with cherr y wood cabinets, Corian counter tops, wet bar, wine storage, convection wall oven and beautiful propane fireplace. 2nd propane fireplace in living room. Master bedroom has walk-in closet; master bathroom has walk-in shower. Gorgeous landscaped yard with underground sprinkler! MLS#290223 $529,000 Jean Irvine UPTOWN REALTY (360) 417-2797

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

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

105 Homes for Sale 505 Rental Houses 683 Rooms to Rent Clallam County Roomshares Clallam County Three bedroom gem Spacious living room with large windows and lots of natural light and hardwood floors. Kitchen with lots of cabinets for storage, cozy dining room with built ins, 3 bright and cheer y bedrooms with hardwood floors. Entire home freshly painted inside and out. Detached two car garage with large wor kshop and storage loft. Plenty of room to p a r k a n RV o r b o a t . Large, southern exposure back yard with mountain views. MLS#290959 $159,000 Kelly Johnson (360) 477-5876 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES

Ready for Dream Home Beautiful property with well and 4 Br., septic installed. Cleared and stumped. Ideal horse proper ty with a little work. Agnew Irrigation r uns along the entire souther n boundar y of the proper ty. Potential saltwater view from a multistory structure MLS#282324/720814 $215,000 Carolyn & Robert Dodds (360)460-9248 Windermere Warm and Real Estate Cozy Cottage Sequim East Custom home built in 2000. Three bedrooms See It Today! and two full bathrooms. This beautiful, double Freshly painted with nice wide home sits amidst quality carpet. This lovee a g l e s a n d o s p r e y, ly home is situated on whales and otters, deer near ly a quar ter acre and fox. At night you can with great privacy and a s e e n o t o n l y b r i l l i a n t cedar deck that is perstars, you can see the fe c t fo r s u m m e r b a r Milky Way. Beach rights, beques. a community airfield and $124,900 a sense of peaceful seJim Hardie clusion within the comU-$ave Real Estate munity known as Dia775-7146 mond Point. It all adds up to a place you’ll love to Water & Mt. View call your own -- and at a 2 B r. , 2 . 7 5 b a , O ve r price that makes it all 1,700 sf., recently rep o s s i bl e. Pe r h a p s t h e modeled, newly installed best deal on the market! trex deck, enjoy watchCall your Realtor and see i n g t h e s h i p s g o by, it today! kitchenette and living MLS#281917 $228,000 area downstairs Doc Reiss MLS#790235/290962 (360) 461-0613 $239,000 WINDERMERE TEAM SCHMIDT PORT ANGELES (360) 460-0331 WINDERMERE Sherwood Village SUNLAND Well kept condo, bedrooms on upper level, 311 For Sale adjacent to greenbelt, enclosed patio, 2 park- Manufactured Homes ing spots MLS#771251/290647 MOBILE: Sequim older $100,000 nice double wide, quiet Deb Kahle senior park. Master bed(360) 683-6880 room and bath with WINDERMERE whirlpool, small bedroom SUNLAND with bath and walk-in shower. Corner lot with Spacious Home nice back yard, trees, All on one level, 4 Br., 4 flowers, bluebirds and ba on 2+ park like acres happiness. Must see. with a pond and gazebo. $24,500/obo. Large outbuilding / shop (719)382-8356 with overhead door. Private, secluded, but close 505 Rental Houses in. Take a look. MLS#290308/749482 Clallam County $449,500 Heidi Hansen (360)477-5322 Properties by Windermere Inc. Real Estate Sequim East Unbeatable attention to detail Remarkable craftsmanship in this quality built home in Freshwater Bay. Kitchen with porcelain tile counter tops, Granite Island with breakfast bar and stainless steel appliances. Master suite with water view, walk in tile shower and double sinks. Two guest suites with attached bathrooms featuri n g ve s s e l s i n k s a n d stone countertops. Deck off of dining room and all three bedrooms and 360 view observatory to enjoy the beautiful sunrises and sunsets. Just minutes to the public boat launch, kayaking and fishing. MLS#290967 $575,000 Kelly Johnson (360) 477-5876 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES

E-MAIL:

RENTALS AVAILABLE COMMERCIAL HOMES APARTMENTS

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

(360)

417-2810

HOUSES/APT IN PORT ANGELES A 1BD/1BA ........$575/M A 2BD/1BA ........$675/M H 1/1 DUPLEX ...$600/M A 2/1.5 TWNHS $750/M H 2BD/1BA ........$775/M H 2/1 JOYCE .....$775/M A 2/1.5 TWNHS .$825/M H 2/1 JOYCE .....$900/M H 2BD/2BA ......$1100/M H 3BD/2BA ......$1100/M COMPLETE LIST @ 551281336

Tier 1 suppor t, with potential for responsibility and skills growth. Responsible fo r w o r k i n g c l o s e l y with tier 2 and 3 suppor t to resolve computer related issues. Assists in maintaining n e t w o r ke d s y s t e m s and services, and ensures ser vice levels are sustained. System installation, maintenance, troubleshooting, and administration are the core functions of this position. Manage systems and provide appropriate support to resolve identified problems, capture systems requirements, and follow through on change requests. If interested in applying, submit an application on our website at www.7cedarsresort .com Native American preference for qualified candidates.

DENTAL HYGENIEST Part-time. Send resume: forksfamily dental@gmail.com

Support Staff To wor k with adults w i t h d eve l o p m e n t a l disabilities, no experience necessary, $10 hr. Apply in person at 1020 Caroline St. M-F 8-4 p.m.

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.

5000900

FOUND: Kitten about 6 months, short hair Tabby, in Gardiner, on Old School House Rd. (360)797-7655

Correctional Officer 1 Perm/On-call Positions available now at Clallam Bay Corrections Center and Olympic Corrections Center Pay s t a r t s a t $ 2 , 9 5 7 monthly, Plus full benefits. Closes 6/7/2015. Apply on-line: www.careers.wa.gov. For further information please call Laura at (360)963-3208 EOE.

PREP COOK: Apply in p e r s o n a t J o s e ’s Fa mous Salsa 126 East Washington St. Sequim.

1111 Caroline St. Port Angeles

Central PA: Upstairs 2 Br. 1 BA. No smoking, pets maybe. First / last / dep. $825/mo.(360)4575089 East PA: 3 br, 2 ba, SW view, updated, move-in ready, 1,768 sf., plus basement, 2-car garage, no yard work $1150./mo (360)808-3721

EAST P.A.: Small 1 Br., trailer. $550 mo., plus deposits. 457-9844 or 460-4968

Properties by

Inc.

RENTALS AVAILABLE COMMERCIAL HOMES APARTMENTS

452-1326

OFFICE FOR RENT O f f i c e i n d ow n t ow n Sequim Gazette building for sub-lease. 448-sq-foot, 2nd floor office for $500 a month. Perfect for accountant or other professional. Shared downstairs conference room, restroom. Contact John Brewer, publisher, (360)417-3500.

6025 Building Materials G A R AG E D O O R : 8’x8’, 1 year old, 2” insulation, row of windows, new hardware. $500. (360)683-8810.

REMODELING MATERIALS: 3 bath sinks with faucets $35/each. 2 matching Kohler toilets $50/each. Thermador Electr ic drop-in down SEQ: 2 br., 1 bath mo- draft stove $300. All in bile, newly renovated, excellent condition. Pics c a r p o r t , s h e d , n o available. (360)385-9986 smoke/pets. $700. RESIDENTIAL BOILER (360)535-3592 Burnham, low pressure, propane fired, 84,000 BTU/Hr. $400/obo. 605 Apartments (360)531-2418. P.A.: 2 Br. 1 bath, carpor t, no smoking, no pets. $750.+ dep. (360)457-7012.

Clallam County

6042 Exercise Equipment

Properties by

Inc.

RENTALS AVAILABLE COMMERCIAL HOMES

INVERSION TABLE: IronMan Atis 4000. Like new heavy duty. $200. (360)417-2699

MISC: Treadmill $150. Pilates chair $25. Gazelle $50. Weight Bench $25. Insanity DVD’s $50. (360)477-1194

APARTMENTS

6045 Farm Fencing & Equipment

452-1326

BALER: New Holland 575, 14 x 18. All options, exc. cond. $12,500/obo. (360)732-4545

6050 Firearms & Ammunition

452-1326

J OY C E : W a t e r f r o n t , next to our home, 2 Br., 2 ba, all utilities, satellite T V ex c e p t p h o n e, n o pets, no smoking. Secluded. $725. mo., $725. dep., 1 yr. lease, avail 7/1. (360)928-3109.

1163 Commercial Rentals

PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM

AIDE: Physical Therapy clinic seeking part time aide. See Therapeuticassociates.com for job description and application.

PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM

RETIRED: Single male. 73, 5’7” 160Lbs. Non s m o ke r, n o n d r i n ke r. Looking for lady friend in Port Angeles area. (360)477-6972

PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM

Employment 4026 Employment 4080 Employment 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 3010 Announcements 4026 General General Wanted Clallam County Clallam County

P.A.: Attractive, spacious 1 Br., $570, 2 Br., $665. New carpet, vert blinds, pvt patio, updated appliances, laundr y r ms, views, on-site mgr. Ask about our current discount. www.olympicsquare.com 457-7200.

GUNS: Springfield XDM, 40 cal, high cap. $550. Springfield XDM, 9 mm, high cap. $550. Springfield XDS, 45 cal, 3.3 with laser. $550. Never been fired. (206)348-3776.

RIFLE: Ruger 10-22, stainless, Bi-Centenial e d i t i o n , n e w i n b ox . $295. (360)452-4803


Classified

B6 MONDAY, JUNE 1, 2015

DOWN 1 Admonish 2 Paddled boat 3 Group for ones in labor? 4 Brilliant bunch 5 Vehicle maintenance

By DAVID OUELLET HOW TO PLAY: All the words listed below appear in the puzzle –– horizontally, vertically, diagonally, even backward. Find them and CIRCLE THEIR LETTERS ONLY. DO NOT CIRCLE THE WORD. The leftover letters spell the Wonderword. CLOGGED SINKS Solution: 7 letters

H S U R B F D D S U C T I O N 6 Canyonlands National Park site 7 Exiled Shah Mohammed __ Pahlavi 8 Edit, as text 9 Come to light 10 Jeff Lynne’s symphonic rock gp. 11 Morning TV host 12 “Leggo my __!” 13 Actress Cannon 21 Singer Brickell married to Paul Simon 22 Teri of “Mr. Mom” 26 Former California NFLer 28 Secure shoelace feature 29 Scatter 31 Part of LPGA: Abbr. 32 Collarless shirt 33 Move like a moth 34 Autodialed campaign messages 35 Juan’s January 36 Old Norse poetic work 37 Chicago transit trains

6/1/15

Friday’s Puzzle Solved Saturday’s Puzzle Solved

©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.

VOSEH ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

41 Disqualifies (oneself), judicially 42 “You have __”: obstetrician’s news 43 Old laundrysqueezing device 44 How some data is backed up 48 Cloister 50 Letter-shaped girders

MISC: Dogloo XL Dog house $50. Kelty Kids Backpack Carrier $40 and many more on PDN online. (360)477-1194.

LAWNMOWER: Craftsman 2014, 42”, 17.5 hp, auto trans., like new. $1,100. (360)509-4894.

MOTORHOME: ‘85 Class C, 3,000k mi on motor and tires. $3,000 obo. (360)808-1134

TRAVEL TRAILER: ‘06 , Thor , Dutchmen/Rainier model 18/SC trailer for sale , good condition please contact us at (360)732-4271

6075 Heavy Equipment MISC: John Deere 550G dozer, wide track, wide bl a d e, $ 1 5 , 0 0 0 . J o h n Deere 490E excavator, w i d e t r a ck , $ 2 2 , 0 0 0 . JCB 214S backhoe, extendahoe, 3 buckets and for ks, $20,000. All in good working condition. (360)460-4081

TERRA TRIKE: Model “Path” Almost new, with H o n d a m o t o r. $ 1 , 0 0 0 obo. (360)683-9667 TWO RECUMBENT TRIKES:Sun model SXS. $750. Lightfoot G r e e n w a y. $ 1 0 0 0 . Both excellent condition. (360)683-8810.

6125 Tools

W E E D E AT E R : S t i h l , Straight shaft, 2 cycle. Nearly new and seldom used. $150. P.T. (360)379-2690

8183 Garage Sales PA - East WA N T E D : Q u a l i t y items in good condition for garage sale June 19-20. Proceeds b e n e f i t WAG , l o c a l dog rescue. Accepting kitchen, household items, linens furniture, garden/outdoor furniture etc. Call to arrange pick up (360)683-0932

B U L L : W h i t e Fa c e / Limousin approx. 1 year old. Located on the east side of Sequim. (360)683-2304

7035 General Pets

MISC: Band saw, 17” 2 blades, fence with foot brake. $600. Bowl lathe will turn up to 72”, with tools and accessories. DOWNSIZING: Oak ta- $5,000. Burl Planer, any E N G L I S H M A S T I F F b l e a n d c h a i r s , $ 2 5 . size burls. $2,000. Puppies. $550 and up. (360)457-7129 Large area rug, $35. House raised with our Book shelves, white, tall, family, variety of colors. $ 2 5 . W i c k e r b o o k TO O L S : 2 0 ” 4 k n i f e L a r g e s w e e t g e n t l e s h e l ve s, $ 3 5 . W i cke r p l a n e r, $ 8 0 0 . P l u n g e giants. Call to see our plant stand, $25. Lots of router, $195. 2 routers, b i g c u t e b a b i e s. W i l l books, $1-$3. And other $100/ea. Carbide saw h a v e 1 s t s h o t s a n d blades, $10 and up. 10” worming. 360.562.1584 things! (360)850-8896 Table saw, $450. 180’ of MISC: Thomsonville Chi- Maple kiln dried, no de- HORSE: Beautiful 14 H, na Cabinet, $1,200. Chi- fects. $3 a board foot. Aribian Mare, born 4/96. na, set of 12, Spring Val- Complete Shop smith exp. rider. $500. l e y p a t t e r n , $ 8 0 0 . with band saw, biscuit (360)600-1817 T h o m s o n v i l l e H u t c h , cutter, sanding belt and misc. tools, $3,000. Call $500. (360)461-0743 fo r m o r e i n fo r m a t i o n . S O FA B E D : Q u e e n Kitchen cabinets (Free). (360)582-1215 size, with chaise, stor-

6140 Wanted & Trades

6100 Misc. Merchandise

WANTED: 2 props. 115 to 130 hp Yamaha prop. 17 pitch. Also prop. for 9.9 Yamaha. (360)683-8668

JUST TOO CUTE MINIAU S S I E P U P P I E S : r e a d y o n Ju n e 1 7 . 6 mer les, 4 black tr is. ASDR registrable,shots, dewormed, well socialized on our hobby farm. WANTED: Honda mini ( 3 6 0 ) 3 8 5 - 1 9 8 1 o r 70cc or 50cc trail bike. 500emil@gmail.com (360)457-0814 KITTENS: Siamese/PerWANTED: Old tools and s i a n , l o n g h a i r, bl u e hand planes. Call Les at point. $100. (360)385-0822 (360)461-6472.

MISC: Wood end table, $20. 2 Tier table, $20. (2) 5x7 area rugs, $35 e a . S o ny C D / A M / F M , $40. Magic Chef upright freezer, $150. 5’ bookcase, $15. (5) folding chairs, $25. 21” wheeled bag, $35. Panasonic microwave, $100. 5 gallon WANTED: Riding lawnaquarium, $5. Igloo ice mowers, working or not. Will pickup for free. chest, $35. Kenny (360)775-9779 (360)681-3561

RV: ‘91 Toyota 21’.V-6, C r u i s e c o n t r o l , ove r drive, 90K miles. $9,900. (360)477-4295 RV: ‘ 9 3 W i n n e b a g o. Class A, very good condition, 88k mi., 454 eng., lots of storage, full bedroom, high rise toilet, self leveling jacks. $18,000. (360)457-3979

7025 Farm Animals & Livestock

6080 Home Furnishings

a g e, n e a r n ew, c o m fortable, light brown fabric. $300 you haul. (360)477-9972

MOTORHOME: Class A, Damon ‘95 Intruder. 34’, Diesel 230 Cummins turboed after cool, with 6 speed Allison, Oshgosh f ra m e, 8 0 k m i l e s, n o slides, plus more! $21,500/obo. (360)683-8142

6/1/15

51 Upshot of poor service 52 “Duck, duck” follower 53 Maneuvered among moguls 54 Bogus offer 55 Flag holder 57 Ref. works that take up a lot of shelf space 58 Try to convince 60 Familia member

SWORD: Naval Officer Ceremonial Sword with scabbard and carrying belt, exc. cond. Made in 1 9 6 5 To l e d o S p a i n . $350. (360)681-4916.

POOL TABLE: Olhausen. 5.5 x 8.5 ft, good condition. You transport. $600. (360)461-1598.

O A A H O B C E T S A W C W I

S H U T O T E K C U B B H A K

A O T G S P A C E A P R L T T

Join us on Facebook

L O D E E P E R T R O O T E R

B S G A B R M H B B U G S R S

S D I U Q I L L A I R E T A M 6/1

Auger, Bags, Bath, Borax, Bottom, Brush, Bucket, Bugs, Cables, Clamp, Cleanser, Clear, Cloth, Debris, Deeper, Dirt, Dislodge, Disposal, Drain, Drill, Fitting, Food, Gloves, Hair, Hand, Kitchen, Liquids, Material, Metal, Nut, Objects, Obstruction, Pipe, Pour, Rooter, Sewer, Sink, Snake, Soda, Space, Stuck, Suction, Tack, Tools, Towel, Trap, Waste, Water, Wire, Wrench Yesterday’s Answer: Seabird

BRITO

9832 Tents & Travel Trailers

FIREWOOD: $179 delivered Sequim-P.A. True cord. 3 cord special $499. Gilbert, 808-3293 www.portangeles firewood.com

www.wonderword.com

P N L I T M S E G C E K N S T

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

9820 Motorhomes

CAMP GEAR: Tent with ground cover REI trail dome-2, mattress, 2, inflatable, inflator pump, 12 vdc, camp stove, 2 b u r n e r, p r o p a n e . I n flatable PFD adult, never used. $200 Cash, firm, no par tials. (360)6836311. Leave message if no answer.

S D P R R O E T J D R A E L C

by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

6135 Yard & Garden

6115 Sporting Goods

I R E W E S L T R B O V R O H

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

6100 Misc. Merchandise

6055 Firewood, Fuel & Stoves

P I P D W I R E C K ‫ ګ‬ N B U ‫ ګ‬ U N R T P T I ‫ ګ‬ O D A S R T N R M A L C E G X A A N L U L I C O L T N L I T S W R I T O D F N E

© 2015 Universal Uclick

By Gail Grabowski and Bruce Venzke

6050 Firearms & Ammunition

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

E K A N S O I P R L L E W O T

TUPEYD

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

Answer here: Yesterday's

9050 Marine Miscellaneous

B OAT: G l a s s p l y 1 7 ’ , good cond., excellent fishing and crabbing setup, great running 90hp Yamaha and 15hp Evinrude elec star t, power tilt, new pot puller with T R AV E L T R A I L E R : pots. 4,800. Lance, ‘11 Model 2285, (360)775-4082 28’ single slide-out, A/C, 18’ power awning, new BOAT: Glassply, 18’, 90 t i r e s, m i c r owave, T V, hp ENV. 15 hp. kicker, many other upgrades. ready to fish. $4,700. $18,000. Contact info: (360)808-4692 nkarr43@gmail.com or (435)-656-2093 BOAT HOUSE: 20’x36’

9802 5th Wheels

long, P.A. $2,500/obo. 457-6107 or 775-4821

BOAT: Searay, 18’, fun 5TH WHEEL: Alpenlite, family boat. $6,500. ‘83, 19’ well maintained, ( 3 6 0 ) 4 5 7 - 3 7 4 3 o r e v e r y t h i n g w o r k s . (360)460-0862 $2,700. (808)-895-5634 BOAT: Tollycraft, ‘77, 26’ Sedan, well 9808 Campers & e q u i p p e d a n d m a i n Canopies tained classic, trailer, dingy and more. See at 1 5 1 8 W. 1 1 t h a l l e y. $20,000/obo. (360)457-9162

(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: BOGUS FAULT APIECE GLANCE Answer: He stole second and now led the league in steals which pleased his — FANBASE

Automobiles 9292 Automobiles 9817 Motorcycles 9180 Classics & Collect. Others SUZUKI: ‘00 600 Katana. 5k ml. $2,200. (707)241-5977 SUZUKI: ‘96, 1400 Special Edition, lots of chrome beautiful bike. $2,500. (360)457-6540 or (360)452-644. FORD: 1950 Original Convertible. Beige interiSUZUKI BANDIT: ‘01 or and top on burgundy 1200S, 15K ml., nice. restoration featured in $2,500. Sequim. B u l b H o r n m a g a z i n e. (360)683-8183 Appeared in ads ran by YAMAHA: ‘05 Yamaha Bon Marche. MechaniY Z 1 2 5 , r u n s g r e a t . cally sound and clean. Owner restored. $1,300 (360)461-9054 $29,500. (360)775-7520 or (360)457-3161.

9180 Automobiles Classics & Collect.

GMC: ‘71 Stepside pick up. Restored, 350 enB M W : ‘ 0 7 Z 4 3 . 0 S I gine, 4 speed manual, R o a d s t e r. 4 7 K m i l e s, New tires and wheels. w e l l m a i n t a i n e d , l i ke Perfect paint and bed. For sale $17,500 obo or new. $20,000. trade for Rialta/Chinook (360)477-4573 RV or late model conver table. 452-5891 or (206)618-5268.

TENT TRAILER: Coachman ‘11 Clipper 126 Spor t. Pop up, Queen bed on each end. Fr idge, stove, stereo, furnace, hot water heater, excellent condition. Ve r y l i t t l e u s e. Ta bl e with bench seats, sofa and table that folds into bed. Must see to appreciate! $6,500. Call (360)640-2574 or (360)640-0403.

HARLEY: ‘06 Custom Deluxe. 25K miles. Comes with extras: rear seat, windshield, sissy bar. New tires. Harley Custom Paint #123 of 150. Immaculate condiTRAILER: Nash, ‘95 26’. tion. $12,500. Call Lil E x c e l l e n t c o n d . G a r - John Kartes. aged, no water damage. (360)460-5273 W I N N E B A G O : ‘ 8 7 Solar panels, 4 batteries, Chieftain, 27’, 37,250 sleeps 8. $5,200. H A R L E Y DAV I D S O N (360)670-8240 orig. miles, low hours on ‘03, Road King Classic, generator, nicely anniversary edition, exc. equipped kitchen, incond. with extras. 29K 9050 Marine cludes TV and microml., $8,500. Miscellaneous wave. New ver y com(360)775-0370 fortable queen mattress, BAYLINER: ‘79 Victoria, lots of extras. $10,500. 2 br cabin cruiser. Great HONDA: ‘02, 750 Shad(360)461-3088 cond. Newer engine and ow Spirt. $3,200./obo (360)477-4355 outdrive. New upholstry. $6,500 obo. 9832 Tents & H O N DA : ‘ 8 2 , A s p e n (360)912-4922 Travel Trailers Cade, 1100A., 60K ml. BOAT: ‘11, Grandy, 12’, Two tone brown, excellent condition, garaged. rowing / sailing skiff, built TRAILER: ‘90 Terry Resort. Sleeps 6, self con- by the boat school in $1,999. (360)301-2209. tained, everything works. 2011. Includes the full G r e a t h u n t i n g t ra i l e r. sailing package, with oars and trailer. Good $2500. Located in P.A. shape. $4,000/obo. (206)963-1203 (360)850-2234 TRAILER: ‘99 Sierra, BOAT: 19’ Fiberglass, 2 5 ’ , n e e d s T L C . trailer, 140 hp motor. $7,000/obo. 417-0803. $2,800. 683-3577

TRAILER: Coleman Niagara Tent Trailer. ‘01. Original owners. Good condition. Showers, toilet, stoves, fr idg, furLAB: Yellow, male 3yr nace, 2 king beds, slideold pure bread, free to out dining area, dual batgood home. Local Num- teries. $5900. ber (509)952-7258. (360)301-1990.

Motorcycle. 2007 Honda Rebel motorcycle CMX 250, Red, 300 miles $2,400. (360) 582-9725 TRAILER: ‘96 Shorelander, galvanized, fits MOTORCYCLE: ‘98 19-21’ boat, many new Honda, 1100 ST, Red. parts. $850/obo. (360)452-9829 (360)460-9285 BOAT: ‘96 Sea Doo Jet boat. $4,500. (360)452-3213

All Elec. NEV Neighborhood elec. Vehicle. 4 8 vo l t N e a r l y n ew batteries, good tires, up graded battery charger. charge with regular household current. Good for student, can’t go over 25 mph. For more details $3,000. (360)385-1583.

BMW: ‘99 Z3 convertible, man. trans., silver, 99.6k miles, exc.cond. $7600. (360)749-6633

JEEP: 1945 Willys Milit a r y. R e s t o r e d , n o t show. $10,000 obo. (360)928-3419

9817 Motorcycles WINNEBAGO ‘02, BRAVE, 33’,. Class A, Model 32V, Ford V10 gas engine with 2 slides, Onan Generator, rear camera, tow package, l eve l e r s. S l e e p s t wo, dinner for 4, party for six, 42.8K miles, $29,800. (407)435-8157 NO TEXTING

Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app

ACROSS 1 Scrubbing Bubbles target 5 Medical research goal 9 Faked on the ice 14 Walking aid 15 “Up and __!” 16 Somber verse 17 “What’s going __ there?” 18 Knock down, as an old house 19 Russian river 20 Coin-counting machine input 23 Chaney of horror 24 “Gracias” response 25 Dawdle 27 Annoys 30 Respond to with loud laughter 33 Capitalist principle 37 Tesla Motors cofounder __ Musk 38 Former California fort 39 Sanctuary recess 40 Feminist 45 Mall divisions 46 Say “Be careful” to 47 Chocolaty concoction 49 Cupcake toppings 54 Spot for a seaweed wrap 56 Yet-to-be-covered volume 59 Stable youngsters 61 Floating ice mass 62 Yours, in France 63 Kate’s sitcom friend 64 Jigsaw puzzler’s starting place 65 Upward slope 66 Southwestern plateaus 67 Belgian river 68 Zipped

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

BUICK: ‘66 Skylark Custom Convertible, Custom paint, Ready for Summer.$16,500. 683-3408 CADILLAC: ‘59 Sedan d e V i l l e. O r i g i n a l , l i censed and runs. $3,259. (360)461-0527 CHEV: ‘00 SS Camaro. Super Spor t package. New, wheels, tires, battery and license. Flow master exhaust system, T.top, black leather interior , cherry red. NEVER ABUSED! 81K ml. $6,000. (360)457-9331

FORD: 1929-30 Custom Model A Roadster. Perfect interior, very clean, r uns great on Nissan p i ck u p r u n n i n g g e a r. Owner sunny day driver only. Teal green, black fenders vinyl top. $28,500 Real eye catche r. ( 3 6 0 ) 7 7 5 - 7 5 2 0 o r (360)457-3161. FORD: 1929 Model A Roadster, full fendered, all mustang running gear. $18,500. 460-8610 F O R D : 1 9 5 2 P i c k u p, Mustang front, 302, C4, 9” Ford rearend. $8,500. 460-8610

CHEVY: ‘80 Monza 2+2. V-8, 350 c.i. engine, Alu m . m a n i fo l d , H o l l ey carb., alum. radiator and trans. cooler, A.T. floor console, Posi 3:08, 5 stud axels and hubs, front and rear sway bars, disc brakes, pwr. steerSEAT: ‘69, 600D. Made i n g . N ew Au t o M e t e r in Spain, Everything re- gauges, paint and tires. $3,800 (REDUCED). Lodone. $12,000/obo. cated in Quilcene, WA. (360)379-0593 Call Brad (360)774-0915. VW BEETLE: 1969 Conver tible. Must sell this 1 9 6 9 V W C o nve r t i bl e with a lots of spare parts, manuals and specialty VW tools. This is a restorable car, and none of the legendary charm of VW’s has been lost with this rig. The e n g i n e s t i l l r u n s, a l though the car hasn’t b e e n d r i ve n i n t h r e e CHEVY: Volt, ‘13, Black years. Title clean and with premium package. c l e a r ! N o t ra d e s j u s t Mint condition with less cash. If you are interest- than 5,800 miles on it! ed, I can provide LOTS Includes leather seats, more details and pic- navigation, ABS brakes, tures. $2,500. Please alloy wheels, automatic call (605)224-4334. temperature control, and much more. Still under $23,000. Call 9292 Automobiles warranty! 360-457-4635

Others

NISSAN: ‘04 Frontier Extended Cab SC 4X4 3.3L Supercharged v6, automatic, alloy wheels, good tires, tow package, matching canopy, Rhino liner, rear sliding window, keyless entry, pr ivacy glass, power windows, door locks, and mirrors, cruise control, tilt, air conditioning, cd stereo, dual front airbags. 123k ml. $9,995 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com

FORD: ‘92 Thunderbird. Low mileage. $2,000. (360)461-2809 or 4610533

H O N DA : ‘ 0 6 A c c o r d . Clean, low mileage. $10,000 OBO cash. (360)374-5060

P O N T I AC : 0 5 ’ V i b e . N ew t i r e s, t u n e d u p, runs great. 132k Mi. $3,200. (360)461-4898

SCION: ‘06, TC, 138K mi., new tires, brakes, alignmnet, sunroof. $5,800. (360)912-2727


Classified

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Momma

AMMUNITION: 22 long rifle, 100 round box. $15. (360)460-2260 APPAREL: Husqvarna, protective, brand new in box, paid $56.95, sell $25. (360)241-4821

CABINET: White shelved, utility, 71”x 18”x 19”. $55. (360)504-2568 CARPET CLEANER: Rug Doctor, professional, heavy duty, vibrating brush. $145. 670-3310

APPLE PEELER: Corer, CHAINSAW: Homelite chainsaw 2” blade with slicer. $13. 582-0180 case. $50. ART: (8) Framed color (949)232-3392 prints of antique trucks. CHAIR: Small log chair, $125. (360)457-7996 for r ustic home, ver y ART: Hiroshige wood c h a r m i n g , m u s t s e e . bl o ck p r i n t s. S eve r a l $200. (360)504-2112 available. Various birds. CHARGER: Marine$20 ea. (360)681-7579 Minnkota on-board salt BAR STOOLS: (2) Light battery charger. New. oak, high back, swivel. $75. (360)683-5284 $80 pair. (360)631-9211 CHIPPER: Shredder, BATH TUB: Dog bath 5 HP. $200.obo. tub, 60 pounds and un(360)452-3039 der, like new. $200. COMPUTER DESK: (360)774-2562 Glass top, black metal B AT H T U B : V i n t a g e , base. $35. 681-0528 claw foot. $200. COOLER: Colman lunch (360)461-0940 p a k p i c n i c c o o l e r, BED: (2) mattress, box- 8 1/2”x11”x8”. $5. spring, and frame set. (360)565-8110 $75. each set. COVER: Tonneau, GM (360)477-0351 short box. $50. BED: Queen bed set. (360)452-3039 $100. (360)477-4545 B E D : Tw i n b e d w i t h COWBOY BOOTS: Size book shelf headboard, 3 1 2 m e n s, b r ow n a n d drawers, some linens. beige, never worn. $25. $100. (360)452-2026 (360)797-1918 BENCH: Bedroom, floral cushion, brass legs, 48” X 18” X 20”. $59. (360)775-0855

DESK: Large antique, leather top desk. $60. (360)461-0940

DISHES: Gorgeous, fine BENCH GRINDER: Skil, porcelain, 4 place set2 - 6” wheels, good con- ting, by Wallace. $80. dition. $30. 681-3811 (360)504-2568 BIKE: Huffy, men’s 18 D I S H WA S H E R : Ke n pseed, new tires, 26”. more ultra wash, black, $40. 683-3197 portable. $45. (360)631-9211 BINDERS: 3-ring binders, (6) 1 1/2 in and 2 in. DOG HOUSE: For large $.50 ea. (360)565-8110 dog. $25. (360)457-9091 BOATS: (4) boats for sale, ver y low pr ices. D O G H O U S E : L a r g e $200. and under. dog house 4’x5’. $100. (360)461-6699 (360)457-7129 BOBBLEHEAD: Ken Griffey Jr., ‘13 Mariners Hall of Fame, new. $50. (360)457-5790

DOLL: 1968 Madame Alexander Cinderella, mint condition. $35. (360)683-7994

B O O K S : ( 7 8 ) L o u i s EQUIPMENT BAGS: (2) L’ A m o u r p a p e r b a ck s, New, Louisville Slugger. westerns. $30 all. $25. (360)452-1277 (360)683-9295 FERRET CAGE: With 2 BOOKS: Harry Potter, levels, 30”x18”x29”. $25 #1-7 set, Hardcover. (360)461-1379 $69. (360)775-0855 FISHING ROD: G-LooBOOKS: Ivan Doig com- mis, MBR 783c/6’, 6” plete collection, all 15 med heavy fast action. editions, $200. 681-7579 $200. (360)808-6430 BOWLING BALL: Bowl- F O O D P RO C E S S O R : ing ball and bag. $10. 12 cup, Quisinart, DVD (360)683-9553 shows you how. $95. (360)582-3025 BRIEFCASE: Computer l a p t o p c a r r y c a s e . F R E E : K i m bl e o r g a n (13X16) $20. with bench. 360-808-6430 (360)640-0556

GOLF BALLS: (1000) MISC: Woodworker inlay pre-hit balls. $75 for all. clear kit, turquoise nug(360)452-1277 gets, dye and metal dust. $35. 683-5284 GOLF: Cleaned, used MIXER: Kitchen Aid, tilt golf balls. $25. stand, 4.5 quart, model (360)457-2856 KSM150. $145 o.b.o. GOLF CLUBS. 7,8,9 (360)582-0180 irons; 4,5 hybrids; 3,5,9 w o o d s . $ 5 a n d $ 1 0 NETTING: Bird netting, commercial large roll, each. (360) 457-5790. never used. $75. GOLF CLUBS: Assort(360)683-0146 ed, dr iver, 3 wood, 5 wood,7 wood, pw,sw, $1 PAK-TOOL: Hand loader for .257 Roberts. $40. each. (360)457-2856 (360)379-6437 GOLF: Travel golf bag, canvas/nylon, used four PIANO: 1910 upr ight Schaeffer, dark wood, Utimes. $35. 681-4916 haul. $200. HATCH COVER: (Mari(360)928-3566 time) Oak, 55” X 27” P O RTA P OT T Y: WWII era. $75. S u i t a bl e fo r h o m e o r (360)452-7721 camping, like new. $50. HEATER: Eemax under (360)452-8760 counter heater. Model PRINTER: HP officejet EX95T, 240 volt, 150psi. all-in-one, printer, fax, $50. (360)461-3246 scan, copy, lightly used. HEATER: Oil filled ra- $75.obo. 457-3627 diator heater. $30. RECLINER: Black leath(949)232-3392 er, near new. $85. H OY E R L I F T: M a ke s (360)670-3310 great lawn mower eng i n e l i f t . N i c e s h a p e. RECLINER: Greenishgray, must see. $25. $175. (360)477-1716. (360)457-5335 HUTCH: Kitchen hutch, circa late 1950’s, maple. ROCKING CHAIR: Antique oak rocking chair $25. (360)681-2013 with padded seat. $150. L A M P S : ( 2 ) Ta b l e (360)504-2112 lamps, new, sand finish, ROOF RACK: Car top 28”. $75. (360)457-7996 roof rack. $20. 683-9289 LIGHTS: Compact fluor e s c e n t bu l b s fo r r e - RUG: Green, beige, with c e s s e d l i g h t i n g . N ew some brown leafy printnice. 7’ 9” x 10’ 9”. $50. $2.25 (360)452-7967. (360)-732-0346 M AT T R E S S PA D S M a g n e t i c . Q u e e n , RUGS: Assorted, door$125/obo. Full, $60/ obo. mats, 2 furry bathroom rugs, dark gray. $15. clean. (360)681-2915 (360)504-2160 MATTRESS TOPPER: Queen size memory for- R U G : S o m e b r o w n , beige, navy-print partly am, never used. $50. abstract flowerish, 5’ 3” x (360)582-9987 8’ 4”. $40. 360-732-0346 M E TA L D E T E C TO R : Whites 6000/di series 2. SCOOTER: Gogo electric scooter, needs bat$175. o.b.o. 452-6842 teries. $125. 452-3666 MIRROR: Decorative, S C R O L L S AW : 1 8 ” 58 1/2” x 46”. $100. Dremmel. $50. (360)457-5335 (360)452-5156 MISC: Cassette stereo recorders (5). $15.-$25. S E P T I C R I S E R L I D : One 12”, black. $10. each, very nice. (360)457-9091 (360)452-9685 M I S C : C D, DV D, a n d VHS players and recorders (8). $5.-$25. (360)452-9685 MISC: Dresser $100. (360)477-4545 MISC: Martial arts/boxing gear, MMA gloves, head gear, lots of stuff. $125. 460-2260

TABLE: Folding table, 6’, locking legs, heavy, like new. $39. 241-4821 TABLE: Kitchen table, oak trestle. $50. (360)808-1106 TABLE: Oval glass table 5’x4’ with a metal base. $60. (360)681-8808 TABLE: Planting table, 8’x3’x30”. $50. (360)683-0146 TA B L E S AW: C ra f t s man 10”. $90. (360)452-5156

Kelly Shea, Supt. Sequim School District No. 323 503 N. Sequim Avenue Sequim, WA 98382 Pub: June 1, 8, 2015 Legal No. 634958

TV: Sony, 21”. Not flat screen, excellent condition, used very little. $10. (360)683-7810 UNIFORM: WWII Shore Patrol, small. $200. (360)379-4134 VACUUM: Shark Infinity bagless vacuum cleaner. $100. (949)241-0371 VISE: Sears 3” clamp vise. Never used, in box. $18. (985)-290-5769. WADE FIGURINES Red Rose Tea. 73 pieces available at $1 ea. (360)452-7721 WALKERS: (2) blue 4 w h e e l , b a s ke t , s e a t , brakes. $30. 2-wheel + slider. $15. 681-0528 WALKER: With seat and brakes. $50. (360)683-6097 WAT E R F I LT E R : P u r water filter plus 5 refills, never used. $20. (360)797-1918 WATER SKIS: Obrien sport cut free carve water skis. $60. (949)241-0371 WELDER: Miller M225 AC arc welder, with cont a i n e r o f r o d s. G r e a t shape. $150. 683-9899

W E L D I N G K I T: F i r e p owe r O x y / A c e t y l e n e S E W I N G M A C H I N E : welding kit, great shape. $125. (360)683-9899 Heavy duty, leather ect. $35. (360)452-8760 WHEELS: Boat wheels. S H U T T E R S : Va r i o u s $20. (360)683-9289 sizes of louvered shutWINDOW FILM: Privacy ters. Prices from mirror, 3 ft by 15 ft. $12 $5.-$20. (360)457-7579 (360)452-6842 SOLDERING GUN: 100 WINDOW: White vinyl watt, excellent condition. 4’x4’ slider, two pane ar$20. (360)681-3811 gon. $50. 640-0556

Mail to: Bring your ads to: Peninsula Daily News Peninsula Daily News PO Box 1330 305 West 1st St., PA Port Angeles, WA 98362

MAZDA: ‘99 Miata, Custom leather seats, excellent condition. $7,300. (360)461-0929

NISSAN: ‘00 XTERRA SE 4X4 Sport Utility 3.3L V6, Automatic, alloy wheels, new tires, r u n n i n g b o a r d s, r o o f rack, power windows and door locks, air cond i t i o n i n g , c d s t e r e o, dual front airbags. only 123k ml. $6,995 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com S U BA R U : ‘ 0 3 B a j a AWD - 2.5L 4 Cyl., 5 S p e e d m a nu a l , a l l oy wheels, good tires, sunroof, roof rack, bed extender, keyless entr y, power windows, door locks, and mirrors, cruise control, tilt, air conditioning, cd stereo, dual front airbags. 89k ml. $12,995 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com

or FAX to: (360)417-3507 Email: classified@peninsuladailynews.com

NO PHONE CALLS

5A246724

HYUNDAI: ‘08 Sonata GLS Sedan - 2.4L 4 cylinder, automatic, new tires, power windows, door locks, and mirrors, cruise control, tilt, air conditioning, cd mp3 stereo with xm radio, dual front, side, and rear airbags. only 49k ml. $10,995 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com

9556 SUVs Others

9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices Clallam County Clallam County

No. 15-4-00176-1 TOYOTA: ‘07 Camry LE. HONDA: ‘97 Passpor t NONPROBATE NOTICE TO CREDITORS 67k miles. Ver y clean. LX, 113K ml., auto, 4 (RCW 11.42.030) $10,500. (360)681-8835. wd, sunroof, 1 owner, IN THE SUPERIOR COURT FOR THE ver y clean, recent STATE OF WASHINGTON maint., well maintained. IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF CLALLAM 9434 Pickup Trucks $4,500/obo. (360)301Estate of 2812 or (360)385-3647 Others MICHAEL DARWIN HICKS, Decedent. The Notice Agent named below has elected to give C H E V Y : ‘ 7 6 3 / 4 To n JEEP: ‘00 Grand Chero- notice to creditors of the above-named Decedent. pick-up GREAT ENGINE kee Limited, 131K ml., As of the date of the filing of a copy of this Notice New 454, carb, battery, loaded, garaged. nice with the Court, the Notice Agent has no knowledge radiator, fuel pump, tur- c o n d i t i o n . $ 5 , 0 0 0 . of any other person acting as Notice Agent or of the bo 400, short shaft. Must ( 3 6 0 ) 4 5 2 - 8 1 1 6 , a f t e r appointment of a Personal Representative of the t a k e e n t i r e t r u c k . 6pm or leave message. Decedent’s estate in the State of Washington. Ac$2,000/obo. Before 6pm cording to the records of the Court as are available JEEP: ‘01 Grand Chero- on the date of the filing of this Notice with the Court, (360)461-6870 kee LTD. 153k mi., ex a cause number regarding the Decedent has not CHEVY: ‘88, K1500, 4x4 cond. All service papers. been issued to any other Notice Agent and a PerPickup, 132K mi., well Black w/ bone interior. sonal Representative of the Decedent’s estate has m a i n t a i n e d 5 s p e e d . $5650 obo. (360)457- not been appointed. 4898 or (360)504-5633. $3,500. (360)600-1817. Any person having a claim against the Decedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by JEEP: ‘80 CJ5. Straight CHEVY: ‘94 Half Ton, any otherwise applicable statute of limitations, 6 e n g i n e, r u n s g o o d , present the claim in the manner as provided in Z71. $3000. good tires, new battery, RCW 11.42.070 by serving on or mailing to the No(360)452-4336 soft top. $3800 obo. tice Agent or the Notice Agent’s attorney at the ad(360)808-8445 DODGE: ‘93 Cummins. dress stated below a copy of the claim and filing the 2x4 with protech flatbed. original of the claim with the Court in which the NoJ E E P : ‘ 9 7 , W ra n g l e r, 135k mi. $12,000. tice Agent’s Declaration and Oath were filed. The Sahara. Low mileage, claim must be presented within the later of: (1) Thir(360)271-6521. r e c e n t e n g i n e w o r k . ty (30) days after the Notice Agent served or mailed N I S S A N : ‘ 1 1 Fr o n t i e r Some r ust, r uns well. the Notice to the creditor as provided under P/U, stick shift, 2 wheel R e m o v a b l e t o p a n d 11.42.020(2)(c); or (2) four (4) months after the drive, extended cab, 49K doors. Must sell. $2900. date of the first publication of the Notice. If the In Sequim. ml., $13,500. claim is not presented within this time frame, the (303)330-4801. (360)681-3561 claim if forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.42.050 and 11.42.606. this bar is efSATURN: ‘04 Vue, ABS, fective as to claims against both the Decedent’s 9556 SUVs 6 cyl. AWD. Ex. Cond. probate and nonprobate assets. 180k mi. Original owner. Others $3900 obo. (360)504- Date of first publication: May 24, 2015 2171 The Notice Agent declares under penalty of perjury pursuant to the laws of the State of Washington that the foregoing is true and correct.

FORD: ‘11, Explorer Limited. 79,500 miles. Excellent Condition. 4-wheel drive, loaded w/ o p t i o n s : n av s y s t e m , touch screen, parking assist, remote locks and star t, back-up camera $28,000. (360)797-3247.

THUNDERBIRD: ‘96, classic, runs great, re- JEEP: ‘84 Grand Cherod u c e d , 1 4 0 K m l . kee, wrecked nose clip. $800/obo 360-912-2727 $2400/obo. 775-6681.

A public Budget Hearing to be conducted by the Board of Directors of the Sequim School District will be held on June 15, 2015 at 6:00 p.m. The Board of Directors shall consider adopting a revision to the school district’s Capital Projects Fund 2014-15 Budget at a regular Board Meeting on June 15, 2015 at 6:00 p.m. The meeting will be held in the board room located at 503 N. Sequim Avenue, Sequim, Washington.

TURNTABLE: Panasonic, plays fine. $75. (360)477-1716

S D A E E E R E F R F

9292 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles Others Others

NOTICE

Any person may appear at the meetings and be heard for or against the budget or any part thereof.

WOODSTOVE: Redishb r ow n , n ew s e a l a n d brick, good cond. Will deliver. $200. 461-6699

• 2 Ads Per Week • No Pets, Livestock, • 3 Lines Garage Sales • Private Party Only or Firewood

9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices Clallam County Clallam County

TREADMILL: Electr ic treadmill. $50. 683-9553

B R O O M : D r i v e w a y FUTON: 2005 custom M I S C : S p raye r b a ck - TABLE: Antique, dining broom for landscaping, futon, with bedding, nev- pack. $45. (4) old shov- table and 5 cane chairs, els, (4) rakes. $40. needs care. $90. 5’ wide. $100.obo er used. $175. (360)683-7994 (360)683-1528 (360)457-3627 (360)452-3666

E E FR

by Mell Lazarus

Copies of said budget are on file in the district administration office located at 503 N. Sequim Avenue, and will be furnished to any person upon request.

WOODBRITENER: One step cleaner/britener for all wood. 2/1 gal. cont. $30. $55 bo. 681-8808.

For items $200 and under

TELESCOPE: Zoom 8-25 power, with tri-pod. $25. (360)683-9295

M I S C : M i n i s p e e d SPEED BAG: Everlast graphic, complete with speed bag platform with RF Lens. $100. bag and gloves. $75. (360)379-4134 (360)681-4916

E E F R E Eand Tuesdays A D SS R F Monday AD

MONDAY, JUNE 1, 2015 B7

Get home delivery. Call 360-452-4507 or 800-826-7714 www.peninsuladailynews.com

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS 9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices Clallam County Clallam County

2015 MRSC ROSTERS SMALL PUBLIC WORKS, CONSULTANT, and VENDOR ROSTERS The Municipal Research and Services Center of Washington (MRSC) hereby advertises on behalf of local government agencies in Washington State (local governments), including - but not limited to - cities (Titles 35 RCW and Title 35A RCW), counties (Title 36, RCW), port districts (Title 53, RCW), water and sewer districts (Title 57 RCW), school districts and educational service districts (Title 28A RCW), fire districts (Title 52 RCW), transit agencies (Ch.35.73 RCW), and public utility districts (Title 54 RCW), for their projected needs for small public works $300,000.00 or under and consulting services throughout 2015. Additionally, MRSC advertises on behalf of some local government for their projected needs for vendor services throughout 2015. Interested businesses may apply at any time by visiting the MRSC Rosters website at www.mrscrosters.org. For questions about MRSC Rosters, email mrscrosters@mrsc.org.

SMALL PUBLIC WORKS ROSTERS: Service categories include construction, building, renovation, remodeling, alteration, repair, or improvement of real property as referenced in RCW 39.04.155. Sub-categories can be viewed on the MRSC Rosters website.

CONSULTANT ROSTERS: Service categories include architectural, engineering, and surveying services as referenced in Chapter 39.80 RCW, as well as other personal and professional consulting services. Sub-categories can be viewed on the MRSC Rosters website.

VENDOR ROSTERS: Service categories include supplies, materials, and equipment not being purchased in connection with public works contracts and limited service contracts as authorized in lieu of the requirements for formal sealed bidding as referenced in RCW 39.04.190. Sub-categories can be viewed on the MRSC Rosters website.

Currently subscribing local government who have their Small Works Roster, Consultant Roster, and Vendor Roster hosted in the MRSC Rosters database: Aberdeen School District #5, Adams County Public Hospital District No. 3, Asotin County Public Facilities District, Bainbridge Island Metropolitan Park & Recreation District, Belfair Water District #1, Benton County, Benton County Fire District 6, Birch Bay Water & Sewer District, Bremerton Housing Authority, Bridgeport School District, Cedar River Water & Sewer District, Central Kitsap Fire and Rescue, Central Kitsap School District #401, Central Whidbey Island Fire and Rescue, Chelan County FPD 6, City of Aberdeen, City of Airway Heights, City of Algona, City of Bainbridge Island, City of Benton City, City of Black Diamond, City of Bonney Lake, City of Bothell, City of Bremerton, City of Brewster, City of Bridgeport, City of Brier, City of Buckley, City of Burien, City of Burlington, City of Carnation, City of Castle Rock, City of Cheney, City of Chewelah, City of Clyde Hill, City of Colfax, City of Connell, City of Covington, City of Des Moines, City of Duvall, City of Edgewood, City of Everson, City of Federal Way, City of Fife, City of Fircrest, City of George, City of Gig Harbor, City of Gold Bar, City of Grand Coulee, City of Granger, City of Granite Falls, City of Hoquiam, City of Ilwaco, City of Kalama, City of Kennewick, City of Kettle Falls, City of Lake Forest Park, City of Lakewood, City of Langley, City of Lynnwood, City of Marysville, City of Mattawa, City of Medical Lake, City of Mill Creek, City of Monroe, City of Mukilteo, City of Normandy Park, City of North Bend, City of North Bonneville, City of Oak Harbor, City of Olympia, City of Orting, City of Pacific, City of Port Angeles, City of Port Orchard, City of Port Townsend, City of Puyallup, City of Quincy, City of Rainier, City of Richland, City of Ridgefield, City of Roslyn, City of Roy, City of Royal City, City of SeaTac, City of Sedro-Woolley, City of Sequim, City of Shelton, City of Shoreline, City of South Bend, City of Sprague, City of Stanwood, City of Sultan, City of Sumner, City of Tekoa, City of Toppenish, City of Tukwila, City of Vader, City of Vancouver, City of Waitsburg, City of Washougal, City of Wenatchee, City of White Salmon, City of Yakima, City of Yelm, Clark County, Clark County Fire District #13, Clark County Fire District 5, Clark Regional Wastewater District, Cle Elum - Roslyn School District No. 404, Coal Creek Utility District, Columbia County Fire District #3, Covington Water District, C-Tran (Clark County Public Transportation Benefit Area), Darrington School District, Des Moines Pool Metropolitan Park District, Dieringer School District, Duvall-King County Fire District 45, East Jefferson Fire Rescue, Eastside Fire & Rescue, Edmonds School District #15, Enduris Washington, Entiat School District 127, Fort Worden Public Development Authority, Franklin County, Grant County Port District #5, Grays Harbor County Fire Protection District No. 2, Grays Harbor PUD (Public Utility District No. 1 of Grays Harbor County), Hartstene Pointe Water Sewer District, Highland Water District, Highlands Sewer District, Housing Authority of the City of Longview, ICOM 911 (Island County Emergency Services Communications Center), Island County Fire District #1 (Camano Island Fire & Rescue), Jefferson County, Jefferson County Fire Protection District No. 3, Juniper Beach Water District, King County Fire District No. 2, King County Housing Authority, King County Water District #90, King County Water District No. 45, King County Water District No. 54, Kitsap County Consolidated Housing Authority, Kittitas County Fire District #7, Kittitas County Fire District No. 2, Lake Forest Park Water District (King County Water District #83), Lake Stevens Fire, Lake Stevens Sewer District, Lake Washington School District #414, Lake Whatcom Water & Sewer District, Lakewood School District No. 306, Lynnwood Public Facilities District, Marysville Fire District, Mason County, Mason County Fire District 5, Mason County PUD No. 1, Mason County Transit (MTA), Mason General Hospital & Family of Clinics (Mason County Public Hospital No. 1), Mid-Columbia Libraries, Mountain View Fire & Rescue District #44, Mukilteo Water and Wastewater District, North Country EMS, North Kitsap Fire & Rescue, North Kitsap School District, North Whidbey Fire and Rescue, Northshore Fire Department, Northshore Utility District, Okanogan Conservation District, Olympic View Water & Sewer District, Orcas Island Fire and Rescue (San Juan County Fire Protection District #2), Orting School District #344, Pend Oreille County, Pend Oreille County Fire District #4, Peninsula Housing Authority, Peninsula Metropolitan Park District, Pierce County Fire District #18 - Orting Valley Fire and Rescue, Pierce County Fire Protection District 6, Port of Bremerton, Port of Brownsville, Port of Edmonds, Port of Everett, Port of Friday Harbor, Port of Kingston, Port of Olympia, Port of Port Angeles, Prosser Public Hospital District (PMH Medical Center), Puget Sound Educational Service District #121, Quincy School District, Renton School District, Ronald Wastewater District, Samaritan Healthcare, San Juan County, San Juan County Fire District #3, San Juan County Fire Protection District 5, Seattle Housing Authority, Sedro-Woolley Housing Authority, Shoreline School District, Si View Metropolitan Park District, Silver Lake Water & Sewer District, Silverdale Water District, Skagit County, Skagit County Sewer District #1, Skyway Water & Sewer District, Snohomish Conservation District, Snohomish County Fire District #26, Snohomish County Fire District #3, Snohomish County Fire District #4, Snohomish County Fire District #5, Snohomish County Fire District #7, Snohomish County Fire District 17, Snohomish County Fire Protection District No. 21, Snohomish County Housing Authority, Snohomish Health District, Snohomish School District, Sno-Isle Intercounty Rural Library District, Snoqualmie Pass Utility District, South Kitsap Fire and Rescue, South Pend Oreille Fire & Rescue, South Pierce County Fire and Rescue - Pierce County Fire Protection District #17, South Whidbey Fire/EMS, South Whidbey Parks and Recreation District, South Whidbey School District #206, Southwest Snohomish County Public Safety Communications Agency, Spokane Conservation District, Spokane County Fire District 8, Spokane Regional Clean Air Agency, Sunland Water District, Tacoma School District #10, The Greater Wenatchee Regional Events Center Public Facilities District, The Port of Orcas, Thurston County Fire Protection District #17, Town of Concoy, Town of Coulee City, Town of Coulee Dam, Town of Coupeville, Town of Eatonville, Town of Friday Harbor, Town of Hunts Point, Town of Ione, Town of La Conner, Town of Mansfield, Town of Marcus, Town of Odessa, Town of Riverside, Town of Rosalia, Town of South Prairie, Town of Springdale, Town of Waterville, Town of Wilkeson, Town of Woodway, Town of Yacolt, Town of Yarrow Point, Tukwila Pool Metropolitan Park District, University Place School District, Valley Regional Fire Authority, Vashon Park District, Waitsburg School District, Washington State Convention Center Public Facilities District, Waterville School District #209, West Benton Fire Rescue (West Benton Regional Fire Authority), West Pierce Fire & Rescue (Pierce County Fire District No. 3), West Sound Utility District, Whatcom Transportation Authority, Woodinville Fire & Rescue, Woodland Public Schools (Woodland School District #404).

Currently subscribing local governments who have only their Small Works Roster and Consultant Roster hosted in the MRSC Rosters database: Alderwood Water & Wastewater District, Arlington School District #16, Bainbridge Island Fire Department, Ben Franklin Transit, Benton County Fire District #5, Benton County Mosquito Control District #1, Benton PUD, Cascade Valley Hospital and Clinics (Snohomish County Public Hospital District No. 3), Chelan County, Chelan County Public Hospital District #2, Cheney Public Schools (Cheney School District # 360), City of Anacortes, City of Arlington, City of Auburn, City of Battle Ground, City of Bellingham, City of Cle Elum, City of Dayton, City of DuPont, City of Edmonds, City of Enumclaw, City of Ephrata, City of Everett, City of Forks, City of Kittitas, City of La Center, City of Lacey, City of Lake Stevens, City of Leavenworth, City of Liberty Lake, City of Long Beach, City of Maple Valley, City of McCleary, City of Medina, City of Mercer Island, City of Millwood, City of Moses Lake, City of Mount Vernon, City of Mountlake Terrace, City of Newcastle, City of Nooksack, City of Oakville, City of Omak, City of Othello, City of Poulsbo, City of Prosser, City of Ruston, City of Snohomish, City of Snoqualmie, City of Soap Lake, City of Tumwater, City of University Place, City of Warden, City of West Richland, City of Woodland, Cowlitz County Fire District 6, Cross Valley Water District, Eastmont School District No. 206, Edmonds Public Facilities District, Elma School District, Evergreen School District #114, Ferry County, Fife School District, Fisherman Bay Sewer District, Foster Creek Conservation District, Grant County, Grant County Port District No.1, Griffin School District #324, Highline Water District, Holmes Harbor Sewer District, Jefferson Transit Authority, Kent Fire Department Regional Fire Authority, Key Peninsula Metropolitan Park District, King Conservation District, King County Fire Protection District #34, King County Fire Protection District #47, King County Water District #117, King County Water District No. 111, Kitsap Conservation District, Kitsap County, Kitsap County Sewer District No. 7, Kitsap Regional Library, Kitsap Transit (Kitsap County Public Benefit Transportation Area Authority), Kittitas County Conservation District, Kittitas County Fire Protection District 6, Klickitat Valley Health, Lacey Fire District 3, Lakewood Water District, Lincoln County, LOTT Clean Water Alliance, Mason County Fire District 9, Mason County Fire Protection District No. 6, Mason County PUD No. 3, McKenna Water District, Mercer Island School District #400, Meydenbauer Center (Bellevue Convention Center Authority), Midway Sewer District, Newport Hospital and Health Services (Pend Oreille County Public Hospital District #1), North Beach Water District, North Mason School District #403, North Perry Avenue Water District, North Valley Hospital Public District #4, Odessa Memorial Healthcare Center, Olympia School District, Pend Oreille County Fire District #8, Pierce Conservation District, Pierce County Library System, Point Roberts Water District No. 4, Port of Ephrata (Grant County Port District #9), Port of Grapeview, Port of Hoodsport, Port of Kalama, Port of Port Townsend, Port of Poulsbo, Port of Shelton, Port of Skagit, Port of Tacoma, Port Townsend School District, San Juan Island Library District, Skagit Transit, Skagit Valley Hospital, Skamania County Public Hospital District (DBA Skamania County EMS), Snohomish County Fire District #1, South Correctional Agency (SCORE), Spokane Public Facilities District, Sunny9730 Vans & Minivans side Housing Authority, The Seattle Public Library, Timberland Regional Library, Town of Beaux Arts VilEXECUTED the 15th day of May, 2015, at Port An- lage, Town of Cathlamet, Town of Creston, Town of Hamilton, Town of Lyman, Town of Northport, Town Others geles, Washington. of Reardan, Town of Skykomish, Town of Steilacoom, Town of Wilbur, Tukwila School District No. 406, Tumwater School District #33, Vashon Island School District, Vashon Sewer District, Washougal School DODGE: ‘06 Van, 67K District 06-112, Wenatchee School District #246, Whatcom Conservation District, Whatcom County Liml., seats 6, extra spare ___________________________ brary System (Whatcom County Rural Library District), Whidbey General Hospital (Whidbey Island Public tire, AC, roof top rack, Jean M. Hicks Notice Agent Hospital District), White River School District #416, Woodinville Water District, Yakima Valley Libraries. tailer hitch, new battery. $5,999. (360)683-6034. Attorney for Notice Agent: Some or all of the local governments listed above may choose to use the MRSC Rosters to select businesses. Master contracts for certain types of work may be required. In accordance with Title VI of the Civil FORD: ‘06 Passenger ROBERT W. STROHMEYER Rights Act of 1964, 78 Stat. 252, 42 U.S.C. 2000d to 2000d-4 and Title 49, Code of Federal Regulations, van. V-8, 350, Runs ex- Attorney at Law Department of Transportation, subtitle A, Office of the Secretary, Part 21, nondiscrimination in federally c e l l e n t , g o o d t i r e s . PMB 27 assisted programs of the Department of Transportation issued pursuant to such Act, these local govern$6,500 obo. 460-2282 132 Deer Park Road ments hereby notify all businesses that they will affirmatively ensure that in any contract entered into purPort Angeles, Washington 98362 suant to this advertisement, disadvantaged business enterprises as defined at 49 CFR Part 26 will be afTOYOTA : ‘ 0 6 S i e n n a , Tel: (360) 457-9525 forded full opportunity to submit bids or proposals in response to any invitations and will not be s e a t s 8 , V 6 , 5 0 K m l . Fax: (360) 452-1168 discriminated against on the grounds of race, color, national origin, or sex in consideration for an award. $14,500. (360)681-3561 PUB: May 25, June 1, 8, 2015 Legal No:634616 PUB: June 1, 2015 Legal No: 633827


B8 MONDAY, JUNE 1, 2015

551210231 5-31

SERVICE

TREE SERVICE

ALL HOME IMPROVEMENTS

No job too small!

Larry’s Home Maintenance

Tom’s Appliance Service

FOX PAINTING

GENERAL CONST. ARNETT

I Fix Driveways,

We go that extra mile for your tree needs • Tree Removal • Tree Trimming • View Enhancement

Larry Muckley

Washer Dryer Refrigeration Range Dishwasher

(360) 683-7655 (360) 670-9274

360-683-5193

larryshomemaintenaceonline.com RDDARDD889JT

Lic.#FLAWKTS873OE

LARRYHM016J8

TREE SERVICE

STUMP REMOVAL

FOR FREE ESTIMATES

Jami’s

PROPERTY MAINTENANCE

Serving Jefferson & Clallam County

Contr#KENNER1951P8

Excavator - CAT - Backhoe Loader - Roller 5 & 10 yd Dump Trucks

✓ Hedges/Trees

Quality Work at Competitive Prices

✓ Roof/Gutter Cleaning ✓ Hauling/Moving

No Job Too Small

582-0384

EXCAVATING/SEPTIC GEORGE E. DICKINSON CONSTRUCTION, INC.

Excavation and General Contracting

• Site Prep • Utilities • Septic Systems • Roads/Driveways

LAWNCARE

CHIMNEY SERVICES Sweeping • Water Sealing Caps • Liners • Exterior Repair

Cont ID#PENINCS862JT

(360) 582-9382

# CCEAGLECB853BO

360-461-5663

We Offer Complete Yard Service

LOW RATES!

(253)737-7317

TREE SERVICE

To Advertise

541301886

LIC#WESTCCT871QN

Reg#FINIST*932D0

(360) 477-1805

CALL NOW (360) 460-2709

Free Estimates • Senior Discounts Licensed • Bonded • Insured

Every Home Needs “A Finished Touch”

Lic#603401251

I WILL MEET OR BEAT ANY REASONABLE BID

Interior/Exterior Painting & Pressure Washing

360-452-8435

SMALL LOAD DELIVERY

Soils •Bark •Gravel SmallLoadDelivery.com

al Speci

4 Yards of Beauty Bark Medium Fir $135 (plus tax)

Includes Delivery

808-1517

551326110

Lyle Lyster, Jr

FREE ESTIMATES!

PAINTING

42989644

3 6 0 - 4 52 - 3 7 0 6 • w w w . n w h g . n e t

551325748

23597511

Appliances

360-683-4881

Call For Free Estimate We Build Rain or Shine

Lawn & Home Care • Trees bush trim & Removal • Flower Bed Picking • Moss Removal • Dump Runs! • De-Thatching AND MORE!

531256831

Mr MANNYs

Cedar • Composite • Tigerwood • Sunwood – Design and Construction –

TV Repair

-$% t 1MBTNB t 1SPKFDUJPO t $35 7JOUBHF "VEJP &RVJQNFOU

/PSUIXFTU &MFDUSPOJDT

DECKS AND PATIOS EEK BUILDER AGLE CR S E Specializing in Decks • Patios and Porches

LAWNCARE

TV REPAIR

29667464

360.928.9550

Port Angeles, WA www.peninsulachimneyservices.com

Please call or visit our showroom for lowest prices on:

(360) 460-3319

13 Years Experience Veteran Owned & Operated 451054676

Serving the Olympic Peninsula

YOUR LOCAL FULL-SERVICE DEALER & PARTS SOURCE

Tree Removal Canopy Reduction Dead Wood Removal View Enhancement Professional Clean Up Free Estimates

Call (360) 683-8332

24608159

Complete Lawn Care Hauling Garbage Runs Free Estimates BIG DISCOUNT for Seniors

PENINSULA CHIMNEY SERVICES, LLC

914 S. Eunice St. Port Angeles

Flooring

Contractor # GEORGED098NR Mfd. Installer Certified: #M100DICK1ge991KA

EARLY BIRD LAWN CARE

APPLIANCE SERVICE INC. 457-9875

Cabinets

Visit our website: www.dickinsonexcavation.com Locally Operated for since 1985

Washington State Contractors License LANDSC1963D2

APPLIANCES

360-452-2054 360-461-2248

431015297

360-681-0132

360-460-0518

30 YEAR CRAFTSMEN

MAINTENANCE EXCAVATING/LANDSCAPING

551139687

Open 7 Days • Mon-Sat 10-5 p.m. Sun 10-4 p.m. 4911 Sequim Dungeness Way (in Dungeness, just past Nash’s)

Lic. # ANTOS*938K5

360-477-1935 • constructiontilepro.com DONARAG875DL

• Senior Discount

54988219

360-683-8328

ND New Dungeness Nursery .com Landscape Design & Construction.

441017676

NO MOLES

• FREE Estimates

Licensed Cont#FOXPAPC871D7

All Carpentry, Kitchen & Bath Tile • Stone • Laminate • Hardwood

4C636738

LANDSCAPING

(360)

✓ Yard Service

SERVICE!! 360-477-2709 •FAST Licensed • Fully Insured

Lic# ROOTZ**913KQ

457-6582 (360) 808-0439

“AFFORDABLE HOME IMPROVEMENTS” We Do It All

✓ Senior Discount

ANTHONY’S TREE SERVICE

GOT STUMPS?

PEST CONTROL

Service On All Major Brands All Major Appliances

In s id e , O u ts id e , A ny s id e

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!

Over 25 Years Experience

Painting & Pressure Washing

471080142

4B968949

360.452.7938 Licensed and Bonded Contr. #ESPAI*122BJ

PAINTING

45769373

Removal of popcorn or acoustic ceilings Water Damage Smoke Damage Removal of wallpaper Repair of cracks and holes Texture to match Orange Peel - Knock Down - Hand Trowel

APPLIANCE SERVICE

32743866

Drywall Repair

LAWN CARE

4A1161355

We Need Work Interior Painting

Licensed, Bonded & Insured

TRACTOR

41595179

All Repairs Needed • Siding • Windows • Gutters Environmentally friendly Products Exterior Chemical Treatment Power Washing Gutter Cleaning • Window Washing

551012185

Peninsula Since 1988

Exterior Painting

AA

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

D •I •R •E •C •T •O •R •Y

PAINTING

Painting The

Classified

OR

1-800-826-7714 It’s a terrific way to reach a whole new market for anything you might want to sell. www.peninsuladailynews.com For details on how your ad can be on the internet 61246807

360-452-8435 or 1-800-826-7714

91190150

ATTENTION ADVERTISERS: No cancellations or corrections can be made on the day of publication. It is the Advertiser’s responsibility to check their ad on the first day of publication and notify the Classified department if it is not correct. Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., is responsible for only one incorrect insertion. All advertising, whether paid for or not, whether initially accepted or published, is subject to approval or rescission of approval by Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc. The position, subject matter, form, size, wording, illustrations, and typography of an advertisement are subject to approval of Northwest Media (Washington), L.P., which reserves the right to classify, edit, reject, position, or cancel any advertisement at any time, before or after insertion. Neither Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., investigates statements made directly or indirectly in any advertisement and neither makes any representations regarding the advertisers, their products, or their services or the legitimacy or value of the advertisers or their products or services. In consideration of publication of an advertisement, the Advertiser and any advertising agency that it may employ, jointly and severally, will indemnify and hold harmless Black Press Ltd./ Sound Publishing, Inc., their officers, agents, and employees against expenses (including all legal fees), liabilities, and losses resulting from the publication or distribution of advertising, including, without limitation, claims or suits for libel, violation of privacy, copyright or trademark infringement, deception, or other violations of law. Except as provided in this paragraph, neither Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., shall be liable for any damages resulting from error in or non-publication of ads, whether paid for or not, including but not limited to, incidental, consequential, special, general, presumed, or punitive damages or lost profits. The sole and exclusive remedy against Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., for any error in, or non-publication of, an ad shall be a refund of the cost of the ad or the printing of one make-good insertion, at the discretion of the Publisher; provided that Advertiser and/or its agency has paid for the ad containing the error or which was not published; otherwise, the sole remedy shall be one make-good insertion. No claim for repetition shall be allowed. No allowance shall be made for imperfect printing or minor errors. Neither Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., shall be liable for failure to print, publish, or circulate all or any portion of an advertisement or of advertising linage contracted for, if such failure is due to acts of God, strikes, accidents, or other circumstances beyond the control of Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc. Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., shall not be liable for errors in or non-publication of advertisements submitted after normal deadlines. Any legal action arising from these terms and conditions or relating to the publication of, or payment for, advertising shall, if filed, be commenced and maintained in any court. Other terms and conditions, stated on our Advertising Rate Cards and Contracts, may apply. This service is not to be used to defraud or otherwise harm users or others, and Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., reserves the right to disclose a user’s identity where deemed necessary to protect Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., or others or to respond to subpoenas or other lawful demands for information. All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation, or discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin, or intention to make any such preference, limitation, or discrimination.” We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.