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Award goes to man for saving life

‘That was magical’

BY JESSE MAJOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

JESSE MAJOR/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Camp Beausite NW camper Higgins Moore rides a horse last week outside Chimacum.

Organizers: Demand for camp is growing Beausite hopes for expansion of its offerings BY JESSE MAJOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

CHIMACUM –– Just outside Chimacum is a camp that offers people with special needs a week filled with excitement and unique opportunities. Last week, Camp Beausite NW, a nonprofit, finished the last of four one-week-long camps for the summer and organizers,

who say they are seeing increasing demand, hope to expand the camp’s offerings in the future. During the week, campers participate in relay contests, watermelon eating contests, visit Fort Warden, swim at the Mountain View Pool in Port Townsend, ride horses, play drums and practice archery, among other activities. Seeing how much the campers enjoy these activities is one of the reasons Cheryl Smith, program director, is a part of Camp Beausite. She described a moment with one of the campers swimming at the public pool in Port Townsend earlier this week as magical. “She was able to kick and

splash and laugh,” Smith said. “That sense of freedom that activity gave her for a few moments — just to be a part of that was magical for me.” Another reason she helps is because her son has special needs. Smith’s 19-year-old son is globally developmentally delayed and non-verbal. “As a parent of a child with special needs myself, I know there is a big need for recreational and learning experiences for people with special needs — especially once they are out of school and in their young adult years,” she said. TURN

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PORT TOWNSEND — A Washington State Ferries crew member was honored on the MV Kennewick for his role in saving a man’s life earlier this month. John McMillen, mate — who grew up in Chimacum — was awarded the Life Ring award Friday as the ferry plied its course between Port Townsend and Coupeville. He used an automated external defibrillator to save the life of a 60-year-old man who had a heart attack on a Bainbridgebound ferry from Seattle on July 17. McMillen said it was a team effort and that his quick thinking was because of WSF’s dedication to having a trained crew. “We take it seriously and that was the thing that really made a difference,” he said. “I’ve been on ferries all over the United States and I’d say hands down, Washington State Ferries is the best. “Our training department really takes it seriously.” Each crew member is trained

to deal with medical situations until professional help arrives, he said. As crew members helped the man, the captain acted quickly and turned the ferry back toward Seattle. The ferry was only about two miles from Seattle when it started going back, said Bill Michael, port captain. “They had just left Seattle,” he said. “He came in and let John know what was going on … (then) ran up to the wheelhouse,” Michael said. That quick thinking allowed the man to be transported to a hospital about an hour sooner than if the ferry had continued to Bainbridge, he said. “That’s what made a big difference,” said McMillen. “That’s outside the box.” McMillen, who now lives in Kingston, graduated from Chimacum High School. This is the third life-saving event on a state ferry this year, officials said. There have been more than 60 instances of providing aid, including assisting disabled boats, rescuing swimmer and divers.

JESSE MAJOR/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Port Capt. Bill Michael, left, gives Mate John McMillen the Life Ring award Friday for McMillen’s role in saving a man’s life earlier this month on a Washington state ferry.

PA man spearheads effort for playground Funds, labor raised for small park BY PAUL GOTTLIEB PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

KEITH THORPE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Kristan and David Mabrey display a rendering of new playground equipment that will be installed in Georgiana Park in Port Angeles, replacing the aging equipment behind them.

TRY OUR

PORT ANGELES — David Mabrey kept the play in playground. Tiny, city-owned Georgiana Park was on life support until Mabrey, who maintains the park as a volunteer, initiated a joint effort with the Olympic Medical Center hospital district, the OMC Foundation and city officials to keep it whole. The half-acre oasis of respite at 1006 East Georgiana St., just two blocks south of the hospital at 939 Caroline St., has drawn neighbor-

hood families and OMC visitors to its welcoming lawn and playground equipment for 24 years. But the unsafe, obsolete childrens slide, tire toys and monkey bars, destined for removal in 2017, would have left bare ground in their wake if not for Mabrey and his efforts, said Corey Delikat, city Parks and Recreation director, last week.

Spearheaded drive Mabrey spearheaded a drive to raise $148,000 in funding and inkind labor to buy new, Americanswith-Disabilities-Act-compliant

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playground pieces and a wheelchair-friendly surface for the play area. “He led the project,” said Delikat, adding the city does not have the funds to replace playground equipment. “It was in danger of having to remove the playground without having anything to replace it.” The equipment will be installed in 2017. The result will be a look similar to state-of-the-art Shane Park. Mabrey’s personal connection: He mows and maintains the park year-round with his wife, Kristan, and their 5-year-old son, Roland. “This was the right time to do this,” Mabrey said last week.

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MONDAY, AUGUST 1, 2016

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Tundra

The Samurai of Puzzles

By Chad Carpenter

Copyright © 2016, 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.

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The Associated Press

Newsmakers Celebrity scoop ■ By The Associated Press

Lear explores inequality in docuseries NORMAN LEAR, AGE 94 and a native New Yorker, thought he knew a few things about the obstacles of housing in the Big Apple. But when he began exploring the subject for “America Divided,” Lear said he was “horrified at how little I knew. Someone making a reasonable living with two children can no longer afford to live in New York City.” Not only is rising costs from real-estate gentrification displacing workingclass and even middle-class residents, but racial discrimination is a problem despite a fair-housing law that makes it illegal. On his episode, Lear goes undercover to expose real-estate agents who give preferential treatment to him, as a white man, over a black man seeking the same apartment. Those were the insights Lear helps bring to viewers in his chapter of “American Divided,” an eight-story, five-part series that premieres on the Epix channel on Sept. 30.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Solly Granatstein, left, and Norman Lear participate in the “America Divided” panel during the EPIX Television Critics Association summer press tour Saturday in Beverly Hills, Calif. Lear — along with one of the series’ creators, Solly Granatstein — appeared before TV reporters Saturday to represent the seven fellow major figures who explore their own issues of inequality that, in each case, was close to their heart. These correspondents also include Amy Poehler, Zach Galifianakis, Common, Rosario Dawson, Peter Sarsgaard, Jesse Williams and America Ferrera. Additional issues they tackle include inequality in education, health care, labor, criminal justice and the political system. Granatstein, whose cred-

its include “60 Minutes” and the docuseries “Years of Living Dangerously,” said he and his co-producers began with ideas for stories. “Then we targeted individuals who we knew were somehow connected with those issues.” He said more social problems and “substantive A-listers” were in the wings if the series scores a second season. Lear, a legendary comedy titan, said this was his first experience in the role of a reporter. What did he learn? “I learned I’m a great reporter,” he replied. “It’s true,” Granatstein said.

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By The Associated Press

Lottery

FRIDAY’S/SATURDAY’S QUESTION: Did you watch any of last week’s Democratic National Convention?

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Passings DAVE SCHWARTZ, 63, a longtime Weather Channel meteorologist, has died after a long fight with cancer. In an announcement of his death, The Weather Channel said on its website that Mr. Mr. Schwartz Schwartz died Saturday after being first diagnosed with stage 2 pancreatic cancer 10 years ago. It said he twice beat cancer, but it resurfaced last year. Mr. Schwartz had been an on-air meteorologist for the network for more than 20 years. The Weather Channel said Mr. Schwartz was known for his friendly onair demeanor and often referred to viewers as “my friend” before giving forecasts. It said his laidback style and sense of humor quickly made him popular with viewers. The Weather Channel said his colleagues remembered Mr. Schwartz as “an

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incredible man who made them better people and better broadcasters.”

announcement campaign about early signs of the disorder.

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SUZANNE WRIGHT, 69, a co-founder of the advocacy group Autism Speaks has died after helping build it into one of the leading voices for people with the developmental disorder. Organization spokeswoman Aurelia Grayson said Ms. Wright died of pancreatic cancer Friday at her home in Fairfield, Conn. She and her husband, former NBC Universal CEO Bob Wright, founded Autism Speaks in 2005 after their grandson’s diagnosis. The New York-based organization funds research, raises awareness and spotlights the needs of people with autism and their families. As part of her role, she appeared at events at the United Nations annually for eight years on World Autism Awareness Day. It’s April 2. She also helped spearhead Autism Speaks’ decade-long public service

ROBERT FANO, 98, a former Massachusetts Institute of Technology computer science and electrical engineering professor who helped usher in the personal computing age has died. The university said Mr. Fano died July 13 in Florida. Mr. Fano’s work in the 1960s on time-sharing systems so multiple people could use a computer at one time helped pave the way for the more widespread use of computers. His research spurred data-compression techniques now used in highdefinition TVs and computer networks. He was also one of the world’s first open-source advocates who saw computing as a public utility that should be accessible to all. Mr. Fano was born in Italy and moved to the U.S. in 1939. He was on MIT’s faculty from 1947 until 1984.

Laugh Lines

MICHAEL KEATON LAST NIGHT’S LOTSAID in a recent interview TERY results are available that it’s very unlikely on a timely basis by phonthey’ll be doing a Beetleing, toll-free, 800-545-7510 juice sequel. Then he said, or on the Internet at www. “Unless you ask me two walottery.com/Winning more times.” Numbers. Jimmy Fallon

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

Setting it Straight Corrections and clarifications The Peninsula Daily News strives at all times for accuracy and fairness in articles, headlines and photographs. To correct an error or to clarify a news story, phone Executive Editor Leah Leach at 360-4173530 or email her at lleach@peninsuladailynews.com.

Peninsula Lookback From PENINSULA DAILY NEWS and Port Angeles Evening News

1941 (75 years ago) Crescent Bay, long familiar to people of Port Angeles and the Peninsula as a picnic beauty spot, is becoming known to the outside world this summer as one of the promising salmon fishing centers on Juan de Fuca Strait. Many local anglers for several years have caught salmon off Crescent Bay and nearby Agate Beach, but the area has had no extensive outside publicity. Now, through the efforts of two energetic young Seattle men who have started development of a fishing resort at the bay, word has got around in fishing circles that here is a good place to be when the salmon are running. Crescent Bay has taken on a new bustle in the past month or so as a result.

1966 (50 years ago) Seen Around the Clock [Port Angeles]: ■ Water ski rope breaking four times in a row as skier attempted to make a jump-start off the diving board at Lake Sutherland.

■ Unusually large number of deer lining Highway 101 watching long lines of travelers heading home Sunday evening. ■ Lauren Poston flipped out of hydro as boat goes on without him. ■ Coast Guard helicopter landing at hospital Sunday.

1991 (25 years ago) A proposed urban growth area boundary that was resisted at public hearings, rejected by the City Council and reduced by a citizen’s committee remains alive. The Port Angeles Planning Commission decided 4-2 Wednesday night to once again recommend the original 20-year boundary to the council for approval. However, the new recommendation adds a smaller 10-year boundary to grow on. The original boundary was rejected by the council as being too large after three public hearings indicated hundreds of affected people did not want to be included.

Looking Back From the files of The Associated Press

TODAY IS MONDAY, Aug. 1, the 214th day of 2016. There are 152 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: ■ On Aug. 1, 1966, Charles Joseph Whitman, 25, an engineering student at the University of Texas in Austin, went on an armed rampage that killed 14 people, most of whom were shot by Whitman while he was perched in the clock tower of the main campus building. Whitman, who had also slain his wife and mother hours earlier, was finally gunned down by police. On this date: ■ In 1876, Colorado was admitted as the 38th state.

■ In 1907, the U.S. Army Signal Corps established an aeronautical division, the forerunner of the U.S. Air Force. ■ In 1944, an uprising broke out in Warsaw, Poland, against Nazi occupation; the revolt lasted two months before collapsing. ■ In 1946, President Harry S. Truman signed measures establishing the Fulbright Program and the Atomic Energy Commission. ■ In 1957, the United States and Canada agreed to create the North American Air Defense Command (NORAD). ■ In 1971, the Concert for Bangladesh, organized by George Harrison and Ravi Shankar, took place at New York’s Madison

Square Garden. ■ In 1981, the rock music video channel MTV made its debut. ■ In 1994, Michael Jackson and Lisa Marie Presley confirmed they’d been secretly married 11 weeks earlier. Presley filed for divorce from Jackson in January 1996, citing irreconcilable differences. ■ Ten years ago: Mel Gibson issued a statement in which he denied being a bigot; he also apologized to “everyone in the Jewish community for the vitriolic and harmful words” he’d used when he was arrested for investigation of drunken driving. ■ Five years ago: The U.S.

House of Representatives passed, 269-161, emergency legislation to avert the nation’s first-ever financial default; Arizona Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords returned to the House for the first time since being shot in January 2011 to cast a “yes” vote. ■ One year ago: Japan’s Imperial Household Agency released a digital version of Emperor Hirohito’s radio address on Aug. 15, 1945, announcing his country’s surrender in World War II; the digital recording offered clearer audio, although Hirohito spoke in an arcane form of Japanese that many of his countrymen would have found difficult to comprehend.


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Monday, August 1, 2016 P A G E

A3 Briefly: Nation Agency: Balloon in Texas struck power lines LOCKHART, Texas — A hot air balloon made contact with high-tension power lines before crashing into a pasture in Central Texas, killing all 16 on board, according to federal authorities who are investigating the worst such disaster in U.S. history. A power line was tripped at 7:42 a.m. Saturday, and the first call to 9-1-1 came a minute later, National TransportaSumwalt tion Safety Board member Robert Sumwalt said during a news conference. The crash site was near a row of high-tension power lines, and aerial photos showed an area of scorched land underneath. One witness described to The Associated Press seeing a “fireball” near the power lines. The NTSB will look at all factors that might have played a role, including weather, but is concentrating on gathering “perishable evidence, the evidence that goes away with the passage of time,” Sumwalt said, noting some of that is witness statements that can fade with time. “This wreckage will not be here more than another day or so,” he added. The pilot was Skip Nichols, 49, said Alan Lirette, who identified Nichols as his best friend, roommate and boss. Lirette said he helped launch the balloon, which was carrying a total of 16 people, none of them children.

The NTSB has not yet publicly identified the pilot or the passengers. Matt Rowan and his wife, Sunday Rowan, were among those on board the hot air balloon. His brother, Josh Rowan, said that as the two prepared to take the balloon ride they texted family and posted on social media pictures of the balloon set up, the rising sun, them in the basket. “It’s a bit haunting now but I guess it was a bit of a play-byplay,” Josh Rowan told The Associated Press on Sunday.

Austin shooting AUSTIN, Texas — A shooting in a crowded entertainment district of downtown Austin early Sunday set off a chaotic scene, leaving one woman dead and three others wounded and police searching for a suspect. Austin Police Chief of Staff Brian Manley said police received reports of gunshots in the crowded entertainment area shortly after 2 a.m. Police arrived to find a chaotic scene and five people shot. Manley said a suspect began firing into the crowd after an initial disturbance. He said a woman was pronounced dead at the scene, and three other women were taken to University Medical Center Brackenridge with gunshot wounds. Officials described those transported to the hospital as serious, but said their wounds were not considered life-threatening. Manley said another victim declined to be transported to the hospital. He said officials are trying to determine who the suspects are, and he didn’t rule out that a suspect might be one of the people transported to the hospital. The Associated Press

Trump backers: Shift in immigration rhetoric BY JILL COLVIN ALONSO LUGO

AND

LUIS

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CLEVELAND — As he turns his attention to the general election, Donald Trump is signaling that he is ready to tone down his fiery rhetoric on illegal immigration — at least behind closed doors. At the same time, Republican officials appear eager to push him in a more moderate direction, telling Hispanics that he has abandoned his divisive pri- Trump mary pledge to deport the estimated 11 million people living in the country illegally — even if Trump hasn’t said so publicly himself. “Trump has already said that he will not do massive deportations,” Helen Aguirre Ferre, the Republican National Committee’s director of Hispanic communications, told reporters at a Spanish-

language briefing at the party’s convention two weeks ago. Instead, she said, “he will focus on removing the violent undocumented who have criminal records and live in the country.” It’s a statement that may come as a surprise to Trump’s legion of loyal followers, many of whom were first drawn to Trump because of his hard-line views on immigration and border security.

Border wall promised Trump has vowed to build a wall along the length of the southern border and use a “deportation force” to track down and deport anyone in the country illegally. “You’re going to have a deportation force, and you’re going to do it humanely,” Trump said in a TV interview last fall. He estimated in a separate interview that the process would take between 18 months to two years. But those who would like to see Trump move in a more inclusive direction say that Trump has indicated that he no longer advocates that plan. As evidence, they

point to several vague sentences from an interview Trump gave earlier this summer to Bloomberg News during a whirlwind trip to Scotland to visit his golf courses. “President Obama has mass deported vast numbers of people — the most ever, and it’s never reported. I think people are going to find that I have not only the best policies, but I will have the biggest heart of anybody,” Trump told the outlet. Pressed on whether he would issue “mass deportations,” Trump responded: “No, I would not call it mass deportations.” “We are going to get rid of a lot of bad dudes who are here,” he was quoted as saying. It remains unclear whether Trump was taking rhetorical or ideological issue with the phrase, and Trump has not made similar comments at any point since. Asked how he would manage the deportations at a press conference in Florida on Wednesday, Trump said only, “We’re going to have a whole policy on that over the next three weeks.”

Briefly: World MONDELEZ INTERNATIONAL

Iraq: Series of attacks kill at least 18 BAGHDAD — Militants unleashed a series of attacks Wednesday in and around Baghdad, killing at least 18 people, officials said. South of the Iraqi capital, a provincial council approved a decision allowing authorities to demolish homes of convicted militants and banish their families from the province. The deadliest attack killed three policemen and three civilians when a suicide bomber on foot blew up his explosives-laden vest at a police checkpoint in Baghdad’s Shiite neighborhood of Shula, a police officer said. At least 15 people were wounded in the explosion, he added. In the town of Youssifiyah, 12 miles south of Baghdad, a bomb explosion in a commercial area killed at least three shoppers and wounded nine others, another police officer said. Elsewhere, three intelligence officers affiliated to the Interior Ministry were gunned down by drive-by shooters armed with pistols fitted with silencers in the northeastern suburb of

Rashidiya, police added. Another bomb explosion in a commercial area in the capital’s southwestern Saydiya neighborhood killed two civilians and wounded five others.

Decision reserved SANAA, Yemen — Yemen’s internationally recognized government agreed Sunday to extend peace talks with Shiite rebels for another week, reversing an earlier decision to quit the negotiations hosted by Kuwait, according to Yemeni state television. It said President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi, following consultations with top aides, has agreed to proposals by U.N. envoy Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed for the rebels to pull out of cities, including the capital Sanaa, and hand over weapons they looted from army depots within 45 days. News of the decision to continue the talks was soon followed by a fresh wave of violence that underlines the country’s precarious security conditions. In the southern port city of Aden, a pro-government militia leader was killed and three of his guards were wounded when a bomb planted in their car was remotely detonated, security officials said. The Associated Press

VIA

AP

Luke Aikins, center, skydives without a parachute over Simi Valley, Calif., on Saturday.

Skydiver becomes the first to jump, land without chute BY JOHN ROGERS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LOS ANGELES — After leaping from an airplane, Luke Aikins rocketed toward earth for two minutes, and then calmly flipped onto his back at the last second and landed dead center into a 100-by-100-foot net in California. Cheers rose from those who gathered at the Big Sky movie ranch on the outskirts of Simi Valley to watch the stunt, including his family. The 42-year-old skydiver with more than 18,000 jumps made history as the first person to survive a leap without a parachute and land safely in a net. As the audience erupted, Aikins quickly climbed out, walked over and hugged his wife, Monica, who had been watching from the ground with their 4-yearold son, Logan, and other family members. “I’m almost levitating. It’s incredible,” the jubilant skydiver said, raising his hands over his

Quick Read

head as his wife held their son, who dozed in her arms. “This thing just happened! I can’t even get the words out of my mouth,” he added as he thanked the dozens of crew members who spent two years helping him prepare for the jump, including those who assembled the fishing trawler-like net and made sure it really worked. The jump — from the deathdefying altitude of 25,000 feet — makes Aikins the only skydiver ever to go from plane to planet Earth without a parachute.

Broadcast live The stunt, broadcast live on the Fox network for the TV special “Stride Gum Presents Heaven Sent,” nearly didn’t come off as planned when Aikins revealed just before climbing into his plane that the Screen Actors Guild had ordered him to wear a parachute to ensure his safety. Aikins didn’t say what prompted the original restriction,

but SAG spokeswoman Pamela Greenwalt said the union and producers “could not come to an agreement on the safest way to pursue this stunt and therefore we could not sanction it to go forward under a union agreement.” Aikins said he considered pulling out at that point because having the parachute canister on his back would make his landing in the net far more dangerous. If he had to wear it, he said he wouldn’t bother to pull the ripcord anyway. A few minutes before the jump, one of the show’s hosts said the requirement had been lifted. Aikins left the plane without the chute. He jumped with three other skydivers, each wearing parachutes. One had a camera, another trailed smoke so people on the ground could follow his descent and the third took an oxygen canister he handed off after they got to an altitude where it was no longer needed. Then the others opened their parachutes and left him on his own.

. . . more news to start your day

West: Fight continues against Big Sur wildfire

Nation: Two dead after Md. town ravaged by floods

World: Pope will let justice take course on allegations

World: Handling of Russian doping scandal defended

CREWS BATTLED A massive wildfire near California’s Big Sur that is threatening thousands of homes as it burns for the 10th day, while a much newer fire in Fresno County quickly spread, damaging homes as it grew to more than 2 square miles Sunday. The newer blaze had damaged some of the 300 evacuated homes in the area, but it wasn’t yet clear how many, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection said. The fatal blaze north of Big Sur grew overnight to 59 square miles, state fire officials said. The wildfire has destroyed 57 homes and 11 outbuildings and is threatening 2,000 more structures.

HISTORIC, LOW-LYING ELLICOTT City, Md., was ravaged by floodwaters Saturday night, killing two people and causing devastating damage to homes and businesses, officials said. A Pennsylvania woman visiting the town with her family was one of those killed after their car was caught in the raging floodwaters and carried toward the Patapsco River, police said. The town, about 14 miles west of Baltimore, received 6.5 inches of rain, according to the National Weather Service, and most of it fell Saturday evening between 7 p.m. and 9 p.m.

POPE FRANCIS TOLD reporters Sunday he won’t address child molestation allegations against a top Vatican cardinal who is one of his most-trusted aides until justice officials in Australia have made a determination. Francis said as far as he’s concerned, accusations against Cardinal George Pell, Francis’ top financial adviser, “are in the hands of justice.” He said that the accused deserved the benefit of the doubt, adding that “once justice has its say, I will speak.” “You can’t judge before they decide. We must wait for justice and not make judgments ahead of time,” the pope said.

IOC PRESIDENT THOMAS Bach on Sunday defended the committee’s decision not to ban Russia’s entire Olympic team and said the country’s doping scandal will not damage the credibility of the Rio de Janeiro Games. Speaking at a news conference five days before the opening of the games, Bach said a total ban on Russia “would not be justifiable” on either moral or legal grounds. “Every human being is entitled to certain rights of natural justice,” he said. Bach was peppered with questions about the International Olympic Committee’s handling of the allegations of state-sponsored doping in Russia.


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Fluoridation foe against advisory vote as PA takes up conciliation effort today because they owned multiple properties. Kailin said council members also PORT ANGELES — Eloise should heed the more than 1,000 city Kailin, the president of the anti-fluo- residents who signed a petition to ridation group Our Water, Our hold an election Nov. 7, 2017 to Choice!, said Sunday she is against change the form of city government Mayor Patrick Downie’s proposal to and elect a new council. hold a Nov. 7, 2017, advisory ballot She said they were responding to on the controversial water treatthe present council majority’s proment. fluoridation stance, although she The City Council will discuss the acknowledged the petition did not pro-fluoridation mayor’s offer of con- mention fluoridation or fully explain ciliation to bring together warring the ramifications of Port Angeles sides in the fractious debate at the changing to a second-class city. council’s regular meeting at 6 p.m. Enough signatures were validated Tuesday at City Hall, 321 E. Fifth to require an Nov. 7, 2017 ballot meaSt. sure that City Attorney Bill Bloor has Downie’s plan, offered in a sursaid will not include asking voters in prise move as a non-agenda item at the ballot title if a new city Council the council’s July 19 meeting, should be elected because, Bloor has includes stopping fluoridation of the contended, the law does not require it. “A vote is superfluous,” Kailin city’s municipal water supply “now,” according to his prepared statement, said Sunday. “They do not need an advisory ballot. and binding the City Council to the “They have all the information majority’s wishes. they need on a perfectly good survey Downie said Sunday he will not of their people,” Kailin said. support the at least temporary cesShe emphasized that the council sation of fluoridation without the did not abide by the survey’s results advisory ballot. showing 57 percent of respondents opposed to the practice and instead Survey decided to continue fluoridation for But Kailin — who praised other 10 years, which spawned four ethics aspects of Downie’s proposal in a let- complaints against council members. ter to the editor in today’s Peninsula The survey results were just one Daily News — said council members indication of public sentiment, Kailin should rely on a November survey of said, adding that residents also were city water ratepayers that showed 57 upset that the council ignored percent opposition to fluoridation. results that reflected concerns about It did not include all city water fluoridation’s health impacts, conusers, included hundreds of ratepay- cerns disputed by health professioners who receive city water outside the als. city limits and resulted in some rate“There is the citizens’ reaction to payers receiving multiple surveys that survey and the more than 1,000 BY PAUL GOTTLIEB

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

CONTINUED FROM A1

people telling them with the request in change of government that they do not want fluoridation,” Kailin said. “Firing the City Council was the very evident response to the fluoridation issue.” Kailin said she also is worried about money from outside Port Angeles weighing in on the side of keeping fluoridation, such as from the Washington Dental Service Foundation, a nonprofit founded and funded by the dental insurance company Delta Dental of Washington. “We think that outside money is just going to just snow this place, and there is no telling what that money is going to do,” Kailin said. Further explanation of the impact of second-class city status will be forthcoming, she added. “We have to take one step at a time,” Kailin said. “The first step is to get the ballot title. “The second step will be just what that change in government means. Even I have to explore it further.” In an impassioned prepared statement at the July 19 council meeting, Downie quoted extensively from a Feb. 8 Peninsula Daily News editorial by Regional Publisher Terry Ward and Executive Editor Leah Leach. “An advisory vote would give a better picture of the wishes of [the city council’s] constituents than an informal, flawed survey,” the editorial said. Downie said July 19 that he still believes fluoridation is valid and beneficial but that “things are not working” and the survey was “flawed.”

“It came down to, I was just a person who lives in that neighborhood,” Mabrey said. Last summer, Mabrey asked the Port Angeles City Council to partner with the hospital district to save the playground. OMC was embarking on a $16.35 million expansion project that will be completed this fall and needed city approval for a street vacation. Mabrey was worried OMC might want to set its sights on what would have been a vacant, sun-baked field and turn it into additional parking. He would learn new parking was not part of OMC’s plans. He did some research on Shane Park before embarking on his own plan to save the Georgiana Park’s essence. Mabrey, who does delivery and sales for The Quarry, a Port Angeles hardscape and masonry products company, thought he’d have a word with Eric Lewis, Olympic Medical Center’s CEO. “I walked up to Eric Lewis, and I said, ‘I need you to put up $150,000 for the park at Georgiana Street,’ and he said, ‘That’s a great idea,’” Mabrey recalled. Delikat and City Manager Dan McKeen met with Lewis at then-Mayor Dan Di Guilio’s direction, Delikat said.

Camp: Counselors, staff help CONTINUED FROM A1 Her son attended the camp this year and had a blast, she said. “He got to enjoy things — because of our counselors and because of this agency — he wouldn’t have been able to enjoy otherwise,” Smith said. “As a parent, I thank these counselors every night so they know how meaningful this is for parents and loved ones.” For the campers, it’s an experience they always remember and look forward to each year, Smith said. One camper, Thomas Skerbeck of Port Angeles, said the highlights for him last year were the barbecue, riding horses and painting leaves. They painted them with “fancy colors like purple and gold,” he said. “Husky colors. We had a great time” On Thursday, Skerbeck was one of many campers who rode horses. He said he had ridden twice before and was looking forward to riding again. Members of the Buckhorn Range Chapter of the Back Country Horsemen of Washington provided the horses and helped out. Volunteers and counselors gave each of the camp-

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Camp Beausite NW camper Thomas Skerbeck of Port Angeles talks with counselor Tiffany Malean of Sequim while waiting to ride a horse at Camp Beausite on Wednesday. ers the help they needed to get on the horses and go for rides around the camp. About 20 campers attend each of the weeklong camps and there are about as many counselors and staff to help out, Smith said. There’s a counselor for every one or two of the campers to give them the special attention they need throughout the entire weekend. Among them is Tiffany Malean, who teaches special education at Helen Haller Elementary School in Sequim. This was her first year; she said she is definitely going back for another.

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Expanding program That family is now looking to expand, said David Christensen, president of the Camp Beausite board. While the camp now only focuses on the four one-week-long camps,

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Another $13,000 is needed to bring the total raised for the playground equipment to the necessary $148,000. “I don’t see that as a problem,” Lewis said, adding that the foundation should be able to raise the amount. The Quinn Redlin Kintner Endowment gift was announced at the July 20 hospital commissioners’ meeting by the foundation and Redlin Kintner’s parents, Kelsy Redlin and Bill Kintner.

Redlin Kinter Kintner was a 20-yearold woman who was disabled who died in 2010 from complications of pneumonia. Shane Park’s wheelchair-accessible features were inspired by a senior project that she did on accessibility in city parks. “This is exactly the kind of project that Quinn would have loved,” Redlin said at the hospital commissioners meeting. She was honored at a 2008 City Council meeting recalled last week by Delikat, who got to know her when she interviewed him for her senior report. “It was a packed house,” Delikat said. “There were bigwigs from government there, and everybody gave her a standing ovation. “It was probably the most special council meeting I’ve ever been to or will ever go to.” Mabrey said Friday he felt a kinship with Kintner. “Inclusive is the word I held onto through the entire process of this park,” he said. “Hers was just basically, nothing stops me, and if I see something wrong in the world, I’m not afraid to say something about it. “It’s just that tenacity of being able to walk up and say, ‘Hey, what’s going on here. I can help with this.’ “We are all on the same page.”

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Their talks resulted in a proposed interlocal agreement with Olympic Medical Center that will be discussed Tuesday by the City Council at its regular meeting at 6 p.m. at City Hall. The agreement, already unanimously approved by OMC commissioners, allows the city to accept funding to purchase the Playcraft Systems equipment in return for maintaining it for its lifetime, to benefit OMC patients, including the poor and infirm, and to “offer an inclusive and accessible community park to local residents and visitors.” Under the pact, the city to accept funds for the project from OMC, which pitched in $69,000, and includes $46,000 in city money for labor for playground installation. The agreement also includes $20,000 from the Quinn Redlin Kintner Endowment for Accessibility, administered by the Olympic Medical Center Foundation and intended to enhance the lives of people with disabilities. ________ The gift was announced July 20 at an OMC commisSenior Staff Writer Paul Gottlieb sioners meeting. can be reached at 360-452-2345, “We knew the play- ext. 55650, or at pgottlieb@ ground was probably going peninsuladailynews.com. to be shut down because of unsafe equipment, and we How’s the fishing? ________ did not really want that,” Michael Carman reports. Lewis said last week. Reporter Jesse Major can be Fridays in “This playground is very reached at 360-385-2335, ext. 5550, or at jmajor@peninsuladaily unique because it focuses PENINSULA DAILY NEWS on access from wheelchairs. news.com. Camp Beausite plans to expand into a year-long program and make improvements to the camp itself. Part of that is building bunkhouses for campers in the coming year, which would then be available the following year. “It’s community support that will enable that to happen,” Smith said. Registration for this summer was $800 per camper. The organization is funded through donations from individuals, groups, organizations, businesses; fundraising activities; camper fees; facility rentals; foundation grants; and support services from the Department of Health and Human Services for individual campers, who are eligible for coverage. Camp Beausite was first started in 1989 by a Kiwanis Club in Sequim. In 1993 four more Kiwanis Clubs joined the group and incorporated the Northwest Kiwanis Camp. The organization officially changed its name to Camp Beausite Northwest in 2011. For more information about the camp, visit https://campbeausitenw. org/.

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“It focuses on all ages and abilities. “It’s got some very unique features to allow it to really service a broad range of ages.” Keeping the playground enriches neighborhood residents and those who visit the hospital, Lewis said. “We have people who deliver babies, and sisters and brothers come here, and it’s all really nice for employees. “Hospitals can be very stressful, so having a place to play is good.”

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“I’ve learned more in the past month than in all of my schooling,” she said. “More people should definitely be counselors. This is such an incredible experience.” What moved her was seeing that everyone who was there was dedicated to helping the campers and everyone was having fun. “You get all these inside jokes with all the campers,” she said. “It becomes one big family.”

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Fires in park larger than first thought BY PAUL GOTTLIEB PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

As of Sunday, the Hayes fire, 20 miles south of Port Angeles on a ridgeline between the Lost and Hayes rivers, was 150 acres, not 30 as first estimated, Wilkolak said. The Godkin fire, 25 miles south of Port Angeles along the Elwha River, was 90 acres, not 65. The Cox Valley fire, 12 mile south of Port Angeles near PJ Lake north of Obstruction Point Ridge, was still 10 acres. Wilkolak said smoke from the Cox fire will keep Obstruction Point Road closed for the next couple of days. Park and fire personnel escorted hikers and motorists off Obstruction Point Road on Friday. The Cox fire’s plumes initially had been visible from Sequim. The Ignar Creek fire 22 miles northeast of Lake Quinault was still a halfacre.

PORT ANGELES — Wildfires totalling 250 acres in Olympic National Park — more than double initial National Park Service estimates — were decreasing in intensity Sunday due to cooler weather, a Park Service information officer said Sunday. Lisa Wilkolak said improved mapping increased the tally of acreage burning that was first estimated Saturday. “Fire behavior has been decreasing over the last two days,” she said, adding that smoke has decreased. Flights were scheduled Sunday night to further map the blazes’ heat signatures. About 35 fire personnel were fighting the fires Sunday, the same total as Saturday. All four fires were caused by lightning strikes during ________ a July 21 storm, which brought heavy rain and Senior Staff Writer Paul Gottlieb more than 400 lightning can be reached at 360-452-2345, strikes to the Olympic ext. 55650, or at pgottlieb@peninsuladailynews.com. Mountains.

Thursday event set to focus on photographer PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

KALALOCH — Two authors will highlight the work of the National Park Service’s first official photographer during a free program Thursday. Olympic National Park will host the program telling about — and showing — work by George A. Grant at 8 p.m. at the Kalaloch Campground amphitheater at 157151 U.S. Highway 101 about 40 miles south of Forks. Authors Ren and Helen Davis will present information and images from their book, Landscapes for the People: George Alexander Grant, First Chief Photographer of the National Park Service.

Career in park service

A Jamestown S’Klallam canoe enters the Port of Olympia on Saturday prior to lining up to ask permission to come ashore to proceed to the Nisqually reservation where the tribe will host a weeklong potlatch where songs, dances and stories will be shared. DEBBIE PRESTON (2)

Tribes from throughout region join canoe landing BY PAUL GOTTLIEB PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

NISQUALLY — Physically and spiritually, pullers from points far and wide embarked from different places to end up at the Port of Olympia this weekend on the journey that is Paddle to Nisqually 2016. About 100 canoes, each containing five to 10 pullers, included participants from as far away as California and New York and as close as Port Angeles’ Lower Elwha Klallam and the Sequim area’s Jamestown S’Klallam contingents. North Olympic Peninsula tribal members also hailed from the Makah, Hoh and Quileute and Quinault tribes. After pulling the Nisqually canoe for the last leg, Gov. Jay Inslee stepped on dry land with tribal members to mark the end of Stage 1 of Paddle to Nisqually 2016. The Nisqually tribe hosts protocol and potlatch events today through Saturday on the Nisqually reservation 15 miles east of Olympia, where tribes will share dances, songs, gifts and stories in events open to the public. “They start from wherever they are from, and all end up at the same place,” Nisqually tribal spokeswoman Debbie Preston said Sunday. “Something happens out on the water with them all singing together. “You just hear them say that. “They all become one with their creator and with each other.”

“National Park Service.” Many of these images, including photographs of Olympic National Park, will be shown during the program. Copies of the book will also be available for sale and can be signed by the authors. The presentation is part of Olympic National Park’s celebration of this year’s National Park Service Centennial. “Images of national parks have always played an important role in telling the parks’ stories and inviting the public to visit,” said Rachel Spector, acting superintendent. “This program promises to be both inspiring and enjoyable, full of iconic photographs from across the Thousands expected national park system.” More information about Up to 10,000 people are the authors and their recent expected to attend. publications can be found at “There’s just a lot of www.davisguides.com.

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The book tells of Grant’s career with the park service, which extended from the 1920s through the mid1950s. It includes a biography of Grant and more than 170 of his black-and-white images. Although Grant’s work was seen by millions of people in park brochures, reports, newspapers and magazines, he was largely unknown. As the agency’s official photographer, his images were simply credited

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water that sustains our fish and our people,” Hanford McCloud, Nisqually tribal council and canoe family member said Saturday. “It is great to have Gov. Inslee not just for this wonderful day, but every day that we are working together on the social, economic and natural resource issues that are affecting our tribal people.”

Quinault tribal member Emmet Oliver and Frank Brown of Bella Bella. Since then, the canoe journey has become a nearly annual event. It took a hiatus in 2015 before resuming this year. It’s been hosted by the Lower Elwha, Makah, Quinault and Quileute tribes. “We will not forget the

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Preston said a renaissance of the canoe-journey tradition began with a few canoes in the 1989 Paddle to Seattle for the Washington state centennial when what was a tradition shared solely among tribes became an annual, more public event. The 1989 canoe journey was the brainchild of

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young kids here, and that’s what the tribes wanted to see,” Preston said. One of several tribes from British Columbia pulled for a month, Preston said, while Puyallup tribal members started out over the weekend, before all settled Saturday into areas set aside for RVs but mostly tents. A California tribe had a distinctive paddle that weighed 30 pounds, while a New York tribe pulled a Nisqually canoe. Today, they all take a deep breath, Preston said. “The Nisqually have built a second city, if you will, to host,” she added. Inslee continued an occasional tradition of Washington governors receiving an invitation to help pull a canoe for the final day, Preston said. Then-Gov. Chris Gregoire joined the Swinomish canoe in 2011.

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Candidates for auditor vow Congress to restore office’s credibility in recess BY GENE JOHNSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SEATTLE — Restoring the credibility of the state Auditor’s Office tops the list of priorities for those seeking to replace departing Auditor Troy Kelley, whose term was marred by his federal fraud indictment and seven-month leave of absence. Pierce County Executive Pat McCarthy, state Sen. Mark Miloscia and Seattle lawyer Jeff Sprung are the leading candidates to replace Kelley. Forensic accountant Mark Wilson, of Bellevue and engineer David Golden, of Spokane are also running but have raised little to no money. The top two vote-getters in Tuesday’s primary will move on to the general election Nov. 8. Kelley, a Democrat from Tacoma, was under federal investigation from soon after he won the auditor’s seat in 2012.

Sprung Sprung, a Democrat, is a partner at the Seattle law firm of Hagens Berman, where he has spent the past 25 years representing whistleblowers and trying to

recover misspent or stolen government money. He says he has helped recover more than $750 million, most of it from drug companies and big banks, and that managing teams of lawyers and accountants assembled to investigate such complex cases gave him experience that closely tracks the work of the state auditor. He also cites his independence: unlike his two chief competitors, he’s a newcomer to politics. Among his aims as auditor would be stressing government transparency and pressing for greater protection of whistleblowers, he says. Sprung has raised $275,000, more than three times what Miloscia or McCarthy have garnered, and he has the endorsements of state Attorney General Bob Ferguson and The Seattle Times in addition to that of Sonntag. He says he wants to be auditor because he has a longstanding passion for protecting the public’s money and because he wants to give back to the country that offered his Jewish parents a chance when they left Nazi Germany; his father survived the Aus-

chwitz concentration camp.

McCarthy, Miloscia McCarthy, a Democrat, and Miloscia, a Democratturned-Republican, cite their own experience, she as a former Pierce County auditor who has administered one of the state’s largest county governments, and he as a lawmaker who has strived to instill efficiency and ethics in state operations. McCarthy has racked up endorsements from former Gov. Chris Gregoire and King County Executive Dow Constantine, and Miloscia from former Attorney General Rob McKenna and former Secretary of State Sam Reed. McCarthy says that far from jeopardizing her independence, her detailed knowledge of government’s inner workings give her an understanding crucial in the auditor’s position. “I don’t think someone who’s never been elected is going to hit the ground running,” she said. Miloscia, who chairs the Senate Accountability and Reform Committee, ran for auditor as a Democrat in 2012 but lost to Kelley in the primary.

He says he wants to encourage agencies to adopt management tools that help them move “from good or mediocre or horrible to great.” In his vision, the size of the auditor’s office would shrink because agencies would be catching problems in advance. He vowed to evaluate how every agency handles whistleblowers. “When you have whistleblowers, that tells you management is unethical and incompetent,” he said. “They’re punishing people instead of encouraging people to come forward so that they’re not whistleblowers.”

till Sept. 6 PENINSULA DAILY NEWS NEWS SERVICES

WASHINGTON — Congress is in recess until Sept. 6.

Contact legislators (clip and save)

Wilson Wilson, a political newcomer, is running as an independent because he believes the office should be nonpartisan. He said that as an independent running a low-budget campaign, he’s received some unexpected support from disaffected Democrats who supported Sen. Bernie Sanders’ presidential run. He hopes to restore the sterling reputation the office had under Sonntag, he said.

Death Notices harper-ridgeviewfuneralchapel.com

Donna Mae Jaime Aug. 26, 1938 — July 21, 2016

La Push resident Donna Mae Jaime died of a long-term illness in Forks. She was 77. Services: Celebration of life at the A-Ka-Lat Center in La Push at 10 a.m. Friday, Aug. 12. Harper-Ridgeview Funeral Chapel, Port Angeles, is in charge of arrangements.

Walter Berger Nov. 15, 1936 — July 27, 2016

Maria A. Red Elk Aug. 2, 1928 — July 28, 2016

Port Angeles resident Maria A. Red Elk died of heart failure at her home with family under hospice care. She was 87. Services: None, at her request. The Neptune Society of Lynnwood is in charge of arrangements.

Sequim resident Walter Berger died of age-related causes in Port Angeles. He was 79. A complete obituary will follow. Services: Private. Drennan-Ford Funeral Home, Port Angeles, is in charge of arrangements. www.drennanford.com

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Cantwell

“Eye on Congress” is published in the Peninsula Daily News every Monday when Congress is in session about activities, roll call votes and legislation in the House and Senate. The North Olympic Peninsula’s legislators in Washington, D.C., are Sen. Maria Cantwell (D-Mountlake Terrace), Sen. Patty Murray (D-Seattle) and Rep. Derek Kilmer (DGig Harbor). Contact information — The address for Cantwell and Murray is U.S. Senate, Washington, D.C. 20510; Kilmer, U.S. House, Washington, D.C. 20515. Phone Cantwell at 202-224-3441 (fax, 202-228-0514); Murray, 202-224-2621 (fax, 202-2240238); Kilmer, 202-2255916. Email via their websites: cantwell.senate.gov; murray.senate.gov; kilmer. house.gov. Kilmer’s North Olympic Peninsula is located at 332 E. Fifth St. in Port Angeles. Hours are 9 a.m. to noon Tuesdays and from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesdays and Thursdays. It is staffed by Judith Morris, who can be contacted at judith. morris@mail.house.gov or 360-797-3623.

Kilmer

counties are represented in the parttime state Legislature by Rep. K e v i n Van De W e g e , Murray D-Sequim, the House majority whip; Rep. Steve Tharinger, D-Sequim; and Sen. Jim Hargrove, D-Hoquiam. Write Van De Wege and Tharinger at P.O. Box 40600 (Hargrove at P.O. Box 40424), Olympia, WA 98504; email them at vandewege. kevin@leg.wa.gov; tharinger.steve@leg.wa.gov; hargrove.jim@leg.wa.gov. Or you can call the Legislative Hotline, 800-5626000, from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Mondays through Fridays (closed on holidays and from noon to 1 p.m.) and leave a detailed message, which will be emailed to Van De Wege, Tharinger, Hargrove or to all three. Links to other state officials: http://tinyurl.com/ pdn-linksofficials.

Learn more

Websites following our state and national legislators: ■ Followthemoney. org — Campaign donors State legislators by industry, ZIP code and Jefferson and Clallam more ■ Vote-Smart.org — How special interest groups Obituaries appear at legislators on peninsuladailynews.com rate the issues.

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A7

Web people vs. wall people YES, WE’RE HAVING a national election right now. Yes, there are two parties Thomas L. running. But no, they are not Friedman the two parties that you think. It’s not “Democrats” versus “Republicans.” This election is really between “Wall People” and “Web People.” The primary focus of Wall People is finding a president who will turn off the fan — the violent winds of change that are now buffeting every family — in their workplace, where machines are threatening white-collar and blue-collar jobs; in their neighborhoods, where so many more immigrants of different religions, races and cultures are moving in; and globally, where superempowered angry people are now killing innocents with disturbing regularity. They want a wall to stop it all. Wall People’s desire to stop change may be unrealistic, but, in fairness, it’s not just about race and class. It is also about a yearning for community — about “home” in

the deepest sense — a feeling that the things that anchor us in the world and provide meaning are being swept away, and so they are looking for someone to stop that erosion. Wall People had two candidates catering to them: Donald Trump, who boasts that he is “The Man” who can stop the winds with a wall, and Bernie Sanders, who promises to stop the winds by ending our big global trade deals and by taking down “The Man” — the millionaires, billionaires and big banks. I don’t see how the country could afford either man’s plans, but they have a simple gut appeal, and there is overlap between them. Web People instinctively understand that Democrats and Republicans both built their platforms largely in response to the Industrial Revolution, the New Deal and the Cold War, but that today, a 21st-century party needs to build its platform in response to the accelerations in technology, globalization and climate change, which are the forces transforming the workplace, geopolitics and the very planet. As such, the instinct of Web People is to embrace the change in the pace of change and focus on empowering more people to be able to compete and collaborate

in a world without walls. In particular, Web People understand that in times of rapid change, open systems are always more flexible, resilient and propulsive; they offer the chance to feel and respond first to change. So Web People favor more trade expansion, along the lines of the Trans-Pacific Partnership, and more managed immigration that attracts the most energetic and smartest minds, and more vehicles for lifelong learning. Web People also understand that while we want to prevent another bout of recklessness on Wall Street, we don’t want to choke off risk-taking, which is the engine of growth and entrepreneurship. Because the GOP was out of the White House for the last eight years, the party’s base and leadership are the least understanding of the world in which we’re living. That is why the GOP fractured first and why some Republican Web People, particularly from the business world, are either sitting this election out or voting for Hillary Clinton. Having been secretary of state, Clinton has been touching the world. She knows America has to build its future on a Web People’s platform, which was first articu-

Peninsula Voices His written statement from that council meeting, Port Angeles Mayor Patrick Downie, a fluoridation obtained by public disclosure request, reveals a man advocate, has earned this fan letter from me, a fluori- putting aside his personal conviction that fluoridation dation opponent. is beneficial to recognize Surprised? The reason for extension “many members of the public feel disenfranchised of thanks and praise to rather than empowered by Mayor Downie is his display of nobility of character those elected to represent them.” and devotion to improving He tells fellow council civic functions in this city members: he so obviously loves “Our elected officials dearly. on the council should go His proposal will back to the drawing board improve civil discourse while it also removes from and defuse the situation water a substance so many by listening to their constituents,” Downie said, wish to avoid. quoting from a Feb. 8 PenMayor Downie at the insula Daily News editoCity Council meeting of rial. July 19 proposed a cessa“My view of the validity tion of fluoridation until and the benefit of water elections in November fluoridation has not of 2017, over a year from now. changed,” Downie added.

Praises Downie

OUR

lated by Bill Clinton and, to this day, is best articulated by him. But Hillary has not always shown the courage of her own, or her husband’s, convictions. So, rather than take on Wall People in her party — and saying to Sanders, “Socialism was the wrong answer for the industrial age, so it sure isn’t the right answer for the information age” — she is tacking toward Wall People. She is opposing things she helped to negotiate, like the Pacific trade deal, and offering more benefits from government but refraining from telling people the hardest truth: that to be in the middle class, just working hard and playing by the rules doesn’t cut it anymore. To have a lifelong job, you need to be a lifelong learner, constantly raising your game. To her credit, though, she chose a great running mate, Sen. Tim Kaine, a Web Person with a soul. My hope is that, for the good of the country, Republican Web People will, over time, join the Democratic Party and tilt it into a compassionate, center-left Web party for the 21st century. That would be a party that is sensitive to the needs of working people, appreciative of the anchoring power of healthy com-

munities, but committed to capitalism, free markets and open trade as the vital engines of growth for a modern society and to providing every American with the learning tools to realize their potential. I don’t see any chance of the GOP becoming a center-right party again soon. The Tea Party, Trump and Fox News have made its base too angry and disconnected from reality. So everything rides on the coalition that Clinton assembles. If America is to thrive in the 21st century, we desperately need a coalition that can govern smartly in this era of rapid change. Clinton has a chance to break not only the glass ceiling for women, but also the rigid walls that have divided our two parties. If she can pull that off, it will make being the first woman president the second most important thing she does.

_________ Thomas Friedman is a three-time Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist for The New York Times. His column appears in the PDN every Monday. Email via www.facebook.com/ thomaslfriedman.

READERS’ LETTERS, FAXES AND EMAIL

“I believe it is in the best interest of the community to continue with fluoridation. “However, I recognize that things are not working and I believe the poll was flawed. “But more than that, I believe that we as a city need to heal.” Mayor Downie put citizen concerns ahead of his own and proposed over a year free of fluoridation when it will be re-examined. That is real public service. Thank you, Mayor Downie. Eloise Kailin, Sequim Kailin, president of the anti-fluoridation group Our Water, Our Choice!, is a retired doctor.

The Bern has been felt ONE HESITATES TO discuss the small group of Bernie Sanders followers that threw tantrums at the Democratic convention. Some 90 percent of Froma Sanders backers say they’ve Harrop already moved their support to Hillary Clinton. But when a tiny number — some with duct tape on their mouths saying “silenced” — marched out of the hall and straight into the media tent, the “journalists” pounded prose on “sharp divisions” in the party. The unhappy few had already booed at Sanders himself. They heckled the progressive warrior Elizabeth Warren. Sanders’ other supporters rolled their eyes at the histrionics, but what

could they do? When Sanders finally offered total support for Clinton, he showed himself to be a giant political leader. That he did so after an email leak confirming that the Democratic National Committee had tilted against his candidacy made him taller still. Sanders had already pushed the Democratic Party to adopt much of his program, demonstrating a skill at negotiating many of us doubted he had. In sum, Sanders deserved the adulation that friends and former rivals poured on him at the convention. So this was a heck of a time for a handful of acolytes to grab at his spotlight, some parroting the imbecilities of the Trump campaign. To borrow from Dante’s “Inferno,” one should not reflect on such people but take a look and pass them by. A good restaurant knows that

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there are certain customers it has to throw out. They’re too disruptive. They give the place a bad reputation and scare off others. Sanders himself gets some blame for having fed his following a constant diet of grievance and belief that the electoral process had been “rigged” against them. The nominating race was lumpy all around. The DNC may have put a thumb on the scale for Clinton, but she was subject to unfairness, as well, in the coverage of the campaigns and the undemocratic nature of the caucuses that Sanders won. I wasn’t a great fan of Sanders. He had a reputation for not working well with others, and I distrust populist campaigns centered on a charismatic figure. But I always admired Sanders for his consistency, his obvious love for country and many of

his ideas. So it was painful to watch Sanders being treated so disrespectfully by people he had led to the portals of power. And at his finest hour, too. A few fancied out loud that they could run the Bernie revolution without Bernie, which is kind of laughable. With Sanders would go the cameras and the attention, leaving behind a skeleton crew of exhibitionists. That said, a lasting Sanders revolution may be in the making by others. Sophisticated backers are now recruiting like-minded candidates for lower office, building a progressive power base and expanded leadership. (A slip in the suggestion box reads, Call this a “movement” rather than a “revolution.”) As Sanders faced hostile members of his California delegation, he laid down the stakes in no uncertain terms.

NEWS DEPARTMENT Main office: 305 W. First St., P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362 ■ MICHAEL FOSTER, managing editor; 360-417-3531 mfoster@peninsuladailynews.com ■ Sports; 360-417-3525; sports@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 ■ Port Townsend office: 1939 E. Sims Way, 98368; 360-385-2335

“It is easy to boo, but it is harder to look your kids in the face who would be living under a Donald Trump presidency,” he said. “Trump is the worst candidate for president in the modern history of this country.” A California Democratic Party official wisely advised against self-pity. “You fought and you won a seat at the table,” Daraka Larimore-Hall said. “We have to act like we have that seat . . . and stop acting like we’ve been shut out.” Just a gentle reminder here: Clinton won the California primary by over 400,000 votes, and Sanders got these followers excellent seats at the table. The revolution, for the time being, is still his.

_________ Froma Harrop’s nationally syndicated column appears in the PDN every Monday. Email fharrop@gmail.com.

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


A8

WeatherWatch

MONDAY, AUGUST 1, 2016 Neah Bay 61/53

g Bellingham 72/57

Olympic Peninsula TODAY Port Townsend 66/54

Port Angeles 67/53

Olympics Freeze level: 12,500 feet

Forks 68/53

Sequim 67/53

Port Ludlow 69/55

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

National forecast Nation TODAY

Yesterday Statistics for the 24-hour period ending at noon yesterday. Hi Lo Rain YTD Port Angeles 61 48 0.00 14.84 Forks 60 54 0.00 58.89 Seattle 63 57 0.00 24.20 Sequim 73 53 0.00 7.14 Hoquiam 60 56 0.00 42.79 Victoria 78 53 0.00 17.15 Port Townsend 71 61 **0.00 12.07

Forecast highs for Monday, Aug. 1

BURN

BAN IN EFFECT PENINSULA-WIDE

Aberdeen 67/55

TONIGHT

Low 53 Skies spring a leak

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY THURSDAY

64/53 69/53 Wet workweek But sun rebels, lies ahead? warding off drops

Ocean: W wind to 10 kt. Wind waves 2 ft or less. W swell 4 ft at 7 seconds. Tonight, W wind to 10 kt. Wind waves 2 ft or less. SW swell 3 ft at 11 seconds.

Port Angeles

70/53 And pluckily loiters overhead

FRIDAY

69/53 For an exquisite end to the week

First

Billings 92° | 60°

San Francisco 63° | 53°

Minneapolis 85° | 68°

Denver 93° | 65°

Chicago 83° | 65°

Miami 90° | 80°

CANADA Victoria 76° | 54° Seattle 79° | 55° Tacoma 82° | 54°

Olympia 78° | 51° Astoria 66° | 56°

ORE.

TODAY High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht 12:42 p.m. 7.0’ 6:17 a.m. -1.6’ 6:14 p.m. 2.0’

Cold

Albany, N.Y. Albuquerque Amarillo Anchorage Asheville Atlanta Spokane Atlantic City 87° | 53° Austin Baltimore Billings Birmingham Yakima Bismarck 89° | 52° Boise Boston © 2016 Wunderground.com Brownsville Buffalo Burlington, Vt.

TOMORROW High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht 12:08 a.m. 8.8’ 7:02 a.m. -1.8’ 1:26 p.m. 7.2’ 7:04 p.m. 1.7’

Warm Stationary

Pressure Low

High

Aug 24 Tuesday Aug 10 Aug 18 8:49 p.m. 5:52 a.m. 7:55 p.m. 5:47 a.m.

Hi 79 93 93 66 87 89 85 95 88 96 88 87 100 80 96 82 79

Lo Prc Otlk 63 1.01 Rain 65 .44 PCldy 67 Clr 60 Cldy 67 .60 Rain 72 .35 Cldy 76 .01 Rain 76 PCldy 72 1.80 Cldy 67 Clr 74 1.33 Cldy 65 .03 Clr 64 Clr 71 Rain 78 PCldy 69 Cldy 58 Cldy

WEDNESDAY High Tide Ht Low Tide 12:56 a.m. 8.7’ 7:44 a.m. 2:06 p.m. 7.4’ 7:50 p.m.

Ht -1.7’ 1.5’

12:50 a.m. 6.6’ 3:55 p.m. 6.9’

8:14 a.m. -1.5’ 8:42 p.m. 5.0’

1:45 a.m. 6.4’ 4:31 p.m. 7.0’

8:57 a.m. -1.4’ 9:32 p.m. 4.7’

2:37 a.m. 6.2’ 9:39 a.m. 5:05 p.m. 7.0’ 10:19 p.m.

-1.2’ 4.3’

Port Townsend

2:27 a.m. 8.1’ 5:32 p.m. 8.5’

9:27 a.m. 1.7’ 9:55 p.m. 5.5’

3:22 a.m. 7.9’ 10:10 a.m. -1.6’ 6:08 p.m. 8.6’ 10:45 p.m. 5.2’

4:14 a.m. 7.7’ 10:52 a.m. 6:42 p.m. 8.6’ 11:32 p.m.

-1.3’ 4.8’

Dungeness Bay*

1:33 a.m. 7.3’ 4:38 p.m. 7.7’

8:49 a.m. -1.5’ 9:17 p.m. 5.0’

2:28 a.m. 7.1’ 9:32 a.m. -1.4’ 5:14 p.m. 7.7’ 10:07 p.m. 4.7’

3:20 a.m. 6.9’ 10:14 a.m. 5:48 p.m. 7.7’ 10:54 p.m.

-1.2’ 4.3’

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

-10s

Casper 96 Charleston, S.C. 99 Charleston, W.Va. 85 Charlotte, N.C. 92 Cheyenne 87 Chicago 78 Cincinnati 86 Cleveland 83 Columbia, S.C. 101 Columbus, Ohio 87 Concord, N.H. 86 Dallas-Ft Worth 99 Dayton 86 Denver 94 Des Moines 83 Detroit 81 Duluth 75 El Paso 97 Evansville 86 Fairbanks 60 Fargo 81 Flagstaff 83 Grand Rapids 71 Great Falls 97 Greensboro, N.C. 94 Hartford Spgfld 91 Helena 98 Honolulu 88 Houston 98 Indianapolis 86 Jackson, Miss. 92 Jacksonville 94 Juneau 63 Kansas City 85 Key West 90 Las Vegas 109 Little Rock 94 Los Angeles 85

-0s

0s

10s

20s 30s 40s

Valley, Calif. Ä 37 in Stanley, Idaho

Atlanta 92° | 72°

El Paso 95° | 72° Houston 94° | 78°

Fronts

Sunset today Sunrise tomorrow Moonset today Moonrise tomorrow

à 121 in Death

New York 79° | 72°

Detroit 84° | 65°

Washington D.C. 91° | 71°

Los Angeles 81° | 68°

Full

Nation/World

Washington TODAY

Strait of Juan de Fuca: W wind 5 to 15 kt becoming NW 10 to 20 kt in the afternoon. Wind waves 2 ft or less building to 1 to 3 ft in the afternoon. Tonight, W wind 20 to 30 kt easing to 15 to 25 kt after midnight. Wind waves 3 to 5 ft subsiding to 2 to 4 ft after midnight. A slight chance of showers after midnight.

La Push

New

The Lower 48

Cloudy

TEMPERATURE EXTREMES for the contiguous United States:

Cartogra C Ca Cart Cartography og ogra g phy y by y Keith Keith ith h Thorpe Th T h / © Peninsula Daily News

Marine Conditions

Tides

Last

Pt. Cloudy

Seattle 79° | 55°

Almanac Brinnon 73/54

Sunny

50s 60s

70s

80s 90s 100s 110s

Cartography © Weather Underground / The Associated Press

59 PCldy Louisville 81 Cldy Lubbock 70 Cldy Memphis 72 Rain Miami Beach 61 Cldy Midland-Odessa 65 Cldy Milwaukee 69 PCldy Mpls-St Paul 68 .13 Cldy Nashville 76 PCldy New Orleans 68 Cldy New York City 66 .03 Rain Norfolk, Va. 81 PCldy North Platte 67 Cldy Oklahoma City 65 Cldy Omaha 68 Cldy Orlando 67 .02 Cldy Pendleton 58 PCldy Philadelphia 77 PCldy Phoenix 70 PCldy Pittsburgh 54 .54 Rain Portland, Maine 66 Clr Portland, Ore. 53 .53 Rain Providence 65 .04 Cldy Raleigh-Durham 50 Clr Rapid City 73 Cldy Reno 67 .30 Rain Richmond 61 Clr Sacramento 73 .16 Rain St Louis 77 Cldy St Petersburg 67 PCldy Salt Lake City 71 1.27 Cldy San Antonio 74 PCldy San Diego 54 Cldy San Francisco 70 Rain San Juan, P.R. 78 .03 Cldy Santa Fe 87 PCldy St Ste Marie 73 .29 Cldy Seattle 70 Cldy Shreveport

87 94 92 93 97 76 81 89 96 84 90 86 91 82 95 96 88 101 81 84 81 85 95 91 99 84 98 87 88 100 96 78 73 89 91 80 75 96

72 75 75 80 74 66 67 73 80 73 75 67 72 71 75 57 75 87 64 65 59 73 74 63 64 71 61 72 80 77 78 68 56 78 57 58 56 73

.39 .06

.26 .57

.27 .82

.03 .91 .12 .36

.30

.68

Cldy Clr Cldy Cldy PCldy PCldy Cldy Cldy Cldy Rain Rain PCldy PCldy Cldy Cldy Clr Rain PCldy Cldy Cldy Clr Cldy Rain PCldy Clr Cldy Clr Cldy Rain Cldy PCldy PCldy Cldy Rain PCldy Clr Cldy Cldy

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

Sioux Falls Syracuse Tampa Topeka Tucson Tulsa Washington, D.C. Wichita Wilkes-Barre Wilmington, Del.

81 78 89 86 97 87 90 90 84 85

67 PCldy 66 .03 Rain 78 .05 Rain 71 .01 Rain 74 .01 Cldy 76 .68 PCldy 74 .33 Cldy 73 .04 Cldy 69 2.61 Rain 74 .93 Rain

_______ Hi Auckland 59 Beijing 93 Berlin 77 Brussels 71 Cairo 100 Calgary 79 Guadalajara 75 Hong Kong 95 Jerusalem 88 Johannesburg 62 Kabul 91 London 71 Mexico City 75 Montreal 80 Moscow 83 New Delhi 91 Paris 76 Rio de Janeiro 73 Rome 89 San Jose, CRica 78 Sydney 66 Tokyo 89 Toronto 83 Vancouver 77

Lo 50 77 61 57 74 55 60 79 69 33 64 57 59 60 64 79 58 64 69 66 51 74 62 58

Otlk AM Sh AM Ts Sh/Ts PCldy/Sh Clr PCldy PM Ts PM Ts Clr Clr Clr Sh PM Ts PCldy Clr Cldy/Ts PCldy Cldy Clr Ts PCldy PCldy PCldy PCldy

Briefly . . . Gansango music, dance set Tuesday The North Olympic Library System will host the multicultural dance and music company Gansango throughout the Peninsula on Tuesday. The first performance will take place at 10:30 a.m. at the Sequim Library, 630 N. Sequim Ave., followed by a 2 p.m. show at the Port Angeles Library, 2210 S. Peabody St., and a 6 p.m. show at the Rainforest Arts Center, 35 N. Forks Ave. In the event of rain, the Sequim Library performance will take place at the Sequim Middle School cafeteria, 301 W. Hendrickson Road, Sequim. Gansango Music and Dance is a multicultural group of international dancers and musicians that will present traditional and contemporary dance and music from West Africa. The event is free and open to the public. The program is supported by Friends of the Library groups at all four NOLS branches. Visit www.nols.org or email youth@nols.org.

trict or be a graduate from Sequim High School and must be enrolled in the program by the application deadline. Application packets are available at sequimsi.org under “What We Do” and “Awards and Scholarships.” Applications must be postmarked by Aug. 15.

Volunteer gleaners PORT TOWNSEND — Quimper Community Harvest known as the Gleaners need volunteers to help harvest extra and unused fruit. The extra fruit is delivered to local organizations including all four area food banks, The Boiler Room, the

senior lunch program, senior housing and later in the season to local schools. Over 55,000 pounds of fruit have been harvested and donated to Port Townsend residents in the past eight years. Volunteers can keep fruit for themselves and their family in return for helping.

Volunteers may work weekly or when they have time to join. Volunteer groups are also welcome. Volunteers pick fruit on at 4 p.m. Tuesdays and 10 a.m. Saturdays. The season starts 4 p.m. Sunday, July 31. The Gleaners will meet at 1039 Jackson St. to start

scouting for trees. Contact Seth Rolland at sethrolland@gmail.com or 360-379-0414 or Sonny Flores at nic.rodeo@gmail. com or 206-290-1020. To donate trees for fruit to be gleaned from, contact Cathie Wier at cathiew@ eusers.com or 360-385-3581. Peninsula Daily News

Diabetes support SEQUIM — The Sequim Diabetes support group will meet at Shipley Center, 921 E. Hammond St., from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. Tuesday. Phone Shipley Center at 360-683-6806.

Deadline extended

681655701

SEQUIM — Soroptimist International of Sequim is extending the due date of its annual Vocational Technical Award to Monday, Aug. 15. Because the organization’s website was down June 1-15, those applying for the award were not able to submit an application, which prompted an extension. The original deadline was July 30. The $2,000 award is given to a female of any age who is enrolled in a nondegree program leading to a certificate or license. Examples include but are not limited to EMT, firefighter, real estate, massage therapist, welder, computer tech, cosmetology, nursing, medical assistant and building trades. Applicants must reside in the Sequim School Dis-

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Monday, August 1, 2016 SECTION

SCOREBOARD, COMICS,CLASSIFIEDS In this section

B Seahawks

Serenity for now, champs later? NOW THAT PAUL Allen has done the deed critical for any successful pro sports owner — spend big money wisely, then head to the yacht — feel free, Seattle sports fans, to gaze upon a feature often invisible elsewhere in the convulsive landscape. Serenity. The Seahawks over Art the past six Thiel years have had great success in football and business. This summer they have no holdouts, hangups, harangues on internal hostilities. Yes, they have some injured in recovery, but this is football, not antimacassar tatting. And they are a lot healthier than they were at this time a year ago. Allen has extended the contracts of the franchise wizards, GM John Schneider and coach Pete Carroll, by five and three years, respectively. And as the season dawns the Seahawks are a consensus top-four pick for Super Bowl LI. When you look around the NFL, are you feeling lucky, Johnny S? “Oh, all the time, all the time,” Schneider said recently during an informal group interview with local reporters. “It always fluctuates and changes with different ownership groups. But this is clearly a top-three/topfive team in terms of ownership in the league. Obviously we’re biased. So we would say it’s ([No.] 1. “Having a strong owner and a strong president is extremely important.” When ownerships in San Francisco, Oakland, Cleveland, Dallas and Washington, among others, are taken into account, the situation in Seattle is sunshine, lollipops and rainbows. That doesn’t mean there won’t be the annual dramas about such things as DE Michael Bennett’s contract, or who the hell might play the same offensive-line position for two seasons in a row, or what part of his over-explored life Russell Wilson is sharing today on social media. But those are the mundane daily controversies of sports, sound and fury signifying little.

Olympic falls in semifinal Give up just three singles, but lose 1-0 BY MICHAEL CARMAN PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES —One mistake was all it took to eliminate host Olympic in the 14U Pacific Northwest Regional Tournament semifinals Sunday at Volunteer Field. Olympic came up on the wrong end of a 1-0 pitchers duel with West Linn, Ore. in the day’s first semifinal and will miss out on a trip to the 14U Babe Ruth World Series in Westfield, Mass. “Even though it was the semis, that was really the way a championship game should be played,” Olympic manager Rob Merritt said. “We tried to swipe a bag, we tried to put on a hit and run and we lined it right at the center fielder. We had three or four plays where we hit it hard but right at them. “The little things just didn’t go our way today.” The game’s lone run came in the bottom of the second inning. West Linn’s Jacob Sherman reached base on a single to right field and advanced on an Ethan Flodstrom walk of Greyson Pihas. Olympic catcher Brody Merritt then allowed a passed ball and Sherman broke for third base. Merritt’s throw to third went into left field and Sherman marched home. Flodstrom, Timmy Adams and Brody Merritt combined on the mound for a 3-hit, five-walk performance for Olympic.

DAVE LOGAN/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Olympic’s Derek Bowechop is beaten to first base by the throw to West Linn, Ore. first baseman Treyton Burke on Sunday at Volunteer Field in Port Angeles. “It’s hard to ask for more from them,” Merritt said. “I thought we might have had few more walks, but those guys all did good work out there.” The trouble was West Linn hurler Sam Romero proved a crafty foe. Romero pitched a complete-

TURN

TO

THIEL/B3

he located it well and threw it for strikes and it kept us offbalance.” Romero also got 10 ground ball outs, one which ended promising scoring opportunity for Olympic with two outs in the top of the fourth. TURN

TO

14U/B3

The Bartender returning to form Struggled after trade to Texas, but return to Seattle paying dividends BY BOB DUTTON MCCLATCHY NEWS SERVICE

Front office brain trust The biggest virtue that manifests at team headquarters is a quiet hum generated by so many people over a long period who seem to know exactly what they are supposed to do, then doing it better than most. Allen is the richest owner in sports, one of the shrewdest and a devout shunner of the mainstream spotlight. Carroll is in the conversation as best coach, Schneider same among GMs. What the Seahawks have is what business professors draw up in Ph.D classes to explain premier organizational culture. “When you have a head coach, and strong ownership, strong president [in Peter McLoughlin],” Schneider said, “the relationship between us is special. Having that core together to have that consistent, solid foundation … that continuity is huge.” Why? Schneider told a story about meeting a leadership coach years ago on a plane flight as he returned from a scouting trip. “He gave great advice [about where] industry was going in terms of leadership; top-down leadership doesn’t exist,” Schneider said. “The pitfalls come when you do things for the wrong reasons, personal reasons. Of course you’re doing everything you possibly can to take care of your family. “That being said, you’re looking out for the organization first and foremost.

game, scattering five hits and four walks, while striking out three. “That’s what I was telling the kids,” Merritt said. “There are pitchers and there are throwers, and he’s a pitcher. “It wasn’t like he overpowered you with his fastball. He just had a good off-speed pitch,

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

After struggling with the Texas Rangers earlier this season, M’s reliever Tom Wilhelmsen has shined in his return to Seattle.

CHICAGO — What increasingly looks like the Mariners’ key move to bolster their bullpen occurred nearly six weeks prior to today’s non-waiver trade deadline. It was June 21 when they reacquired right-hander Tom Wilhelmsen after he chose to become a free agent rather than accept an outright assignment to the minors by the Texas Rangers. Wilhelmsen, 32, has a 1.93 ERA in 11 appearances since rejoining the Mariners and has emerged as manager Scott Servais’ first choice in high-leverage situations in the later innings. “When we have traffic,” Servais said, “he figures a way to get through it because he’s got experience. That means a lot. You want a guy out there who is not going to panic. Just make pitches, and that’s what he’s done.” That was particularly evident last Tuesday at Pittsburgh, when Wilhelmsen bailed out Vidal Nuno from a first-and-

third jam with no outs against the heart of the Pirates’ lineup. “That’s always the goal,” he Next Game e x p l a i n e d Today non-plussed. vs. Boston “ G e t at Seattle three outs Time: 7 p.m. with no runs. Or On TV: ROOT however many outs you’re asked to get. I guess it’s just the comfort level, maybe. Stuff is still there.” Catcher Mike Zunino was less reticent. “This is the best I’ve seen him since ’14,” Zunino said. “He’s got four pitches right now, and he’s commanding all of them. He’s throwing his soft stuff early in counts. Then his fastball plays even better — and it’s 98 [mph].” Wilhelmsen served as the Mariners closer in 2012-13 before losing the job due to ineffectiveness. TURN

TO

M’S/B3

Hawks following pack, lack fullback BY DAVE BOLING MCCLATCHY NEWS SERVICE

RENTON — To the proud franchise legacy of Dan Doornink and John L. Williams and Mack Strong and Michael Robinson, the 2016 Seahawks add well, nobody. As of Sunday mornings second practice of training camp, the Seahawks had zero players listed as fullbacks. Brandon Cottom (listed at tight end) and Tre Madden (running back) will serve in the role when needed. But that won’t be very often. “It’s just that the offenses are changing with the three wide

receivers and four wide receivers, its a passing game,” running backs coach Sherman Smith said. “You can run the ball without a fullback, you can find ways to run without them.” Smith was the teams original running back in 1976, following the lead blocking of Don Testerman, David Sims, and Doornink over the years. “What we’ve done is our fullbacks are ex-tailbacks because we want our guys to be able to read (the defenses) like a tailTHE ASSOCIATED PRESS back and make those adjustSeattle’s Thomas Rawls (34) follows the block of ments,” Smith said. TURN

TO

HAWKS/B3

fullback Will Tukuafu (46) against the Chicago Bears last season.


B2

SportsRecreation

MONDAY, AUGUST 1, 2016

Today’s

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

SPORTS ON TV

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

Scoreboard Calendar

Today

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

12:15 p.m. (313) CBSSD Soccer FIFA, Bahrain vs. United States, International U-20 Tournament (Live) 4 p.m. (313) CBSSD Fast Pitch NPF, Scrap Yard Dawgs vs. USSSA Florida Pride (Live) 4 p.m. (26) ESPN Baseball MLB, New York Yankees at New York Mets (Live) 4 p.m. (311) ESPNU Basketball H.S., Adidas Nations, Third Place Game (Live) 5 p.m. NBA TV Basketball FIBA, Nigeria vs. United States, Exhibition Game (Live) 5:30 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Soccer, Friendly, Liverpool vs. AS Roma (Live) 6 p.m. (311) ESPNU Basketball H.S., Adidas Nations Final (Live) 7 p.m. (25) ROOT Baseball MLB, Boston Red Sox at Seattle Mariners (Live)

SPORTS PIC OF THE DAY

Monday No events scheduled

Tuesday No events scheduled

Area Sports Baseball 14U Pacific Northwest Regional At Volunteer Field Semifinals Olympic (Port Angeles), West Linn, Ore. Helena, Mont. Moses Lake Saturday’s Scores Kennewick 11, South Coast, Ore. 1 Moses Lake 13, West Linn, Ore. 3 Helena 6, Columbia Basin 3 Olympic (Port Angeles) 23, Riverton, Wyo. 0 Friday’s Scores Calgary, Alberta 5, Olympic (Port Angeles) 3 West Linn, Ore. 12, South Coast, Ore. 7 Moses Lake 12, Lewiston, Idaho 2 Helena, Mont. 14, Riverton, Wyo. 4 Thursday’s Scores West Linn, Ore. 12, Lewiston 3 Calgary, Alta. 10, Riverton, Wyo. 0 Kennewick 5, Moses Lake 0 Olympic (Port Angeles) 15, Columbia Basin

West Division W L San Francisco 60 44 Los Angeles 58 46 Colorado 52 52 San Diego 45 59 Arizona 43 61

5 Wednesday’s Scores Columbia Basin 6, Calgary, Alta. 5 Lewiston, Idaho 6, Kennewick 5 Moses Lake 11, South Coast, Ore. 0 Olympic (Port Angeles) 10, Helena, Mont. 0 Tuesday’s Scores West Linn, Ore. 7, Kennewick 0 (Forfeit) Columbia Basin 15, Riverton, Wyo. 1 Helena, Mont. 10, Calgary, Alta. 5 Lewiston, Idaho 10, South Coast 0 THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Baseball

LACES

American League East Division W L Toronto 59 45 Baltimore 58 45 Boston 56 46 New York 52 51 Tampa Bay 41 61 Central Division W L Cleveland 59 42 Detroit 56 48 Chicago 51 53 Kansas City 49 54 Minnesota 39 64 West Division W L Texas 61 44 Houston 55 48 Seattle 52 50 Los Angeles 47 57 Oakland 47 57

Pct GB .567 — .563 ½ .549 2 .505 6½ .402 17 Pct GB .584 — .538 4½ .490 9½ .476 11 .379 21 Pct .581 .534 .510 .452 .452

Saturday’s Games Toronto 9, Baltimore 1 Seattle 4, Chicago Cubs 1

GB — 5 7½ 13½ 13½

OUT,

DAD

Luke Jansen, right, follows through on his kick as his father, Carolina Panthers long snapper J.J. Jansen, maintains his placement following a training camp practice Sunday. Tampa Bay 6, N.Y. Yankees 3 Chicago White Sox 6, Minnesota 5, 10 innings Cleveland 6, Oakland 3 Detroit 3, Houston 2 Texas 2, Kansas City 1 L.A. Angels 5, Boston 2 Sunday’s Games Baltimore 6, Toronto 2, 12 innings Cleveland 8, Oakland 0 Detroit 11, Houston 0 Tampa Bay 5, N.Y. Yankees 3 Minnesota 6, Chicago White Sox 4 Texas 5, Kansas City 3 Boston 5, L.A. Angels 3 Seattle at Chicago Cubs, late. Monday’s Games Kansas City (Duffy 6-1) at Tampa Bay (Archer

5-14), 4:10 p.m. Minnesota (Duffey 5-8) at Cleveland (Salazar 11-3), 4:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Sabathia 6-8) at N.Y. Mets (Verrett 3-6), 4:10 p.m. Toronto (Stroman 8-4) at Houston (Fister 10-7), 5:10 p.m. Boston (Rodriguez 2-4) at Seattle (Paxton 3-5), 7:10 p.m. Tuesday’s Games Texas at Baltimore, 4:05 p.m. Chicago White Sox at Detroit, 4:10 p.m. Kansas City at Tampa Bay, 4:10 p.m. Minnesota at Cleveland, 4:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at N.Y. Mets, 4:10 p.m. Toronto at Houston, 5:10 p.m. Oakland at L.A. Angels, 7:05 p.m.

Boston at Seattle, 7:10 p.m.

National League East Division W L Washington 61 43 Miami 56 48 New York 53 50 Philadelphia 48 58 Atlanta 36 68 Central Division W L Chicago 62 41 St. Louis 56 48 Pittsburgh 52 50 Milwaukee 46 56 Cincinnati 41 62

Pct GB .587 — .538 5 .515 7½ .453 14 .346 25 Pct .602 .538 .510 .451 .398

GB — 6½ 9½ 15½ 21

Pct GB .577 — .558 2 .500 8 .433 15 .413 17

Saturday’s Games Seattle 4, Chicago Cubs 1 San Francisco 5, Washington 3 Colorado 7, N.Y. Mets 2 Miami 11, St. Louis 0 Milwaukee 5, Pittsburgh 3 Philadelphia 9, Atlanta 5 San Diego 2, Cincinnati 1, 10 innings Arizona 4, L.A. Dodgers 2 Sunday’s Games Miami 5, St. Louis 4 N.Y. Mets 6, Colorado 4 Atlanta 2, Philadelphia 1 Milwaukee 4, Pittsburgh 2 San Francisco 3, Washington 1 Arizona at L.A. Dodgers, 4:10 p.m. Cincinnati 3, San Diego 2 Seattle at Chicago Cubs, late. Monday’s Games N.Y. Yankees (Sabathia 6-8) at N.Y. Mets (Verrett 3-6), 4:10 p.m. Miami (Koehler 8-8) at Chicago Cubs (Hendricks 9-7), 5:05 p.m. Washington (Strasburg 14-1) at Arizona (Bradley 4-6), 6:40 p.m. Milwaukee (Nelson 6-9) at San Diego (Cosart 0-1), 7:10 p.m. Tuesday’s Games San Francisco at Philadelphia, 4:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at N.Y. Mets, 4:10 p.m. Pittsburgh at Atlanta, 4:10 p.m. St. Louis at Cincinnati, 4:10 p.m. Miami at Chicago Cubs, 5:05 p.m. L.A. Dodgers at Colorado, 5:40 p.m. Washington at Arizona, 6:40 p.m. Milwaukee at San Diego, 7:10 p.m.

Dynamite Jimmy Walker wins a marathon PGA Championship BY DOUG FERGUSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SPRINGFIELD, N.J.— The stars never aligned this magnificently for Jimmy Walker. In the longest final day at the PGA Championship in 64 years, Walker produced three big birdies on the back nine at Baltusrol and held his nerve against the No. 1 player in the world to close with a 3-under 67 for a one-shot victory over defending champion Jason Day. Walker provided a little too much drama at the end. After watching Day make a 15-foot eagle putt on the par-5 18th to close the gap to one shot, Walker went for the green when a par would win it. He missed to the right in deep rough, safely pitched

on some 35 feet away and had to hole a 3-foot putt for the victory. There was never a doubt, and the 37-year-old calmly pumped his fist twice. “Sometimes, things just don’t come easy,” Walker said after hoisting the 37-pound Wanamaker Trophy, amazing that he had any strength left after a 36-hole final day brought on my rain over the weekend. “He really put it on me to make a par. Sometimes pars are hard. But we got it. “It was amazing,” he said. “It was a battle all day.” It was a battle for everyone. In a most peculiar final day at a major, the PGA Championship allowed for preferred lies because of nearly 4 inches of rain during the week that drenched the Lower Course.

Heavy rain in Poconos delays NASCAR to today THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

LONG POND, Pa. — Pocono CEO Brandon Igdalsky took refuge from the rain inside a garage stall that was being used as the site of the drivers meeting. ]His message Sunday morning to Jimmie Johnson, Jeff Gordon, Tony Stewart and the rest of the field: “I love you guys. But I don’t want to see you tomorrow.” Well, tough luck. Call it, Pocono Rainway. Rain washed out the NASCAR Sprint Cup race at Pocono Raceway and the 400-mile race will now run at 8 a.m. today. Martin Truex Jr. is on

the pole and Kurt Busch tries to sweep Pocono in the track’s second Monday race of the season. The June Pocono race also was delayed a day. NASCAR said this was the first time a track had two rain-postponed races in the same season. This was NASCAR’s 10th postponed race since 2011. The 2012 rain-shortened race at Pocono was marred by lightning strikes that killed one fan and injured nine others. Monday’s forecast seems cloudier than Kasey Kahne’s chances to make the Chase. But NASCAR set the time an hour earlier than the green flag start on that June Monday to try to

But it ended on a happy note for Walker. He is a major champion, completing a sweep of first-time winners in the majors this year. Better yet: It moves him into position to secure a spot on the Ryder Cup team. Walker is a late bloomer who has received as much attention in recent years for his astrophotography, with some of his work recognized by NASA. He needed a perforTHE ASSOCIATED PRESS mance that was out of this world in a wet and wild Jimmy Walker reacts after making a birdie on the 17th hole during the final round of the PGA Sunday, and he delivered every step of the way. Championship. He played the final 28 holes without a bogey. He Desperate to beat the meaning Walker was play- began the back nine by holclock, they sent the third- ing the third round as oth- ing a 45-foot bunker shot on round pairings right back ers were playing the final No. 10 and making a 30-foot out for the final round, round. birdie putt on No. 11.

British Open champion Henrik Stenson, trying to join Ben Hogan as the only players to win back-to-back majors at age 40, finally faded away with a double bogey on the 15th hole. So did Brooks Koepka earlier on the back nine. Day stuck around, determined to be like his buddy Tiger Woods and win backto-back at the PGA Championship. And he almost did, drilling a 3-wood from 258 yards up the hill to 15 feet for an eagle and a 67. The Australian flipped his club in despair as he neared the green, seeing the leaderboard and realizing that cheer behind him was Walker answering with a birdie on 17.

NFL Roundup 49ers Davis returns to league SANTA CLARA, Calif. — Right tackle Anthony Davis sat down with 49ers general manager Trent Baalke for a productive discussion about his return to the team after a year-long retirement, and both men insist they have moved past any issues between them. Davis was reinstated by the NFL on Saturday and took part in his first practice Sunday after missing all of the offseason program under new coach Chip Kelly. Davis was part of Baal-

ke’s first draft class after taking over as GM, selected 11th overall in 2010 out of Rutgers, and he became an immediate impact player. He has started all 71 games in which he has appeared.

Hopkins in camp HOUSTON — It was something Houston Texans general manager Rick Smith hoped wouldn’t drag out, and in the end it lasted just one day. After missing the opening day of training camp, Texans wide receiver DeAndre Hopkins ended his holdout Sunday following the Texans’ first practice. Hopkins, who is scheduled to make $1 million in

base salary this season, and the team were still in constant communication. Smith said the dialogue was positive throughout the short holdout. During the holdout, Hopkins was being fined $40,000 per day he missed, but now because of his return he will be able to cash in on a $445,004 roster bonus on Wednesday. Hopkins is coming off the best season of his career with 1,521 yards receiving, third-best in the NFL, 111 receptions and 11 touchdowns.

Debates no game ASHLAND, Ohio — The Commission on Presidential Debates rejected Republican Donald

Trump’s claim that Democrats rigged the debate schedule so that two of the three debates would occur during football games. In a statement released Sunday, the commission said it started working more than 18 months ago to identify all religious and federal holidays as well as baseball and football games and other major events. The commission said it was “impossible” to avoid all sporting events. On Sept. 26, the night of the first debate, ESPN will carry the Monday night game featuring the Falcons vs. the Saints. On Oct. 9, the second debate will air opposite the Sunday night game featuring the Giants vs. the Packers on NBC. The Associated Press


SportsRecreation

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

MONDAY, AUGUST 1, 2016

Sounders dominate, but settle for draw Thiel: BY TIM BOOTH THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SEATTLE — Cristian Roldan scored his second goal of the season in the 49th minute to give Seattle the lead, but a defensive miscue late allowed Los Angeles’ Sebastian Lleget to score the equalizer in the 78th minute as the Sounders and Galaxy finished in a 1-1 tie. Seattle was in position to get the victory in the debut of interim head coach Brian Schmetzer, taking over this week after the club and Sigi Schmid parted ways. Yet the frustrating season for the Sounders (6-123) continued after missing numerous chances to put the game away in the second half. Roldan’s goal was his second of the season off an assist from Nelson Valdez. But Seattle’s defense that broke down in the closing minutes, allowing a chipped pass by Steven Gerrard to find Lletget unmarked at the back post to tap in his first goal since Aug. 23, 2015.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Seattle Sounders midfielder Nicolas Lodeiro, right, looks to pass against the L.A. Galaxy. Seattle missed out on a needed three points in its attempt to get back into the playoff race in the Western Conference, but came away hopeful about what newly signed designated player Nicolas Lodeiro can provide. Despite arriving in Seattle on Tuesday, Lodeiro was the best player on the field. His playmaking created numerous chances for others and he nearly scored three times in the second half, his last chance a

deflected shot that forced Los Angeles goalkeeper Brian Rowe to make a fingertip save. Los Angeles defender Jelle Van Damme also saved two shots off the goal line, one in each half. Van Damme denied Clint Dempsey’s shot in the first half then raced back on stuff Jordan Morris’ shot in the 70th minute after Morris was sent free on a pass by Lodeiro and dribbled around Rowe.

The Galaxy (9-3-9) came away with a point despite playing without U.S. national team midfielder Gyasi Zardes, who missed the match with a strained chest muscle. Seattle played its first game in franchise history without Schmid as the head coach. Schmid was appointed to navigate the franchise through its infancy beginning with its expansion season in 2009, but the relationship reached a breaking point this season with the Sounders slogging through the worst four months in club history and culminating with last Tuesday’s decision between Schmid and the club to part ways. Schmetzer, Schmid’s top assistant from the outset, was tabbed as the interim head coach. He was the first in a week of changes for Seattle that included the signing of Lodeiro as the Sounders’ newest designated player and the return of midfielder Alvaro Fernandez for his second stint in Seattle.

M’s: Interested in Reds’ Cozart CONTINUED FROM B1 but, after being recalled, rejected a second one. The Mariners took a He readily admits he wasn’t emotionally pre- chance. The easy explanation is pared at that point to hansimply dle the pressures that Wilhelmsen regained his confidence accompany the duty. He served in a variety of once he returned to the roles over the next two Mariners — except he said: years before reclaiming his “I felt pretty confident over job as closer last season there, too.” So what is it? over the final six weeks. He Even Wilhelmsen isn’t responded by compiling a 1.04 ERA in 15 games and sure. “I’m guessing,” he said, converting 13 of 15 opportu“it’s just that I’m much nities. But the Mariners dealt more comfortable in a Marihim to Texas in mid-Novem- ners uniform than I was in ber in a multi-player trade a Texas uniform. I don’t that netted center fielder know how that translates, but I really don’t care Leonys Martin. The reasoning was sim- because it’s working.” And, really, what else ple; the Mariners believed matters? they needed a regular center fielder, and the Rangers Trade whispers wanted bullpen help. For whatever reason, The Mariners remain Wilhelmsen was a disaster linked to Cincinnati in a in Texas. He gave up 25 possible trade to acquire runs and 38 hits in just 21 shortstop Zack Cozart. 1/3 innings over 21 appearThere are indications ances. that it could be a multiHe accepted one demo- player deal, but sources tion to Triple-A Round Rock indicate outfielder Jay

Bruce is not likely to be involved. Several other clubs are trying to acquire Bruce. The Reds are believed to want a high-end pitching prospect as part of any deal for Cozart. One possibility is lefty Luiz Gohara, who turned 20 on Sunday. He is a combined 5-0 with a 2.05 ERA in eight starts at Lo-A Clinton and Short-A Everett.

always been minimal in non-game situations since it first surfaced in a June 14 start at Tampa Bay. He made three more starts before going on the disabled list following a shortened outing July 5 at Houston. If all goes well today, Walker is tentatively slotted to return to the bigleague staff for a projected Aug. 6 start against the Los Angeles Angels at Safeco Walker’s rehab Field. He was 4-7 with a 3.66 The final — and biggest — test for right-hander Tai- ERA prior to being placed juan Walker in his recovery on the disabled list. from tendinitis in his right foot comes today in a pro- On tap jected five-inning rehab The Mariners open their start for Triple-A Tacoma against Albuquerque (Rock- longest homestand of the year at 7:10 p.m. today with ies) at Cheney Stadium. Walker reported no prob- the first four four games lems in recent days as he against Boston at Safeco worked through the stan- Field. Left-hander James Paxdard progression of flatground throwing, bullpen ton (3-5 with a 4.27 ERA) workouts and a three- will face Red Sox lefty Eduinning simulated game last ardo Rodriguez (2-4, 6.51). The game can be seen on Wednesday in Pittsburgh. But the discomfort has Root Sports Northwest.

M’s trade Miley for veteran minor-leaguer THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CHICAGO — The Seattle Mariners swapped lefthanded pitchers with the Baltimore Orioles on Sunday, sending Wade Miley to the Orioles in exchange for Ariel Miranda. The Cuban pitcher has spent most of the year with Triple-A Norfolk.

He appeared in one game for Baltimore on July 3 at Seattle, allowing three runs and four hits in two innings. He owns a 3.93 ERA and 1.26 WHIP with 87 strikeouts over 100.2 innings for Norfolk, and he will serve as organizational rotation depth for Seattle— it will

likely take an injury at the major league level to open up a rotation spot for Miranda. Miley is 7-8 with a 4.98 ERA on the year but he had a 3.45 ERA in five July starts. He pitched seven innings of one-hit ball in Seattle’s 4-1 against the major

league-leading Chicago Cubs on Saturday. The 29-year-old Miley was selected by Arizona with the 43rd pick in the 2008 amateur draft and made his major league debut with the Diamondbacks in 2011. He is 56-54 with a 4.07 ERA in six years in the majors.

14U: Blistered Wyoming team West Linn: Romero 1-2, BB; Sherman 1-3, R; Gabel 1-1.

CONTINUED FROM B1 Brody Merritt singled to center and moved up to second on a line drive base hit to center by Tanner Lunt. The pair advanced on a passed ball but Romero got a ground ball out to end the threat. Olympic got the leadoff hitter aboard in the fifth when Nathan Miller walked. But Miller was thrown out trying to steal second base and Olympic couldn’t take advantage when Lucas Jarnagin followed with a single to left. Trying to get the tying run home Olympic then tried a hit-and-run. But Tyler Bowen’s hardhit liner was sent straight to the West Linn center fielder and Jarnagin was doubled off first base for an inning-ending double play. Merritt led off with a single in Olympic’s last atbats in the top of the seventh. But a strikeout, a fielders choice and a ground out ended the game.

Olympic 23, Riverton 0 To reach the semifinals, Olympic racked up 22 hits and 23 runs to blister Riverton, Wyoming on Saturday night. Silas Thomas pitched four clean innings for Olympic, allowing no runs on no hits and two walks and striking out two. Flodstrom was 4 of 5 with a triple, a double, two runs and five RBIs. Merritt scored four runs and went 4 for 5 with a double and three RBIs. DAVE LOGAN/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Riverton’s Trey Draper beats the throw to Olympic first baseman Timmy Adams from pitcher Slater Bradley. Bradley picked off Draper on the next pitch. “It’s a tough way to go out in a pitcher’s duel like this, but we are absolutely proud of these kids,” Rob Merritt said. “We have some more lessons to learn and this group will be back.”

West Linn 1, Olympic 0 Olympic 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 — 0 5 3 West Linn 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 — 1 3 0 WP- Romero; LP- Flodstrom Pitching Statistics Olympic: Flodstrom 4 IP, 2 H, R, 0 ER, 3 BB, 6 K; Adams IP, H, BB; Merritt IP, 0 H, 0 R, BB, 2 K. West Linn: Romero 7 IP, 5 H, 0 R, 4 BB, 3 K. Hitting Statistics Olympic: Merritt 2-3, Lunt 2-3, Jarnagin 1-2.

Olympic 23, Riverton, Wyoming 0 5 innings Olympic 5 9 1 0 8 — 23 22 0 Riverton 0 0 0 0 0 — 0 1 3 WP- Thomas; LP- Draper Pitching Statistics Olympic: Bradley IP, H, 0 R, 2 BB; Thomas 4 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 2 BB, 2 K. Riverton: Draper 5 IP, 22 H, 23 R, 12 ER, 6 BB, K. Hitting Statistics Olympic: Flodstrom 4-5, 2B, 3B, 2 R, 5 RBI; Merritt 4-5, 2B, 4 R, 3 RBI; Jarnagin 2-3, 2B, 2 RBI; Adams 2-2, R, RBI; Whitman 3-5, 2B, 3 R, RBI; Miller 1-2, R, 3 RBI; Bowechop 2-2, 2 R; Powers 1-2, 2B. Riverton: Draper 1-2.

________ Compiled using team reports.

B3

Serenity

CONTINUED FROM B1 intense questions. Like I said: Impeccable communiThat means you’re com- cation.” What happens when municating with people in that impeccable communian impeccable manner, cation ends in disagreemaking tough decisions ment? and being a good listener. “We just put everything Being a good listener is 80 on the table and not let to 90 percent of my job.” In their first meeting in things just drift for a while — be able to address those 2010, Allen didn’t ask Schneider about zone/man things as quickly as you defensive principles, or the can, talk through it,” he said. trips-wide offensive set or “With Pete, it’s basically whether he could steal about just spending the away Aaron Rodgers from extra time. Like, ‘OK, let’s Green Bay, his previous just clear our heads, sit employer. down and start watching the film again,’ or, ‘Let’s Compatibility key just start our conversation over again, keep an open He wanted to know whether he could work well mind and be respectful of each other.’” with a coach who had just Perhaps much of this hired him, a very non-NFL seems like well-known kind of thing. modern business psychol“He wanted to make ogy. sure Pete and I were comBut remember, this is a patible,” Schneider said. franchise that went from “That I was going to be 1984 to 2005 without a a forward thinker, able to playoff win, longer than the think on your feet. It Mariners’ much-lamented wasn’t like Pete and I knew each other especially current streak. This is a franchise that well at the time. “[The collaboration] was was moved by its weaponsgrade idiot owner for two the attractive part of the weeks in 1996 without perposition. We were going to mission or rationale. strive for uniqueness and This was a franchise on greatness. We’re going to its third coach in three work together and it’s not years when Carroll was going to be about ego, hired. about who gets credit for One doesn’t have to look this or that.” around the league for It starts with Allen, who examples of dysfunction has been a pro sports and dystopia. owner since 1988 with the The current Seahawks Portland Trail Blazers. operation is better than it There is nothing he hasn’t ever has been here, and the seen. He has made his share of impulse decisions, equal of the best in any sport. believed he knew the Serenity is pro sports is games better than he did, a rare, splendid thing, and ran over some of his never to be taken for hires. He is a wiser man granted. If you’re a good now. listener, like Schneider, you Allen “is extremely can hear the hum. intelligent . . . you can ________ bounce ideas off of him,” Schneider said. Art Thiel is the co-founder of “He asks you great, sportspressnw.com.

Hawks: Block CONTINUED FROM B1 along with his part-time duties at defensive tackle. It “We have Brandon and was light duty, though. Tre and they’ve shown they “We don’t do a lot of that can do that when we need [isolation] blocking, so we it.” don’t need a big lead The Seahawks have blocker,” Smith said. “We been among the last teams need more of an athletic in the league to veer away guy.” from fullback use. Super Using three tight ends, Bowl winner Denver, for too, has added point-ofinstance, didn’t have a full- attack blocking power. back on the roster last sea“Now, with the throwing son. game, you can get people The Hawks, though, still out of those big personnel ran the ball (501) more than groups so they have to put passed (489) last season. five or six DBs out there, For much of last season, and then you can run the they plugged in versatile ball against that,” Smith Will Tukuafu at fullback, said.

Indians go all-in, trade for lefty All-Star Miller BY TOM WITHERS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CLEVELAND — Serious about winning the World Series, the Indians batted .500 in making a pair of major trades on Sunday. Call it an All-Star split doubleheader. Going all in for October, the AL Central leader acquired All-Star lefthanded reliever Andrew Miller from the New York Yankees for four minor leaguers. Although they have one of the game’s best starting staffs, the Indians’ bullpen needed a proven lefty and there is none better than Miller, who possesses a nearly unhittable slider and brings a 6-1 record, 1.39 ERA and postseason experience to Cleveland. Miller didn’t come cheap. The Indians had to part with Frazier along with minor league pitchers Justus Sheffield, Ben Heller and J.P. Feyereisen. Frazier was the No. 5 overall pick in 2013. In 94 games this season at Double- and Triple-A, he’s batting .273 with 13 homers and 48 RBIs.

The deal came less than 12 hours after the Indians had reached agreement on the parameters of a swap with Milwaukee for Brewers All-Star catcher Jonathan Lucroy. However, that trade was stopped by Lucroy, who refused to waive his notrade clause and turned down a chance to join a contender. Lucroy’s decision would have been a huge blow to the Indians if not for the addition of Miller, who will help Cleveland manager Terry Francona shorten games and gives the Indians a legitimate shot at winning their first World Series title since 1948. “It certainly should help us a lot,” Francona said before the Indians beat the Oakland Athletics 8-0 to complete a three-game sweep. “I know when we go into New York next week, we don’ have to face Andrew Miller, which will be really nice.” So will his ability to mix and match Miller with right-hander Bryan Shaw in the late innings before handing the ball to closer Cody Allen.


B4

Fun ’n’ Advice

MONDAY, AUGUST 1, 2016

Dilbert

Long-ago ties can be bound up

by Scott Adams

For Better or For Worse

Classic Doonesbury (1986)

Frank & Ernest

Garfield

DEAR ABBY: Forty-five years ago I had a mistress. My wife knew about her. Both of our spouses have now passed. I have found her address on the internet, and I’m debating if I should contact her. What do you think? Unsure in Iowa

by G.B. Trudeau

by Bob and Tom Thaves

by Brian Basset

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Spend more time with friends and colleagues. Put regrets and mistakes behind you. Make amends and move forward. Look for healthier ways to live. Smart, fit and focused should be your goal. Give your best and you’ll get the highest returns. 4 stars

by Pat Brady and Don Wimmer

ZITS ❘ by Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

Dennis the Menace

by Hank Ketcham

Abigail Van Buren

The Last Word in Astrology ❘ ARIES (March 21-April 19): Communicate, participate and network. The connections you make will lead to contracts, negotiations and a fresh start. Express your plans and you’ll be given unique options to explore. Consider updating your look. Romance is in the stars. 5 stars

Rose is Rose

DEAR ABBY them and keep scrolling.

Dear Abby: We are a family of six children. Our elderly mother lives with each of Dear Unsure: Because you are us three to 10 both now unencumbered, I don’t see months at a time. any reason why you shouldn’t. Out of the six of Clearly, you have things in comus, only one is a mon and a lot of shared history. homemaker who has the room and Dear Abby: We are well into school’s summer vacation, filled with ideal setting for her to live comfortdays by the pool, trips to the zoo, and ably. However, she refuses to have plenty of time for kids to goof off Mom permanently. around the house. The rest of us have jobs that don’t This extended leisure time for the kiddos may be a good time to remind allow us to be with her during the parents to be thoughtful about what day. Yet we all agreed that putting they post on social media. Mom in a nursing home would be Some basics: When your child accidentally dumps all the sunscreen out of the question. If I didn’t have to work, I’d take from your beach bag onto the car care of her permanently myself. floor, you do not have to post a picI admit that she can be difficult to ture of a regretful, crying toddler to live with. She can cut you down, prove that “he really did it this insist you do all kinds of errands and time!” When your child falls off her bike is suspicious about someone taking her money. and gets a great big scrape on her I don’t know what to do. forearm, you do not have to post a One of Six in Ohio picture of the scrape for the world to see. Dear One of Six: Has your When your child is running mother always been this way? through the backyard sprinkler If so, then perhaps it’s time for without clothes on, you do not have another family meeting. to post a picture to let us know. To expect one sister to shoulder Abby, please encourage your readthe entire burden of taking in a ers to have a memorable, safe and demanding, suspicious parent is exciting summer — but to keep unfair to her. those photos to themselves. If there have been changes in Common Sense, Please your mother’s personality, consider having her be neurologically evaluDear C.S.P.: You obviously don’t ated to see if there is something want the children put at risk or wrong with her. shamed. Some people feel a compulsion to A geriatric psychiatrist could give record everything a kid does for the you some helpful input regardless of world to see because their child is so whether she’s ill — and help you all special and unique. decide upon a workable, permanent Unfortunately, we seem to have living situation for her. reached a point in our culture that ________ nothing is private anymore. Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, I’ll print your suggestion to parknown as Jeanne Phillips, and was ents, but while I applaud your want- also founded by her mother, the late Pauline Philing to protect their children, it’s their lips. Letters can be mailed to Dear Abby, P.O. job. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069 or via If the photos bother you, ignore email by logging onto www.dearabby.com.

by Lynn Johnston

by Jim Davis

Red and Rover

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Pickles

by Brian Crane

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Put more effort into how you present yourself. A couple of subtle changes will make a difference to the outcome of what you are trying to achieve. Don’t get angry when you should be concentrating on getting things done. 3 stars VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Don’t limit the possibilities. Look beyond what’s right in front of you and consider trying something quite different. Ask questions, share ideas and you will find a way to interest others while satisfying your personal needs. 4 stars

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Sharing secrets will get you into trouble with your peers and could damage your reputation. Don’t start something new when you should be more concerned with finishing what’s left undone. Don’t promise the impossible. 3 stars

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Take care of pressing matters at home. Give yourself a chance to consider the best way to move forward and pursue your goals. Personal changes will encourage all sorts of interesting possibilities. Don’t be idle when you should be taking flight. 2 stars

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Control your mood and your day will be filled with passionate and productive activities. Think outside the box and you will entice others to help you expand your plans. Make room at home for a project that could require extra hours. 3 stars

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Passion will give you the drive you require to get things accomplished. Don’t let personal matters deter you from reaching your goals. If you are physically active, take care to protect yourself from stress-related injury. 5 stars

The Family Circus

by Eugenia Last

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Think before you land in a precarious position. Make a motion to bring about personal changes that will make you feel good about the way you look or how you live. An unexpected gift, offering or financial opportunity is apparent. 3 stars CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Partnerships will need attention. Don’t forget the past, but don’t dwell on it either. Wasting time on a fruitless situation will not be productive. Look over contracts and negotiate on your own behalf. Don’t give in to emotional blackmail. 3 stars AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Put your energy into your professional concerns. Your greatest gains will come from your ability to stick to whatever you are working on until the task is complete. It’s up to you to bring about the changes you want to see happen. 3 stars PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Activities that stimulate your mind and make you think about your alternatives will encourage you to be more selective, especially when it comes to the people you deal with. Separate the hangers-on from the helpers. 3 stars

by Bil and Jeff Keane


Classified

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

MONDAY, AUGUST 1, 2016 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

SNEAK A PEEK PENINSULA DAILY NEWS s

s

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

CAREGIVERS CNA/RNA: Must be able to work all shifts and weekends, requires all certifications, excellent wages. Apply in Person at Golden Years, 202 Birdsong Ln., P.A.

3023 Lost

Guest Service Agent $11 - $14, DOE

www.peninsula dailynews.com

Housekeepers Starting $10.50

4026 Employment General

Apply in person at 140 Del Guzzi Dr. P.A.

4026 Employment General Accounting Clerk II (Reception & General Support) The Accounting Clerk II performs a broad range of accounting tasks with a primary focus on answer ing the phone, greeting customers, & general suppor t to the Accounting team. This position is cross-trained in other accounting functions to provide backup support to Accounts Receivables, Accounts Payable, & Payroll. The Accounting Clerk II position creates & maintains a broad range of modera t e l y c o m p l ex E x c e l spreadsheets to support various accounting functions. The ideal candidate must have a 2 year degree & 5+ years of related work experience or a combination of education & experience. Applications & job descriptions may be obtained at the Por t Admin Office, 338 West First Street, Port Angeles or online at www.portofpa.com/em ployment . Applications accepted through Wednesday, August 10th. The starting wage for this position is $21.27 to $22.89 per hour DOE. Drug testing is required. Auto Detailer Looking for a experienced full time detailer. Willing to train the r i g h t p e r s o n . Va l i d dr iver’s license, dependable, energetic, courteous required. Apply in person at PRICE FORD Chief Financial Officer (CFO): Olympic Area Agency on Aging (O3A) seeks CFO based in Port Hadlock. Join mission-driven team advocating for independence & quality community services for older or disabled adults. 40 hrs./wk, exempt $60,095 -$78,850 annual range, benefits, pension plan. Oversee fiscal management of agency including budget development, accounting, federal grant management. Requirements: BA in business, accounting or related field & 4 yrs. exp. in supervisory fiscal position, knowledge of computeri ze d a c c o u n t i n g s y s tems, exp. with governm e n t a l a u d i t requirements, MBA preferred. WDL, auto ins. For job description & application: 360-379- 5061 or www.o3a.org. Open until filled; applications r e c e i ve d by 5 : 0 0 p m Monday, August 8, 2016 in first review. O3A is an EOE.

DENTAL ASSISTANT: 3 days per week in Forks, must be registered. Call for more info or to apply. (360)374-2288 DUMP TRUCK DRIVER: Fo r t i m b e r r o a d s. L i censed and exper ienced, needs ability to perform some labor, and equipment operating experience is a plus, good pay. Call John (360)460-9297 Early Childhood Services OlyCAP is hiring for the following positions: Family Service Worker, Teacher, Teacher Assistant, Itinerant Teacher Assistant, and Child Development Substitute. Fo r m o r e i n fo r m a t i o n visit www.OlyCAP.org. EOE.

Executive Assistant The Executive Assistant provides high level office support to the Executive Director, Port Commission & the Port’s leadership team. This position composes, edits & finalizes the official records & reports of the Por t. The ideal candidate must have exper t level skills in office support programs (Microsoft Office & Adobe). 5 plus years in a high level executive assistant position with increasingly responsible administrative & executive support. Exp e r i e n c e w o r k i n g fo r government, a municipality and/or attorneys preferred. Knowledge & awareness of the Revised Code of Washington (RCWs) preferred. Must type 65 accurate words per minute & be a Notar y Public or have the ability to obtain in 1 year from hire date. Applications & job descriptions may be obtained at the Por t Admin Office, 338 West First Street, Port Angeles or online at www.portofpa.com. Applications accepted through Wednesday, August 10th. The starting wage for this position is $23.84 to $28.05 per hour DOE. Drug testing is required. PA R T S / S A L E S / S E RV I C E : We a r e looking for a motivated individual to sell parts, whole goods, and wr ite up ser vice orders. Fast paced, interesting and lots of var iety to make the day go by fast. Must be willing to learn, have some knowledge of parts, and be outgoing and not afraid to ask questions. Please apply in person. Work days are Tuesday-Satu r d ay. Po r t A n g e l e s Pow e r E q u i p m e n t 2624 E Hwy 101, Port Angeles

LOT PERSON: Vehicle washing, and minor maintenance, for Dungeness Bus Lines, Avis, and Budget Rent a Car, on Fr i, Sat, and Sundays. Fast paced, phyically demanding job. Attention to detail, and pride in work necessary. Good driving record required, must pass initial and random drug screenings. Must be 21 years of age. Long term downtown Port Angeles business. Great place to work! $13.87 per hour. (360)460-1073 LUBE TECH Full-time, valid WSDL required. Apply at 110 Golf Course, P.A. in the Quick Lube.

MAINTENANCE $11 - $14, DOE Apply in person at 140 Del Guzzi Dr. NOW HIRING! Seeking friendly team players for lunch and dinner shift, Wed-Sun. Apply in person at Dockside Grill, 2577 W. S e q u i m B ay R d . 11:30am-9pm. PART-TIME RESIDENTIAL AIDE $11-$13hr. DOQ Req: HS Diploma/GED 2 openings for day shift, 1 for weekend graveyard Bonus pay for graveyard and oncall shifts. EOE. Resume/cover letter to: PBH 118 E. 8th St. Port Angeles, WA 98362 peninsulabehavioral.org WELDER/ FABRICATOR Busy welding shop looking for exper. fabricat o r / l a y o u t / a s s e m b l y. Jour neyman skills required. F/T with benefits. Send resume to: Peninsula Daily News PDN#784/Welder Port Angeles, WA 98362

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS Has a newspaper route available in the Por t Townsend area, Kala Point and Marrowstone Island. Deliver y star t time is approximately 2 am, 75 miles, and 4 hours. Six days per week, 200220 subscribers approximated $1200 per month plus tips. This is a contracted position not - employee. Must have dependable, economical vehicle and c a r i n s u r a n c e . Yo u must be dependable and at least 18 years of age. If you are interested please call: 360-452-4507

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS Has a newspaper route available in the Port Angeles area. Delivery start time is approximately 2 am. Six days per week. This is a contracted position not- employee. Must have dependable, economical vehicle and c a r i n s u r a n c e . Yo u must be dependable and at least 18 years of age. If you are interested please call: Ask for Jazmine. (360)452-4507

REPORTER / EDITOR Sought for the Por t Townsend / Jefferson County bureau of the Peninsula Daily News, a six-day a.m. newspaper on Washington state’s beautiful North O l y m p i c Pe n i n s u l a . This full-time position is for a proven selfstarter with experience on a weekly or a daily who can spot the most newsworthy and compelling stories of East Jefferson County and produce stories and p h o t o s fo r a zo n e d edition each of the six days of publication. You will work from a room with a view — a private office on the w a t e r f r o n t i n Po r t Townsend, an historical seaport known for its Victorian architecture and artistic ambiance — coordinating with editors in the Port Angeles office. Compensation includes medical, vision, life insurance, 401(k) and paid vacation. The PDN, nearly a century old, is a communityminded, family-focused local newspaper and Web enter pr ise that is the main news provider for the North O l y m p i c Pe n i n s u l a . Check us out at www.peninsuladailynews.com. The Peninsula Daily News is part of Washington state’s largest newspaper group, Sound Publishing Inc. If you meet the above qualifications, email yo u r r e s u m e, c ove r letter addressing how yo u f i t o u r r e q u i r e ments and at least 3 non-returnable writing samples, to careers@sound publishing.com. No phone calls, please.

REPORTER The Sequim Gazette, a n awa r d - w i n n i n g weekly community newspaper in Sequim, WA., is seeking a general assignment repor ter. Assignments will including ever ything from local government and politics to investigative pieces and more. If you have a passion for community jour nalism, can meet deadlines and produce people-oriented news and feature stories on deadline (for print and web), we’d like to hear from you. Experience with InDesign, social media and p h o t o s k i l l s a p l u s. Minimum of one year news reporting experie n c e o r e q u i va l e n t post-secondary educat i o n p r e fe r r e d . T h i s full-time position includes medical, vision and dental benefits, paid holidays, vacation and sick leave, and a 4 0 1 k w i t h c o m p a ny match. Interested individuals should submit a resume with at least 3 non - returnable writing samples in pdf format to careers@soundpublishng.com or by mail to SEQ/REP/HR Department, Sound Publishing, Inc., 11323 Commando Rd. W, Main Unit, Everett, WA 98204 One of the top weekl i e s i n Wa s h i n g t o n State, the Sequim Gazette was named the top newspaper in the state in its circulation size by the Washington Newspaper Publishers Association in 2005-2008 and 2010, and among the nation’s best in 2011 and 2012 (National Newspaper Association). We are a small newsr o o m , c o ve r i n g t h e stories of the SequimDungeness Valley on the North Olympic Peninsula. We are part of Sound Publishing, the largest community media organization in Wa s h i n g t o n S t a t e. Visit us at www.soundpublishing.com

Warehouse Operator 2 Permanent position(s) ava i l a bl e a t O l y m p i c Corrections Center and Clallam Bay Corrections Center. Starting monthly p ay $ 2 , 8 3 3 , p l u s f u l l benefits. Apply on-line: w w w. c a r e e r s . w a . g o v closes 8/7/2016. For further information please call Lorena at (360)3748303 or Cynthia at (360)963-3207.

Support Staff To wor k with adults w i t h d eve l o p m e n t a l disabilities, no experie n c e n e c e s s a r y, $ 1 1 . 5 0 h r. s t a r t i n g wage. Apply in person at 1020 Caroline St. M-F 8-4 p.m. Team Members Wanted Positive, good hear ted, productive people. Sherwood Assisted Living is looking to hire for the following positions: • Dishwasher PT • Server PT • Housekeepers • Caregivers FT all shifts, will train • RN/LPN’s FT 2nd and 3rd shifts Our ideal candidates m u s t b e m o t i va t e d , clean and want to work as a team. Applicants must be available to work evenings and weekends. Good benefits, c o m p e t i t i ve w a g e s . Stop in and fill out an application at 550 W Hendr ickson Road, Sequim. Weatherization Program Coordinator Primary task of developing new community partnerships for OlyCAP’s Weather ization Assistance Program. Outreach to public; target high-priority households and evaluate applicant eligibility. A.A. preferred or extensive WAP experience. Knowledge of energy conservation, constr uction and building codes. More details and application at olycap.org, or 228 W First St, Port Angeles (360)452-4726. EOE.

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

E-MAIL:

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

4080 Employment 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale Wanted Clallam County Clallam County Yo u n g C o u p l e E a r l y 60’s available for seasonal cleanup, weeding, trimming, mulching and moss removal. We specialize in complete garden restorations. Excell e n t r e fe r e n c e s. 4 5 7 1213 Chip and Sunny’s G a r d e n Tr a n s f o r m a tions. License # CC CHIPSSG850LB.

2030 Investments WANTED: Private Investor. Need $275K now, secured by first deed of tr ust and 2 rentals with over $300K equity. (360)461-4107

4080 Employment 105 Homes for Sale Wanted Clallam County Aaron’s Garden Service Pruning, fruits & flowers. 3 Br, 2 Ba, 1598 SF, Weed removal, clean up. light and bright rambler on .5 flat acre with a (360)808-7276 large living room with Book now for year long woodstove, big family services including orna- room. Home with nice mental pruning, shrubs, updates inside and out, h e d g e s a n d f u l l l aw n beautifully manicured ser vices. Established, yard and fenced-in backmany references, best yard and spacious 552 ra t e s a n d s e n i o r d i s - SF garden shed for lawn counts. P. A. area only. necessities. This home Local (360)808-2146 has been loved and cared for. NEW PRICE! Father & Sons’ MLS#301311 $228,500 Landscape Service Ania Pendergrass since 1992. 1 time clean Remax Evergreen ups, pruning, lawn main(360)461-3973 tenance, weeding, orGREAT BONES ganic lawn renovations. Ready for someone to (360)681-2611 move in and make cozy or update to personal p r e fe r e n c e. 1 , 7 5 2 s f, with room for additional ex p a n s i o n . L g . l i v i n g room with fireplace insert. Nice (768 sf) 2 car detached garage, with 220 elec. All this sits on a flat lot .63 Acre with irrigation water and plenty KINGDOM CLEANING of room for gardening, Your professional resi- a n d h a s l o c a l b e a c h rights. dential cleaner. MLS#301409/976241 Call us today! Discounts $219,000 for seniors, military, and first responders! Jeff Biles We are licensed and in360.477.6706 sured! (360)912-2104 TOWN & COUNTRY

COUNTRY LIVING Near Discovery Trail, 2 BR, 2 BA, 1404 sf, stainless steel appl. and island in lg. kitchen, warm colors, vaulted ceilings, large windows, attached 2 c a r g a ra g e, l o t s o f storage. low yard maint e n a n c e, f u l l y fe n c e d back yard MLS#938565/300877 $180,000 Deb Kahle lic# 47224 360-918-3199 WINDERMERE SUNLAND CUSTOM BUILT CHARMER! This custom built home by Mill Creek Construction has been refreshed w/ remodeled bathrooms, stylish fixtures, new roof and new deck! The bright living room w/ vaulted ceilings flows into the kitchen with granite tiled counters. MBR with walk-in closet and attached bath with a custom tiled shower for two. The fully fenced backyard boasts gorgeous landscaping, hot tub and play set making it a perfect space for enter taining. Attached 2 car garage and space to park an RV or boat! MLS#301473 $249,900 Windermere Port Angeles Kelly Johnson 360-477-5876 Elegance and Style Newly Listed Sherwood Village Condo built in 2008. Gourmet kitchen with high quality hardwood cabinetry and solid surface counters. Open floor plan with vaulted ceilings, skylights and expansive bay windows. Impressive fireplace for those cool winter nights and a large patio for barbecues and entertaining guests. MLS#301478 $344,000 Jim Hardie Brokers Group Real Estate Professionals (360)775-7146

DIAMOND IN THE ROUGH Lots of square footage in this split level on a corner lot in the center of town. 4 bd. 3 ba. with family room, attached 2 car garage + RV parking. Needs love and updating, but appears solid and sound. Just listed at $245,000. Call Harriet to take a look. MLS#301498 Windermere Port Angeles Harriet Reyenga 360-460-8759

DON’T MISS THIS ONE! Spacious 4 BD, 2.5 BA, 2606 SF, den, office, family and great rooms, large kitchen, dining room, vaulted ceilings, 2 car garage with carport, front and back patios, mtn. and golf course views , plus buildable lot included MLS#928764/300721 $328,500 Tyler Conkle lic#112797 360-670-5978 WINDERMERE SUNLAND

NEW CONSTRUCTION! This fresh and contemporar y home was just completed on a quiet cul-de- sac only moments from town. The modern 8ft tall front door opens to 9ft ceilings, giving this home a bright and spacious character. This home is heated by an energy efficient heat pump and propane fireplace. Stylish kitchen with a large farm sink, island breakfast bar and quar tz counter tops. MBR with walk-in closet and attached bath with gorgeous tiled shower. The covered back deck looks out to open space and recreation path. MLS#301444 $315,000 Windermere Port Angeles Tennette Possinger Lic#117240 360-477-6428

HELP WANTED: EXECUTIVE ASSISTANT/COORDINATOR Be part of a team that cares about service & community. Front office/clerical must manage day-to-day operations & supplies. Organize records, plan & coordinate meetings, projects & events. Prepare correspondence & presentations including formatting data & graphics. Provide quality customer service. Complete projects & follow up on results. Maintain executive’s schedule. Must be proficient in Microsoft Office, have skills in: writing, scheduling, organization, time management, equipment maintenance, verbal communication, social media, photo management. Only kind, caring people who enjoy serving others need apply. Non-smoking. Some flexibility in hours. Cover letter, salary expectations & resume to: JACE Real Estate, PO Box 2437, Port Angeles 98362. In-person & email resumes will not be considered.

J ACE

REAL ESTATE COMPANY

671658026

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

Correctional Officer 1 Permanent & On-Call Positions available now at Clallam Bay & Olympic Corrections Center. Pay s t a r t s a t $ 3 , 2 5 4 Monthly, plus full benefits. Closes 8/14/2016 Apply on-line: www.careers.wa.gov. For further information please call Laura at (360)963-3208 EOE

Job Opportunities at Sound Community Bank. A t S o u n d C o m mu n i t y Bank, we pride ourselves on taking as good care of our employees as we do our customers. We’re about more than just the bottom line; we maintain a solid reputation as a quality employer, recognized by Washington CEO magazine as one of the top ten p l a c e s t o wo r k t h r e e years in a row. We operate on the basis of teamwork, with all employees working toward the common goal of quality customer service. We strive to provide effective benefits and programs that allow employees to par ticipate in the success of the bank. We are committed to becoming a learning organization, so that our employees c a n d eve l o p a n d e n hance their skills with the understanding that employees will also accept responsibility for personal development. We have three job opportunities available: Assistant Branch Manager - S e q u i m B ra n c h A c count Executive - Sequim Branch Senior C S R - Po r t A n g e l e s Branch Please visit our Career Oppor tunities page to apply: http://www.soundcb.com /about-us/career-oppor tunities.html

Port Angeles School District FT Accounts Payable, S P E D t e a c h e r s, L H S Math teacher, Psychologist and Sub Bus Drivers needed. For information, visit: https://portangeles jobs.hrmplus.net

5000900

FORD: ‘88, Econoline, V6, with Pro-Chem truck mounted carpet cleaning unit installed, as is, $3,500. (360)457-8978 or (360)460-5329.

FREIGHT/SALES: Port Angeles Sears. (360)457-9481

FSBO: 2 Br, 2 Ba, Dbl wide, with sunroom, all remodeled, includes 14x27 work shop, carport, in 55+ park. $60,000. (360)452-5127

LOST: Kindle with maroon cover, and reading glasses. Reward for return. (360)775-1306

4070 Business Opportunities

4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment General General General General


Classified

B6 MONDAY, AUGUST 1, 2016

S S I L B X U A M U E R R E D By Jason Mueller

LAKE SUTHERLAND. Cute cabin on large property with 2 br, 1 ba, with storage shed, has large deck with a covered area, has a beach and a dock, off the South Shore Rd. $295,000 (360)452-3952 Quiet & Private Light and bright 4BR/2BA home; backs up to forest and green space. New paint and car pet. Fully fenced back yard. Open floor plan, bonus office/hobby room off garage w/separate entrance. Big kitchen, lots of storage, skylights, dual shower heads in new tiled bath. MLS#301397/975197 $349,950 Rick Brown lic# 119519 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East 360-775-5780

JUST LISTED! Nice cozy 3bd 3ba one and a half story home located on the east side of Sequim close to Discove r y Tr a i l a n d C a r r i e Blake Park. You’ll love t h e h a r d w o o d f l o o r s, skylights and versatile s u n r o o m . E x t ra l a r g e fenced easy care yard. MLS#301507 $299,000 Ed Sumpter 360-808-1712 SURROUNDED Blue Sky Real Estate BY NATURE This 2 BR, 1 BA doubleSequim wide sits on a quiet PEACEFUL COUNTRY dead-end street, surrounded by nature on 5 SETTING 2 BR 1.5 BA over 1800 treed lots in 4 Seasons SF, hot tub and partial Park. Easy-access circular drive, attached carmt. view, 1.25 acres of port, ADA ramp to front pr ivacy, master bd w/ entry and from the back b a l c o n y , u p d a t e d porch to a wooded picnic throughout area. Storage shed with MLS#1004549/301525 wo r k b e n c h . S p a c i o u s $249,900 front yard. Tyler Conkle MLS#301447 $125,000 lic#112797 Windermere 360-670-5978 Port Angeles WINDERMERE Quint Boe SUNLAND 360-457-0456

L E O E D W A E R O P M E E E

A B D G M A Y L T L U A P V L

S E K N R O W O F A ‫ ګ‬ R M ‫ ګ ګ‬ W R M Y A A R E H I V R I H H E V N O T O E R N I H S O C P A M T T S W A C I F E S O O L E L L

N E A H I N E S H O F I I R I

R N I B I N G I N G L I C N V

C A R L O T M A N I I U L G N

S I U O L C L A W S O N L A O

E C N A R U D N E K A R K U C 8/1

Aloha, Arron, Binging, Bliss, California, Carlo, Clawson, Conville, Danielle, Derreumaux, Dycus, Endurance, Erden, Facchino, Hammer, Hawaii, Hines, Honolulu, Knight, Kraken, Leach, Louis, Matt, Megan, Moana Uli, Monterey, Neill, Ohana, Otmani, Pacific, Pat, Paul, Raf, Roosevelt, Ryan, Schildermans, Spiteri, Thiago, Vlasek, Waves, Worbey, Yves Yesterday’s Answer: Followme

Saturday’s PuzzleSolved Solved Friday’s Puzzle

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

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

COLAV ©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.

GINET ©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

34 Listened to, as advice 36 Pan partner 37 Old Ford model 40 They’re tried in court 44 Get in one’s reps 46 Tony winner Tammy 48 Soccer sphere 50 __ card: payment method

8/1/16

MIRNOF

52 Block 53 Colombian metropolis 54 Chief Norse god 55 Bone near the radius 56 Mixed-breed dog 60 Before, poetically 61 United 62 Driller’s deg. 63 Palindromic call for help

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

Answer here:

PRIVATE, EXCLUSIVE and EXQUISITE! Gorgeous Custom 3 BD, 2 BA, 3147 sf Bell Hill home, wood floors, 2 fireplaces, large kitchen, custom built dining, office and library, master suite with huge walk-in closet and hot tub. extensive rock terraces, stone garden shed, upper level deck offers panoramic views MLS#900812/300253 $399,900 Team Schmidt Mike Lic#15329 460-0331 Irene Lic#15328 460-4040 WINDERMERE SUNLAND Sequim City Lot ? 921 E. Alder St. in Seq u i m , ½ B l o c k Fr o m Carrie Blake Park, 0.24 level building lot, unobstructed mountain views, excellent neighborhood, city utilities in at street. MLS#300507 $69,000 Team Thomsen COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY (360)808-0979

308 For Sale Lots & Acreage SEQUIM: 2.5 wooded acres with potential wat e r v i e w, p o w e r a n d building pad in, on quiet country road, owner financing available. $95,000 360-460-2960

311 For Sale Manufactured Homes FSBO: Unique and spacious, 2 Br, 2 Ba, manufactured home, on 1 ac, in great area, double car garage, 14’ x 24’ shop, sunroom and spa are just a few of the amenities, come see. $245,000 (360)670-6686

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Sequim/Dungeness Great lot near beach with Beach Access. Private and quiet with open feeling. 3/8 acre next to open space. Safe neighborhood, plenty of parking. Heated, insulated large shop. Separate art studio. Well and septic. Older mobile home with approx. 1,000 sq ft including studio and laundry. $119,900. (360)681-7775

WATER VIEW! WATER VIEW! WATER VIEW ! Great views of Discovery Bay can be seen from this beautiful 2008 sqft home located in Diamond Point. Features include hardwood flooring through out. Great kitchen with skylight, lots of 505 Rental Houses c a b i n e t s, a n d p a n t r y. Clallam County Water views from the kitchen, living area, dinSEQUIM: 4 Br., 2 ba., ing area, and master b e d r o o m . H u g e d e ck wo o d s t ove, Pa l o A l t o that’s partially covered Rd. $1,200. (360)477-9678 and perfect for entertaining or simply enjoying the view. CHECK OUT OUR MLS#301437 $395,000 NEW CLASSIFIED Tom Blore WIZARD AT 360-683-4116 www.peninsula PETER BLACK dailynews.com REAL ESTATE

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505 Rental Houses 505 Rental Houses Clallam County Clallam County

105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County

Great Investment Opportunity Charming, quiet and well cared for unit in a commercial condo complex. 3 separate rooms, ADA bathroom, comfor table waiting room, laundr y room, another private entry in back, good storage area. All rooms are wired for high speed internet so possibilities are endless! MLS#301520 $115,000 Ania Pendergrass Remax Evergreen (360)461-3973

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by Mell Lazarus

FSBO: 2 Br, 2 Ba, Dbl wide, with sunroom, all remodeled, includes 14x27 work shop, carport, in 55+ park. $60,000. (360)452-5127

F A C C H I N O H A N A T T N

RENT: 1000 sf, 2 br, 1 ba, fireplace, laundry, carport and view. 1st and last mo. rent, no smoking, refs. $900 per month. 417-5063 msg

605 Apartments Clallam County Properties by

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692 WA. Rentals Wanted to Rent

1111 CAROLINE ST. PORT ANGELES LONG DISTANCE No Problem! Peninsula Classified 1-800-826-7714

Vegetarian home, free Wifi, $400 month and $200 cleaning deposit. (360)808-2662.

692 WA. Rentals Wanted to Rent WANTED: Apartment. GREAT TENANT, seeks clean $500 apt. Port Angeles or Sequim. Call JR at (360)775-1648

6075 Heavy Equipment

TRAILER: Horse/stock. COUCH: And Loveseat, $3,000. (360)912-4765 bl u e, i n g o o d s h a p e. $300. (360)681-7845

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452-1326

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6045 Farm Fencing & Equipment

WA N T E D : R o o m f o r T R AC TO R : ‘ 1 3 J o h n C AT : D 6 C C r a w l e r . rent, call Tom: Deere, 37hp, includes $8,500. (360) 457-8210 (360)808-4559 JD backhoe/thumb. 4x4, still has 2 years on war1163 Commercial r a n t y. B o t h e x c e l . 6080 Home $29,995 obo. Rentals Furnishings (360)670-1350

BUGGY: 1895, Doctor’s PROPERTY b u g g y, h o r s e d r a w n , EVALUATION good shape. $2,500/obo. (360)683-4056 INTERNET MARKETING QUALIFIED TENANTS 6010 Appliances RENT COLLECTION 683 Rooms to Rent SMOKER: Propane, Roomshares Masterbuilt, brand new, PROPERTY never used. $109. MAINTENANCE ROOM FOR RENT: In (360)582-0911 vegitar ian home for INSPECTIONS t h o s e t h a t n e e d l i g h t STOVE: Kenmore staincare, vegetarian meals, less steel. New in box, 5 AUTOMATIC cleaning provided, trans- burner, black glass top, p o r t a t i o n t o a p p o i n t - lg. self-cleaning convecBANK DEPOSITS tion oven. $647.15. ments. $1,500. Have all manuals, (360)808-2662 EASY ONLINE comes with pigtail. STATEMENT ACCESS ROOMS FOR RENT $360)565-6221

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ACROSS 1 Veggies in Mendel’s experiments 5 Wear away 10 Key with five sharps: Abbr. 14 Apiece 15 Name of nearly 20 French kings 16 Deceptive scheme 17 Albert/Gabor sitcom set on a farm 19 Spring flower 20 Auction unit 21 Remain firm 23 Chided 27 Slangy affirmative 28 Gives a hoot 29 Fingers in a lineup 32 Pictograph 35 Award for Tiger Woods or Roger Federer 36 Con’s early release 38 Spelling contest 39 High degree 40 1950s RCA innovation ... or this puzzle’s four longest answers? 41 Hwy., e.g. 42 Stat for Cy Young 43 Compensated (for) 44 Thesaurus entry 45 Top 40 listings 47 Solidify 48 “Space Oddity” singer David 49 Raised, as horses 51 Longed (for) 53 Amphitheater 57 Jan. honoree 58 Garden of Eden exile 59 Tom Selleck police series 64 Scalp parasites 65 Prefix with mural 66 “Go back!” computer command 67 Signs, as a contract 68 __ Tots 69 Thomas Hardy heroine

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

GUNS: Spingfield XDM, 3.8, 9mm, $450. FNX 9mm, $450, never been DINING TABLE: Quartz top table, 1930’s, oak fired. (360)460-8149. pedestal base, custom quartz Cambria overlay 6055 Firewood, on oak, claw feet, sturdy, h e a v y, i n S e q u i m . Fuel & Stoves $2000. (505)994-1091 FIREWOOD: OPEN AGAIN IN JULY $179 delivered Sequim-P.A. 3 cord special $499. (360)582-7910 www.portangelesfire wood.com

6065 Food & Farmer’s Market BLUEBERRIES: Certified organic, U-Pick. $3.00/lb. www.dungenessmeadowfar m.com or (360)582-1128. EGGS: Farm fresh from f r e e r a n g e c h i cke n s . $4.25/dzn. Weekdays (360)417-7685

6075 Heavy Equipment

6035 Cemetery Plots B U R I A L P L OT S : ( 2 ) side by side at Mt. Angeles Memor ial Par k. $1,500 ea. (360)808-8014

EMAIL US AT classified@peninsula dailynews.com

FURNITURE: Couch, chair and ottoman, matching set. Good cond. $150. (360)460-1207

FURNITURE: Matching couch loveseat, and 2 wing chairs. $500. Sectional couch. $300. Oak dining table, 6 chairs. $450. Loveseat. $200. B i g s c r e e n T V. $ 2 0 0 . Antique lamp. $50. Bomb a y d e s k a n d c h a i r. $200. 2 end tables. $50/ea. 2 brass lamps. $35/ea. Oak rocking chair. $30. (360)457-3503 MISC: (2) Recliner/Rockers. $200 ea or $350 both. Dining Set, t a bl e, ( 6 ) c h a i r s, ( 2 ) leaves, pads, solid wood. $450. Mattress topper, memor y foam, king size. $50. (360)461-4159

6100 Misc. Merchandise DUMP TRAILER: Big Tex 12LX, like new, 7’X12’ tlr. wt. 3570# GVWR 12,000#. $6,000. 683-0141 or 808-0312

AIR CONDITIONER: Ke n m o r e, 2 4 0 vo l t , 18,000 BTU, In great shape, perfect for shop or house. $100. (360)683-7302

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.


Classified

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS 6100 Misc. Merchandise CARPET CLEANING: Machine, RX20 rotary, for use with truck unit. $1,200. (360)457-8978 M I S C : H e n r y M i l l e r, 100th Anniversary edition Piano. $1,200/obo. Washer/dryer, Kenmore. $150. Sofa and loveseat, multi pattern. $150. (360)808-2594

9820 Motorhomes T I O G A : ‘ 9 0 M o n t a ra , 22’. Class C. Ford 460, low miles, sleeps 6, generator, AC, solar panel, Air shocks and bags, new tires, LED lights, microwave, extra water tank, ex. cond. a must see! $12,900 obo. Ready for fun! (360)477-9584

WATER HEATER: Little Giant, propane, works great, new $1,200. ready to install. $600. (360)457-8978

6115 Sporting Goods COMMERCIAL DIVING Equipment. DUI CF200, med, drysuit, excellent: $600: ZEAGLE RANGER BC vest, excellent $300: OCTO Regulator setup with 2 regulators and pressure gauge $150: K valve $25: Commercial fins and drysuit gloves, excellent, $50: all for $1000: (360)461-5069

Winnie VISTA ‘14 30T New cond., non-smoker, 3 glides, 21,300 miles. Sleeps 6, 40”HDTV, V10 engine, 4KW gen auto l e v e l s y s t e m AM/FM/DVD/CD, Bluetooth, rear & side view cameras, power awning. $93,500. (360)473-3592, billinda4552@gmail.com Sequim

9832 Tents & Travel Trailers

6125 Tools

CRUISER: ‘10 Fun Finder, 18’ with tipout and awning, barbecue, microwave/convection oven, large fridge/freezer, air conditioning. Sleeps 4. Very little use, neat and clean. $14,000. (360)928-3761

HARTLAND: ‘13, Trailrunner, 26’, sleeps 6, great condition. $11,500. Contractor Tool Sale (360)460-8155 Radial arm saw, $125. Miter Saw $25. Scaffolding $280. Pump jacks $250 for 4. Nail guns $25/ea. Air compressor $375. Metal wall bracing $8/ea. Worn winch $200. (360)681-8195. KEYS: ‘07, 25’ (19’ SLB) Clean as a whistle, do6140 Wanted metic fridge/freezer,AC, & Trades awning, dual marine batteries, electric tongue WANTED: Riding lawn- jack, new tires, winter mowers, working or not. c o v e r a n d o t h e r u p Will pickup for free. grades. $9,000. Kenny (360)775-9779 (360)457-8588 WANTED: Small house K E Y S TO N E : ‘ 0 6 3 1 ’ or apt, rural ok, refer- Zephlin. $6,000 obo or rences. (360)808-4559 trade for motorhome. (360)461-7987

8180 Garage Sales PA - Central

NOMAD: ‘08 19’ 194/SC Clean, well maintained, sleeps 4. Reduced to AUCTION: Angeles Mini $9,500. (360)808-0852 Storage, 1:30PM, Friday, Aug. 5, 2016 at 919 TRAILER: ‘04 27’ James W. Lauridsen Blvd, P.A.; R i ve r C h e r o ke e, w i t h Unit: A43, Name: Ran- excel. cond., $10,000. dall Boucher and Unit: (360)477-0930 A140, Name: Elizabeth McGuire. Call 452-2400 TRAVEL TRAILOR: ‘10, to verify. Wildwood XLT,18’, only 1,950 lbs tounge weight, excellent condition, 7030 Horses $6,800. (360)775-1075

9802 5th Wheels

HORSE TRAILER: 2 horse, straight load, Thoroughbred height, new tires, needs minor JAYCO: ‘07 Jay Flight, 24.5 RBS. Sleeps 6, 12’ work, call for details. slide-out, 16’ awning, (360)417-7685. a/c, microwave, stereo/ SORREL MARE: AQHA DV D w i t h s u r r o u n d registered, sweet dispo- sound, outside shower sition, eager to please, gas grill. Aqua shed covfully trained for trail rid- er for storage. $12,900. (360)928-3146 ing, needs experienced rider, for sale or lease, MONTANA: ‘02 36’ 5th call for details. wheel, very good cond., (360)417-7685. 3 slides, arctic pkg., oak cabinets, fireplace. $19,999/obo. (360)4577035 General Pets 4399 or 888-2087 PUPPIES: Chihuahua/ 9050 Marine Pomeranian, born EastMiscellaneous er Sunday. $200 ea. (360)582-0384 Aluminum skiff: 10’, PUPPIES: Purebred custom welded, with Po m e ra n i a n P u p p i e s. oars, electric motor and 8 w k o l d f e m a l e f o r trailer with spare tire. $1,200 is black w/white $975. (360)460-2625 m a r k i n g s . M a l e f o r B OAT : 1 5 ’ G r e g o r, $1,000, is light tan w/ Welded aluminum, no white markings. Call/text l e a k s . 2 0 h p, n e w e r for more info or to come Yamaha. Just serviced b y t o m e e t t h e m , with receipts. Electric (360)477-3762. trolling motor. Excellent t r a i l e r. $ 4 , 9 0 0 . B o b (360) 732-0067

9820 Motorhomes

ITASCA: ‘03, Sundancer, 30’, class C 450, low 38K miles, always garaged, 1 owner, leveling jacks, auto seek satellite TV, entertainment centers, new tires, 2 slides, see to believe. $33,000/obo 681-7996

SUNSEEKER: ‘05, Ser ies M-2860DS. 28’ C class with low miles 9,160. 2 slide-outs, sleeps 8 (Queen, couch, t a bl e fo l d s d ow n a n d upper berth above seats. Outdoor shower for the dogs. Hitch up the toys and take off. Stove, oven, refrigerator, microwave, double sink. Sepa ra t e s h owe r P r i va t e toilet/sink, Great buy Price is lower than NADA Guide. $27,000. (360)379-2714

T R AV E L S U P R E M E : ‘01 38.5 ft. deisel pushe r, b e a u t i f u l , e x c e l . cond. coach. 2 slides, 2 LED TVs and upgraded LED lighting. 83K miles. 8.3L Cummins $42,500. (360)417-9401

DOLLS: Hamilton Collection, porcelain, 1990s, still in box. $45$150. (951)956-0438

GUITAR: Yamaha, red steel str ing acoustic, with hardshell case $200. (360)775-4727

ART: Wood block print, CHAIR: Beautiful, with Signed. Yoshida hum- foot stool. $200. mingbirds and fuchsias. (206)567-2825 $150. (360)681-7579 CHAIRS: 2 oak, BED: 1880’s, decorative pressed-back vintage brass and iron, with slats chairs, non-matching. and rails.Only $150. $40ea. (360)452-7721 (360)670-3310 CHEST: 6 drawers, all BED: Queen size, solid wood, 48”w, 16”d, 31”h, wood, head and foot- holds lots. $25, boards, like new. $125. (360)457-6431 (360)452-6879

DRYER: GE 6.0 cu. ft. extra large capacity, excellent conditon. $175. (360)477-4453

HARNESS: Trango, 2 M U D F L A P S : D u r a sets, rock climbing, with F l a p s f o r F o r d d u a l cer tified rope. All for wheel new. $75. (360)582-1988 $39. (360)477-3834

BOAT: ‘75 Classic Apollo 25ft cuddy/galley I/O 350 Ford Volvo-Penta. extras: radio, GPS, D/F, down riggers and Honda kicker. EZ-Load trailer with new brakes. Boat and trailer serviced in 2016. $15,000. (360)683-1940 BOAT: Larson, 16’, fiberglass 40 hp mercury, Eagle depth finder, with t r a i l e r. n e e d s m i n o r wor k, call for details. 417-7685 or 928-5027 BOAT: Marlin, with MerCruiser 135 hp. 16’. call 5-9pm, $3,800. (360)457-0979 BOAT: Sorensen, 12’, 16hp Suzuki, depth s o u n d e r, g a l v a n i z e d trailer, new tires, similar to Livingston. $1500. (360)582-1265

C H E S T: O f d r aw e r s , 22Wx27H, 3 drawer, all wood construction. $30.obo (360)683-7435

B E E R S T E I N S : ( 4 ) , C H E S T: O f d r aw e r s , 1990s, Budweiser Series 22Wx27H, 3 drawer, all A/B, excellent condition. wood construction. $35. (360)683-7435 $50/ea. (951)956-0438.

MISC: left-handed, base ball mitt, like new. $15 Left handed golf clubs, bag. $25. 417-3688

DRYER: Whirlpool, $695 HEADBOARD: Brass, NAIL GUN: 15 GA angled finish, with case, new, looks like new, new king size. $25. lots of nails. $85. (360)640-2155 belt, only $75. 928-0236 (360)531-0617 DVD’S: Rock n’ Roll Hall H E A R I N G A I D S : R e OIL STOVES: (3) 2 work of Fame, complete set. sound, small, behind the and 1 for par ts, 2 oil ear model. $200/obo. $75. (360)582-1988 tanks, 110 and 175 gal. (360)460-1804 $200. (360)808-3160 EASY BOOTS: Equine, HELMUT: Motorcycle, Glove style, sz., 00.5, l a r g e, r e d , f u l l v i s o r, Patio Bench/Footstools. never used in box. $75 black metal with cushclean. $30. 681-7258 pair. (360)808-6099 ions, 26”w, 22”d, 2/$10, (360)457-6431 ENTERTAINMENT Cen- HIP WADERS: Rubber. t e r : 4 ’ x 4 ’ x 1 9 ” , g l a s s unisex size 8 and 9. $30 PATIO SET: Cedar, (4) for both. (360)417-9401 doors. $35/obo. pieces, glass top table, (360)477-3834 H O M E G Y M : We i g h t (2) benches, umbrella. $150. (360)670-3310 EXERCISE EQUIP: All set, Marcy. $200. (949)232-3392 n ew, a b, t h i g h , b a ck . PHONE: Candlestick, Cost $300, only $49.97. balck, retro, works. $35. Hospital Bed. $200. (360)928-0236 (360)808-1305 (949)241-0371

BENCH: Charming, drift C H E V: 1 9 6 2 - 3 c o m wood, 31Lx 12W X 36H, plete, 230, 6 cyclinder. $200. (360)457-1996 must see. $60. (360)504-2112 AtCHRISTMAS CACTUS: EXERCISER: Air-O-Fit, H U T C H : To p g l a s s , PICNIC TABLE: easy on hips, swings shelves, wood bottom tached benches, casters BIKE: 21 speed, Sorren- N e e d s g o o d h o m e , back and forth. $200. for easy moving. $40. b l o o m s b e a u t i f u l l y, storage. 6’ high, $25. to Diamondback. $50. (360)683-5626. (360)379-1532 2’9”x3’8”. $75. 460-1192 (360)631-9211 (360)582-0723 B O B B L E H E A D : Ke n CHURN: Antique glass, FAN: Multi speed, 6’, JACUZZI TUB: ExcelGriffey Jr, 2013 Mariners butter, 1 gallon, wood heavy duty industrial, lent shape, works great. with blade cage. $65. HOF, brand new. $40. 3ft, 6in X 5 ft. $200. paddle. $50. (360)631-9211 (360)457-5790 (360)683-8769 (360)582 0503. BOBBLEHEAD: Lou Pi- COMPRESSOR: 6 gal., n i e l l a , “ 1 4 M a r i n e r s porter cable, 16 and 18 HOF, brand new. $20. gauge guns, new. $125. (360) 457-5790 (360)775-4273 BOOKSHELF: freestanding, 7’, maple with movable shelves . $35. (360)460-9562

DAY PAC K : O s p r e y, brand new, waterproof, with waist strap, gray. $20. (360)683-2914

CABINET: Walnut, non working stereo inside 45”Wx17”Dx31”H. $20 (360) 417-3688

D E S K C H A I R : B l a ck leather, with arms, swivel, high back, like new. $120. (360)452-6879

CANNER: Pressure cooker, 22Qt Mirromatic, D E S K : C o m p u t e r, 1 drawer, 2 shelf, like new. $70. 60x24x29, with chair. (360)477-1716 $175. (360)452-9130 CARPET CLEANER: Hoover, and upholstery DINING SET: Table, 6 upholstered chairs, 2 cleaner. $75. leaves, game surface. (360)417-7399 $200. (360) 460-2112 CART: Microwave, caste r s , u p p e r / l o w e r , DISHWASHER: GE Potscrubber. $100./obo. shelves, with door. $25. (360)683-5626 (360)460-9562

FOLDING BIKE: Dahon, JUICER: Singer Juice 26”, 21 speed, with tote giant, excellent. $12. bag and accessor ies. (360)417-2056 $200. (360)683-0033 LEAD: For reloading, FREE: (2) gates, chain sinkers, etc. I have in exl i n k o n w o o d f r a m e , cess of 100 lbs. $0.70 45x55, 45x36. per LB. (305)582-3065 (360)452-6272 LOVE SEAT: by La-ZFREE: Flower pots, clay, Boy, 64”, blue. $199. ceramic, glass, plastic, (360)461-6101. good condition, you pick. (360)452-7721 Metal Tool Box: 6 drawer. $50. (360)417-7399 FREE: Marquis Spas, C o n s t a n t C l e a n . M I C ROWAV E : L a r g e, 20-year old, you haul. stainless, over stove, (360)457-8966 vent, like new. $85. (360)775-4273 GLIDER: Lifetime metal frame, plastic seat and MINIATURES: Dragon, back, 4’. $100. clown/boy, woman/dog, (360)928-9494 woman/horse, display case. $200. 683-0033 GREENHOUSE: Collapsible, 12’ X 32’, hoop MIRROR: Mission style, style. $100. made by Keller, beauti(505)994-1091 ful. $175. 928-9494

E E F R E Eand Tuesdays A D SS FRMonday

PRESSURE COOKER: Wolfgang Puck, like new. $20 obo. 417-2056 PRESSURE WASHER: Craftsman, 7 HP, 2900 p.s.i. $150. (360)681-2542 PRESSURE WASHER: Electric 1800 psi. Husky great shape, now $55. (360)681-3522. PRINTER: Scanner/Fax, Del 962, works great, n o t fo r W i n d o w s 1 0 . $15/obo. (360)683-7435 PROGRAM: Husky football, WA vs USC, centinnial edition. $15/obo. (360)452-6842

RIMS/WHEELS: (4) size TA B L E : S m a l l , 3 6 ” 15 X 6, fits Chevy, Toyo- round, has 12” leaf. $25. (360)452-9685 ta, Mazda etc., good cond. $100. 460-4943 TENNIS RACKETS: (2) ROTOTILLER: Crafts- used, Dunlop $25. man 5 hp, good condi(360)452-6842 tion. $100. 452-3447 TENT CANOPY: New, R OW B OAT / D I N G H Y: Coleman, 15 x 13, inFiberglass, 8’x4’, $200. stant screened. $75. (360)457-5299 (949)232-3392 RUG: Southwestern de- THULE: Rooftop cargo sign, 47”x62”. $39. c a r r i e r, 8 4 ” x 2 1 ” x 1 1 ” . (360)775-8005 $200. (360)775-4727 SERVICE KIT: Ford cam TURNTABLES: (2) look shaft. $100. good and working, each (360)457-5299 for $25. (360)452-9685 SHOES: Men’s, dress size 12, men’s tennis T.V: 48” Sanyo, used, blown speakers, comes size 11.5. $15 each. with 47” Vizio sound bar. (360)457-9528 $200. (360)461-2274 SHOP BENCH: WoodTV: LCD, 32”, like new. en, 7x4x3, (11) drawers. $75. (360)457-9528 $75. (360)452-3535 SLEEPING BAG: Zero TV: Older model, but degrees, synthetic fill, used very little. $30. (360)640-2155 new. $20. (360)683-2914 T Y P E W R I T E R : S L I D E S C A N N E R : Portable, electric, Smith Imagelab, 9mp, works Carona with extra cartridge. $35. 681-7579 great. $35. (360)477-1716 VELOCITY GUN: BushSOFA: Light beige, 3 nell. $25. (360)775-9780 seats, clean. $75. (817)657-3662 WASHER: GE 3.2 cu. ft, super plus capasity, exSTAND MIXER: Kitchen cellent condition. $195. Aid, all standard attach(360)477-4453 ments, works excellent. $100. (360)460-4943 WATER BED: 4 Poster, Cal King, frame, 1 yr old STEP STOOL: Red, ret- mattress, heater, liner. ro, with back. $35. $135. (360)457-1996 (360)808-1305 WHEAT PENNIES: Over STROLLER: Childs Jog- 5 pounds of wheat penging stroller, Schwinn, nies. $30. like new. $129. (360)775-0578 (360)775-8005 S W I V E L R O C K E R S : WOODEN BENCH: with (2), one with matching planter boxes on each end, 58x19x14, new in footstool, good shape. box. $100. 460-1192 $30/ea. 582-0723

TABLE:/china closet, RECLINERS: (2) Tan. Antique table, 6 chairs, 2 $100. (817) 657-3662 leaves. $ 200. (360)452-9405. RECLINERS: Medium brown, leather like. $150 TABLE: Glass top, out each. (949)241-0371 door, large umbrella, 4 chairs/cushions. $75. R I D I N G L E AT H E R S : (360)681-3522 Ladies, jacket size 12, vest, HD patches, pants TRUNK: Large, old flat size 4. $150. 477-9584 top. $50. (360)582 0503

M ail to: Peninsula Daily News PO Box 1330 Port Angeles, WA 98362

WOOD STOVE: $200. (360)808-3160 WOOD STOVE: Beautiful antique parlor stove, excellent condition, must see. $200. 681-4834 WOOD STOVE: Unusual, end loading, very ornate, you’ll love this one. $200. 681-4834

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D A For items E $200 and under S E D A E FR E E R E F R F

• 2 Ads Per Week • 3 Lines • Private Party Only 9050 Marine Miscellaneous BOATS: 15’ Adirondak g u i d e b o a t , 1 2 ’ p a ck boat. Both are kevlar and fiberglass with oars, caned seats and seatbacks. YakPacker boat t ra i l e r bu i l t fo r t h e s e boats with spare tire and mount. All lightly used. $6,700. (360)319-9132

9817 Motorcycles

9817 Motorcycles

H A R L E Y: ‘ 0 5 D y n a Glide. 40K mi. Lots of extras. $8,500 obo. DELTA: (Gregor) boat, (360)461-4189 12.5 length, 65” beam, welded aluminum, rated H O N DA : 0 6 ” S h a d ow for 465 lbs, and 20 hp Sabre 1100, like new, motor, newer trailer with 1 6 0 0 a c t u a l m i l e s . current registration, light $5499. (360)808-0111 bar, 40 lb, Minn kota with good marine bat- HONDA: ‘69, 350 CC, tery. Hummingbird 170, $650 as is, firm. as is, w i t h b a t t e r y i n c l u d e s runs. (360)460-0658 vest, anchor and cushions, great crabbing or H O N D A : ‘ 7 8 H a w k , 400cc, 10K miles. lake fishing. $1,450. $2,000. (360)461-1320 (360)582-3065

9805 ATVs

SCATT: Hovercraft with HONDA: ‘97 1100 Shad- trailer, fresh motor, new ow Spirit. Ex. cond. low heavy duty bags, runs m i l e s , m a n y e x t r a s . great. $1,950. $2,300. (360)477-3437 (360)460-6249 HONDA: ‘98 VFR800, 23K ml., fast reliable, ext ra s, gr e a t c o n d i t i o n . $3,800. (360)385-5694

GLASSPLY: ‘79, 16ft. 70 hp and 8 hp Johnson INDIAN: ‘14, Chief Clasincluded. ‘96 EZLoad sic, 1160 mi., extras. t r a i l e r . G o o d c o n d . $17,000. (360)457-5766 $5,000. (360)683-7002 M OTO R C Y C L E : ‘ 0 5 , Sangstercraft: 17’ with Suzuki Boulevard C50. t r a i l e r, o u t b o a r d a n d E x c e l l e n t c o n d i t i o n , kicker. Garmijn. $2,200. $4,200/obo. (360)683-8816. (360)683-4056

SAN JUAN CLARK BOATS, 28’, Ready to sail, excellent for cruising or racing, rigged for easy single handling, all lines aft, sleeps 4 easily, standing room 6’2” in cabin. NEW factory eng i n e , Ya n m a r 2 Y M 1 5 diesel 15hp, trailer 34’, dual axle with spare inver ter 2000 watt (12v DC to 110AC) with microwave, new 120 JIB Taylor Sails, main sail cover + spare 110 Jib Har king Roller Sur ler Auto Helm 1000 - compass with bulkhead mount GARMIN 182 GPS with charts, navagation station with light. $14,500 obo. (360) 681- 7300

• No Pets, Livestock, Garage Sales or Firewood

9030 Aviation AIRCRAFT RADIO: Icom A200 (New) $400. Robert at (360)457-7828

9180 Automobiles Classics & Collect. AMC: ‘85, Eagle, 4x4, 92K ml., no rust, needs minor restoration. $3,700. (360)683-6135

Tr i u m p h T i g e r ‘ 0 1 . Three-cylinder 955cc, fuel injectied, liquid cooled. Top-box and factory panniers. Plenty of storage for tour ing. 31,600 miles. Maintenance up to date. $4,000. (360)301-0135

9931 Legal Notices Clallam County

9934 Jefferson County Legals

9934 Jefferson County Legals

AUCTION: Angeles Mini Storage, 1:30PM, Friday, Aug. 5, 2016 at 919 W. Lauridsen Blvd, P.A.; Unit: A43, Name: Randall Boucher and Unit: YAMAHA: Vino, 49cc, 4 A140, Name: Elizabeth stroke, like new. $950. McGuire. Call 452-2400 to verify. Leave message. P u b : J u l y 3 1 , Au g 1 , (360)452-0565 2016 Legal No. 713649

NO. 16-4-00063-0 PROBATE NOTICE TO CREDITORS (RCW 11.40.030) IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON FOR JEFFERSON COUNTY IN RE THE ESTATE OF, BILLIE LEE HUTCHESON, Deceased. The personal representative named below has been appointed as the personal representative of this estate. Any person having a claim against the decedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the personal representative or the personal representative’s attorney at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the court. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) Thirty days after the personal representative served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided under RCW 11.40.020(3); or (2) four months after the date of the first publication of the notice. If the claim is not presented within this time frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the decedent’s probate and nonprobate assets. Date of First Publication: July 18, 2016 Personal Representative: Tracy Oliver 33976 NE Erin Drive Scappoose, OR 97056 Attorney for Personal Representative Anne M. Montgomery, WSBA #23579 Ryan, Montgomery and Armstrong, Inc. P.S. 9657 Levin Road NW, Suite 240 Silverdale, WA 98383 Phone (360) 307-8860 / Fax (360) 307-8865 Pub.:July 18, 25 August, 1, 2016 Legal No.710391

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

NO PHONE CALLS

5A246724

FREE: Peruvian Gelding: Older horse, nicely trained, Companion horse or light riding, Hay only, no pasture, free to good home. call (360)452-5005 or (206)715-4143.

ALCOHOL STOVE: Ori- CARTRIGES: 38, super go Heat Pal, RV, 5100, full metal jacket, pistol heater, stove. $80. cartridges. $7.00 (360)681-7258 (360)775-7546

BED SET: Double size, comforter, shams, dust ruffle, valences, pictures. $50. (206)567-2825

KAYAK: Osprey standard, pygmy, 16’, hardly used, kept in garage, with paddle, skirt, floats and pump. $1,200. (360)301-6324 or (360)437-7736. MISC: Rubber boat, 12’ Achilles, wood transom and floor. $650 or trade for firearms. Toro Recycler, front drive, 22”, less than 3 hours. $225 or trade for firearms. (360)417-2056

MONDAY, AUGUST 1, 2016 B7

9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County

SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON S U P E R I O R C O U RT O F WA S H I N G TO N F O R FOR CLALLAM COUNTY CLALLAM COUNTY In re the Estate of Agnes Dorothea Elmer, In re the Estate of Ruth L. Womac, Deceased. Deceased. NO. 16-4-00219-6 PROBATE NOTICE NO. 16-4-00223-4 PROBATE NOTICE TO TO CREDITORS RCW 11.40.030 CREDITORS RCW 11.40.030 The personal representative named below has The personal representative named below has been appointed as personal representative of this been appointed as personal representative of this estate. Any person having a claim against the de- estate. Any person having a claim against the decedent must, before the time the claim would be cedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limita- barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in the manner as provided tions, present the claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the personal representative or the personal representa- personal representative or the personal representative’s attorney at the address stated below a copy of tive’s attorney at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the the claim and filing the original of the claim with the court in which the probate proceedings were com- court in which the probate proceedings were commenced. The claim must be presented within the menced. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) Thirty days after the personal represen- later of: (1) Thirty days after the personal representative served or mailed the notice to the creditor as tative served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided under RCW 11.40.020(1)(c); or (2) four provided under RCW 11.40.020(1)(c); or (2) four months after the date of first publication of the no- months after the date of first publication of the notice. If the claim is not presented within this time tice. If the claim is not presented within this time frame, the claim is forever barred, except as other- frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. wise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the This bar is effective as to claims against both the decedent’s probate and nonprobate assets. decedent’s probate and nonprobate assets. Date of First Publication: August 1, 2016 Date of First Publication: July 18, 2016 Personal Representative: Richard Thomas Elmer Personal Representative: Janis M. Marsicek Attorney for Personal Representative: S t e p h e n C . Attorney for Personal Representative: Patrick M. Irwin, WSBA #30397 Moriarty, WSBA #18810 Address for mailing or service: Address for mailing or service: PLATT IRWIN LAW FIRM PLATT IRWIN LAW FIRM 403 S. Peabody, Port Angeles, WA 98362 403 S. Peabody, Port Angeles, WA 98362 (360) 457-3327 (360) 457-3327 Court of Probate Proceedings: Court of Probate Proceedings: Clallam County Superior Court Clallam County Superior Court Probate Cause Number: 16-4-00219-6 Probate Cause Number: 16-4-00223-4 Pub: August 1, 8, 15, 2016 Legal No. 713645 Pub: July 18, 25, August 1, 2016 Legal No. 710379 SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON FOR CLALLAM COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON In re the Estate of DONALD G. LOGHRY, FOR CLALLAM COUNTY I n r e t h e E s t a t e o f B a r r y R . Deceased. NO. 16-4-00235 8 PROBATE NOTICE Fahlstedt, Deceased. TO CREDITORS RCW 11.40.030 NO. 16-4-00228-5 PROBATE NOTICE The personal representative named below has TO CREDITORS RCW 11.40.030 The personal representative named below has been appointed as personal representative of this been appointed as personal representative of this estate. Any person having a claim against the deestate. Any person having a claim against the de- cedent must, before the time the claim would be cedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limitabarred by any otherwise applicable statute of limita- tions, present the claim in the manner as provided tions, present the claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the personal representative or the personal representapersonal representative or the personal representa- tive’s attorney at the address stated below a copy of tive’s attorney at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the the claim and filing the original of the claim with the court in which the probate proceedings were comcourt in which the probate proceedings were com- menced. menced. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) Thirty days after the personal represen- The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) tative served or mailed the notice to the creditor as Thirty days after the personal representative served provided under RCW 11.40.020(1)(c); or (2) four or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided unmonths after the date of first publication of the no- der RCW 11.40.020(1)(c); or (2) four months after tice. If the claim is not presented within this time the date of first publication of the notice. If the frame, the claim is forever barred, except as other- claim is not presented within this time frame, the wise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. claim is forever barred, except as otherwise providThis bar is effective as to claims against both the ed in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the decedent’s decedent’s probate and nonprobate assets. probate and nonprobate assets. Date of First Publication: July 25, 2016 Date of First Publication: July 25, 2016 Personal Representative: Florence Fahlstedt Attorney for Personal Representative: S t e p h e n C . Karee Loghry, Administrator Moriarty, WSBA #18810 Robert L. Michaels and Matthew C. Niemela Address for mailing or service: Attorneys for Administrator PLATT IRWIN LAW FIRM 1501 Dock Street 403 S. Peabody, Port Angeles, WA 98362 Tacoma, WA 98402 (360) 457-3327 Court of Probate Proceedings: Clallam County Superior Court Clallam County Superior Court Probate Cause Number: 16-4-00235-8 Probate Cause Number: 16-4-00228-5 Pub: July 25, August 1, 8, 2016 Pub: July 25, August 1, 8, 2016 Legal No. 712565 Legal No. 711698


Classified

B8 Monday, August 1, 2016

Peninsula Daily News

9180 Automobiles 9180 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles 9434 Pickup Trucks 9434 Pickup Trucks 9434 Pickup Trucks Classics & Collect. Classics & Collect. Others Others Others Others Others Others CHEVELLE: ‘70 - 350, numbers matching, all rebuilt, too many new par ts to list. $29,500 obo. (360)477-4593 DODGE: ‘78 Ram C h a r g e r, 4 x 4 , l i k e a Bronco. $1,400/obo (360)808-3160

FORD: ‘60 Thunderbird. Upgraded brakes and ignition. New Tires and wheels. Looks and runs great. $13,500. (360)457-1348

9292 Automobiles Others

FORD: ‘67, Falcon, V8, 2 d o o r, n e w b r a k e s , needs carburator, interior work. $2,250. (360)457-8715 WA N T E D : B M W Z 3 , 2000 or newer, blue or silver, convertible . BMW: Mini Cooper, ‘04, (360)457-1573 61K ml., 2 dr. hatchback, 1.6L engine, standard, excellent condition: $7,500. (360)461-4194 BUICK: ‘91 Riviera. 135K miles, looks, runs and drives great. $3,800. (360)600-1817 FORD: ‘89, LTD Crown Victoria LX, 30K miles, no rust, interior like new. Needs minor repairs and a good detailing to look a n d r u n l i ke n ew. $2,000/obo. (360)775-0058

CHEV: ‘06 Monte Carlo, b e a u t i f u l , 2 d r, 9 1 K miles, perfect cond. $6400. (360)681-4940 CHEVY: ‘02, Monte Carlo SS, 104K miles, excellent condition. $4,000. (360)460-5296

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CHEVY: ‘11 Malibu, 64K ml., exc. cond. runs perfect. $8,800. (360)477-1146 C H RY S L E R : ‘ 0 5 , P t Cruiser, limited edition 2.4l dohc 4 cyl, only 72,301 miles - an im- FORD: ‘13 C-Max Hymaculate wagon inside brid SEL. 1 Owner. Exand out, this cruiser is cellent Cond. Loaded, loaded up with options. l e a t h e r, AT, c r u i s e, leather power driver’s P S , r e g e n . p o w e r seat, power windows, brakes, ABS, premium locks, cruise control, tilt sound/ nav, power lift steering wheel, rear fold- g a t e, p owe r h e a t e d ing seats, chrome alloy seats, keyless entry, wheels, chrome exhast, 41.7 MPG, 70k miles. am/fm radio, cd player. D o w n sizing. 72K miles. $14,500/obo. Call VIN# (360)928-0168. 3C8FY68B55T633419) $4,995 JAGUAR: ‘87 XJ6 SeGray Motors ries 3. Long wheel base, 457-4901 ver y good cond. $76K graymotors.com mi. $9,000. (360)460-2789 FORD: ‘01 Escor t SE, 137K miles, runs good. $1,000 obo. LEXUS: ‘00, GS 300, (360)681-4537 Platinum series, 160k, a must see, excellent conFORD: ‘04, T-Bird, 73K dition. $6,800. miles, well cared for. (360)582-3082 $15,800. call or text; (253)736-5902 Mini Cooper, ‘13 S HONDA: ‘94 Prelude. Hardtop, 9,300 ml. exc. Auto, sunroof, runs and cond. extras, $19,000. (951)-956-0438 d r i ve s gr e a t . $ 3 , 5 0 0 . obo. (360)460-1207 NISSAN: ‘11 370 Coupe. Sports pkg, new tires. Still under warranty, 19K mi., immaculate inside and out, silver in color. $24,000. (360)640-2546

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N I S S A N : ‘ 0 5 , S e n t ra 1.8S Special edition sedan, 1.8l 4 cylinder, automatic, alloy wheels, good tires, keyless entry, p owe r w i n d ow s, d o o r locks, and mirrors, cruise control, tilt, air conditioning, rockford fosgate cd player with 6 disc changer, dual front airbags. 111k, miles. VIN# 3N1CB51D45L566844 $5,995 Gray Motors 457-4901 graymotors.com

CANOPY: Leer GMC, 8’, for pick up, nice, over $1,500 new. $449/obo. (360)640-2155 CHEVY: ‘03 Silverado LS 3500 2WD, ext. cab. 8.1 L with Allison. 79K m i , d u a l l y, 8 ’ b e d . $17,500. (360)797-4539 DAT S U N : ‘ 6 4 p i ck u p. Doesn’t run. $250. (360)683-4761. DODGE: ‘00 Dakota, 2 wheel drive, short bed, a l l p o w e r, t o w p k g . $5400. (360)582-9769

NISSAN: ‘97 Sentra, 4 D O D G E : ‘ 0 0 P i ck u p, door, runs good. $1,500. great shape motor and (360)461-1193 body. $3900 firm. (760)774-7874 PONTIAC: ‘98 Bonneville, great condition. DODGE: ‘83, Pick up, $1,700. (360)797-1179 with lift gate. $700. (360)457-9402 T OYO TA : ‘ 1 0 P r i u s . Leather, GPS, Bluetooth D O D G E : ‘ 9 8 D a ko t a , etc. 41K mi. $18,000. pickup, 2wd. $1,500. (360)477-4405 (360)461-1193

VOLVO: ‘02 S-40, Safe clean, 30mpg/hwy., excellent cond., new tires, a l way s s e r v i c e d w i t h high miles. $4,995. (360)670-3345

S AT U R N : ‘ 0 1 L 2 0 0 . VW: ‘86 Cabriolet, conPower, leather, straight vertible, excellent condibody, new tires. Needs tion. $4,000. Firm. work. $1000. 461-4898 (360)477-3725

FORD: ‘08, Ranger, Super Cab FX4 4X4 - 4.0L V 6 , a u t o m a t i c , a l l oy wheels, running boards, tow package, bedliner, tonneau cover, keyless entry, 4 opening doors, p owe r w i n d ow s, d o o r locks, and mirrors, cruise control, tilt, air conditioning, cd stereo with aux input, dual front airbags, only 59K miles. Vin# 1FTZR45E38PA94211 $15,995 Gray Motors 457-4901 graymotors.com

Ford: ‘11, Ranger, Sport Super Cab, 4X4, 4.0L V 6 , a u t o m a t i c , a l l oy wheels, new tires, running boards, bedliner, tow package, 4 opening doors, keyless entr y/alar m, power windows and door locks, air conditioning, mp3 cd stereo, dual front and side airbags, only 30K miles. VIN# 1FTLR4FE2BPA57940 $18,995 Gray Motors 457-4901 graymotors.com

9556 SUVs Others

GMC: ‘84 Sierra Classic. V-8, auto, with canopy, 116K miles. $2200. (360)460-9445

SUZUKI: ‘93 Sidekick. Runs well, have title. $2,000. (360)374-9198 or 640-0004.

NISSAN. ‘03 Frontier SE Crew Cab, 4x4, auto, spray bed liner, leather, power windows and locks, cruise control, air cond., CD, canopy, 99K, Carfax. $10,500. (360)457-0860.

9730 Vans & Minivans Others

9556 SUVs Others

C A M P E R VA N : 2 0 0 0 G T RV “ W e s t y ” , v e r y good condition. 75Kmi, Fo r d V 8 4 . 6 L e n g i n e , Class-B RV. $12,000. (360)477-4638

FORD: ‘83 Ranger, Auto, V6. Mechanic special. $300. (360)461-1320

CHEV: ‘96, Astro Van LS, power windows, locks, AWD, 180K miles, $2,000/obo. 808-1295

C H E V Y: ‘ 0 0 L i m i t e d SUV. AWD or 4 wheel drive, garage kept, new cond. in and out, low miles, loaded with opFORD: ‘95 F250 Diesel, tions, must see. $6,950. (360)215-0335 269K miles, auto/overdrive, good cond. $5000 GMC: ‘98, Yukon XLT, obo. (360)531-0735 4WD, new brakes, good condition, r uns great. FORD: 97’, F250 7.3L, $3500/obo. 452-4299 or Turbo diesel, tow pack(360)460-4843. age, 5th wheel tow packa g e, d u e l f u e l t a n k s, J E E P : ‘ 0 5 , G r a n d power chip, new tranny Cherokee Limited 4x4. 2012. $9,900. 5.7 hemi, sun roof, tow (360)477-0917 package, heated seats, deep beryl green pearl GMC: ‘61 Suburban RV. with grey leather interior, Runs well, $2,500. excellent condition. (360)683-4761 $12,000/OBO (360)797-1214 M A Z DA : ‘ 8 4 , B 2 2 0 0 DIESEL, good mechani- SUZUKI: ‘86 Samari. 5 c a l c o n d i t i o n , n e e d s s p e e d , 4 x 4 h a r d t o p, body work. $1,500/firm. 143K mi. A/C. $5,200. (360)417-5583 (360)385-7728

FORD: ‘89, F150 Lariat, ex t r a c a b, l o n g b e d , 136K ml., $2,500/obo. (209)617-5474

CHEVY: ‘06 Uplander, 97K, nice condition. $6000. (360)683-1260

CHEVY: ‘95, Astro Cargo Van, modified interior, engine, transmission, diff - rebuilt. $2,717.50. (360)460-6419

HONDA: ‘01 Odyssey EX, 112,663 miles, clean. $4,800. (360)808-8667

671493673 7-31

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ROOF CLEANING

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• Diesel Repair & Welding • Heavy Equipment Repair • Trucks, Marine, RV’s, Trailers • 10,000 sq ft Shop • Authorized DOT Inspection Station • Fully Equipped on-site Service Trucks Now Offering Commercial Tires Locally owned & operated for 16 years

(360) 638-0044 or (360) 620-9589 Kingston www.flyingwrench.net

ASE CERTIFIED MECHANICS

allgone1274@gmail.com Port Angeles, WA 360-775-9597

CHIMNEY SERVICES PENINSULA CHIMNEY SERVICES, LLC

Sweeping • Water Sealing Caps • Liners • Exterior Repair

CAR CARE

13 Years Experience Veteran Owned & Operated

Serving the Olympic Peninsula

360.928.9550

Port Angeles, WA www.peninsulachimneyservices.com Cont ID#PENINCS862JT

HANDYMAN STRUIR HANDYMAN SERVICES Lic# 602584850

TOM MUIR EXPERIENCED HANDYMAN

Specializing in home repairs, remodel projects, and superior customer service. (360) 808-3631

Email: Struirservices@yahoo.com Licensed, bonded and insured. Lic.# 603576786

451054676

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

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

ERIC MURPHY

621541153

CALL NOW To Advertise

611080142

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

MECHANIC

Jami’s

PROPERTY MAINTENANCE

SmallLoadDelivery.com

lic #HARTSTS852MN

DECKS AND PATIOS

661619344

APPLIANCE SERVICE

452-MOSS (6677)

24 hour emergency service

360-582-6845 Serving Neighbors in Clallam and Jefferson Counties

30 YEAR CRAFTSMEN

671656036

425-814-9161

All Carpentry, Kitchen & Bath Tile • Stone • Laminate • Hardwood DONARAG875DL

5C1491327

Climbing Arborist Tree Removal Tree Topping Pruning Excavation

“AFFORDABLE HOME IMPROVEMENTS” We Do It All

360-477-1935 • constructiontilepro.com

TREE SERVICE

Power washing roof TreaTmenT moss removal

Driveways • Patios • Steps Play Courts • Excavating & Removal

GENERAL CONST. ARNETT

Contr#KENNER1951P8

ROOF CLEANING

Since 1987

www.hansonsconcrete.com

SMALL LOAD DELIVERY

(360) (360)

INC.

FREE ESTIMATES

Steve Hanson

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

Jerry Hart

All Finishes • Any Size Job Stamped & Colored Concrete

360-460-0518

HOME IMPROVEMENTS

Painting & Pressure Washing

45769373

Serving the Peninsula ANTHONY’S SERVICE Concrete, Inc. SPECIALIZING IN TREES Hanson’s Residential & Contractors

Lic. # ANTOS*938K5

Every Home Needs “A Finished Touch”

5B636738

NO MOLES CONCRETE

FAST SERVICE • LICENSED FULLY INSURED FREE ESTIMATES SENIOR DISCOUNT

(360) 477-1805

EXCAVATING

PAINTING

Free Estimates • Senior Discounts Licensed • Bonded • Insured Reg#FINIST*932D0

FOX PAINTING

PEST CONTROL

360-683-8328

TREE SERVICE

Appliances

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

661615772

Lic#603401251

Flooring

32743866

(253)737-7317

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

Interior/Exterior Painting & Pressure Washing 42989644

551325748

FREE ESTIMATES!

Cabinets

Appliances

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

23597511

We Offer Complete Yard Service

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

Flooring

23597511

Lawn & Home Care

Cabinets

EARLY BIRD LAWN CARE

65608159

Mr MANNYs

808-1517

APPLIANCE APPLIANCE INC. 457-9875 SERVICE APPLIANCE SERVICE INC.

LAWNCARE

LANDSCAPING

Includes Delivery

AAAA AA

GEORGE E. DICKINSON

914 S. Eunice St. Port Angeles

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

Lic#3LITTLP906J3 • ThreeLittlePigs@Contractor.net

LOW RATES!

EXCAVATING/SEPTIC

431015297

LICENSED • INSURED • BONDED

Grounds Maintenance Specialist • Mowing • Trimming • Pruning • Tractor Work • Landscaping • Spring Sprinkler Fire Up • Fall Cleanup and Pruning

41595179

360-683-4349

APPLIANCES


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