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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS July 14, 2015 | 75¢
Port Angeles-Sequim-West End
Search for ship passenger in Strait BY ARWYN RICE PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
HOLLAND AMERICA LINE
The 719-foot cruise ship ms Statendam.
PORT ANGELES — Coast Guard personnel from Port Angeles, Settle and Everett were seeking a missing cruise ship passenger in the Strait of Juan de Fuca northwest of Protection Island on Monday afternoon. A 64-year-old man traveling alone aboard ms Statendam went missing after the ship departed from a port visit in
Victoria, the Coast Guard said. Using footage from cameras on the ms Statendam cruise ship, representatives from the Holland America Line narrowed down the man’s disappearance to about 12:40 a.m. this morning, which led to the Coast Guard to search northwest of Protection Island, said Petty Officer Katelyn Shearer, spokeswoman for the Coast Guard in Seattle. The missing man has not
been identified, and representatives of Holland America Line, operators of the Statendam, said he was traveling alone on a 14-day round trip to Alaska. The concentrated search Monday included an MH-65 Dolphin helicopter from Coast Guard Air Station/Sector Field Office Port Angeles, along with two small boats and the Coast Guard cutter Wahoo, also from the Port Angeles station. TURN
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Charges Should 3 Crabs area change face? in animal case filed BY CHRIS MCDANIEL PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
SEQUIM — The Clallam County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office has filed misdemeanor animal cruelty charges against a Sequim man. The Sheriff’s Office has been investigating allegations of animal abuse at a property southwest of Sequim for the past several weeks after being contacted by neighbors who reported several animal carcasses left to rot on the premises. Their owner, John Dashti Dashti, 61, faces two charges of animal cruelty in the second degree — both misdemeanors, according to a criminal complaint released Monday afternoon. Dashti has not been arrested. A court date had not been set as of Monday, said Mark Nichols, Clallam County prosecuting attorney. Animal cruelty in the second degree is knowingly, recklessly or with criminal negligence inflicting unnecessary suffering or pain upon an animal under circumstances not amounting to first-degree animal cruelty, according to state statutes. The charges were for allegedly failing to provide necessary medical care to two donkeys in his possession, according to the criminal complaint. TURN
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A proposed restoration project intended to revitalize wetlands near Dungeness’ 3 Crabs Road, shown in this aerial view, has drawn ire from residents living in the area.
Proposed project irks residents Wetlands plan affects key Dungeness road BY CHRIS MCDANIEL PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
DUNGENESS — A proposed restoration project intended to revitalize wetlands near 3 Crabs Road has angered residents living in the area. “We will be severely impacted by the
proposed realignment project,” Julie Smyth, who lives in the 400 block of 3 Crabs Road, said during a public hearing Wednesday night at the Clallam County Courthouse. Smyth, 65, was nominated to speak for the 25 homeowners in her neighborhood, who have signed a letter opposing the project. Residents are concerned that the proposed realignment of 3 Crabs Road will cause more traffic in their neighborhood.
“We do not support a configuration that funnels traffic to the public access area through our neighborhood,” Smyth said. The project area is located north of Sequim and east of Dungeness Bay. Construction, estimated to cost $2.98 million, is scheduled to begin sometime in 2016 if permitting is completed by then. TURN
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$3.57 million pact for final plywood mill site cleanup let BY PAUL GOTTLIEB PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — Port of Port Angeles commissioners awarded on Monday a $3.57 million contract to finish cleaning up the abandoned KPly mill site in hopes that the 439 Marine Drive parcel will be ready for development by November. In a second related unanimous board action, commissioners approved a $794,653 professional
services agreement for remedial action that will include two years of quarterly sampling and installation of compliance monitoring wells on the 19-acre parcel. The $3.57 million contract was awarded to Engineering/Remediation Resources Group of Seattle, which submitted the lowest of six bids. The $794,653 professional services agreement went to Floyd Snider, also of Seattle.
Floyd Snider will manage the cleanup. The company’s new contract adds to the $979,199 covered by the port’s insurance and paid to Floyd Snider since January 2013 for tasks including preparation of an environmental assessment and a draft cleanup action plan. Peninsula Plywood ceased operations at the site in December 2011. TURN
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Lincoln Park trees focus of federal grant BY PAUL GOTTLIEB PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — The Port of Port Angeles has started the process of finding a solution to the ever-growing, obstructive Lincoln Park trees in the path of William R. Fairchild International Airport. But don’t expect a decision on cutting down trees to increase visibility of the airport’s flight path until the beginning of 2018, port Airport and Marina Manager Jerry Ludke said. At a special meeting Monday, commissioners unanimously accepted a $596,913 Federal Aviation Administration grant to update the five-year airport master plan as part of a $663,237 project.
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UpFront
TUESDAY, JULY 14, 2015
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Tundra
The Samurai of Puzzles
By Chad Carpenter
Copyright © 2015, Michael Mepham Editorial Services
www.peninsuladailynews.com This is a QR (Quick Response) code taking the user to the North Olympic Peninsula’s No. 1 website* — peninsuladailynews.com. The QR code can be scanned with a smartphone or tablet equipped with an app available for free from numerous sources. QR codes appearing in news articles or advertisements in the PDN can instantly direct the smartphone user to additional information on the web. *Source: Quantcast Inc.
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Newsroom, sports CONTACTS! To report news: 360-417-3531, or one of our local offices: Sequim, 360-681-2390, ext. 5052; Jefferson County/Port Townsend, 360-385-2335, ext. 5550; West End/Forks, 800-826-7714, ext. 5052 Sports desk/reporting a sports score: 360-417-3525 Letters to Editor: 360-417-3527 Club news, “Seen Around” items, subjects not listed above: 360-417-3527 To purchase PDN photos: www.peninsuladailynews.com, click on “Photo Gallery.” Permission to reprint or reuse articles: 360-417-3530 To locate a recent article: 360-417-3527
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The Associated Press
Newsmakers Celebrity scoop ■ By The Associated Press
Singer’s dogs lock selves, infant in car NEW MOTHER CARRIE Underwood called her brother-in-law to the rescue over the weekend during a frightening mom moment. The country star tweeted about the incident Saturday, writing, “When your dogs manUnderwood age to lock themselves, all your stuff & the baby in the car & you have to break a window to get in. #WhatAreTheChances.” Her publicist, Jessie Schmidt, said Monday it happened very fast, and no one was hurt. Underwood tweeted that her brother-in-law broke the window to unlock the car. Underwood is back on tour after giving birth to Isaiah in February, the first child for the former “American Idol” winner and her husband, NHL player Mike Fisher.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW MISS USA
CROWNED
Miss Oklahoma Olivia Jordan celebrates after winning the 2015 Miss USA pageant in Baton Rouge, La., on Sunday.
50 Cent bankruptcy The rapper and actor known as 50 Cent has filed for federal bankruptcy protection, days after a jury ordered him to pay $5 million in an invasionof-privacy lawsuit. Curtis Jackson III, who owns a home in Farmington, Conn., filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in U.S. District Court in Hartford, Conn., on Monday. The filing lists both his assets and liabilities as
between $10 million and $50 million. It comes after a New York jury Friday 50 Cent ordered Jackson to pay $5 million to a woman who said he acquired a video she made with her boyfriend, added himself as a crude commentator and posted it online without her permission.
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS PENINSULA POLL SUNDAY’S QUESTION: How often do you play computer video games? All the time
Peninsula snapshots
18.0%
Seldom
17.9% 56.3%
Total votes cast: 700
By The Associated Press
Seen Around
Often Never
Passings D’ARMY BAILEY, 73, a lawyer and judge who helped preserve the Memphis hotel where civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated and turn it into the National Civil Rights Museum, died Sunday, his wife said. Adrienne Bailey said her husband died after a long illness, surrounded by family at Methodist Hospital in Judge Bailey Memphis, in 2011 Tenn. Judge Bailey led the fight to preserve the crumbling Lorraine Motel, where King was slain while standing on a balcony April 4, 1968. King had stayed at the hotel while marching and making speeches on behalf of striking sanitation workers who were protesting low wages and unsafe working conditions. Judge Bailey assembled donors to buy the hotel,
7.9%
Vote on today’s question at www.peninsuladailynews.com
which ultimately became the National Civil Rights Museum in 1991. The museum has since undergone an extensive renovation.
________ SATORU IWATA, 55, the president of Nintendo who led the Japanese game-maker back to ascendancy in the early 2000s with the Wii console, died Saturday. The cause was bile-duct cancer, the Kyoto, Japan-based company said in a statement Mr. Iwata Monday. in 2014 The first president from outside the Yamauchi family since it started selling playing cards in the late 19th century, Mr. Iwata had led the iconic company since 2002 and helped oversee a tripling of revenue with hits including the Game Boy Advance SP and the Wii.
Laugh Lines
IN ENGLAND, THE TRAVEL TRAILER world’s oldest bride and CHAINED to a post in a groom tied the knot. She’s Sequim parking lot . . . 91, he’s 103. Men are unbelievable. WANTED! “Seen Around” He couldn’t find someone items recalling things seen on the North Olympic Peninsula. Send his own age? them to PDN News Desk, P.O. Box They’re the world’s old1330, Port Angeles WA 98362; fax est newlyweds, but I like to 360-417-3521; or email news@ think of them as the peninsuladailynews.com. Be sure world’s newest oldlyweds. you mention where you saw your Jimmy Kimmel “Seen Around.”
In addition to his companywide role, Mr. Iwata had oversight of the Redmond-based Nintendo of America subsidiary, led by Reggie Fils-Aime. Under Mr. Iwata, Nintendo, a pioneer of video gaming, pushed into motion-sensing game consoles like the Wii designed to go beyond the basic model of buttons pushed on a handheld controller. Mr. Iwata had a higher profile among fans than some other gaming executives, appearing in the company’s occasionally whimsical “Nintendo Direct” online videos, as well as interviews with developers.
NOTE: The Peninsula Poll is unscientific and reflects the opinions of only those peninsuladailynews.com users who chose to participate. The results cannot be assumed to represent the opinions of all users or the public as a whole.
Setting it Straight Corrections and clarifications
■ High temperatures in the Elwha River have affected juvenile salmon in estuary ponds near the mouth of the river. An article Sunday on Page A8 erroneously said high temperatures have affected salmonids at the mouth of the river. ■ The final two outs of Olympic’s win over Spokane at the Junior Babe Ruth 13U state baseball
tournament were made by Tyler Bowen and Timmy Adams. Bowen and Adams were misidentified in the report Sunday on Page B1.
________ The Peninsula Daily News strives at all times for accuracy and fairness in articles, headlines and photographs. To correct an error or to clarify a news story, phone Executive Editor Rex Wilson at 360-417-3530 or email rex.wilson@peninsuladailynews. com.
Peninsula Lookback From the pages of the PENINSULA DAILY NEWS and Port Angeles Evening News
1940 (75 years ago) Formal dedication of a new civic stadium in Port Angeles was held last night, emceed by Mayor Harry H. Beetle. The event was a benefit for the David Junior Health Camp for underprivileged children at Lake Crescent. The mayor turned the ceremonies over to the Elks Naval Lodge, which is the financial sponsor of the camp [now known as Camp David Jr.]. The stadium was filled as the Elks put on a mammoth vaudeville show. An estimated 3,500 attended the show under the roof of the new covered grandstand.
1965 (50 years ago) Acquisition of property to build Heart o’ the Hills Parkway south of Port Angeles into Olympic National Park is scheduled for this fall. Right of way plans have been approved by the National Park Service and are new
at state Highway Department headquarters in Olympia for final approval. The U.S. Bureau of Public Roads also has to approve the plan. The Highway Department will appraise various properties for negotiation and purchase, said District Engineer R.W. Kerslake, once the state Highway Commission approves.
1990 (25 years ago) The Sequim School Board has selected a contractor to build the new Greywolf Elementary School for a price less than the $3.7 million bond issue passed to pay for the school. Beacon Construction and Engineering Inc. of Bellingham was the lowest bidder at $3.499 million, project manager Roger Easling said. Construction will begin in about three weeks, he said. The school in Carlsborg is scheduled to be open in the fall of 1991.
Looking Back From the files of The Associated Press
TODAY IS TUESDAY, July 14, the 195th day of 2015. There are 170 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: ■ On July 14, 1865, the Matterhorn, straddling Italy and Switzerland, was summited as a sevenmember rope party, led by British climber Edward Whymper, reached the peak. On this date: ■ In 1789, in an event symbolizing the start of the French Revolution, citizens of Paris stormed the Bastille prison and released the seven prisoners inside. ■ In 1881, outlaw William H. Bonney Jr., alias “Billy the Kid,”
was shot and killed by Sheriff Pat Garrett in Fort Sumner in presentday New Mexico. ■ In 1913, Gerald Rudolph Ford Jr., the 38th president of the United States, was born Leslie Lynch King Jr. in Omaha, Neb. ■ In 1921, Italian-born anarchists Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti were convicted in Dedham, Mass., of murdering a shoe company paymaster and his guard. ■ In 1933, all German political parties, except the Nazi Party, were outlawed. Cartoon character Popeye the Sailor made his movie debut in the
Fleischer Studios animated short, “Popeye the Sailor.” ■ In 1943, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed a measure providing funds for a national monument honoring scientist George Washington Carver; the monument was built at Carver’s birthplace near Diamond, Mo. ■ In 1965, the American space probe Mariner 4 flew by Mars, sending back photographs of the red planet. ■ In 1966, eight student nurses were murdered by Richard Speck in a Chicago dormitory. ■ Ten years ago: Chief U.S. Justice William H. Rehnquist, end-
ing a two-day stay in the hospital, pledged to continue working as long as his health permitted. ■ Five years ago: An Iranian nuclear scientist who’d disappeared a year earlier headed back to Tehran, telling Iranian state media that he’d been abducted by CIA agents. The U.S. said Shahram Amiri was a willing defector who’d changed his mind. ■ One year ago: Citigroup agreed to pay $7 billion to settle a federal investigation into its handling of risky subprime mortgages. The Church of England voted overwhelmingly in favor of allowing women to become bishops.
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, July 14, 2015 P A G E
A3 Briefly: Nation the criminal justice system fairer while saving the government money. Fourteen of those whose sentences were commuted had been sentenced to life in prison and the vast majority to at least 20 BOSTON — The son of a years, the president said in a Boston police captain has been video released by the White arrested in an FBI sting and House, adding that “their punaccused of plotting to commit ishments didn’t fit the crime.” terrorist acts in support of the Since Congress enacted manIslamic State group, including datory minimum sentences for the setting off of pressure-cooker drug crimes in the 1980s, the bombs at an unidentified unifederal prison population has versity and the slaughter of stu- grown from 24,000 to more than dents live online. 214,000, according to Families Alexander Against Mandatory Minimums, Ciccolo’s own a group seeking sentencing father alerted changes. authorities And the costs, said Obama, last fall that are more than $80 billion a year the younger to incarcerate people who often man had a “have only been engaged in nonlong history of violent drug offenses.” mental illness and was talkNo. 15 in the race ing about join- A. Ciccolo WAUKESHA, Wis. — Scott ing the Islamic Walker vowed Monday to fight State, according to two law for America’s interests abroad enforcement officials. and for his conservative policies Ciccolo, 23, of Adams was charged in a criminal complaint in Washington, launching a 2016 Republican presidential unsealed Monday with illegal bid by highlighting his clashes possession of a firearm for with labor unions as his camreceiving four guns July 4 from paign taunted his Democratic a person cooperating with the critics. Western Massachusetts Joint The 47-year-old second-term Terrorism Task Force. Because of a drunken driving governor embraced his “fighter” reputation as he formally conviction, Ciccolo was barred declared his candidacy in an from having a gun. evening speech, his family at his Ciccolo’s father, Robert Cicside and protesters gathered colo, is a 27-year veteran of the just outside the convention hall. Boston police force. He becomes the 15th highprofile Republican to enter the Sentences commuted GOP presidential contest, yet WASHINGTON — Calling occupies a unique space in the America “a nation of second congested field, he said. chances,” President Barack He not only fights for conserObama cut the prison sentences vative principles, Walker added, of 46 non-violent drug offenders but he also wins elections and Monday in what the White policy debates in a state that House hopes will be just one typically supports Democrats. The Associated Press prong of a broader push to make
Policeman’s son accused of terrorism plot
Briefly: World Iran nuclear pact likely to be reached today VIENNA — An Iran nuclear agreement appeared likely within hours, diplomats said late Monday after a day in which American and Iranian negotiators appeared to be struggling to clear final obstacles and looking like they’d miss their fourth deadline in less than two weeks. Three diplomats familiar with the talks said the announcement could come early today, possibly during predawn hours in Vienna. At the White House, press secretary Josh Earnest said the talks were “making genuine progress,” and the American negotiating team under Secretary of State John Kerry would remain in Vienna as long as the negotiations advanced.
World leaders ‘stingy’ AZRAQ REFUGEE CAMP, Jordan — Rich countries should spend less on weapons in the Syrian civil war and more on education, Nobel Peace Prize laureate Malala Yousafzai said Monday, calling world leaders “quite stingy” as she toured a
camp for the conflict’s refugees. Yousafzai, a champion for girls’ education rights, was joined in Azraq camp by Mezon al-Meli- Yousafzai han, a 17-yearold refugee who has been urging girls to stay in school. The teens spoke to school girls, played on a swing set and kicked around a soccer ball. Yousafzai, who rose to fame after being shot by the Taliban in her native Pakistan in 2012 for insisting on her right to education, said the world must do more to help the refugees.
Police hurt in Belfast BELFAST, Northern Ireland — Northern Ireland police say at least eight officers have been injured in nighttime Belfast riots after the British territory’s main Protestant brotherhood was blocked from marching through a Catholic district. The riot police suffered a range of injuries from handthrown projectiles as they blocked the Orange Order parade from passing Ardoyne, a power base of the outlawed Irish Republican Army. The Associated Press
Military transgender ban may be removed Plans affect those already in, not recruits THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON — Pentagon leaders are finalizing plans aimed at lifting the ban on transgender individuals in the military, with the goal of formally ending one of the last gender- or sexualitybased barriers to military service, senior U.S. officials told The Associated Press. An announcement is expected this week, and the services would have six months to assess the impact of the change and work out the details, the officials said Monday. Military chiefs wanted time to methodically work through the legal, medical and administrative
issues and develop training to ease any transition, and senior leaders believed six months would be sufficient. During that time, transgender individuals would still not be able to join the military, but any decisions to force out those already serving would be referred to the Pentagon’s acting undersecretary for personnel, the officials said. One senior official said the goal was to avoid forcing any transgender service members to leave during that time.
Objective look at issue The officials said Defense Secretary Ash Carter has asked his personnel undersecretary, Brad Carson, to set up a working group of senior military and civilian leaders to take an objective look at the issue, identify any problems and develop uniform guidelines. One senior official said that while the goal is to lift the ban,
Carter wants the working group to look at the practical effects, including the costs and what impact, if any, it would have on military readiness. The move follows several weeks of high level meetings in the Pentagon among top ranking military chiefs, secretaries and Defense Department leaders, including one Monday involving Carter and the chiefs of the various services. Transgender people — those who identify with a different gender than they were born with and sometimes take hormone treatments or have surgery to develop the physical characteristics of their preferred gender — are banned from military service. But studies and other surveys have estimated that as many as 15,000 transgender people serve in the active duty military and the reserves, often in secret but in many cases with the knowledge of their unit commander or peers.
STILL
HARD FEELINGS
An anti-austerity protester places a Greek flag next to riot policemen as they guard one of the entrances to the Greek Parliament during a rally against the government’s agreement with its creditors in Athens on Monday. After months of acrimony, Greece clinched a preliminary bailout agreement with its European creditors on Monday that will, if implemented, secure the country’s place in the euro and help it avoid financial collapse.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
U.S. warned Mexico that drug lord would try to flee THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON — The weekend disappearance of Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman from a maximum security prison should have come as little surprise to Mexican authorities: The Drug Enforcement Administration had alerted them 16 months ago about several plans to escape. Mexico’s most notorious drug trafficker began plotting to break out almost immediately after his recapture at a seaside resort in February 2014. Internal DEA documents obtained by The Associated Press revealed that drug agents first got information in March 2014 that various Guzman family members and drug-world associates were considering “potential operations to free Guzman.”
Quick Read
Mexican federal government officials did not immediately respond to requests for comment about the earlier escape schemes. Since the 1990s his violent and powerful cartel has been known for digging sophisticated smuggling tunnels under the U.S. border with Mexico.
‘Really ingenious’ Jim Dinkins, the former head of Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Homeland Security Investigations unit said that Guzman’s history of tunneling makes Saturday’s escape “really ingenious.” The sophisticated tunnel described by Mexican authorities would usually take about a year and half to two years to complete, Dinkins said, suggesting it was started almost immediately after
Guzman’s arrest in 2014. The DEA documents obtained by AP do not include details of how the previous escape plots would be carried out. In them, Guzman is identified as Guzman-Loera. DEA agents did not have information about Saturday night’s plan, when Guzman escaped through an underground tunnel in his prison cell’s shower area, allegedly built without the detection of authorities. It allowed Guzman to do what Mexican officials promised would never happen after his re-capture last year — slip out of one of the country’s most secure penitentiaries for the second time. A widespread manhunt that included highway checkpoints, stepped up border security and closure of an international airport failed to turn up any trace.
. . . more news to start your day
West: No poison in death of B.B. King, coroner says
Nation: Clerical error led to gun for church shooter
Nation: Clinton vows hard line against Wall Street
World: Romanian leader accused of corruption
THE CORONER IN Las Vegas says there’s no evidence blues legend B.B. King was poisoned before he died of natural causes in May. Clark County Coroner John Fudenberg said Monday that an autopsy sought by two of the musical icon’s 11 adult children showed that the cause of death was Alzheimer’s disease with other physical conditions. Daughters Karen Williams and Patty King alleged through their attorney that King’s business manager, LaVerne Toney, and his personal assistant, Myron Johnson, hastened his death. King died May 14 in hospice care at home in Las Vegas at age 89.
A JAIL CLERK made a mistake when entering information about the location of a drug arrest for church shooting suspect Dylann Roof, the first in a series of missteps that allowed Roof to purchase a gun he shouldn’t have been able to buy two months before the attack, authorities said. Lexington County, S.C., Sheriff Jay Koon said the jail discovered mistakes two days after Roof’s drug arrest, but the change wasn’t corrected in the state police database of arrests. So when a FBI examiner pulled Roof’s records in April, she called the wrong agency, and Roof was eventually allowed to buy the .45-caliber handgun.
LAYING OUT HER agenda to help American workers, Hillary Rodham Clinton said in New York on Monday that if she is elected to the White House, she will seek to build a “growth and fairness economy” that would rejuvenate wages that have remained stagnant since the Great Recession. In her first major economic speech of her presidential campaign, Clinton vowed to crack down on Wall Street excess and warned that a large field of Republican White House hopefuls would promote tax cuts and a return to policies that would balloon the national debt. She singled out three GOP candidates, including former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush.
ROMANIAN PROSECUTORS INDICTED Prime Minister Victor Ponta on Monday as part of a corruption investigation and seized his assets, increasing pressure on him to resign. Prosecutors said Ponta’s charges include tax evasion, money laundering, conflict of interest and making false statements while he was working as a lawyer in 2007 and 2008. At the time, Ponta was a lawmaker. He denies wrongdoing. Prosecutors also said in a statement Monday that they temporarily froze Ponta’s personal assets which include shares in a house, an apartment and several bank accounts.
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PeninsulaNorthwest
TUESDAY, JULY 14, 2015
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Clallam asks for review of OK of grants BY ROB OLLIKAINEN PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
KEITH THORPE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
WELCOMING
THE SALMON HOME
Jamestown S’Klallam tribal council member Kurt Grinnell sets a plank carrying a partially eaten salmon free to float away on the current of the Dungeness River at Railroad Bridge Park on Saturday. Jamestown tribal leaders held a Salmon Homecoming Ceremony honoring the species that has sustained the Salish people for centuries. According to Klallam legend, the spirit of the released salmon will tell other salmon that the river is a good place to swim upstream to spawn because the people on shore will have respect for the fish. Saturday’s ceremony was the first conducted by the Jamestown S’Klallam for more than a decade, Grinnell said.
2-vehicle wreck sends pair of adults, 1 child to Seattle
Third-party review
BY CHRIS MCDANIEL
McEntire said there is “enough confusion and question in our citizens’ minds” to justify a thirdparty review. He said he hoped for a “written communication back from the state’s Auditor’s Office to this board telling us what we did right or what we did wrong.” “If there’s things that we need to fix, we can hear that from the state auditor and fix them,” McEntire said.
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT TOWNSEND — A head-on collision in Port Townsend over the weekend sent two adults and a child to a Seattle hospital. Their names were not available Monday afternoon. Hospitals will not release conditions of patients without names. A Honda Odyssey minivan reportedly stuck a Chevrolet Tahoe sport utility vehicle at the intersection of West Hastings Avenue and Cape George Road shortly before 7 p.m. Saturday, said Bill Beezley, East Jefferson Fire-Rescue spokesman. Five children and one adult were in the minivan. Two adults were in the SUV, he said. A 52-year-old woman passenger in the minivan suffered leg injuries and was airlifted from Jefferson County International Airport to Harborview Medical Center in Seattle,
BILL BEEZLEY/EAST JEFFERSON FIRE-RESCUE
Two adults and a child were airlifted to Harborview Medical Center in Seattle after a two-car head-on collision Saturday at the intersection of West Hastings Avenue and Cape George Road. Beezley said. The adult woman driver of the minivan and a boy who was a passenger in the car also were flown to Harborview with head and shoulder injuries, he said. The remaining children in the minivan were trans-
ported to Jefferson Healthcare hospital in Port Townsend for evaluation. The Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office is investigating the wreck. Air bags in both vehicles deployed during the collision. Units from Naval Maga-
Thursday and July 30. Attendees can taste, see and feel the qualities of hydrogen-rich water and better understand its health properties. Preregistration is required, as space and free CD supplies are limited. For more information and to register, phone Rose Marschall at 360-457-1515.
Cannabis art show
zine Indian Island and Quilcene Fire and Rescue assisted at the wreck.
________ Sequim-Dungeness Valley Editor Chris McDaniel can be reached at 360-681-2390, ext. 5052, or cmcdaniel@peninsuladailynews. com.
Briefly . . . Seminar on water slated Thursdays PORT ANGELES — A free water seminar will be presented by Dr. Rick Marschall and Rose Marschall, MCS, at The Natural Healing Clinic, 162 S. Barr Road, at 7 p.m.
PORT ANGELES — Clallam County commissioners have asked the state auditor if they botched the process of awarding a pair of infrastructure grants to city and port governments in May. Commissioners voted 3-0 Monday to send a letter asking state officials to determine whether they appropriately modified their budget to award a $1 million grant to the Port Angeles and a $285,952 grant to the city of Port Angeles. County Treasurer Selinda Barkhuis rejected the warrants because the board did not hold a public hearing or secure written contracts with the port or the city before approving them. Commissioners have voided the checks and reset a grant application process that will involve recommendations from the Opportunity Fund advisory board. Board Chairman Jim McEntire floated the idea of a “special compliance review audit” after speaking with other elected officials and a ranking member of the state Auditor’s Office.
SEQUIM — RedHouse Press and Gallery, 681 Lotzgesell Road, is presenting an art show titled “The Doobie Toke Invitational” this Thursday through Sunday, July 26. Admission is free, which is all about cannabis. Curator Ld Lawrence has assembled works from artists from Sequim, Port
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PORT TOWNSEND — A new reality show starring two Port Townsend residents makes its debut tonight on the DIY channel. Jake Jacob and Forrest Binger, who both work at Pacific Northwest Timbers, 130 Seton Road, have joined the cast of the new show which is viewable at 9 p.m. Tuesdays on the cable channel. Jacob and Binger are part of a crew lead by builder B’Fer Roth and will offer a unique twist on traditional home building, according to a press release.
The first season of show has already been filmed, according to the network. DIY Network, from the creators of HGTV and Food Network, currently broadcasts to more than 58 million homes and covers a broad range of categories, including home improvement and landscaping, the press release said.
No interviews After a story last week in the Port Townsend/Jefferson County Leader, Jacob and Binger are no longer allowed by the network to grant media interviews, Jacob said. For more information, go to DIYNetwork.com, where the show also streams live. The DIY Network is viewable at Comcast Channel 203 in Port Townsend and on the Dish Network at Channel 111.
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Port officials plan to use the money to complete a building that will house the Composite Recycling Technology Center in west Port Angeles. The city would use its grant on the second phase of the waterfront improvement project, which is currently under construction. “They don’t want to demobilize,” County Administrator Jim Jones told commissioners. “The city is in a hurry. The port isn’t in as big a hurry.” City officials will pitch the waterfront project at the Opportunity Fund board meeting Thursday. Commissioners are expected to hold a public hearing before approving either grant.
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Angeles, Seattle, Los Angeles and New York City. The exhibit will be open from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. this Thursday through Sunday, July 19, as well as Wednesday, July 22, through Sunday, July 26. For more information, contact Lawrence at ld lawrence@olypen.com or 360-775-1132. Building treehouses Peninsula Daily News Each episode features the team as they climb high and build treehouses ranging from Hobbit-style cottages to open air structures that offer woodland views, the release said.
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“If there’s things that we don’t need to fix and keep doing, we can do that as well.” McEntire said he would invite County Auditor Shoona Riggs to sign onto the letter. Riggs declined, saying she did not object to the audit but did not believe it was necessary for her to sign the letter. “Right now, we’re operating under the condition we did something wrong,” Commissioner Mike Chapman said. County Prosecuting Attorney Mark Nichols said he would welcome the feedback from state officials. Nichols issued a 16-page legal memorandum in June that concluded the commissioners modified the budget appropriately and that the treasurer had a duty to disperse the funds. Barkhuis was not available for comment Monday.
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
TUESDAY, JULY 14, 2015
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State grants for drought aid available PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
OLYMPIA — The state Department of Ecology is accepting applications for grants for projects to relieve hardships from drought. The agency received a $16 million appropriation from the Legislature for the grants. The funds can be used over the next two years to help protect public health and safety from effects of the drought, and reduce economic or environmental impacts from water shortages, Ecology said. “Our communities, farms and fish are quite literally feeling the heat from this drought,” said Ecology Director Maia Bellon. “We now have money and a grant program in place to fund projects that can bring immediate and even long-term relief.” The drought funding will help support projects that ensure reliable public water supplies, augment water supplies for farmers, and rescue or preserve fish runs in streams. Director Bellon signed a drought emergency funding rule to make grant money available to public entities such as cities, public utilities and irrigation districts.
Grant purposes Grants may be used to: ■ Modify an existing water source or deepen an existing groundwater well. ■ Develop an emergency or alternate water source. ■ Purchase or lease water or water rights to be used during the drought.
■ Construct an emergency intertie or connection to another approved public water supply. ■ Build transmission pipelines, diversion structures, or storage devices, and acquire pumps and accessories for moving water. ■ Detect and repair leaks, and line water canals. ■ Implement emergency water conservation programs and education programs to alleviate hardships from water shortages.
Matching funds Grants will require 50 percent matching funds from applicants with one exception: No matching funds are required for drinking water supply projects that serve a population of less than 25,000 with households that have 80 percent or less of the statewide mean income. Gov. Jay Inslee declared a statewide drought May 15 after the state’s snowpack declined to less than 20 percent of normal. The Olympic Mountain snowpack is at zero. In a typical year, runoff from melting snowpack sustains rivers and streams that provide a water supply for communities, irrigators and fish habitat. This year, runoff from snowpack disappeared in June and currently 83 percent of the state’s streams and rivers are running at below normal or record low flows. Application forms and more information are available at http://tinyurl.com/ PDN-ecologydroughtfunds.
Sheriff: Teen girl who survived plane crash found BY PHUONG LE AND MARTHA BELLISLE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Lynden. Family members notified authorities when the plane did not arrive. Five aircraft had been flying over a rugged, mountainous area of the state Monday, searching for the small, private plane. The plane crossed the Idaho-Washington border about 2:20 p.m. Saturday, but it dropped off the radar near Omak about an hour later, transportation officials said. The last phone signal from one of the plane’s occupants was detected around 3:50 p.m. The search Monday had focused on an area south of Mount Baker and northeast of Seattle.
SEATTLE — A driver picked up a teenage girl who survived a small plane crash in a mountainous area in Washington state, authorities said. Crews had been searching for the plane with three aboard after it failed to reach its destination. Okanogan County Sheriff Frank Rogers said Monday afternoon that the girl managed to walk to a trailhead, where she was picked up by a motorist and brought to a store in Mazama. The girl had been “walking for a couple of days,” Rogers said. She was being taken to a Cellphone clues local hospital, and she The Civil Air Patrol’s seemed to be in stable con- Cell Phone Forensics and dition, he said. Radar Analysis teams were analyzing clues left by the No word on others phones that were on board. Five aircraft equipped Rogers wouldn’t comwith special radios for ment on the status of the other two people aboard the detecting the missing plane’s emergency-locator plane. Officials had identified transmitter searched the those aboard as Leland and mountains while ground Sharon Bowman of Marion, crews focused on areas Mont., and their 16-year-old between Mazama and the s t e p - g r a n d d a u g h t e r, Rainy Pass area, officials Autumn Veatch of Belling- said. “These grids contain ham. “We’re not going into the some of the toughest mounstatus of the grandparents. tainous terrain in the state,” She was the only one who Civil Air Patrol spokeswalked out,” Rogers told woman Julie DeBardelaben The Associated Press. “She said. Rain early Monday just said they came out of the clouds, and it crashed.” slowed efforts, but clearing The Beech A-35 left skies in the afternoon were Kalispell, Mont., about expected to help with the 1 p.m. Saturday, headed for search.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
A three-man crew with Chewack Fire Suppression stands amid ground burned by the Douglas County Complex Fire and a wheat field Sunday. “Right now it’s the embers we’re worried about,” one of the firefighters said.
Evacuation orders lifted for Central Wash. fires Firefighters holding perimeters THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WATERVILLE — All evacuation orders have been lifted involving a pair of big wildfires burning near Waterville in central Washington. Fire spokesman Jeff Sevigney said the final 30 evacuation orders were lifted Monday. Sevigney said Monday that crews kept the fires within established
perimeters overnight and continued to strengthen fire lines. He said aircraft will assist ground crews Monday.
35 square miles The Douglas County Complex fires began Friday afternoon and have scorched nearly 35 square miles of brush, grass and sage.
They are 55 percent contained, thanks to cooler weather. One fire is burning about 17 miles northeast of Waterville near Jamieson Lake. The other fire is burning approximately 10 miles southeast of Waterville. There have been no reports of structures lost or injuries at this time. About 300 firefighters are working the wildfires.
Sunday rains, humidity keep Paradise Fire activity down PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
QUEETS — Wet weather has kept down the activity of the Paradise Fire in the Queets River valley, according to Monday’s official activity update. There were isolated showers in the area Sunday, and humidity was more than 95 percent. The rain did not put
out the fire. Even an inch of rain cannot prevent smoke and then flames a week later, officials said.
Boots on the ground Forest fires require “boots on the ground” workers who mix water into hot embers and burn roots under old stumps, officials said.
The Paradise Fire is expected to become more active when conditions warm up and dry out this week. “An A-star helicopter arrived as a replacement with a seven-member helitack module,” the Monday update said. “The module, from the Inyo National Forest, brings experience with
helicopter rescues on Mount Whitney and will help deliver supplies and gear to the firefighters along the Queets.” The smoldering fire has burned more than 1,590 acres, primarily though dried moss and lichen in the tops of oldgrowth trees and in deep duff on steep hillsides.
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TUESDAY, JULY 14, 2015
Clallam candidates discuss county grants, water issues
Woman airlifted after 3-vehicle collision Monday
BY ARWYN RICE rin M. Liggins, 44, of Sequim then struck the PENINSULA DAILY NEWS Focus. PORT TOWNSEND “We are investigating — A woman was airthis as a DUI, vehicular lifted to a Seattle hospi- assault . . . due to the tal Monday morning injuries and what we after she was hurt in a believe was impairment three-car collision on on the part of the U.S. Highway 101 at driver,” Winger said. Discovery Bay . “We do believe he Laurel S. Thompson, was intoxicated.” 45, of Port Ludlow was A blood screen is listed in stable condition pending, Winger said. at Harborview Medical “There are going to Center on Monday after- be charges pending, noon after the 6:19 a.m. most likely, but those wreck at Milepost 281, are yet to be [detersaid Trooper Russel mined].” Winger, State Patrol Baylon was transspokesman. ported to Jefferson He said she had sus- Healthcare hospital tained non-life-threaten- with ankle injuries and ing injuries. was contacted there by Hector D. Baylon, 19, a trooper, Winger said. of Sequim was driving a Baylon was treated 2003 Chevy Impala and discharged from northbound when he Jefferson Healthcare crossed into oncoming hospital, Winger added. traffic and crashed into Liggins was transa 2002 Ford Focus being ported to Jefferson driven southbound by Healthcare in Port Thompson, Winger said. Townsend, Winger said. “Baylon crossed the The wreck remains center line in a curve, under investigation. and Thompson A detour at the scene attempted to avoid the of the collision was in collision by steering into place from 12:51 p.m. the southbound shouluntil 1:47 p.m. while der,” he said. detectives investigated, “But she wasn’t able Winger said. to get out of the way, ________ and they basically hit in Sequim-Dungeness Valley the southbound lane.” Editor Chris McDaniel can be Following the initial reached at 360-681-2390, ext. collision, a 1993 Chevro- 5052, or cmcdaniel@peninsula let truck driven by Dar- dailynews.com. BY CHRIS MCDANIEL
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
SEQUIM — Three candidates for the Clallam County District 1 commissioner seat debated water and the distribution of county funds at a League of Women Voters of Clallam County forum. Incumbent Commissioner Jim McEntire and challengers Mark Ozias and Bryan D. Frazier were questioned by audience members during the Sunday afternoon forum on the controversy surrounding County Treasurer Selinda Barkhuis’ refusal to honor funds transfers to other agencies, as well as about water rights and building permits in water-critical areas. About 100 audience members attended the Clallam County commissioner forum hosted by the League of Women Voters at the Shipley Center, 921 E. Hammond St. The office has a six-year term, with a current $70,590 salary for a veteran commissioner, or $67,189
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Cambridge choir to raise voices in Sequim church SEQUIM — The 27-voice Selwyn College Choir from the University of Cambridge, England, will give a single public concert at St. Luke’s Episcopal Church, 525 N. Fifth Ave., this Thursday night. The choir is on tour this month, singing in Vancouver, B.C.; in Seattle; and at Victoria’s Christ Church Cathedral. St. Luke’s, which hosts a monthly Music Live with
Lunch program in the fall, winter and spring, will make Thursday a “Music Live with Dinner,” with a meal in the parish hall after the concert. Listeners can choose just the concert, though, for $20 per person, or have dinner, too, for $50 per person. Seating is limited, so St. Luke’s offers reservations at its church office, open 9 a.m. to noon Mondays through Thursdays. For more details, phone the office at 360-683-4862.
for a firstterm commissioner. Two of the three candidates will be selected in McEntire Ozias the Aug. 4 Frazier primary to move on to the November added that government should be efficient, as well general election. as open and transparent. His challengers disQuestions on grants agreed. Both said there All three candidates should have been more pubwere asked if the county lic involvement in the procommissioners were correct cess. in initially allowing war“It could have been hanrants for $1.3 million in dled differently. Barkhuis grants to port and city gov- was looking out for the peoernments. ple,” Frazier said. Barkhuis rejected them Commissioners for what she believed to be attempted to re-write the an insufficient public pro- county policies after the cess. Commissioners have fact, he said. since voided the warrants Ozias also said it should and started the process have been handled differover. ently. McEntire said he “It’s about the right believed that he and the thing to do, not just the other commissioners had legal thing to do. The public acted entirely within the has a stake in the outcome,” law and within county char- he said. ter in their initial actions. In response to questions “We followed policy to about the availability of the letter,” he said, and water in the Carlsborg area
and the suspension of new building permits, McEntire said he believed the Water Resource Inventory Area 18 water rule put into effect by the state Department of Ecology is not necessary, and showed graphs indicating the amount of water available in the region is on a long-term upward trend. He also noted that water use is controlled by Ecology, not the county. Ozias said he supports the new Dungeness water rule, saying that it protects existing uses, people, fish against the possibility of future water scarcity. Frazier said the water rule only makes matters worse by allowing those with the money to pay for water rights to overuse scarce water resources. McEntire opposed a building permit moratorium based on water availability, while Ozias and Frazier both supported a moratorium.
________ Reporter Arwyn Rice can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 5070, or at arice@peninsuladaily news.com.
Paramedics, fireworks ban topic of fire panel hopefuls BY ARWYN RICE
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
SEQUIM — Three candidates for commissioner of Clallam County Fire District 3 discussed adding paramedics, a fireworks ban and the district’s ability to respond to fires during the drought. About 60 audience members attended the Clallam County commissioner forum hosted Sunday afternoon by the League of Women Voters at the Shipley Center, 921 E. Hammond St. Incumbent G. Michael Gawley and challengers Sean Ryan and Alan. W. Slind are competing for the job in the Aug. 4 primary. The top two finishers will move on to the November general election.
Each of the candid a t e s agreed that Sequim has a growing retired population, and r a p i d l y Gawley increasing call volumes for the fire district. The district responded to 6,000 calls last year.
Paramedics Currently there are 21 paramedics on the staff, working on three shifts. Gawley, who has been a volunteer in the district since 2005, said that there is not currently a shortage, but that more paramedics will eventually be needed. The district must “live within our means, meet
increasing the district’s expenditures. “We need to go out and serve the community and still be able to control our expenses,” he said.
Fireworks Ryan
Slind
payroll and equipment and look to the future. This is a challenge all around,” he said. Ryan, an 8-year volunteer in the district, said he wants to add between nine and 11 new paramedics as the city grows, adding two to four each shift. “We could pay for it by cutting stuff we want but don’t need,” he said. Slind, a retired bank financial officer, said two or three more paramedics are needed, but that they should be added without
All three candidates also supported some kind of fireworks ban in Sequim, and assured audience members that despite the current drought and water restrictions, the district would be able to fight fires using tanker engines that bring their own water. “If your house in on fire, we will come put it out, Gawley said. Ryan said the district may eventually need to consider adding a couple of additional tankers to the district’s fleet of firefighting equipment.
More than independent senior Sequim School Board hopeful living . . .
only candidate to show at forum BY ARWYN RICE PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
SEQUIM — Only one of three candidates for the Sequim School District was present for a candidate forum on Sunday, where the lone candidate fielded questions on the implementation of Common Core standards. Candidate Heather Short was present. Candidates William Payne and Charles Meyer sent representatives. Candidate representatives did not take part in the question-and-answer portion of the forum, but read introductory statement and final statements. About 50 audience mem-
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bers attended the forum — one in a series of candidate forums hosted Sunday by the League of Women Voters at the Shipley Center, 921 E. Hammond St. Two of the three candidates to fill the seat of departing board member Walter Johnson will be selected in the Aug. 4 primary and move on to the November general election. Short is a veterinarian, owner of the Sequim Animal Hospital, and the mother of two children enrolled in the district, including a newly enrolled kindergarten student. In her introduction, she said she has suggested that School Board meetings be
held in the various school buildings, where parents would be more comfortable and less intimidated by the official meeting room in the district offices. She said she hopes to help the district design a bond measure voters would accept to fund updates and expansions needed at district buildings. Voters rejected propsoed bond measures in April 2104 and in February this year. In answer to a question, Short said that Common Core standards have been implemented across the nation and that the only option for a local school board is to select its choice
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of curriculum that meets the requirements. Payne — father of four children in the district, former Clallam County prosecuting attorney and current private practice attorney — said that he was uniquely qualified for the school board in an introduction read by Stephanie Hyatt.
PHONE: (360) 582-2850 FAX: (360) 582-2851
Meyer is a retired U.S. Air Force officer whose children are each college graduates, said a statement read by Ed Tulloch. In the statement, Meyer said the School Board must address district challenges within its limited resources.
________ Reporter Arwyn Rice can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 5070, or at arice@peninsuladaily news.com.
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
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(C) — TUESDAY, JULY 14, 2015
A7
Shellfish poaching Site: Breaking up the concrete danger to health, wildlife officer says shellfish,” Cenci said. “But if someone want to launder product through a PORT TOWNSEND — reputable restaurant, they Shellfish poaching is more could.” than just stealing or not following the rules, a busiEnforcement ness audience was told Monday. Enforcement suffers It is a health hazard that from a lack of personnel. can damage the reputation Cenci said the entire of the food industry, said state has only 123 officers. Mike Cenci, deputy chief of The Port Townsend office is the state Department of staffed with three officers Fish and Wildlife. and has three vacancies. “The illicit shellfish marCenci said the public can ket doesn’t only have conse- help by reporting observed quences for conservation,” violations and by lobbying Cenci told about 60 people the state Legislature and at the weekly meeting of “getting them to act as if the Jefferson County Cham- this were something imporber of Commerce. tant.” “It erodes the potential The fund for enforceof legitimate seafood busi- ment is $15 million a year nesses and can jeopardize and has not changed in public safety if the poacher some time. involves shellfish taken “I have enough to susfrom a sewer outfall.” tain a minimum contingent of officers, which is 20 perFocus of bad batch cent less than what I had in Those who eat bad shell- 1993,” he said. “We don’t have a lot of fish will be less focused on who harvested it and where staff,” he added. it came from and more “We tend to prioritize focused on how eating shell- and focus a lot of our effort fish made them sick, Cenci on the most egregious said. offences.” “The reputation of the industry is compromised,” Not in business he said. Many that buy poached Poached product is attractive to purchasers seafood aren’t in the seabecause it is less expensive food business, he said. “Many of these profesthan from legitimate sources and “people want a sions have no connection with seafood,” he said. good deal,” Cenci said. “If you throw a good deal He said poachers may be using shellfish to fuel illegal in the mix, people aren’t thinking about the consedrug habits. “Black market prices are quences to conservation directly linked to what it and public health or the takes to sustain a drug effect on legitimate business. habit,” he said. “So we have some educa“It’s a quick source of revenue. A poacher can get tion to do.” anything from $200 to $800 Consumer awareness is for what they gather during on the rise, he said, and the a two-hour tide.” agency is receiving more tips about suspicious behavBuyers may be unaware ior and people trying to market poached shellfish. While restaurants with Sometimes what appears good reputations often to be poaching is often innomake considerable effort to cent, he said. keep their shellfish stock Anyone observing what legitimate, they can be unaware of the source if the they perceive to be illegal poacher masks it well shellfish poaching should immediately call the State enough, Cenci said. “Restaurants try to Patrol or 9-1-1 emergency develop partnerships with dispatchers, Cenci said. ________ people who have been in business a long time rather Jefferson County Editor Charlie than a fly-by-night crew Bermant can be reached at 360that shows up in an alley 385-2335 or cbermant@peninsula with a pickup truck full of dailynews.com. BY CHARLIE BERMANT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Search: Didn’t
get off the ship CONTINUED FROM A1 other passengers and was not found aboard the ship. The Coast Guard was Also responding were three small boats from the notified at 10:55 a.m. “The Coast Guard is Coast Guard station in Seattle, and Coast Guard cutter working closely with HolBlue Shark from Coast land America staff to locate Guard station in Everett, the missing passenger,” said Petty Officer Derik SchaeShearer said. The Statendam left Vic- fer, situation unit watchtoria at about 11 p.m. Sun- stander at Sector Puget day, headed south to the Sound. “Mariners transiting Port Angeles pilot station through the area are urged off Ediz Hook, then headed east past Port Townsend to keep a sharp lookout for any signs of distress and toward Seattle. report it to the Coast It arrived in Seattle at Guard.” about 5 a.m. Monday. ________ A search for the man began after he did not disReporter Arwyn Rice can be embark from the ship with reached at 360-452-2345, ext.
CONTINUED FROM A1 ing Rayonier Inc. and Exxon Mobil. The port also has been Structures on the parcel a block west of downtown awarded a $1.5 million were demolished in fall remedial action grant under the state Model Toxics Con2012 and early 2013. trol Act, the proceeds of which are generated by a Breaking up concrete tax on petroleum products. Heavy equipment operaThe cleanup is being tors were breaking up con- conducted under an agreed crete at the site Monday. order with Ecology, referred Port Director of Engi- to as DOE. neering Chris Hartman “I want to give a shoutsaid Monday that as early out to DOE,” said Commisas Aug. 3, workers will sioner John Calhoun, the begin removing soil and groundwater laden with board’s senior member. “DOE has worked very gasoline, diesel, heavy oil, dioxins, furans, benzene well with us on this project. “I have very few comand pentachlorophenol, a plaints. wood preservative. “There was a time I The contaminants will be transported to a landfill. never would have said that, The port had set aside but I am today.” The $3.57 million con$4.5 million in the 2015 capital budget to clean up tract was the largest single the site and make it pre- allocation Calhoun said he sentable to potential ten- has approved in his two sixyear terms on the board. ants. “Maybe the milestone of Outside funding sources will continue to include my two terms on the cominsurance coverage and mission is to get this accomstate Department of Ecol- plished,” he said. “It’s everything we ogy funds. The port also will try to should be doing as a port.” The mill opened as Penrecover costs from claims against former owners and insula Plywood in 1941 and operators at the site, includ- became a Rayonier affiliate
for 18 years beginning in 1971. It was sold to an Alaskabased corporation and renamed KPly in 1989. KPly shut down the mill in 2007. It was reopened in March 2010, renamed Peninsula Plywood and then was shut down for good in December 2011 with the company owing the port, city of Port Angeles and state Department of Labor & Industries $2.4 million. Ecology has long supervised cleanup of the site. Under a 1990 Ecology remedial action order, Rayonier for several years monitored and abated a hydraulic oil spill that occurred when the company operated the mill as ITT Rayonier. Rayonier stopped those activities once the site was demolished.
Hartman said. “I would say [there is] strong interest in marine trades for that site.” “There are no prospective tenants at this point, but the key point is, it will be ready for development.”
Commerce
Brian Young of the state Department of Commerce also introduced himself to the commissioners during a brief presentation Monday. The port’s plans to develop a Composite Recycling Technology Center “can turn into real jobs,” said Young, Commerce’s director of economic development for the Clean Technology Sector. “Using scraps and leftovers to produce new materials is really exciting,” he said. “Carbon fiber and other composites are high on the Seek tenant list in areas we lead not Port officials want to find only the nation in but the a tenant in the marine world.” ________ trades industry to set up shop there. Senior Staff Writer Paul Gottlieb “We’ve been entertaining can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. and visiting potential cus- 5060, or at pgottlieb@peninsuladaily tomers around the Sound,” news.com.
Trees: Includes port’s 10 percent CONTINUED FROM A1 groundwork for deciding whether a follow-on enviThe overall amount ronmental assessment is includes the port’s 10 per- necessary,” Jerry Ludke, cent match of $66,324, half port airport and marina of which will be covered by manager, said in a report to state Department of Trans- commissioners. Trees at the city-owned portation funds. Reid Middleton Inc. of park have grown so tall Everett will update the they have cut the safe plan, which will include approach to the 6,350-foot aviation demand forecasts main runway to 5,000 feet. The option of cutting the and alternatives to address trees has encountered stiff, the trees. emotional opposition from Environment assessment some city residents. Commissioners met in The FAA is requiring the executive session for 50 update before and if an minutes to discuss three environmental assessment parcels of property and to is conducted as part of find- discuss the master plan ing a solution to the trees. update before emerging and “This project will deter- approving the grant with mine the airport’s critical- little discussion. aircraft and required runPort lawyer Simon Barnway length and lays the hart of Port Angeles said
Bros. Aviation. Ludke said he is hoping to hear by the end of July from an airline that may start flying in and out of Fairchild. He would not identify the airline. In a related matter, port commissioners accepted a $922,500 FAA grant for a $ 1.02 million project that includes a $102,500 port match for runway apron improvements. The improvements will Commercial airline allow more frequent operaLudke said the trees tions by larger corporate have not hindered the port’s and general aviation aireffort to entice a commer- craft. ________ cial passenger airline to the airport, which since NovemSenior Staff Writer Paul Gottlieb ber has lacked commercial can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. passenger service except 5060, or at pgottlieb@peninsuladaily for charter-based Rite news.com. the master plan update was discussed behind closed doors as a matter of potential litigation, although he said no litigation has been threatened or is pending. Ludke said later in an interview that it could take at least a year to determine if an environmental assessment needs to be conducted. “I would think it will be two-and-a-half years before a decision is made on tree removal,” he said.
Charges: Dashti being evicted CONTINUED FROM A1 ing the results from the necropsy of the pig, which Conviction of each mis- will be forwarded to the demeanor could result in a prosecutor’s office in the fine of up to $5,000 and up near future. Animal cruelty in the to 364 days in jail, according to the criminal com- first degree is intentionally inflicting substantial pain, plaint. Dashti also is being causing physical injury or evicted from his property, killing an animal by a and was informed in court means causing undue sufJuly 10 he had 20 days to fering, according to state statutes. vacate the premises. If charged and convicted If he fails to leave by of a felony, Dashti could that time, he will be removed by deputies, King receive a fine up to $20,000 and be jailed for up to 10 said. years. In late June, law enforceMore charges possible ment officials confiscated Felony charges of animal nearly all of Dashti’s liveabuse in the first degree stock. possibly could be added in On June 24, officials connection with the death seized four goats, two donof a pig on Dashti’s prop- keys and two sheep because erty, said Brian King, chief of parasitic load, malnourcriminal deputy for the ishment, lack of basic care Sheriff’s Office. and unsanitary conditions, Investigators are await- King said.
On June 29, law enforcement returned to the property to confiscate two pigs, a Bernese mountain dog, 12 rabbits, various chickens and about 60 quail. Those animals had been left behind during the initial seizure because a veterinarian on-site issued them a clean bill of health and deputies ensured they had adequate access to food and water. That changed when one of Dashti’s three pigs died. The dead pig established a basis for seizing the remaining animals, even though there was no outward sign of neglect, King said. The pig carcass was removed by law enforcement. The seized animals are being cared for at the nonprofit Center Valley Animal Rescue near Quilcene.
Dashti, a native of Iran who has been a permanent legal resident of the U.S. since 1979, said he did not mistreat his animals. He believes the pig was poisoned by those who want to see him off his property on Serenity Lane and blames the deaths of some of the other animals on falling trees and grass tainted by fuel and fertilizer. Others he killed to eat, he said. Dashti left the carcasses untouched to provide food for carrion birds, he said. Before the seizures, deputies visited the property daily to encourage Dashti to take better care of his animals, King said.
________ Sequim-Dungeness Valley Editor Chris McDaniel can be reached at 360-681-2390, ext. 5052, or cmcdaniel@peninsuladailynews. com.
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TUESDAY, JULY 14, 2015
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Primary voter guide coming Friday BALLOTS WILL BE mailed W Wednesday to North Olympic P i l jurisdictions j i di i Peninsula in which primary elections will be held Aug. 4. And just in time for the all-mail election, the Peninsula Daily News’ North Olympic Peninsula Voter Guide will be included in this coming Friday’s PDN. Published as a public service, the 20-page guide features all candidates in primary races, including biographical synopses and their responses to questions on issues related to the offices they seek. Included are the provisional commissioner candidates for the Sequim Aquatic Recreation Center (SARC) metropolitan park district on the ballot, should Proposition 1 be approved. KEITH THORPE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PA
GARDEN COMMUNITY GROWING
Garden advocate Hank Gibson carries digging implements on Friday at the newly created 11th Street Community Garden now occupying half of Wolverton Park in the 800 block of West 11th Street in Port Angeles. The garden, which was constructed last spring, still has room for interested participants. Applications for plots can be downloaded at www.pacommunitygardens.org.
Rock Walk to explore geology, evolution of Dungeness Spit PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
SEQUIM — Dave Parks, geologist with the state Department of Natural Resources, will lead a “Rock Walk” to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the Dungeness National Wildlife Refuge this coming Saturday. The free program will be offered twice, at 11 a.m. and 2 p.m. Parks will discuss the geological history and coastal evolution of the Dungeness Spit and examine the stratigraphy of the coastal bluffs west of the base of the Spit. Parks also will discuss recent research on the rates of coastal bluff erosion in the Dungeness drift cell. The “Rock Walk” will start at the Upper Overlook at the top of the trail leading down to the Spit.
Parks is a licensed engineering geologist and hydrogeologist living in Port Angeles. The event is one of several at the refuge during its centennial year. President Woodrow Wilson signed Executive Order 2123, establishing the Dungeness Spit Reservation as “a refuge, preserve and breeding ground for native birds,” on Jan. 20, 1915. Presidential Proclamation 2416 in 1940 changed the reservation’s name to the Dungeness National Wildlife Refuge, as it is known today. Other events marking the refuge’s centennial year will be: ■ Aug. 15 — Shorebird walk led by Audubon society members; time to be announced, dependent on
the tides. ■ Sept. 25-26 — Celebration of 100 years with the Dungeness River Bridge and Klahhane Hike Club as part of the annual River Festival at the river center. ■ Nov. 21, 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. — Migrating waterfowl walk on the refuge led by Audubon society members. Participants will meet in the parking area. The entrance fee to the refuge is $3 per family or per group with up to four adults. Children younger than 16 are admitted free. For more information about the refuge’s centennial year, see www. dungeness100.com, phone the refuge office at 360-457-8451 or email david_falzetti@fws.g.
Briefly . . . Burned food fills house with smoke PORT TOWNSEND — Food left cooking on a stove top was the cause of a smoke-filled home and a 9-1-1 call Monday morning. East Jefferson Fire-Rescue was alerted to the smoke in the 600 block of Monroe Street in Port Townsend at 10:46 a.m., said department spokesman Bill Beezley. Firefighters removed the smoking pot from the house before an actual fire
broke out, Beezley said. The house was ventilated to remove the smoke. When the resident of the house returned, she told firefighters that she had left the food cooking when she had to make an unscheduled trip to the veterinarian, Beezley said. Once firefighters had completely cleared the home, it was turned over to the resident, who was not identified, at 11:50 a.m.
Powell found guilty TACOMA — The fatherin-law of Susan Powell, a Utah woman who went missing six years ago, has
been found guilty of possessing child pornography. Steven Powell was on trial last week for possessing explicit images of two neighbor girls. Jurors returned a unanimous verdict against the 64-year-old Monday. Powell was convicted in 2012 on 14 counts of voyeurism for shooting video and still pictures of the girls, ages 8 and 10, from a window as they used a family bathroom. Powell is the father of Josh Powell, who killed his two sons and himself in February 2012 while under investigation for his wife’s 2009 disappearance that
gained national attention.
Federal grant SUNNYSIDE — The federal government is providing the city of Sunnyside with more than $533,000 to help restore part of its airport’s taxiway and runway. The Olympian reported that the Federal Aviation Administration is providing the grant. More than 1,100 feet of the airport’s taxiway and more than 3,400 feet of the runway are at the end of their lifespans. Peninsula Daily News and The Associated Press
Death and Memorial Notice AUDREY AUGUSTA KAPLAN 1928-2015 Audrey Augusta Kaplan passed away on July 4, 2015. She was born in the early spring of 1928 in Cresbard, South Dakota, to Fred and Anna (Carlson) Lien. She was the second of three children. She attended elementary school and graduated from high school in Cresbard. When not in school, she worked in her father’s lumberyard, spent time creating beautiful paper dolls and dreamed of becoming a fashion designer. She attended one term at the University of South Dakota, then transferred to and graduated from Willamette University in Salem, Oregon, with a business degree. While at Willamette, she met and eloped with her husband of the next 64 years, Bob Kaplan. In the early years of their marriage, Audrey worked for the Red Cross
Audrey Kaplan and as a bookkeeper while Bob completed his Ph.D. They eventually settled in the Los Angeles area, where Audrey dedicated her time to raising their three children. She was an avid seamstress and knitter, producing much of her children’s clothing, as well as clothing for their dolls. She participated wholeheartedly in Bob’s career, playing hostess and mother to both local and foreign students, traveling throughout the world for extended periods of
time and typing (before computers and delete buttons) entire journals for publication. She was passionate about her family, politics (volunteering for many years at the polls), current events and Trojan (University of Southern California) football. From its inception (1966), she was a cardcarrying member of the National Organization for Women (NOW). In 1996, Audrey and Bob retired to Port Angeles, built a new home and watched their grandchildren grow up. Over the years, they welcomed family and friends from all over the world. Audrey was an extremely caring and compassionate person with the ability to talk to anyone and everyone. She expressed genuine care for and interest in everyone she met. She sent cards to recognize birthdays, anniversaries, thanks and triumphs to family, friends, neighbors, her children’s friends, children of her children’s friends, grocery
clerks, pharmacists, gardeners and all whom she got to know through her gregarious nature. Her home is full of pictures of children, grandchildren and friends. She will be missed by her husband, Bob Kaplan; her three children, Robin (Hank) Gibson, Lisa Morris and Bob (Theresa) Kaplan; her four grandchildren, Matt Morris, Cole Gibson, Ben Morris and Katie Gibson; and her siblings, Melvin (Elaine) Lien and Arda Berryhill. Her many friends will remember her fondly. A celebration of her life will be held at her home on Saturday, August 8, 2015, from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Please contact Robin Gibson at rgibson@olypen. com to RSVP and get directions to the home. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made in her name to the National Park Foundation at www. nationalparks.org or the Peninsula Daily News’ Peninsula Home Fund at https://secure.peninsula dailynews.com/homefund.
Naval Magazine Indian Island to practice oil spill response PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT HADLOCK – Naval Magazine Indian Island personnel will conduct an oil spill response exercise today. The simulated oil spill will be in Port Townsend Bay at the northern point of Indian Island near the ammunition wharf. Navy personnel will use small boats and place bright orange containment boom
across the water. Residents and boaters may see oil spill response activity and equipment in the water from late morning to early afternoon, the Navy said. Response personnel and vehicles also may be seen on the Navy’s ammunition wharf as part of this exercise. No impact to road or water traffic is anticipated, the Navy said.
Death and Memorial Notice NOAH JOSHUA CHAPMAN May 21, 1999 July 6, 2015 Noah Joshua Chapman was born on May 21, 1999, in Port Angeles. Noah was killed in an automobile accident on July 6, 2015, while on vacation in Maui, Hawaii, with family and his best friend, Beck. Noah was proud of his Native American heritage and was an enrolled member of the Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe, located in Sequim. Noah attended Borah High School and Treasure Valley Math & Science Center, where he was an interested and accomplished student. Noah excelled in math and science, and was planning to study medicine. He would have been a talented and compassionate doctor. Noah had a gentle, compassionate and kindhearted presence that was felt by everyone lucky enough to have known him. Noah loved laughter, and he was able to make us all laugh with his welldeveloped wit and sarcasm. While we don’t know that we’ll ever laugh again, we appreciate the support we’ve received from our friends and family. He left in the morning of his moment, With his happy shadows on my being. Laughing knowledge and wisdom in torrent, With Eternal love, unfinished but serene. — Dad Joe.
Noah Chapman Noah was preceded in death by his grandmother, Debra Priest, and grandfather, Eugene Chapman Jr.; also by many great-grandparents; Lareal Hautzinger, Edith Cusack, Raymond “Grump” Hautzinger, Jim Priest and Ron Dean (killed in the same accident). Noah is survived by his mother, Mikel Hautzinger; his father, Joshua Chapman; and his brothers, Matthew and Liam Chapman. He is also survived by grandparents Joe “Dad Joe” Hautzinger, Sharon Ackroyd, Tina Davis, Karen Dean and Charles Kekoni; aunts Brooke and Patricia Hautzinger, Jaid and Jeralyn Biggers, and Jill Dean; and uncles John “Jack” and Paul Hautzinger. Noah is also survived by many other aunts, uncles and cousins. In lieu of flowers, the family requests that donations in memory of Noah be made to Treasure Valley Math & Science Center Foundation and mailed to P.A. Hautzinger, 323 West Jefferson Street, No. 306, Boise, ID 83702.
Remembering a Lifetime ■ Death and Memorial Notice obituaries chronicle a deceased’s life, either in the family’s own words or as written by the PDN staff from information provided by survivors. These notices appear at a nominal cost according to the length of the obituary. Photos and ornamental insignia are welcome. Call 360-452-8435 Monday through Friday for information and assistance and to arrange publication. A convenient form to guide you is available at area mortuaries or by downloading at www. peninsuladailynews.com under “Obituary Forms.” ■ Death Notices, in which summary information about the deceased, including service information and mortuary, appears once at no charge. No biographical or family information or photo is included. A form for death notices appears at www. peninsuladailynews.com under “Obituary Forms.” For further information, call 360-417-3527.
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, July 14, 2015 PAGE
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Normally wet West End bone dry THE HAZE DYES the sunshine with an orange hue, causing the raven’s feathers to have a red tint. She glides through the canopy of the upper Hoh Rain Forest in the late morning, staying out of the direct sunlight whenever possible. A shower of dry needles cascades to the forest floor when she lands next to her mate. They sit together, panting, their wings drooping away from their bodies in an effort to cool themselves in the heat. Together, they fly past the wilting leaves of immature bigleaf maples to splash on the edge of the river. Nearby, a small flock of Steller’s jays flies leapfrog-style across U.S. Highway 101. They, too, have learned to stay in the shadows as the day marches on. But their usual haunt of a nearby clearcut is dry. The foxglove there is shriveled. The cow parsley on the fringes of the cut has died. Landing on the ground is not something these active fliers do often, but the lure of abundant berries is hard to resist. The six jays swoop to the powdery dirt in shifts and make a meal of wild blackberries, thimbleberries and raspberries. Up the south fork of the Sol Duc Road, large puddles have dried up into condensed mires of squirming pollywogs. Layer upon layer of these baby frogs try to absorb the fleeting
WEST END NEIGHBOR moisture. Departing Barker from its usual diet, a gray jay pulls a meal from the squirming mass. Scratching on the shady floor of the forest is a robin. Usually this brightly colored male would be digging under the moss for worms. But the heat has dried the shag moss to hay. Even the ground under the moss is dry in the deep forest. The earthworms are down deep in the soil and even the robin’s most attentive, head-cocking listening doesn’t reveal a clue to even one worm’s whereabouts. So, for lunch, he chooses tearing apart a duffy log for beetle grubs. It’s surprisingly easy to move the wood without the normal weight of dampness. The upper Calawah River has quit running. It does this every summer, but this year it’s gone dry earlier than normal. The surface water left is isolated in shallow pools where small salmon fry and periwinkles are in concentrated numbers. Down lower on the Calawah, a belted kingfisher rests on a newly
Zorina
Peninsula Voices
OUR
ZORINA BARKER/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
The Calawah River, normally flowing at the start of summer, is a rocky road in the current drought. broken and fallen red alder. For this brightly colored female, her environment has changed a bit due to the heat. The temperature of the water is warmer, and there seem to be less big fish competing for her food. But down in the river bottom of the forest, closer to the Pacific Ocean, the temperature is a lot
cooler than inland. The smoky haze is even paler here, west of Forks. It is early in the season. If it was later in the season, the effects of the heat on the forest would be considered fairly normal. But some believe our recent heat wave is anything but normal, and the scant rain doesn’t
READERS’ LETTERS, FAXES AND EMAIL
Self-imposed ban Kudos to the West End Youth League for modeling a common-sense decision and canceling its sale of fireworks. [“Sole Vendor of Consumer Fireworks Closes Up Shop,” PDN, July 1.] It is an example that all private vendors and Native American vendors should follow in this time of extreme fire danger. I encourage the public to join me in sending what might have been spent on fireworks to the West End Youth League, P.O. Box 2449, Forks, WA 98331. Gina Hietpas, Sequim
In hindsight What would be a politically correct way of saying: “I told ya so!” Or, perhaps another way might be: Why did we taxpayers have to pay about $350 million to destroy two working dams, and then reconstruct with all of the ancillary costs connected to the destruction of the two dams on the Elwha River — the revegetation, hatcheries, etc., in order to kill more fish, create the loss of a God-given water supply with Lake Mills and Lake Aldwell reservoirs, and a local low-cost electricity power source? The dust has hardly settled from all of that deconstruction, and we are already feeling the results from Port Angeles’ Stage 2 city water conservation program. It was the largest and dumbest dam removal project in our (once was) “United” States. Always having been a positive contributor to our local community — my hometown — I offer my sincere condolences to the local
tribes’ upcoming fish losses, and to our present youthful generations’ loss of reasonable costs of electricity and year-round water supply for all livable pleasures, and green lawns, too, of course. So, I say: Enjoy the fruits of uncommon sense that prevailed with our prior two historically recognized dams with sufficient water reservoirs for our local city’s backup source for domestic water supply, forest-firefighting reserve and the local tribes’ commercial and food supplies. Paul Lamoureux, Port Angeles
of commissioners much broader powers than they now have, including taxing property owners in the SARC voting district up to more than six times the former proposed 12 cents per $1,000 of assessed property value levy (which failed). The implications of this new SARC ballot initiative are much more severe for property owners than just “a few coffees or a couple lunches out each year.” The moral of this letter to the editor is, “Know for what you vote,” or you, as a property-owning taxpayer, may be very unpleasantly surprised. Richard Hahn, Sequim
SARC proposal
Confederate flag
I was very surprised at the naivete or lack of pertinent information available to the writer of the letter supporting the Sequim Aquatic Recreation Center. [“For SARC Measure,” Peninsula Voices, July 1.] There is a new SARC ballot vote scheduled for Aug. 4 which, if passed, would give the SARC board
Being a white Southerner, I can understand how blacks would consider the Confederate battle flag a racist symbol. If I were black, I would feel the same way. Every time I see that flag used by various hate groups, it makes my blood boil because it casts dishonor on all those who fought and
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died under that flag. By all historical accounts, the majority of those who fought for the South never owned slaves, and when asked why they fought, to a man they answered to protect their homes and love ones from the invading Yankee army. In every major battle, they were outnumbered and out-gunned, yet they fought with incredible bravery and won more often than they lost. As a Union general described [Gen. Robert E.] Lee’s army: “They were dressed in rags and looked liked scarecrows, they marched into battle shoeless, you could smell them before you could see them, but boy could they fight!” That’s what that flag represents to most white Southerners: pride in our ancestors who fought in a lost cause with such bravery and sacrifice to protect their homes and loved ones, not for slavery. Tom Schmolke, Port Angeles
NEWS DEPARTMENT Main office: 305 W. First St., P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362 ■ LEAH LEACH, managing editor/news, 360-417-3531 lleach@peninsuladailynews.com ■ MICHAEL FOSTER, news editor; 360-452-2345, ext. 5064 mfoster@peninsuladailynews.com ■ LEE HORTON, sports editor; 360-417-3525; lhorton@peninsuladailynews.com ■ DIANE URBANI DE LA PAZ, features editor; 360-452-2345, ext. 5062 durbanidelapaz@peninsuladailynews.com ■ General news information: 360-417-3527 From Jefferson County and West End, 800-826-7714, ext. 5250 Email: news@peninsuladailynews.com News fax: 360-417-3521 ■ Sequim office: 147 W. Washington St., 98382; 360-681-2390 CHRIS MCDANIEL, 360-681-2390, ext. 5052, cmcdaniel@peninsuladailynews.com ■ Port Townsend office: 1939 E. Sims Way, 98368; 360-385-2335 CHARLIE BERMANT, 360-385-2335, ext. 5550, cbermant@peninsuladailynews.com
seem to make much difference. Zorina Barker is a longtime West End resident whose column, West End Neighbor, appears every other Tuesday. Submit items and ideas for the column to her at zorinabarker81@ gmail.com or phone her at 360327-3702. Her next column will appear July 28.
Still haunted by bombs that never went off TRAFFIC ON THE Rhine halted, trams and cars could not cross a main highway bridge and about 20,000 Cologne, Germany, residents on either side of the river were forced to leave their homes and gather, for safety’s sake, in the gyms of schools closed one day in May. Seven decades after the end of World War II, the threat of aerial bombs still disrupts life in Germany with surprising regularity. A bomb found along the riverbank during excavations for a pipeline forced the evacuation of everyone within about a half-mile radius. In the end, it took half an hour to defuse the 2,200-pound bomb, believed to have been dropped by the Americans in the waning years of the war. Evacuations are no aberration in Germany. The Cologne evacuation was the largest for the city since the war’s end, but it was one of more than a half-dozen instances in Germany in May alone in which large devices were discovered, several of which required evacuations. The discoveries show the enormous firepower unleashed on Germany in World War II and indicate the haste with which the devastated country sought to recover. “It is an issue in most major German cities, where anywhere from 5,000 to 10,000 unexploded bombs are believed to be lying under the ground,” said Sebastian Dosdall, the head of GFKB-MV, a private company that specializes in clearing old munitions. The Allies carpeted industrial or urban areas — among them Cologne and Berlin — with thousands of tons of bombs during the final years of the war. Rather than safely dispose of them at the time, the Germans simply buried them in the rush to rebuild adequate housing after 1945. Now, with many of the 1960s- and ’70s-era buildings being torn down to make way for new buildings, the rusted and corroded devices are turning up. Experts warn that these devices are as dangerous now as they were during the war, prompting the regularity of wide-scale evacuations. Some of the dormant explosives were products of the Germans themselves, part of the enormous war machine that kept munitions factories busy in the prelude to World War II and during the fighting. In the later stages of the war, those munitions were gathered in central storage areas, and many were later dumped into rivers or other waterways. The New York Times
HAVE YOUR SAY We encourage (1) letters to the editor of 250 words or fewer from readers on subjects of local interest, and (2) “Point of View” guest opinion columns of no more than 550 words that focus on local community lifestyle issues. Please — send us only one letter or column per month. Letters and guest columns published become the property of Peninsula Daily News, and it reserves the right to reject, condense or edit for clarity or when information stated as fact cannot be substantiated. Letters published in other newspapers or websites, anonymous letters, letters advocating boycotts, letters to other people, mass mailings and commercial appeals are not published. We will not publish letters that impugn the personal character of people or of groups of people. Include your name, street address and — for verification purposes — day and evening telephone numbers. Email to letters@peninsuladailynews.com, fax to 360-417-3521, or mail to Letters, Peninsula Daily News, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. Sunday RANTS & RAVES 24-hour hotline: 360-417-3506
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
TUESDAY, JULY 14, 2015
Brown Maloney, Todd Ortloff, and the staff of
Radio Pacific, announce the launch of
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, July 14, 2015 SECTION
CLASSIFIEDS, COMICS, BUSINESS, WEATHER In this section
B Mariners
Cutters ends tourney with win Olympic hosting district this week PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
CENTRALIA — The Olympic Crosscutters got the experience and exposure they were seeking at the GSL College Showcase. They concluded the baseball tournament with two consecutive wins, and end the
five-day tournament with a 2-2 record. All four games were decided in the final inning. Olympic defeated NPA Ford 18U 4-3 in a consolation game at Borst Park on Sunday. Blake Mann scored the winning run on a two-out single by Austin Hilliard with two outs in the top of the seventh inning. Cutters pitcher Daniel Harker worked the bottom of
the seventh, striking out two batters to earn the save. Harker was one of seven pitchers Olympic used. That was by design. Each threw one inning. When one took the mound, the other started warming up. “We went and just got everybody a little action,” Cutters manager John Qualls aid. “They embraced it and loved it.” The seven — in order: Nigel Christian, Eli Harrison,
Cole Dotson, Nick Faunce, Logan Hankinson, Jake Sparks and Harker — combined to hold the Northwest Prospects Academy team to two hits and three runs, despite being backed by a defense that committed five errors. “It worked out great,” Qualls said. “They got to go out 100 percent, and give it all they got.” TURN
TO
CUTTERS/B3
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Mariners manager Lloyd McClendon talks with players in the dugout last week.
Skipper’s job is on the line THE OBVIOUS CONCLUSION while watching the Mariners butcher the game of baseball Sunday at Safeco Field was that their hearts and heads were elsewhere in anticipation of the All-Star break. But the Mariners didn’t John merely play with McGrath a last-schoolday-before-vacation indifference during their first-half finale against the Los Angeles Angels. They played like a team that was trying to get its manager fired. “Very poor.” “Embarrassing.” “Horrible.” “The worst game of the year.” Those were the terms Lloyd McClendon used to describe a 10-3 defeat that was even more of a mismatch than the score indicated. The Mariners were charged with three errors and committed at least as many defensive mistakes not scored as errors — basic stuff, like the pitcher failing to back up home on a throw to the plate.
Wilder opens state today Top three teams go to Calgary PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
EPHRATA — Wilder Baseball is one step from going international. The area team of players from Port Angeles and Sequim opens the Senior Babe Ruth state baseball tournament in Ephrata with two games today. Wilder needs to finish third or better at the four-team tournament to secure a spot at the Pacific Northwest regional tournament in Calgary, Alberta, next week. Today, Wilder faces the Columbia Basin River Bandits at 10 a.m. and the Columbia Basin River Dogs at 7 p.m. The area team concludes the state tournament with a 10 a.m. game Wednesday against Lakeside Recovery. Wilder faced all three teams during the regular season. It lost to the River Dogs 4-0 at the High Desert Classic, also held in Ephrata, last month. Wilder defeated the River Bandits, the junior team of the River Dogs, 8-5 at the same tournament, in which Wilder went 4-1-1 and placed third.
JEFF HALSTEAD/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Wilder shortstop Brady Konopaski throws to first base against North Kitsap last TURN TO WILDER/B3 week.
‘We have to change things’ Managers can and do survive seasons with losing records. Managers rarely survive seasons that find their teams unfocused and ill-prepared for pivotal home games against division rivals. “We’ve got to get better,” McClendon said. “We need to string together wins. That’s the message I’m going to send to my club starting the second half. I’ve given my club a lot of string and allowed them to do a lot of things, but it’s not working. “We have to change things.” McClendon declined to specify either the things he’s allowed his team to do or the things he Next Game plans to change, Friday but it’s inevitavs. Yankees ble some kind at Bronx of clubhouse Time: 4 p.m. meeting will be On TV: ROOT held when the Mariners reconvene Friday in New York. In other words, he has four full days to cobble together some thoughts on how to motivate a team that, as he put it, “takes one step forward and two steps back.” If I’m McClendon, my sermon setting the tone for the second half begins like this: “I’ve been fired once from this job, and I’m not real crazy about getting fired again. My future is on the line, and I’ll be darned if I’ll let you guys decide it by playing as if you’re halfasleep.” McClendon might want to substitute another word for “darned,” and there are limitless options for modifiers preceding “half-asleep.” But you get the idea: The 2015 season, so rich with promise and potential four months ago, has devolved into a test on whether Lloyd McClendon gets a chance for a third season in Seattle. TURN
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MLB
Fresh faces taking over baseball BY RONALD BLUM THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Seattle Mariners pitcher Felix Hernandez, left, and outfielder Nelson Cruz, right, hold their All-Star uniforms prior to Sunday’s game against the Angels. Cruz will start for the American League and Hernandez will be a relief pitcher.
Keuchel tabbed over Felix BY RONALD BLUM THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
CINCINNATI — Picked to start the All-Star Game for the National League, Zack Greinke wasn’t sure he wanted his wife to make the trek from Los Angeles to Great American Ball Park. “My wife is less than three weeks until having a kid,” he said of Emily. “She found a way to get out here even though she probably shouldn’t have. That just shows how excited the family is.” A 31-year-old Dodgers righthander with a big league-best 1.39 ERA, Greinke starts tonight against Houston lefty Dallas Keuchel, known for a distinctive long, bushy beard.
That means Seattle Mariners ace Felix Hernandez will serve as a relief pitcher for tonight’s game. Informed Sunday by AL manager Ned Yost that Keuchel was starting, Houston manager A.J. Hinch opted not to tell the first-time All-Star. Keuchel found out from MLB Senior Vice President Phyllis Merhige when he arrived at the team’s hotel Sunday night. “I was able to tell my family, but I couldn’t really tell many more,” he said. “And even my family has loose lips, so I was very thankful for them not telling anybody.” Greinke is 8-2 and enters the game following five straight scoreless starts over
MLB ALL-STAR GAME ■ The AL and NL face off tonight at 6 p.m. on Ch. 13.
35 2/3 innings. The three-time All-Star can terminate his contract at the end of the season, forfeit a minimum $71 million over the next three years and become a free agent again. Given his season, he figures to receive lucrative offers. “These numbers he’s putting up are really, really unbelievable,” NL manager Bruce Bochy said Monday. Keuchel, 27, is 11-4 with a 2.23 ERA. Since starting his big league career 9-18 in 2012 and ’13, he is 23-13. TURN
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CINCINNATI — Not too long ago, Mike Trout, Bryce Harper and Gerrit Cole were the ones picking up the extra balls and getting pranked into paying the pricey checks. Now, along with the likes of Kris Bryant, Matt Harvey and many others, they’ve become the face of the All-Star Game and the future of the major leagues. “The Derek Jeter generation in the last few years came to the end of their careers. We have a great new crop of young players,” new Commissioner Rob Manfred said. This is an age when The Kids are All Right — a record 20 of the 76 All-Stars for tonight’s game are 25 or younger, according to STATS.
‘Exciting players’ “I think the young talent in baseball is better than it’s been in years,” said Yankees first baseman Mark Teixeira, one of the older All-Stars at 35. “These are exciting players, players that kids can look up to.” His former teammates — baseball royalty, in the form of Mariano Rivera and Jeter — are gone. The brash bats who rule the new era belong to Giancarlo Stanton, Yasiel Puig and Manny Machado, trying to solve bold arms led by Chris Archer, Cole and Harvey. TURN
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SportsRecreation
TUESDAY, JULY 14, 2015
Today’s
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Scoreboard Calendar Today
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SPORTS PIC OF THE DAY
Baseball: Olympic Crosscutters at North Kitsap, 6 p.m. Senior Babe Ruth State Tournament at Ephrata: Wilder vs. Columbia Basin River Bandits, 1 p.m.; Wilder vs. Columbia Basin River Dogs, 7 p.m.
Wednesday Baseball: Wilder vs. Lakeside Recovery, Senior Babe Ruth State Tournament, at Ephrata, 10 a.m.; Olympic Crosscutters at Tumwater, 6 p.m.
Area Sports BMX Racing Port Angeles BMX Track RACE FOR LIFE Saturday 4 Strider 1. Laila Charles, Port Angeles 2. Emerson Duty, Bonny Lake 13 and Under Pitbike Strider 1. Isaiah Charles, Port Angeles 2. Makaylie Albin, Bikemaster, Port Angeles 10 Cruiser 1. Mike “The Bulldog” Bryant, Vancouver 2. Cash “Money” Coleman, Port Angeles 3. Anthony Brigandi, Port Angeles 14 Cruiser 1. Jacob Zoll, SeaTac 2. Antonio Erb, Puyallup 3. Riley “Zappenator” Zappen, Port Orchard 26-30 Cruiser 1. Walt Dorsey, Renton 2. Kayli “Sparkle” Williams, Port Orchard 3. Eric Hodgson, Port Angeles 56-60 Cruiser 1. Danny “Bionic Man” Bushnell, Vancouver 2. “Curious George” Williams, Port Angeles 3. Robert “Faceplant” Williams, Port Angeles 6 Novice 1. Dominic Price, Sequim 2. Brayden Gillespie, Maple Valley 3. Aiden “Power” Post, Port Orchard 7 Novice 1. Nick Niebuhr, Olympia 2. Kaylee Gillespie, Maple Valley 3. Landon Sage, Port Angeles 10 Novice 1. “The Brother’s Trouble”, Port Angeles 2. “The Brother’s Trouble”, Port Angeles 3. Natale Brigandi, Port Angeles 12 Novice 1. Lucas Niebuhr, Olympia 2. Logan Williams, Port Angeles 3. Kyley Glenn, Kent 15 Novice 1. Destinee Edwards, Vancouver 2. Ty Bourm, Sequim 3. Kayli “Sparkle” Williams, Port Orchard 7 Intermediate 1. Tess Bailey, Lake Tapps 2. Jaron Tolliver, Port Angeles 3. Rily “Rippin” Pippin, Port Angeles 8 Intermediate 1. Cash “Money” Coleman, Port Angeles 2. Dylan Downing, Orting 3. Tate Bowen, Bonney Lake 9 Intermediate 1. Aaron Kingslien, Lake Taps 2. Landon “L Factor” Price, Port Angeles 3. Zachary Pinell, Sequim 11 Intermediate 1. Joseph Pinell, Sequim 2. Angel Plata, Seattle 3. Carter Peach, Kent 4. Aydan Vail, Port Angeles 12 Intermediate 1. Jaxon Bourm, Port Angeles 2. Zack Niebuhr, Olympia 3. Dylan Hergesheimer, Vancouver 14 Intermediate 1. Joshua Sutton, Sequim 2. Grady Bourm, Port Angeles 3. Kiele Brogan, Port Orchard 11 Girls 1. Taylor Coleman, Port Angeles 2. Taylor “American Idol” Tolliver, Port Angeles 3. Cholena Morrison, Port Angeles 8 Expert 1. True Bailey, Lake Tapps 2. Jesse “LL Cool J” Vail, Port Angeles 3. Ashton “Fireball” Duty, Bonney Lake 9 Expert 1. Mike “The Bulldog” Bryant, Vancouver 2. Talan Hemans, Lake Stevens 3. Alex “Lightning Bolt” Duty, Bonney Lake 11 Expert 1. Reed “Speed Reed” Kay, Dupont 2. “Red Monster Donster” Vidovic, Lakewood 3. Shayne “Rockstar” Vidovic, Lakewood 13 Expert 1. Brandon Daly, North Bend 2. Jaden Dahners, Sammamish 3. Riley “Zappenator” Zappen, Port Orchard 14 Expert 1. Lain Pesek, Mukilteo 2. Jacob Zoll, SeaTac 3. Antonio Erb, Puyallup 17-18 Expert 1. Trenton Owen, Port Angeles 2. Stephon Jasicki, Port Angeles 3. Jim Hergesheimer, Vancouver 4. Nathan Gillespie, Maple Valley 6 and Under Local Open 1. Dominic Price, Sequim 2. Emily Youngblood, Lakewood 3. Brayden Gillespie, Maple Valley 7-8 Local Open 1. True Bailey, Lake Tapps 2. Jesse “LL Cool J” Vail, Port Angeles 3. Dylan Downing, Orting 4. Tate Bowen, Bonney Lake 5. Nick Niebuhr, Olympia 6. Kaylee Gillespie, Maple Valley 9-10 Local Open 1. Aaron Kingslien, Lake Taps 2. Shayne “Rockstar” Vidovic, Lakewood 3. Landon “L Factor” Price, Port Angeles 4. Anthony Brigandi, Port Angeles 5. “The Brother’s Trouble”, Port Angeles 11-12 Local Open 1. Jaxon Bourm, Port Angeles 2. “Red Monster Donster” Vidovic, Lakewood 3. Zack Niebuhr, Olympia
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
SPORTS ON TV
Today 5 a.m. (304) NBCSN Cycling, Tour de France, Stage 10, Tarbes - La Pierre-SaintMartin (Live) Noon NBA TV Basketball NBA, Portland Trail Blazers vs. San Antonio Spurs, Summer League (Live) 2:30 p.m. NBA TV Basketball NBA, New York Knicks vs. Philadelphia 76ers, Summer League (Live) 3 p.m. (306) FS1 Soccer CONCACAF, Jamaica vs. El Salvador, Gold Cup (Live) 4:30 p.m. NBA TV Basketball NBA, Phoenix Suns vs. Utah Jazz, Summer League (Live) 4:30 p.m. (13) KCPQ Baseball MLB, American League vs. National League, All-Star Game (Live) 5 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Pan American Games, Toronto (Live) 5:30 p.m. (306) FS1 Soccer CONCACAF, Canada vs. Costa Rica, Gold Cup (Live) 7:30 p.m. (306) FS1 Soccer International Champions Cup, San Jose Earthquake vs. Club America (Live)
Wednesday 5 a.m. (304) NBCSN Cycling, Tour de France, Stage 11, Pau - Cauterets (Live)
SEQUIM ALL-STAR Kylynn Stringer from Sequim Little League was asked to join the North Kitsap Little League Junior Fastpitch All-Star softball team. The team lost their first two games of the state tournament at Centennial Fields in Snoqualmie and was eliminated. 4. Carter Peach, Kent 5. Taylor Coleman, Port Angeles 13-14 Local Open 1. Nathan Gillespie, Maple Valley 2. Joshua Sutton, Sequim 3. Grady Bourm, Port Angeles 4. Kiele Brogan, Port Orchard STATE CHAMPIONSHIP RACE Sunday Pro-Am 1. Josh Klapman 2. JJ Simmons 3. Lain Pesek 4. Jon Lindberg 5. Duane Lyphardt 6. Greg Faris 7. Trenton Owen 8. Kris Tofanelli 5 Strider 1. Laila Charles, Port Angeles 2. Ellie Almquist, Lakewood 3. Axel Swanson, Port Angeles 3 Strider 1. Emerson Duty, Bonny Lake 2. Parker Oconnell, Maple Valley 3. Beckett Vanzutphen, Mukilteo 13 and Under Pitbike Open 1. Isaiah Charles, Port Angeles 2. Christina Burris, Oak Harbor 3. Makaylie Albin, Port Angeles 11-12 Girls Cruiser 1. Sydney Garonzik, Auburn 2. Taylor “American Idol” Tolliver, Port Angeles 3. Emily Youngblood, Lakewood 17-20 Women’s Cruiser 1. Ella Austin, Spanaway 2. “Super” Callie Mueller, Everett 3. Kayli “Sparkle” Williams, Port Orchard 9 Cruiser 1. Mike “The Bulldog” Bryant, Vancouver 2. Zane Pickett, Tacoma 3. Oliver Smith, Tacoma 10 Cruiser 1. Khari Dawson, Seattle 2. Kai Altendorf, Everett 3. “Turbo” Alex Mueller, Everett 12 Cruiser 1. Joshua Wilbur-Henry, Oak Harbor 2. Jarren “Big Time” Abel, Graham 3. Brandon Daly, North Bend 14 Cruiser 1. Jacob Zoll, SeaTac 2. Antonio Erb, Puyallup 3. Trenton Moore, Port Orchard 15 Cruiser 1. Jarred Simmons, Tacoma 2. Coleby Howell, Longview 3. Tyler Blaesi, Bonney Lake 26-30 Cruiser 1. “Style” Kyle Unrein, Lynnwood 2. Adam “Snowman” Finch, Bellingham 3. Mark Shaw, Tempe, Ariz. 4. Ken Barley, Bremerton 5. Juan Rivera, Seattle 41-45 Cruiser 1. Jon Lindberg, Bremerton 2. Darin Ranes, Seattle 3. Eric Hodgson, Port Angeles 46-50 Cruiser 1. Steve Clark, Buckley 2. Steve Bourke, Kent 3. David Bauder, Federal Way 4. Darren Simmons, Tacoma 5. Walt Dorsey, Renton 6. Mike Unrein, Lynnwood 56-60 Cruiser 1. Danny “Bionic Man” Bushnell, Vancouver 2. Rick Parr, Port Angeles 3. Rich “Suspender Man” Mundell, Tacoma 4. “Curious George” Williams, Port Angeles 5 and Under Novice 1. Jenner Smith, Tacoma 2. Aira Hardy, Lacey 3. Melandra Steiger, Belfair 4. Jaxson Rich, Everson 5. Brayden Gillespie, Maple Valley 6. Kenzie Green, Olalla 7. Henry Schultz, Port Orchard 6 Novice 1. Ezekiel Green, Fox Island 2. Dominic Price, Sequim
3. Kenneth Smith, Fort Lewis 7 Novice 1. Sebastian Buhrer, Sequim 2. Riley Oconnell, Maple Valley 3. Kaylee Gillespie, Maple Valley 4. Nick Niebuhr, Olympia 8 Novice 1. Braeden Hughes, Bremerton 2. Colin Medcroft, Edmunds 3. Nora Hunt, Bellingham 4. Ayden Cartwright, Bothell 5. Phillip E. Knight, Bonney Lake 10 Novice 1. Diego “Swag Wagon” Buhrer, Sequim 2. Jorge Marin, Seattle 3. “Cam Ham” Cameron Hamilton, Port Orchard 4. Anthony Brigandi, Port Angeles 5. Rylie Mundell, Puyallup 6. “Hunter Brother’s Trouble”, Port Angeles 11 Novice 1. Lucas Niebuhr, Olympia 2. Joaquin Robideau, Port Angeles 3. Jacob Brostrom, Lake Stevens 13 Novice 1. Tim Adcock, Bremerton 2. Logan Williams, Port Angeles 3. Kyley Glenn, Kent 14 Novice 1. Destinee Edwards, Vancouver 2. Ty Bourm, Sequim 3. Stephanie Voldes, Seattle 28-35 Novice 1. Sean O’Connell, Maple Valley 2. Allen Low, Port Orchard 3. Nathan Gillespie, Maple Valley 5 and Under Intermediate 1. Nicholas Austin, Spanaway 2. Caleb Durkin, Port Orchard 3. Cooper Lindberg, Bermerton 7 Intermediate 1. Talon Olsen, Port Orchard 2. Mason Sanders, Bellingham 3. Jaron Tolliver, Port Angeles 4. Rily “Rippin” Pippin, Port Angeles 5. Mason Coggins, Bonney Lake 6. Kyuss Bartel, Seattle 8 Intermediate 1. Cash “Peso” Coleman, Port Angeles 2. Dylan Downing, Orting 3. Rygene Hardy, Lacey 4. Garrett Cartwright, Botheu 5. Tate Bowen, Bonney Lake 9 Intermediate 1. Malcom Evans, Bellingham 2. Zachary Pinell, Sequim 3. Landon “L Factor” Price, Port Angeles 4. Finn Lutton, Seattle 5. Trevor Kornish, Port Orchard 10 Intermediate 1. Angel Plata, Seattle 2. Trenton Bautista, Bremerton 3. Rohan Lutton, Seattle 4. William Knight III, Bonney Lake 5. Thomas “Tommy” Steiger, Belfair 11 Intermediate 1. Joseph Pinell, Sequim 2. Jaden Nguyen, Bellingham 3. Carter Peach, Kent 4. Judah Kiourkas, Port Orchard 12 Intermediate 1. Jaxon Bourm, Port Angeles 2. Christian Amberson, Tacoma 3. Dylan Hergesheimer, Vancouver 4. Zack Niebuhr, Olympia 14 Intermediate 1. Riley Medcroft, Edmonds 2. Joshua Sutton, Sequim 3. Grady Bourm, Port Angeles 17-18 Intermediate 1. Matt Groves, Port Angeles 2. Kevyn Ward, Sequim 3. Stephon Jasicki, Port Angeles 36-40 Intermediate 1. Ken Barley, Bremerton 2. Adam Vanzutphen, Mukilteo 3. Rikki “Lakewood” Almquist, Lakewood 41-45 Intermediate 1. Jim Hergesheimer, Vancouver 2. Raymond Ong, Surrey, B.C. 3. Josh Evans, Bellingham 4. Joseph Dorage, Federal Way
5. Darin Ranes, Seattle 46 and Over Intermediate 1. William Knight, Bonney Lake 2. Lawrence Moroles, Sequim 3. Michael Girvin, Seattle 4. Walt Dorsey, Renton 7 Girls 1. Tess Bailey, Lake Tapps 2. Makayla Austin, Spanaway 3. Emily Youngblood, Lakewood 9 Girls 1. Sydney Garonzik, Auburn 2. Emmalie Bybee, Allyn 3. Taylee Rome, Port Angeles 10 Girls 1. Jacy Moore, Port Orchard 2. Rileigh Negrones, Allyn 3. Cholena Morrison, Port Angeles 12 Girls 1. Sierra Altendorf, Everett 2. Kennedy Dawson, Seattle 3. Taylor Coleman, Port Angeles 14 Girls 1. Zoe Steffen, Buckley 2. Courtney Corgain, Belfair 3. Kiele Brogan, Port Orchard 15-16 Girls 1. Anna “The Animal” Nordyke, Puyallup 2. Ella Austin, Spanaway 3. Anjelyna Grillo-Lyphardt, Lakewood 7 Expert 1. Isaac Peddle, Sammamish 2. Kai Barley, Bremerton 3. Ashton “Fireball” Duty, Bonney Lake 4. Leo Tyrrell, Buckly 5. Steven Richardson, Port Orchard 8 Expert 1. Sean Day, Tacoma 2. True Bailey, Lake Tapps 3. Jesse “LL Cool J” Vail, Port Angeles 4. Jasper Altendorf, Everett 9 Expert 1. Mike “The Bulldog” Bryant, Vancouver 2. Christoph Lawrence, Seattle 3. Talan Hemans, Lake Stevens 4. Oliver Smith, Tacoma 5. Zane Pickett, Tacoma 6. Aaron Kingslien, Lake Taps 7. Brody Mehling, Port Orchard 8. Dylan Gasca, Buckley 10 Expert 1. Khari Dawson, Seattle 2. Kai Altendorf, Everett 3. Grant Zipay, Port Orchard 4. Owen Rich, Everson 5. Ricky Corgain, Belfair 6. Heston Zell, Belfair 7. Augustus Rodriguez, Bellingham 8. Billy Hamilton, Lakebay 12 Expert 1. Joshua Wilbur-Henry, Oak Harbor 2. Brandon Daly, North Bend 3. Jaden Dahners, Sammamish 4. “Red Monster Donster” Vidovic, Lakewood 5. Jarren “Big Time” Abel, Graham 13 Expert 1. Steven “Cranky Franky” Frank 2. Trenton Moore, Port Orchard 3. Jacob Rich, Everson 14 Expert 1. Lain Pesek, Mukilteo 2. Jacob Zoll, SeaTac 3. Jake Olson, Marysville 4. Harrison Anderson, Buckley 5. Brayden Bartlett, Lacey 15 Expert 1. Jarred Simmons, Tacoma 2. Coleby Howell, Longview 3. Caleb Fredrickson, Belfair 4. Tyler Blaesi, Bonney Lake 17-18 Expert 1. “Style” Kyle Unrein, Lynnwood 2 Duane Lyphardt, Lakewood 3 Trenton Owen, Port Angeles 4. Steven Curtin, Ghy, Spanaway 28-35 Expert 1 Greg Faris, Port Angeles 2 Kris Youg-Tofanelli, Sequim 3 Deandre Hahn, Bremerton
41-45 Expert 1 Jon Lindberg, Bremerton 2 Jeff Graham, Bremerton 3 Jason Ondell, Tacoma 4. Sheldon “Crusher” Boyajean, JB Lewis McChord 6 and Under Local Open 1. Steven Richardson, Port Orchard 2. Kai Barley, Bremerton 3. Dominic Price, Diablos, Sequim 4. Aiden “Power” Post, Port Orchard 7-8 Local Open 1. Tate Bowen, Bonney Lake 2. Kyuss Bartel, Seattle 3. Sebastian Buhrer, Sequim 9-10 Local Open 1. Aaron Kingslien, Lake Taps 2. Landon “L Factor” Price, Port Angeles 3. Diego “Swag Wagon” Buhrer, Sequim 4. Anthony Brigandi, Port Angeles 5. “Hunter Brother’s Trouble”, Port Angeles 13-14 Local Open 1. Grady Bourm, Port Angeles 2. “Red Monster Donster” Vidovic, Lakewood 3. Joshua Sutton, Sequim 4. Jaxon Bourm, Port Angeles
Baseball American League West Division W L Los Angeles 48 40 Houston 49 42 Texas 42 46 Seattle 41 48 Oakland 41 50 East Division W L New York 48 40 Tampa Bay 46 45 Baltimore 44 44 Toronto 45 46 Boston 42 47 Central Division W L Kansas City 52 34 Minnesota 49 40 Detroit 44 44 Cleveland 42 46 Chicago 41 45
Pct GB .545 — .538 ½ .477 6 .461 7½ .451 8½ Pct GB .545 — .505 3½ .500 4 .495 4½ .472 6½ Pct GB .605 — .551 4½ .500 9 .477 11 .477 11
Sunday’s Games Tampa Bay 4, Houston 3 Oakland 2, Cleveland 0 N.Y. Yankees 8, Boston 6 Washington 3, Baltimore 2 Minnesota 7, Detroit 1 Kansas City 11, Toronto 10 Chicago Cubs 3, Chicago White Sox 1 San Diego 2, Texas 1 L.A. Angels 10, Seattle 3 Monday’s Games No games scheduled Tuesday’s Games All-Star game at Cincinnati, 4:30 p.m. Wednesday’s Games No games scheduled - All-Star Break
National League West Division W L Los Angeles 51 39 San Francisco 46 43 Arizona 42 45 San Diego 41 49 Colorado 39 49 East Division W L Washington 48 39 New York 47 42 Atlanta 42 47 Miami 38 51 Philadelphia 29 62 Central Division W L St. Louis 56 33 Pittsburgh 53 35 Chicago 47 40 Cincinnati 39 47 Milwaukee 38 52
Pct GB .567 — .517 4½ .483 7½ .456 10 .443 11 Pct GB .552 — .528 2 .472 7 .427 11 .319 21 Pct .629 .602 .540 .453 .422
Sunday’s Games N.Y. Mets 5, Arizona 3 Miami 8, Cincinnati 1 Washington 3, Baltimore 2 Chicago Cubs 3, Chicago White Sox 1 San Diego 2, Texas 1 San Francisco 4, Philadelphia 2 Colorado 11, Atlanta 3 L.A. Dodgers 4, Milwaukee 3 Pittsburgh 6, St. Louis 5, 10 innings Monday’s Games No games scheduled Tuesday’s Games All-Star game at Cincinnati, 4:30 p.m. Wednesday’s Games No games scheduled - All-Star Break
GB — 2½ 8 15½ 18½
SportsRecreation
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
TUESDAY, JULY 14, 2015
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Cutters: Two games before district tourney CONTINUED FROM B1 — Olympic was 5 for 9 stealing Sunday, and Adept base running in a Qualls points out that all three-run third inning gave three outs in the top of the six were base runners who the Cutters a 3-1 lead. were caught stealing — but Hilliard reached on an error and stole second and aggressive base running is the Cutters’ strength. third before scoring. “We keep the pressure A.J. Prater also reached on people,” Qualls said. safely due to an error. He “And a majority of the stole second and advanced time, we’re going to be sucto third base on a single by cessful.” Gavin Velarde, and then In fact, the winning run scored on a bad throw to in both of Olympic’s win at home. the GSL College Showcase Velarde swiped second came on steals of home. base, went to third on a Prater stole home in Saturpassed ball and stole home day’s 2-1 win over Showfor the third run of the time Junior Prep. frame. Those victories came after close losses WednesIt doesn’t always work
day and Thursday by the Crosscutters, who are in their first year of existence. “It was all uncharted territory for them. They were a little bit tense and nervous those first two games,” Qualls said. “Once the nerves wore off, we realized we can compete with every team out there. “The games lost came from lack of experience in a high-caliber tourney. “Now they’re paving the way for kids on Olympic Peninsula.” Scouts from more than 40 schools attended the tournament.
The Cutters were able to play in front of and network with those scouts. Qualls said some players arranged workouts with the schools. He also said that Centralia College scouts are now planning to attend this weekend’s American Legion AA district tournament hosted by the Crosscutters in Port Angeles. “One comment we got [from scouts] is they’ve been waiting for representation from the Olympic Peninsula to get into a big tourney like that for a long time,” Qualls said. Qualls added that the scouts were aware of the
baseball talent on the Peninsula, they “just haven’t been able to get to the tournaments.” The district tournament, featuring eight teams from throughout Western Washington, is Friday through Sunday at Civic Field. The seeding and schedule have yet to be finalized, but Qualls said the Crosscutters will for sure play Friday at 7 p.m. After playing with wooden bats all summer, the Cutters will switch to aluminum bats for the postseason. Olympic finishes its American Legion slate with two road games prior to
the district tournament. The Cutters travel to Poulsbo to face North Kitsap for their final North League game today, and then they face Tumater on Wednesday. Crosscutters 4, NPA Ford 3 Crosscutters 0 0 3 0 0 0 1 — 4 5 5 NPA Ford 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 —3 2 3 WP- Sparks, SV- Harker; LP- Jones Pitching Statistics Crosscutters: Christian IP, 0 H, R, K, BB; Harrison IP, 0 H, K; C. Dotson IP, 0 H, R, BB; Faunce IP, 0 H, R, K, BB; Hankinson IP, H, 0 R, K; Sparks IP, H, 0 R, K; Harker IP, 0 H, 0 R, 2 K. NPA Ford: Jacobson 3 IP, 3 H, 3 R, 0 ER, 3 K, 2 BB; Allen 2 IP, H, 0 R, 2 K; Jones 2 IP, H, R, 0 ER, 4 BB. Hitting Statistics Crosscutters: Velarde 2-3, R, 2 SB; Hilliard 1-3, R, RBI, 2 SB; Bradow 1-1; Dennis 1-3; Prater 0-2, BB, R, SB; Mann 0-1, BB, R. NPA Ford: Champlain 1-2, 2 R; Ott 1-2; Roeser 0-3, R.
Faces: Hyping new generation McGrath: M’s CONTINUED FROM B1 newbie outfielder later in spring training with a mesMajor League Baseball, sage on the right-field which often relies on the scoreboard, urging fans to nostalgia of its 19th-cen- call “Mike Trout directly tury roots, is striving to con- with your baseball quesnect with 21st-century tions” during an exhibition youth more familiar with game — with his actual cell Reddit and Tinder than phone number, of course. Josh Reddick and Branden “It was pretty creative of Pinder. them,” said Trout, now a “We’re working very four-time All-Star and winhard to give our fans the ner of an MVP award. “It’s kind of access to those play- part of breaking into the big ers and others in order to leagues.” raise their awareness of these players,” Manfred Cubs’ new hope said. At 23, Bryant looks more “We do realize we have a challenge in that regard high school student than because of what I character- big-time ballplayer. He made his big league ize as generational change.” debut in April, and his 12 Welcome to the majors homers and 51 RBIs have given Chicago Cubs’ fans How different it was in hope of a first World Series 2011, when Trout was 19 and arrived at his first big title since 1908. Face of the game? He league camp. Some Los Angeles Angels veterans doesn’t think so. “It is pretty cool to be invited him to dinner Masmentioned in the same sentro’s City Hall Steakhouse tence as those guys,” he in Scottsdale, Ariz. A waiter brought the said. Cole, a new All-Star at check, which came to $1,800, and ace pitcher Jeff age 24, hopes to bring the Weaver handed it to Trout Pirates their first title since and told him the bill was 1979. He’s just two years his to pay. When Trout arrived at removed from bringing the Tempe Diablo Stadium a veterans balls and gloves few days later, he found a out to the field every day toy truck in front of his during spring training and locker. Inside were 7,200 proving his worth to teammates with a different kind quarters. And Weaver punked the of pitch.
“It is pretty cool to be mentioned in the same sentence as those guys.” CUBS ROOKIE KRIS BRYANT On being considered one of the faces of the game “We’d sing a lot of songs on the bus,” he said. “My voice has gotten better — my pitch probably not so much.” Production on the field. Personality off it. That’s what baseball’s bosses are looking for. MLB announced in February it had hired Anomaly its new multimedia creative marketing agency. Its first campaign, “This in Baseball,” debuted in April for opening day and featured Trout, Stanton and Puig. Others highlighted this season include Joc Pederson, Nolan Arenado and George Springer. “When you look at the Mike Trouts and the Bryce Harpers and the Kris Bryants of the world, we’re just so fortunate and we need to take advantage of this opportunity to the fullest,” said Jacqueline Parkes, Major League Baseball’s senior vice president and chief marketing officer.
Hosting the All-Stars for the first time since 1988, the Reds celebrate their history at Great American Ball Park, which opened in 2003. Statues of former stars Ted Kluszewski, Ernie Lombardi, Joe Nuxhall and Frank Robinson greet fans outside the home plate gate in Crosley Terrace, an homage to the sloped outfield at the team’s home from 191270. A Rose Garden outside the first-base stands was planted in tribute to — who else? — Pete Rose, the hometown hero banned from baseball for life for gambling on the Reds to win while playing and managing the club. The symbol of this year’s Midsummer Classic is a handlebar mustache, befitting the club that became baseball’s first professional franchise in 1869. Special old-style caps with horizontal stripes will be used, although not in the traditional “pill box” shape. There are two smokeHonoring the past stacks in right center, and a Yet as much as baseball riverboat deck sits above tries to move forward, the the batter’s eye in center sport always looks behind. field.
Starters: No lefties in lineup CONTINUED FROM B1 vious team to do that was the NL for the first of two He becomes Houston’s games in 1962. fourth All-Star starting pitcher after J.R. Richard Cruz batting cleanup (1980), Mike Scott (1987) Mariners outfielder Neland Roger Clemens (2004). The AL will open the son Cruz will start at desiggame with an all right- nated hitter and bat fourth handed-hitting lineup for for the AL. the first time; the only preThis is the first time the
AL starting lineup did not have at least one player from Boston or the New York Yankees. Bochy said having the decision to have the winning All-Star team’s league gain home-field advantage in the World Series has increased the intensity of the game.
Bochy’s Giants opened at home in 2010 and ’12 and went on to four game sweeps, then started at Kansas City last year and became the first visitor to win a Game 7 since 1979. “Your priority is not to get everybody in as much as it used to be,” he said. “There is a lot at stake.”
tennis courts. The clinic for seventhand eighth-graders runs from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. each day, and 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. for those in high school. Players should bring sunscreen, hats and water with them to the clinic. For more information, contact Stockton at gmstockton@wavecable. com.
The Port Angeles High School boys basketball program will host youth basketball clinics August 1-2 at Port Angeles High School. The cost is $35 per camper. All the funds received will go to the boys basketball program. Campers can register in advance or the morning of the first day. Port Angeles boys varsity and JV players and coaches will serve as
CONTINUED FROM B1 ing the wrong-way route the Mariners have taken He belonged in the con- as a team. “You try to stay positive versation for American and encourage your club,” League Manager of the Year in 2014, when he took said McClendon, who typically refers to his club in over a team with modest the tone of an affectionate aspirations and kept hope dog owner resigned to the alive through 161 games suspicion unconditional and halfway through the obedience is impossible. 162nd. “But maybe it takes prodding of a different Fallen from grace nature,” he continued. “If That McClendon doesn’t that’s the case, that will belong in the conversation happen.” for 2015 ranks as an Maybe it takes prodding understatement along the of a different nature? lines of “Mike Zunino sure There’s no maybe about it. strikes out a lot” and Nothing short of a mira“Mark Trumbo has defencle will allow the Mariners sive limitations as an outto leapfrog their way into fielder.” the playoff race, but the Trumbo’s “Destination second half of the season Wherever” throw from left no longer is about the playfield Sunday started a off race that never was. third-inning sequence that The second half of McClendon’s second season might have lived in in Seattle is about convincblooper-highlight eternity ing his team to play smart had Zunino not applied a run-saving tag at home on and be ready to play all-out all the time, so that the Erick Aybar. manager gets a shot at a Trumbo moved to right field in the seventh inning third season in Seattle. and tracked a line drive by ________ taking a step backward John McGrath is a sports colinstead of a few steps forumnist for The News Tribune. He ward, turning an out into a can be contacted at john. hit while precisely mimick- mcgrath@thenewstribune.com.
Wilder: State CONTINUED FROM B1 this month. The River Bandits, then The tie came against known as the Desert Dogs, Lakeside Recovery in a won last year’s state tourgame that was called due to nament in Port Angeles, darkness with the score and Lakeside Recovery took second. even at 6-6. As the hosts, the River Wilder and the IssaquahDogs had an automatic bid area team have played five to the Senior Babe Ruth times this summer. Along World Series, and therefore with the tie, each team has did not play in the state won two games. tournament. The most recent was a If Wilder survives state 2-1 win by Wilder in extra and regionals, it will innings at the Dick Brown advance to the Senior Babe Memorial Firecracker Clas- Ruth World Series in Klamsic in Port Angeles earlier ath Falls, Ore.
Briefly . . . Tennis clinic PORT ANGELES — Port Angeles High School boys tennis coach Gil Stockton is offering a free clinic for middle school and high school students who want to learn more about the game. The clinic runs from Monday, July 20, through Friday, July 31, at the Port Angeles High School
Kymco People 50. 2009, red, 4 stroke 49cc with 1,835 miles. MPG: 80. Includes helmet, all weather riding cover, and battery tender. Purchased and serviced locally.
360-477-0021
The Greatest
Gunshow in Washington! bigtoppromos.com
571368039
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Clallam County Fairgrounds Saturday, July 18th 9 AM - 6 PM Sunday, July 19th 9 AM - 4 PM Buy, Sell and Trade!
ethic, setting goals and teamwork.” Each day will have two two-hour sessions: ■ 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. for those entering grades 3-5. ■ 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. for those entering grades 6-8. For more information or to register, contact Ulin at 360-640-1845. Peninsula Daily News
521232323
$1,150
PORT ANGELES —
GTOPPROMOS.COM BIGTOPPROMOS.COM BIGTOPPROMOS
SCOOTER:
PA summer hoops
instructors at the camp. “We want to teach the key fundamentals like shooting, ball handling, passing, rebounding and defense,” Port Angeles boys coach Kasey Ulin said. “We will also be talking about the importance of team sports and life lessons such as a strong work
541275754
PORT ANGELES — The Port Angeles High School football team will be washing cars to raise scholarship money this Saturday. The car wash is at Les Schwab from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Les Schwab is located at
2527 E., U.S. Highway 101 in Port Angeles.
GTOPPROMOS.COM BIGTOPPROMOS.COM BIGTOPPROMOS
Port Angeles football car wash
B4
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
TUESDAY, JULY 14, 2015
THE MONEY TREE
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1921 W. Hwy 101, Port Angeles Now Accepting Visa/Mastercard
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YOUR PRICE $6.50
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200 W. First Street Port Angeles Downtown
360-452-7175 $20 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER
TOWARDS BATHING OR KENNEL SERVICES ONLY 4 VOUCHERS AVAIL.
YOUR PRICE $6.50
NO LIMIT PER CUSTOMER NOT A COUPON
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360-452-6545 $10 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER TOWARDS OUR MADE-TO-ORDER, FRESH BREAKFAST, LUNCH & DINNER MENU ITEMS! NOT GOOD WITH OTHER OFFERS, EXCLUDES ALCOHOL.
1 PER TABLE ONLY 4 VOUCHERS AVAIL.
YOUR PRICE $6.50
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1210-B E. Front St. Port Angeles
360-452-4222 $10 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER
TOWARDS 2 HRS OF CYBER BOWLING
ONLY 12 VOUCHERS AVAIL.
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YOUR PRICE $13.00
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YOUR PRICE $6.50
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First Street Barber and Tanning 127 E. First St. Ste. 2E Port Angeles
360-452-1741 $15 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER TOWARDS SCALP MASSAGE
ONLY 4 VOUCHERS AVAIL.
YOUR PRICE $9.75
YOUR PRICE $9.75
NO LIMIT PER CUSTOMER
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Call for Convenient Tee Times 824 S. Lindberg Ave. Port Angeles, WA
360-457-6501
$18 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER TOWARDS 9 HOLES OF GOLF
ONLY 2 VOUCHERS AVAIL.
YOUR PRICE $11.70
NO LIMIT PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON
360-452-6148 $10 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER
DINE-IN ONLY • MIN. $20 ORDER LIMIT 1 PER PERSON, PER TABLE NOT VALID WITH ANY OTHER OFFER
ONLY 3 VOUCHER AVAIL.
YOUR PRICE $6.50
634 E. 8th St. Port Angeles
360-912-3373 $45 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER
1 HR MASSAGE THERAPY OR PRANIC HEALING SESSION OR PREGNANCY MASSAGE NEW CUSTOMERS ONLY
ONLY 1 VOUCHERS AVAIL.
8th & Laurel St. Port Angeles
360-457-5858 $45 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER BOWLING PACKAGE
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112 West Front St., Port Angeles
1123 E. First St. Port Angeles
$35 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER
360-457-4150 $20 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER
OR RETAIL
WEIGHTS MAY VARY SLIGHTLY
NO LIMIT PER PERSON NOT A COUPON
360-457-5056 Voted Best Pizza on The Peninsula!
105 1/2 E. 1st St., (Upstairs) P.A. www.create-your-scent.com
WE DELIVER!
$10 TOWARDS CREATING YOUR OWN FRAGRANCES AND MORE!
Check out our Daily Specials!
ONLY 4 VOUCHERS AVAIL.
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YOUR PRICE $13.00
YOUR PRICE $6.50
LIMIT 1 PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON
$300 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER TOWARD DECORATOR LAMPS ONLY 2 VOUCHERS AVAIL.
YOUR PRICE $195 NOT A COUPON
William Shore Memorial Pool 225 E. Fifth St. Port Angeles, WA. 98362
360-417-9767 $10 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER
ONLY 4 VOUCHERS AVAIL.
ONLY 10 VOUCHER AVAIL.
YOUR PRICE $6.50 LIMIT 2 PER FAMILY NOT A COUPON
360-457-5434
$10 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER
NO LIMIT PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON
$10 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER ONLY 4 VOUCHERS AVAIL
YOUR PRICE $6.50
LIMIT 1 PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON
William Shore Memorial Pool
217 N. Laurel St., P.A.
(360) 457-6400
LIMIT 1 PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON
518 N. Sequim Ave., Sequim Great Food! Great Wines! Great Times!
929 W. 8th St., Port Angeles
360-452-0400 $10 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER ONLY 4 VOUCHERS AVAIL.
YOUR PRICE $6.50
LIMIT 1 PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON
360-681-7622 $50 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER TOWARDS FRAMING
ONLY 4 VOUCHERS AVAIL.
YOUR PRICE $32.50 NO LIMIT PER CUSTOMER NOT A COUPON
207 W. First St., Port Angeles
360-417-8888 $20 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER
ONLY 5 VOUCHERS AVAIL.
NO LIMIT PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON
YOUR PRICE $22.75
YOUR PRICE $6.50
ONLY 4 VOUCHERS AVAIL.
NO LIMIT PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON
ONLY 4 VOUCHERS AVAIL.
1 PER TABLE ONLY 2 VOUCHERS AVAIL.
TOWARDS ANY SALON SERVICE OR APPAREL PURCHASE.
LIMIT 1 PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON
1LB. OF SMOKED STEELHEAD, 1 PACK OF SALMON OR BEEF JERKY, 1 PACK BEEF PEPPERONI, 2 LANDJAGERS, 1 STICK OF SALAMI OR SUMMER SAUSAGE. FOR SERVICE
$10 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER
1 LANE. INCLUDES 2 HOURS OF BOWLING FOR UP TO 6 PEOPLE PER LANE AND A 16” PEPPERONI OR HAWAIIAN PIZZA. PRICE INCLUDES SHOE RENT. ADDITIONAL CHARGE FOR SPECIAL ORDER PIZZA. CALL TO RESERVE SPACE
YOUR PRICE $29.25
BACKPACKER’S DELIGHT
360-452-9292
Healing Therapies 222 N. Lincoln Ste.#1 Port Angeles
YOUR PRICE $29.25
LIMIT 1 PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON
Smuggler’s Landing Northwest Seafood & Casual Dining 115 E. Railroad Ave., Port Angeles
Atma Massage
TheTwo of Us
ONE VOUCHER PER ORDER
LIMIT 2 PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON
$15 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER
DINE-IN ONLY 1 PER TABLE
TOWARDS SINGLE ADMISSION FAMILY PASS
YOUR PRICE $6.50
$10 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER
360-457-5858
MUST BE REDEEMED IN FULL AT TIME OF PURCHASE
1325 East First St. Port Angeles
$10 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER
360-452-3928
8th & Laurel St. Port Angeles
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS 10 P.M. TO 12 A.M. (INCLUDES SHOE RENTAL) LIGHT SHOW MUSIC BOWLING
SUNRISE MEATS 40 Levig Rd., Port Angeles
Open 7 Days a Week! Lunch & Dinner 636 E. Front Street Port Angeles, WA
225 E. Fifth St. Port Angeles, WA. 98362
360-417-9767 $40 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER TOWARD SWIM LESSONS ONLY 2 VOUCHERS AVAIL.
YOUR PRICE $26.00 NO LIMIT. NOT A COUPON
YOUR PRICE $13.00
NO LIMIT PER CUSTOMER
NOT A COUPON
Call for Convenient Tee Times 824 S. Lindberg Ave. Port Angeles, WA
360-457-6501
$35 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER
TOWARDS A ROUND OF 18 HOLES OF GOLF ONLY 1 VOUCHER AVAIL.
YOUR PRICE $22.75
NO LIMIT PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON
Anime Kat 114 W. First St. Port Angeles
360-797-1313 $30 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER
30-DAY ANIME/MANGA RENTAL PASS ONLY 4 VOUCHERS AVAIL.
YOUR PRICE $19.50
NO LIMIT PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON
Salon 501 501 East First St. Port Angeles, WA
(360) 477-4437 Tues-Fri 9-5, Sat 9-3 Evening Appointments Available Walk-ins Welcome
$25 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER TOWARDS ANY PRE-BOOKED SERVICE ONLY 6 VOUCHERS AVAIL.
YOUR PRICE $16.25 LIMIT 1 PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON
106 North Lincoln Port Angeles
2577 W. Sequim Bay Rd. Sequim, WA 98382
360-683-7510 $10 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER LIMIT 1 VOUCHER PER TABLE
111 E. Front St., Port Angeles
360-565-0200
$30 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER
PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER
360-417-0700
ONLY 4 VOUCHERS AVAIL.
TOWARDS THE PURCHASE OF A TICKET WITH DUNGENESS BUS LINES ONLY 6 VOUCHERS AVAIL.
LIMIT 1 PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON
LIMIT 1 PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON
YOUR PRICE $6.50
YOUR PRICE $19.50
$60
TOWARD 1 HOUR RELAXING MASSAGE ONLY 4 VOUCHERS AVAIL.
YOUR PRICE $39.00 LIMIT 1 PER CUSTOMER.
NOT A COUPON
Fun ’n’ Advice
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Dilbert
❘
❘
Classic Doonesbury (1982)
Frank & Ernest
Garfield
❘
❘
DEAR ABBY: I am a partially disabled person in my 70s. Because of arthritis in my spine and hip, I’m able to stand for only a few minutes and walk only 20 to 30 feet. When I know I am going to be someplace that requires more walking or standing, I use my wheelchair. My question is: How do I reply to strangers who ask me, “Why are you in a wheelchair?” One lady said, “Oh, is it your knees?” I feel the questions are rude, and I shouldn’t have to explain my medical status to people I don’t know. I try to mumble something about not being able to stand for long periods, like waiting in line. But I’d really like to respond with a funnier, more flippant reply if I could think of one. Any suggestions? Traveling By Wheelchair
by Lynn Johnston
❘
by G.B. Trudeau
DEAR ABBY Abigail Van Buren
Dear Troubled Twin: Oh, my. I don’t think your brother-in-law was being rude. But in light of the fact that you and your sister were womb mates, you were treated with incredible insensitivity.
by Bob and Tom Thaves
The Last Word in Astrology ❘
Rose is Rose
❘
❘
ARIES (March 21-April 19): Be sensitive toward others. A feud will escalate quickly if you are too quick to judge. Learn from past mistakes and you will avoid an emotional mishap. Offer affection over criticism, and you will get your way. 4 stars
by Brian Basset
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Keep busy, do your research and refuse to make impulsive moves or decisions. Timing is everything, and knowing exactly what’s required to reach your goals with the least amount of opposition will result in your success. 3 stars
by Pat Brady and Don Wimmer
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Slow down and give yourself a chance to experiment with some of the more obscure ideas you would like to pursue. It’s okay to be different, but do your homework before heading down that path. There won’t be any room for error. 3 stars
ZITS ❘ by Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Don’t let your emotions get the better of you. Hold your thoughts until you can deal with the responses you get. Someone will put you in your place if you overreact or become aggressive. Exercise will help you curb a growing temper. 3 stars
Dennis the Menace
❘
by Hank Ketcham
her, and I was a gracious guest, but as her twin, I felt awkward and ignored. Am I being overly sensitive, or were they just rude? Troubled Twin
Dear Abby: I’m in a sticky situation. My husband, “Chester,” can’t Dear Traveling: Try one of these “flippant” possibilities: “It’s nothing I stand to eat meals with my dad. It’s never bothered me, but Dad usually discuss in public, but it’s consometimes “smacks” or talks with tagious.” food in his mouth. It drives Chester Or, “I broke my tailbone dancing crazy. at the Bolshoi.” We visit them every week, and Or, “Just lazy, I guess.” meals are always involved. However, joking about a medical What do I do? Should my huscondition isn’t funny. So perhaps you should reconsider band just get used to it? We decided to ask you for advice and just be honest. before we do anything else. In a Pickle in Texas Dear Abby: I recently was invited to a surprise 50th birthday Dear In a Pickle: Have your party for my twin sister. Her husband had a family dinner mother talk to Dad and “suggest” that their son-in-law is used to more that included all my siblings. formal table etiquette, so would Dad When my brother-in-law invited please make an effort to not chew me, he said my sister didn’t want a big party, but he wanted to celebrate with his mouth open when the two of our birthdays with this special dinyou are visiting. ner. I can’t promise it will do the trick, I was delighted to attend, but I but it may make your father more must admit I was a little hurt when conscious about what he’s doing. the celebration turned out to be ________ strictly for my sister. Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, My name wasn’t on the cake, and also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was only she blew out the candles and founded by her mother, the late Pauline Philopened gifts. (I did receive two lips. Letters can be mailed to Dear Abby, P.O. cards.) Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069 or via I know the party was given for email by logging onto www.dearabby.com.
by Jim Davis
Red and Rover
B5
Wheelchair use brings questions
by Scott Adams
For Better or For Worse
TUESDAY, JULY 14, 2015
Pickles
❘
by Brian Crane
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): A secret affair may be enticing, but think it through before engaging in activities that are likely to end in distress. Think carefully before you jump into something without weighing the pros and cons. 3 stars VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Your dedication and desire to make improvements to whatever cause you join will bring you popularity and clout. Share your plans and use constructive criticism as a bridge to implementing your plans. A partnership will enhance your position. 4 stars LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Problems will mount both at home and at work. Back away if someone tries to force his or her opinions on you. Look to make a change that will benefit you mentally, physically and financially. Don’t bend under pressure. 2 stars SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Your ability to see situations clearly will help you make decisions that will benefit you and improve the relationships you have with others. Your unique approach to learning and cultural differences will encourage assistance. Travel is encouraged. 5 stars
The Family Circus
❘
by Eugenia Last
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Cash deals will be tempting. Before you give the go-ahead, make sure you have all your facts straight. Home improvement projects will turn out well, but the cost is something you have to consider. Your plans are likely to go over budget. 3 stars CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You will face a problem if you neglect your responsibilities within a work or personal partnership. You are best to make amends quickly so you can move forward without delay. Inconclusive information must not lead to overreacting or undue blame. 3 stars AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Channel your energy into going above and beyond the call of duty when asked to do a job or work on a project. What you do in a timely fashion will be your ticket to bigger and better projects and monetary gains. 3 stars PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Competitive sports, socializing or spending time with the people you get the most from in return should take top priority. A trip that ensures both fun and learning will help you make decisions regarding your current and future lifestyle. 5 stars
by Bil and Jeff Keane
Classified
B6 TUESDAY, JULY 14, 2015
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Peninsula MARKETPLACE Reach The North Olympic Peninsula & The World
NOON E N I L D A E D on’t Miss It! D
IN PRINT & ONLINE
Place Your Ad Online 24/7 PLACE ADS FOR PRINT AND WEB:
Visit | www.peninsuladailynews.com Call: 360.452.8435 or 800.826.7714 | Fax: 360.417.3507 In Person: 305 W. 1st St., Port Angeles s Office Hours: Monday thru Friday – 8AM to 5PM
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 !
AKC GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPPIES. G o r g e o u s , h e a l t hy, purebred AKC $1,200 males, $1,300 females. Taking deposits now. Avail.7-21 Going quick! 360-3007230. See Peninsula Daily online classifieds for more info and pic.
B OAT: ‘ 7 4 L i g h t n i n g sailboat, 19’. On trailer. $1000 obo. 460-6231
3023 Lost
Single 47 year old male, husky, really nice guy, looking for a nice friend t o bu i l d a fo u n d a t i o n with, non smoker. Looking to buy a house. Text me at (360)477-6202.
L O S T: C a t . Fe m a l e black with white markings. No collar, no front claws. (360)683-9823
Sprint Boat Tickets now Available: P.A. Sunset Wire & Rope Lincoln Street Station Mobile Music Sequim Dog House Powder Coating Chimacum CHS Propane
3020 Found FOUND: All black cat. 2 mi. east of Happy Valley. Been living wild for 4 mo. (360)683-3790 FOUND: Dog. Lower Elwha Rd. Angeles Point area. (360)775-5681
LOST: Cat, male, g r e y / b l a c k Ta b b y. W. 13th St. 7/7. 775-5154 LOST: Chihuahua, black, 7/10, Silverhorn and River Rd. (360)681-3498 LOST: Plain gold, men’s wedding band. Costco, store or parking lot. (360)683-5653
4026 Employment General AmeriCorps Tutors-Mentors Needed: AmeriCorps members will provide focused and strategic intervention in the form of academic tutor and mentor support to at risk and struggling students in Port Angeles and Crescent School Districts. For more information, visit: http://www.portangelesschools.org/administration/americorp.html.
FOUND: Dog, Silberhorn Rd area of Sequim. Assistant Fire Chief Black and brown male Clallam Co FD3 AcceptChihuahua. 683-7604 ing Apps for Assistant FOUND: Grey kitten, 4-6 Fire Chief. Fur ther Inmonths old. Taken to the fo/Req. and App contact: pound. (360)775-5154 or 323 N. 5th. Ave Sequim 98382, 360-683-4242 or (360)452-5226 www.clallamfire3.org
3023 Lost LOST: Black cat, manx, green eyes, no tail. Sherwood Village area of Sequim. 477-4600 LOST: Black male Chihuahua, near Silberhorn and River Rd., around July 10th. 683-3311 LOST: Cat, female, black/white. 7th & I St. (360)477-9326
Housekeeping Supervisor Full time, upscale nonsmoking retirement center looking for reliable, flexible professional to supervise housekeeping staff. Must have excellent people skills, self m o t i va t e d , e n e r g e t i c, and a team player. Exper ience preferred. Wage-DOE-Benefits Apply in person at 660 Evergreen Far m Way, Sequim
S E A K AYA K : W i l d e r ness systems “Tsunami” with rudder, 6’6”, 60#s $750. Yakima roller rack system $100. (360)749-6633
VISIT: WWW.PENINSULADAILYNEWS.COM OR
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.
4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment General General General MEDICAL FRONT OFFICE Full time. Medical exp. preferred. Send resume P/T. Send resume to P.O. Box 985 Port Angeles, WA 98362
4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment General General General General
MEDICAL OFFICE ASSISTANT Full time with benefits. Apply in person at Peninsula Children’s Clinic, 902 Caroline PA.
CARRIER ROUTE AVAILABLE Peninsula Daily News Circulation Dept. Is looking for an individual interested in a Por t Townsend area route. Interested parties must be 18 yrs. of age, have a valid Washington State Drivers License, proof of insurance and reliable vehicle. Early morning delivery Monday through Fr i d a y a n d S u n d a y. . Call Jasmine at (360)683-3311 Ext 6051 Or email jbirkland@ peninsuladailynews.com
Client Care Coordinator, Apps accepted until Sat, 7/25. Duties: client meetings, create service plans, quality assurance, CAREGive r i n t r o s a n d m o r e. Home Instead Senior Care apply here: homeinstead.com/ 650/home-care-jobs COOK: Do you like to cook, want to help seniors, need some extra money? Hours 8:30-1 p.m. Suncrest Village (360) 681-3800
Customer Service Manager. Local roofing company is looking for an outgoing, customer focused person to join our team. Experience with CMS/CRM preferred. Please email: info@hoperoofing.com for a full job description. Deadline: July 25th. D ATA S P E C I A L I S T (DS): Olympic Area Agency on Aging (O3A) seeks DS based in Port H a d l o ck . 4 0 h r s / w k / , $33,186-$41,445 annual range, nonexempt, full agency paid benefit package. DS supports contract desk monitoring; ensures data reporting accuracy; analyze/int e r p r e t d a t a ; p r ov i d e technical assistance to staff/contractors in varied software platforms. Required: WDL, autoins, BA in math, computer science or data analysis and 2 yrs. exp. providing data management / repor ting OR 2 yrs. relevant college courses and 4 yrs. exp. For complete job description and application: 866-7204863 or www.o3a.org. Closes 5:00 p.m. on Friday, July 31, 2015. O3A is an EOE.
Looking for a job with a team environment, paid training, referral bonus, gas money, annual bonus, raises, healthcare, c o m p e t i t i ve wa g e s & more? Be a CAREGiver with Home Instead Senior Care - www.homeinstead.com/ 650/home-care-jobs * DELIVERY ROUTE No experience required Early morning, approx. CNAs & HCAs highly en- 65 miles, Sequim ares, couraged. 2 . 5 h r s . p e r d a y. $1200/mo. LICENSED JOURNEY(360)457-4260. MAN plumber or 2yr. apprentice, residential. ApHOUSEWORK. $15/hr. ply at: 425 S. 3rd Ave. or more. (360)912-2079. Sequim. (360)683-7996.
EXCAVATING company seeks Truck Driver / Laborer. Class A CDL required. Great pay and benefits, drug free workplace. Pick-up application at 257 Business Park Loop - Carlsborg, WA or download at www.jamestowntribe.org.
Local Non-Profit looki n g fo r ex p e r i e n c e d Development Coordinator. Responsible for planning and executing fundraising events, donor retention, new donor solicitation, and grant writing. Email resumes to nonprofitdevelopment 819@gmail.com
GENERAL LABORER (Extra Board) with NIPPON PAPER INDUSTRIES USA. Va r y i n g d ay s / s h i f t s with no guarantee of hours. Union wage and benefits; including medical, dental and paid time off. Minimum Qualifications: High school dip l o m a ( o r r e c e i ve d GED in 2014 or later); able to work rotating 12-hour shifts and perfor m work classified with Heavy Strength requirements. Please send an updated resume to jobs@npiusa.com. Must meet minimum qualifications for consideration. NPIUSA is an AA/EEO employer and participates in E-Verify.
Olympic Bagel Company Cashier-Barista-Meals Experience preferred 912 E. 1st St., PA
HOME HEALTH CUSTOMER SERVICE Full-time, rotating weekends. Experience with home health equipment p r e fe r r e d bu t n o t r e quired. People person a must. Competitive salary and benefits. Apply at Jim’s Pharmacy, 424 E. 2nd St., P.A. EOE. Licensed Nurse needed, flexible hours, with benefits. 3+ shifts per week. Call Cherrie.(360)683-3348
Request for Qualifications - JPUD Attorney. Public Utility District #1 of Jefferson County (JPUD) Request for Proposals for JPUD Attor ney JPUD requests proposals from qualified attorneys to provide utility and general legal advice to J P U D, i t s M a n a g e r, Senior Staff and Commissioners and to represent JPUD as its general legal counsel. The successful applicant will be an attorn ey w h o i s fa m i l i a r with and has experience in all phases of the law applicable to municipal corporations in the State of Washington and who is knowledgeable in elect r i c a l , wa t e r, s ewe r and telecom utility law. For complete information on the specific proposal format go to the PUD website: www.jeffpud.org. For additional information c o n t a c t J i m Pa r ke r, JPUD Manager at 360 385 8340 or email at jparker@jeffpud.org. Mailing address is 310 Four Corners Road Por t Townsend WA 98368. Interest in submitting a proposal must be expressed in writing before 23 July 2015.
E-MAIL:
CLASSIFIED@PENINSULADAILYNEWS.COM
TOYOTA: ‘00 Celica GT. Beautiful, mechanically perfect, KBB pr ice is $4K with over $4K in professional performance modifications real value $8K-asking $5500/obo . For more information or to view. (360)460-6231.
CHEVY: ‘11 Tahoe, low CHEVY: ‘94 Van, short miles, new tires / front base 20, Mark III. b ra ke s, 3 r d r ow, t ow $700/obo. 452-0987 package, power seats, navigation system, xm, CHEVY: ‘85, 4x4, many Dennis’ Yard Work and b a c k u p c a m e r a . new parts. $1,700. Window Cleaning (360)452-4156 or $28,150 KBB. (360)457-5205 (360)681-7478. (360)477-2532
3010 Announcements
D O D G E : ‘ 9 7 D a ko t a , JAGUAR: ‘83, 350 Che4x4, V6, 5 spd, 82K ml. vy engine and transmis$2,500. (360)457-4383. sion, many new par ts. $2,500/obo. (360)452FORD: ‘70, 500, 4dr.,3 4156 or (360)681-7478. speed stick, 302, new ex h a u s t , n ew t i r e s / MEDICAL OFFICE wheels. $2,650. ASSISTANT (360)452-4156 or Full time with benefits. (360)681-7478 Apply in person at Peninsula Children’s Clinic, HOME HEALTH 902 Caroline PA. CUSTOMER SERVICE Full-time, rotating weekends. Experience with PALO ALTO RD.: 1 home health equipment Br. apt. over garage, p r e fe r r e d bu t n o t r e - W/D, wood stove, on quired. People person a 5 acres. must. Competitive salary $700. (360)477-9678. and benefits. Apply at Jim’s Pharmacy, 424 E. PALOMINO: QH geld2nd St., P.A. EOE. ing, 10yr, 15+H, trail ridHONDA: ‘06, Rebel 250, d e n , n e e d s a r e n a 1 , 6 5 0 m i . ve r y n i c e , schooling, $2,500. (360)681-5030 $1,950. (360)683-9163.
CALL: 452-8435 TOLL FREE: 1-800-826-7714 FAX: 417-3507
5000900
ADULT TRIKE: Comfy , 24 speed, Fits wide height range, perfect, q u a l i t y ! $ 7 5 0 / O B O. MUST SELL-MAKE OFFER (360)554-4215.
B e a u t i f u l 2 b r, 2 b a , home with formal dining, den/office, large kitchen, RV parking, fruit trees, greenhouse, fireplace and much more. Come see this move in ready, well taken care of home. MLS#291285 $425,000 Carolyn Dawson John L. Scott (360)582-5770
TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD:
NEW CAREER? If you are looking for a challenging and rewarding new career, we are in need of a highly self-motivated, goal driven, honest, dependable, professional sales person. We offer a great compensation plan, with 401K, medical, dental, and training. Send resume to: sales@priceford.com or contact Mark (360)457-3333.
The La Push Police department has a job opening for a Police Officer I in La Push Washington. Please visit our website at www.quileutenation.org for a complete job description and job application. Or call 360374-4366. Closes July 21, 2015 or until filled.
OFFICE Nurse: for a busy family practice. The Quileute Tribe is acSend resume to: cepting applications for a P.O. Box 985 L e a d Te a c h e r fo r t h e Port Angeles, WA 98362 Quileute Head Start Program. Must have a CDA P L U M B E R : J o u r n e y - or an AA preferred and m a n / r e s i d e n t i a l l eve l two years exper ience c o n s t r u c t i o n e x p . a w o r k i n g fo r a n e a r l y must. (360)683-8336. childhood program; also must have a valid WA SALESPERSON ST Driver’s license, first WANTED aid card. DOE/Q Indian Looking for 2 sales pro- p r e f e r e n c e a p p l i e s . fessionals to join our Open until filled. For a team and take us to the complete job descripnext level. We are grow- tion/application contact ing and need motivat- the personnel dept. at ed,honest and hardwork- (360)374-4366 or visit ing individuals. We sell our website at New GM and Hyundai www.quileutenation.org and a full line of preowned vehicles. Are you looking for great p ay, gr e a t h o u r s a n d m o r e i m p o r t a n t l y, a great selling environment? If you are we are your next and last place to work. Positions will fill fast for the right individual, p l e a s e s e n d yo u r r e sume’ to: The Quileute Tribe is acgmcarsandcepting applications for a trucks@gmail.com Teacher Assistant for the Quileute Head Start Program. DOE/Q Support Staff Indian preference apTo wor k with adults plies. Open until filled. w i t h d eve l o p m e n t a l For a complete job dedisabilities, no experi- scription/application conence necessary, $10 tact the personnel dept. hr. Apply in person at at (360)374-4366 or visit 1020 Caroline St. M-F our website at www.qui8-4 p.m. leutenation.org
Substitute Carrier for Combined Motor Route Peninsula Daily News and Sequim Gazette Is looking for individuals interested in a Substitute Motor Route in Sequim. Interested parties must be 18 yrs. of age, have a valid Washington State Dr ivers License and proof of insurance. Early morning delivery Monday through Friday and S u n d a y. P l e a s e c a l l Gary at 360-912-2678
The Quileute Tribe is accepting applications for (2) positions in the Accounting department. (1) Accountant (1) Accounting Department Manager DOE/Q Indian preference applies. Open until filled. For a complete job description/application contact the personnel dept. at (360)374-4366 or visit our website at www.quileutenation.org
The Quileute Tribe is accepting applications for an Assistant Cook for the Quileute Head Start Program. DOE/Q Indian preference applies. Open until filled. For a complete job description/application contact the personnel dept. at (360)374-4366 or visit our website at www.quileutenation.org
4080 Employment Wanted Dennis’ Yard Work and Window Cleaning (360)457-5205
91190150
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
By DAVID OUELLET HOW TO PLAY: All the words listed below appear in the puzzle –– horizontally, vertically, diagonally, even backward. Find them and CIRCLE THEIR LETTERS ONLY. DO NOT CIRCLE THE WORD. The leftover letters spell the Wonderword. PEPPERMINT TEA Solution: 4 letters
F R E S H T A B L T R Y D O B
A Plus Lawn Service Hedge, shrub trimming, thatching, many references, professional Results. Here today here tomorrow. Senior Discounts. P.A. only. Local call (360) 808-2146 EDITING SERVICES: by English PhD. Former instructor at Stanford, Antioch College and Peninsula College. Contact Suzann, (360)797-1245 hetaerina86@gmail.com F u r m a n ’s A f f o r d a b l e Lawn Care. Mowing, weed eating, clean up. Reliable. (360)912-2441 HANDYWORK: Active grandma seeks work thoroughly cleaning (inside and out), painting, landscaping ect. $15$20 per hour. (360)461-0743 MIKE’S LAWN CARE: Clean up, hauling, & odd jobs. (415)870-1788.
Mowing Lawns, lots and fields. Trimming, pruning of shrubs and trees. Landscape maintenance, pressure washing, light hauling and more. Free quotes. Tom (360)460-7766. License: bizybbl868ma
I E S T E M A A U S O G V V E
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A A C L U T O S R O N M I T T
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M C E I A A V M L G G S R S E
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© 2015 Universal Uclick www.wonderword.com Join us on Facebook Download our app!
By C.C. Burnikel
DOWN 1 Skewered Asian snack 2 They’re committed by 62Acrosses 3 Negligent 4 One at the Louvre 5 Get into hot water 6 Chain known for its New York pizza 7 Huggies rival 8 “It’s clear now” 9 ISP connection option 10 About 30% of Africa 11 Hawkeye Pierce portrayer 12 People shelfmate 13 Suffered defeat 18 Wanders 22 Adult sheep meat 24 Christian of fashion 25 Thumbs-up vote 28 Dubbed 29 Tidal decline 30 Nickname for a sib 32 La Brea attraction 35 Worldwide lending org.
7/14/15 Monday’s Puzzle Solved
Beautiful Home, New Lower Price Kitchen has built-in wine rack, 2 large pantries and lots of cabinets. 3 br w i t h a d j o i n i n g b a t h s. Bright, open living room, large familyroom with panoramic views of the Olympic Mountains. Familyroom has french doors and beautiful propane enameled stove. For mal diningroom. Walk-in closets. Storage shed could be converted fo r a wo r k s h o p. S p a cious patio. Home security system. 3 car garage. MLS#290700 $409,900 Dave Stofferahn (360)477-5542 Dungeness Real Estate BEST OF SUNLAND Recently remodeled and painted 2 br., 2.5 ba., n ew a p p l i a n c e s, w i n dows, light fixtures, h a r d wo o d f l o o r s w i t h walnut inlays, huge master bedroom with fantastic master bath, heated sunroom with incredible landscape view. MLS#811711/291333 $420,000 Team Schmidt (360)460-0331 WINDERMERE SUNLAND CEDARS DUNGENESS HOME 3 bd., 3 ba., 2546 sf., on 3rd fairway, split level, dining area opens to deck, lower level opens to large patio and back ya r d , b o n u s r o o m i n basement, large 2 car g a ra g e, p o s s i b i l i t i e s abound with this quiet cul-de-sac home. MLS#812577/291354 $259,000 Deb Kahle (360)918-3199 WINDERMERE SUNLAND
7/14
Analgesic, Aromatic, Bath, Beverage, Body, Calcium, Calm, Carminative, Cold, Cool, Cramps, Decongestant, Double Mint, Dream, Fever, Flavorful, Flu, French Press, Fresh, Healing, Honey, Iced, Leaves, Liquid, Medicinal, Muscles, Oil, Organic, Plant, Relax, Saucer, Serve, Sip, Skin, Sleep, Soothe, Spirit, Steep, Stem, Sweet, Teabag, Tisane, Water, Weight Yesterday’s Answer: Watermelon
by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.
LUDAT ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.
SCURH ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
36 “Great suggestion” 37 Folded fare facilities 38 “Isn’t that cute?” 40 Not just assume 43 Suffix with ball 44 Hag 46 Not subject to taxes 47 Passes, as a law 49 Enjoy a bedtime ritual with
7/14/15
50 “That’s enough!” ... or what one can do with the first word of 17-, 27-, 45- and 60-Across 53 Pile in Santa’s sleigh 54 Dijon heads 55 Wrapping aid 56 Transcript stats 57 Diary clasp 60 Après-ski option 61 60-Down reaction
Colonial Beauty Welcome to yester-year gorgeous and well maintained 1930s home, 2448 sq ft, 3-plus beds, 2 baths, a must see to appreciate the many wonderful features of the past as well as modern touches to enjoy a style of living few homes provide. Fenced in backyard with greenhouse, detached 2-car garage MLS#291046 $270,000 Ania Pendergrass 360-461-3973 Remax Evergreen
Just Listed 114 W 14th A little cutie on a large 65’ X 140’ lot. 2 br with a bonus room that could be used for an office or ???? Other features: I car garage, heatform fireplace, privacy fencing, deck and more. You’re going to want to see this one so schedule an appt TODAY. MLS#291392 $120,000 Dave Ramey UPTOWN REALTY (360) 417-2800 Location, Style and Views! Top of the hill central location in town with panoramic water view and mtn. view, 3,050 sf., 4 br, 2.5 ba., elegant hardwood floors, 2 fireplaces, 2 p e l l e t s s t ove s, s u n room, large deck, gorgeous mature landscapi n g , c l a s s y, s p a c i o u s and comfortable. MLS#290991 $319,900 Ania Pendergrass 360-461-3973 Remax Evergreen
Enjoy All That Sequim Offers! Easy care condo! Kitchen with breakfast bar and SS appliances. Master suite with walk in shower & bath between 2 guest rooms. Large fenced patio, graveled area for pets and fire pit. MLS#291102/797995 $239,000 Carol Dana Windermere Real Estate Sequim East LOVELY LAKE HOME (360)461-9014 With water view and located in a gated commuFSBO: 8.3 acres, south nity. 2 BR, 2 BA with facing, with cabin on the large master suite. Sunback side of Bell Hill, ny South side deck with Happy Valley area. All v i ew o f t h e l a ke. I n services on site, septic cludes a boat slip. for 3 Br. home. Cabin MLS#291390 $269,000 currently rented to tenChuck Turner ant. Do not contact ten452-3333 ants. $275,000. Call PORT ANGELES owner at (360)808-3909. REALTY
VERY PRIVATE AND PICTURESQUE SETTING! With a list of amenities that goes on and on. Beautiful 3 br, 2 ba, rambler with a complete wrap around deck, propane rock fireplace and mtn view. There is a separate 1 br., 1 ba., ADU that was built in 1994. The long list of amenities include an incredible barn with loft, multiple outbuildings, two amazing green houses and a pond. This is a gardener’s paradise. MLS#290520 $489,000 Quint Boe (360)457-0456 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES
WHAT A DEAL! Take advantage of the opportunity to purchase t h i s p r o p e r t y i n Po r t Hadlock! This 3 br., 2 ba. home features brand new carpets, kitchen upg r a d e s, o p e n l ayo u t , large back porch, big backyard with fire pit and outbuildings for storage, 2- car detached garage. Great for enter taining! Property is already set up for Cable TV and HiSpeed Internet. Move-in ready! MLS#291120/798754 $139,000 Jake Tjernell (360)460-6250 TOWN & COUNTRY YOU OWN THE LAND Cute, well maintained 2 br., 1 ba., with pond, stream view, sunroom, deck, community pool, 9 hole par 3 golf course, perfect getaway with privacy yet close to town. MLS#807075/291271 $67,900 Team Schmidt (360)460-0331 WINDERMERE SUNLAND
BERHEY Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
Answer here: Yesterday’s
❘
(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: HUMUS ICING ABSORB DEFECT Answer: To pay for the new roof support system, he used his — “TRUSS” FUND
by Mell Lazarus
308 For Sale Lots & Acreage LEVEL LOT. Level lot in meadow in forested area off Diamond Pt Rd. 0.84 acres. Water and electricity metered. Septic plans. Top of private cul de sac. Mfg’d or mobile home ok. $60,000. (360)683-8246
311 For Sale Manufactured Homes MOBILE HOME: ‘79 Peerless. 14 x 70, 2 br., 1 ba., with 3 axles and 6 wheels. Located in Gardiner. Make offer. (360)797-7654
505 Rental Houses Clallam County
RUN A FREE AD FOR ITEMS PRICED $200 AND UNDER • 2 ads per household per week • Run as space permits • Private parties only Mondays &Tuesdays • 4 lines, 2 days • No firewood or lumber • No pets or livestock • No Garage Sales
Deadline: Friday at 4 p.m. Ad 1
Ad 2 (360)
417-2810
HOUSES/APT IN PORT ANGELES
A 1BD/1BA $575/M DUPLEX 1/1 $600/M H 2BD/1BA $650/M A 2BD/1BA $675/M H 2BD/1BA $775/M A 2BD/1.5BA $825/M H 2/1 JOYCE $900/M H 3BD/1BA $1100/M H 3BD/2BA $1100/M
Name Address Phone No
Mail to:
Bring your ads to:
Peninsula Daily News Peninsula Daily News PO Box 1330 305 West 1st St., Port Angeles Port Angeles, WA 98362 Sequim Gazette/Peninsula Daily News 147 W. Washington, Sequim or FAX to: (360) 417-3507 NO PHONE CALLS
Email: classified@peninsuladailynews.com
HOUSES/APT IN SEQUIM
A 2/2 GOLF COURSE $825/M COMPLETE LIST @
308 For Sale Lots & Acreage
1111 Caroline St. Port Angeles
ACRES: 2 1/3 acres, between P.A. and Sequim. M o u n t a i n v i ew, w e l l , utilities. $120,000. (360)457-4756
PA L O A LTO R D. : 1 Br. apt. over garage, W/D, wood stove, on 5 acres. $700. (360)477-9678.
Get home delivery. Call 360-452-4507 or 800-826-7714 www.peninsuladailynews.com
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
3A574499
Prime Location for Commercial Property! 0.48 acres Building on best location, corner of Peabody St. and E. 8th, full 0.16 acre lot for parking, main building 4,050 sf., auxiliary building 968 sf., with storage loft. MLS#281787 $325,000 Team Thomsen GOLF COURSE VIEW UPTOWN REALTY Spacious 2 br., 2.5 ba., (360) 808-0979 1,720 sf., Large kitchen, b r e a k fa s t b a r, d i n i n g WANTED: Fixer upper room, light and bright livwanted. Sequim / P.A, ing room with wood firearea, cash in hand. place, 2 car garage + (206)348-2592 golf cart garage/storage, quiet cul-de-sac, southSPECTACULAR ern exposure, full deck. VIEWS! MLS#808195/291282 Beautiful 2br 2ba home. $259,000 See the views from the Tyler Conkle high perch of Diamond (360)670-5978 Point, you will have a WINDERMERE sweeping view of ProSUNLAND tection Island, the Straits, Victor ia, Por t Townsend, and Mt. Baker right from your front window. You can take in the awesome sights and sounds of the sea from this custom single level home with its open floor plan, spacious kitchen, GREAT SEQUIM HOME and dining/family room, 12 yr old single level, with a den, and bonus 1,382 sf., with attached room. double garage. 2 br plus MLS#291399 $429,900 Team Tenhoff den and 2 full ba. Blue Sky Real Estate 514 W Summer Breeze Sequim Ln. $189,900. (651)233206-853-5033 4271 or (253)732-7142. FSBO: Sequim,2Br.,one with Murphy bed, 2ba., soaker tub. Like new,1961 sf mountain view. Den with fireplace, park-like landscaping, lots of large closets, all appliances. (360)232-4223
Truly Exceptional Home Exquisite proper ty! 5 master suites. Generous living spaces. Stunning outdoor patios and barn. Impeccable gardens. A beautiful place to call home or hold special events. A must see! MLS#776410 $665K Deborah Norman Brokers Group Real Estate Professionals (360)461-6059
LEYREF
571351571
CHARMING RAMBLER Custom built, 2 br., 2 ba. Summer mowing, prune, 1,492 sf., nice br ight kitchen, master suite haul, painting, odd jobs. with 3 closets, private (360)452-7249 fenced and landscaped lot, new septic system, 2 105 Homes for Sale car garage with storage MLS#811579/291329 Clallam County $225,000 TEAM SCHMIDT 3 Rental Units (360)460-0331 1,480 sf., commercial WINDERMERE building plus a 2 br SUNLAND home on a prime corner lot in the uptown busiReduced To Sell ness district. The commercial building is divid- Must-see home on oute d i n t o 2 u n i t s , a skirt of town. Established s t o r e f r o n t u n i t fa c i n g Builder built this home Fr o n t S t . a n d a b a ck f o r h i m s e l f a n d p u t unit. Both units share an everything in it. Many aroff street parking area. tistic touches throughout The home has alley ac- home. 2,800 SF cencess and its own parking t e r e d o n 3 . 7 2 a c r e s. Suitable for a couple of area. MLS#280179 $149,900 horses. $445,000 Tom Blore Walter Clark 360-683-7814 (360)460-6250 PETER BLACK TOWN & COUNTRY REAL ESTATE
N D E C I T N I M E L B U O D
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
4080 Employment 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale Momma Wanted Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Alterations and Sewing. Alterations, mending, hemming and some heavyweight s ew i n g ava i l a bl e t o you from me. Call (360)531-2353 ask for B.B.
P Y S P E E T S N O H L E E R
Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app
ACROSS 1 Use an S.O.S pad 6 Skidded 10 “Better Call __”: “Breaking Bad” spin-off 14 Circus venue 15 Kiss 16 “One more thing ... “ 17 “Back to the Future” subject 19 Partners of hems 20 “Who __ to argue?” 21 Steed 22 Impressionist Édouard 23 “Anything you say, honey” 25 Saintly glows 26 Fed. assistance program 27 “Cash makes things happen” 31 Tie settlers: Abbr. 33 Disable a surveillance camera for, say 34 Ovid’s 551 35 Prefix with state or coastal 38 UN delegate 39 Signs off on 41 “Give __ break” 42 “Dirty Jobs” host Mike 44 “State of the Union” channel 45 Cosmetic applied after foundation 48 RN workplaces 51 Antidote target 52 “Piece of cake” 55 Dalai Lama’s land 56 African country whose capital is Accra 58 Ill. and Ind., in Monopoly 59 Genesis progenitor 60 Ditzy one 62 Cop’s quarry 63 History 64 Holmes of “Batman Begins” 65 NCAA’s Big __ Conference 66 Egyptian snakes 67 They may be called or fired
TUESDAY, JULY 14, 2015 B7
Classified
B8 TUESDAY, JULY 14, 2015
AB LOUNGE: Exercise BBQ: kettle type 18”, BOOTS: Oneal dirtbike machine, blue, like new. new, never used. $35. r iding boots, size 12, $65. (360)631-9211 (360)681-7579 good shape. $50.obo. (360)775-9631 A I R C O N D I T I O N E R : BED: Double brass bed, B U N K BED: Double Goldstar, 6000btu, win- black accent, antuque. twin, white, medal, d ow AC, u s e d t w i c e. $200. (360)670-3310 comes with mattresses $100. (360)796-4559 BED FRAME: Head and $100. (360)477-3407 fo o t w i t h r a i l s , n i g h t ALBUM: Elvis Presley, s t a n d , s o l i d m a p l e . CABINET: Glass display Blue Hawaii, $35. cabinet 6ft long 32” $150. (360)452-6339 (360)681-5411 wide. $150. 461-0743 ALBUMS: Swing Era, B E D F R A M E : Q u e e n CART: for acetylene and size, metal, on wheels. ‘36 -’37, includes book, oxygen tanks. $25. $40. (360)683-2589 new in box. $40 o.b.o. (360)640-0556 (360)681-5411 B I K E : Tr e k m o u n t a i n CART: Utility, 3 shelves, b i k e , g o o d s h a p e . AMMO: Weatherby 460 30” by 20”. $12. Magnum, 20 Roundnose $100.obo. 775-9631 (360)683-4063 500 grain, CollectorsB OAT S : w i t h t r a i l e r s Box.$125. 457-2050 CASTE NETS: Set, and titles, must go. Call brass, in holder. $10. AQUARIUM: 60 gal rep- to come see. $200. (360)683-9295 (360)461-6263 tile aquarium with heat pad and extras. $50. CELL CASE: (2) SamBOBBLEHEAD: Ken (360)452-9685 sung Galaxy S3 cases. Griffey Jr., ‘13 Mariners $5. (360)417-0921 AQ UA R I U M F I LT E R : Hall of Fame, new. $50. (360)457-5790 For large tank, Fluval CHAIRS: 4 metal, foldModel 204, cost $80. sell ing, excellent condition. BOBBLEHEAD: Lou Pifor $25. (360)582-0723 $20. (360)457-5385. niella ‘14 Mariners Hall of Fame, new. $20. CHEVY PART: 73’, cenART: 1960 Century of (360)457-5790 ter dump, exhaust maniprogress, framed, signed by Buzz Aldrin, COA. BOOK CASES: Display fo l d , l e f t s i d e , g o o d $200.(360)461-7365 style, ver y nice, light shape. $50. 797-4230 brown, $85. Dark brown. ART: Framed “Friends $65. (360)477-4004 of the Field”, s/n and 1st “ C r a b f e s t ” c a r t o o n . BOOKCASE: Wood, 28” $200. for both. 461.7365 X 37”, folds up. $25. (360)683-4063 A RT: M c C a r t hy p r i n t “winter trail”, framed, BOOKS: (110) Recent signed and numbered. C o s t c o t y p e n o v e l s , $175. (360)681-7579 Paper & hardbacks. $69. (360)681-3331 ART: Pr int by Nagel, C a s a L u p i t a , f r a m e d BOOKS: Harry Potter, 25”x33”. $50. 565-8039 #1-7 set, Hardcover. $69. (360)775-0855 ART: Pr int by Nagel, Pa r k S o u t h G a l l e r y, BOOKS: Ivan Doig comframed 22”x30”. $75. plete collection, all 15 (360)565-8039 editions, $200. 681-7579 BATTERY: Mugen Powe r 3 . 8 v fo r S a m s u n g phones, excellent condition. $15. 417-0921
BOOTS: Justin cowboy boots, rare elephant hide, ladies 6 1/2 B. like new. $200. 582-1280
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
DISHES: Mikasa Inta- GUN CABINET: Maple, MANIFOLD: Edelbrock glio, leaf lyric pattern, g l a s s d o o r s , g l a s s Ford 351W 4bb, intake manifold. $50.obo. service for (10). $50. shelves included. $150. (360)797-1106 (360)683-0146 (360)681-5295
MISC: Rose petal cot- SAW CHAIN: for 20” bar TA B L E S AW: C ra f t s tage w/ accessories $60, 8 4 d r i ve s 0 5 0 g a u g e m a n 1 0 ” , 3 h p, h a n d tools too! $199. obo like new FurReal friends skip tooth round. $15. (360)640-0556 (360)681-5473 puppy. $40. 608-9645
DOLL: 26” porcelain col- H A I R R E M OV E R : N o MATTRESS: Twin matlector bride doll in box No, hair remover, like tress set, like new. $30. “ w i n t e r b l i s s ” . M i n t . new, barely used. $100. (360)452-4860 $95.obo. 683-7435 (360)683-2489 M I C R O W AV E : S u n D R E M E L : 1 6 ” s c r o l l HEATER: Oil filled ra- beam “Express Meals” saw, variable speed, kilt diator heater. $30. toaster, broiler, microtable. $200. 457-6889 wave. $50. 452-8760 (949)241-0371
TABLE SAW: Rockwell 12” contractor model, 240 volt. $150. 460-9680
DRESSER: 10 drawer H E AV Y D U T Y p o r t e r with mirror, solid maple, c a b l e p l u n g e r o u t e r. 56Lx35H21D. $200. $45. (360)457-5385. (360)452-6339
TEAPOTS: Novelty collection, 50, Can send pictures. $100. (360)374-9332
DV D P L AY E R : S o n y H I D E - A - B E D : L o v e seat, brown microfiber, with remote. $15. good condition. $95. (949)241-0371 (360)460-3707 FOOT BRIDGE: Wood, c u s t o m m a d e, 1 1 ’ by HOLDING TANK: RV 15 gal. 10” wheels, never 25”, email pictures. $80. used. Cost $115. Sell for (360)452-8264. $30. (360)683-1438 FREE: 2103 XL movie camera, (2) projectors JACKET: Black and red suede Dale Ear nhardt and tripod. J r. # 8 , m e d i u m . VG C (360)640-3600 $50. (360)797-1106 FREE: Hammond organ T-500, U-Haul. JACKET: Embroidered (360)457-6889 with Olympic Nat Park & Lavender, new, large. FREE: Retro 1960’s? $25. (360)683-5284 CLOTHES: Girls size 6. Magnavox b/w T.V. and stereo, great condition. JOINER: 5”, good condi$10. for all. 477-9962 (360)683-5959 tion. $125. 452-8750 COMMODE: Adjustable height, stable, large and F R E E Z E R : S e a r s, 1 6 LADDER: Little giant c u . f t . c h e s t f r e e ze r. ladder system 26’, extinportable. $50. 452-8760 $150. (360)808-6792. sion 23”. $115. COWBOY HAT: Stetson (360)912-1783 “Stallion”, black felt, new FREEZER: Sears coldspot freezer, 31 cu.ft. LAMPS: (2) large brass in box. size 6 7/8. $100. E x c e l l e n t c o n d i t i o n . barrel style, pull chains, (360)582-1280 $100. (360)457-5953 white shades. $75.each CUES: Both 2 piece with (360)670-3310 h a r d c a s e s . $ 1 0 0 FUTON: Black, like new. $60. (360)681-5068 each/o.b.o. 681-6601 LIFT CHAIR: Blue. $40. (360)928-9659 D E S K : 6 f t w i t h t w o G A LVA N I Z E D P I P E : drawer file cabinets at 31pc 1” and 1 1/4”. $40. LIGHT: Antique, hang(360)452-3550 each end. $150. ing light. $200. (360)461-0743 (360)681-8911 GLASSWARE: Fostoria DOG STROLLER: Used American, LOT- 50 piecL Y E : Up to 10#, es! exc. condition! $200. very little. $35. $5.50per lb. 582-0723. (360)452 8264 (360)452-7246
E E F R E E A D S R F Monday and Tuesdays S
MIXER: Heavy duty S C R E E N H O U S E : Bosch mixer, blender, 12x12, in box. $40. (360)417-0111 foodgrinder, bread hook. $50. (360)417-5339 S E W I N G M AC H I N E : MODELS: Vintage kits Singer touch and sew, (5) unopened, (1) open, portable. $100. (360)683-0146 planes and boats. $50. (360)452-6842 MISC: (27) white painted SHOES: Boys size 12 frame and panel cabinet medium, cars blk/red, doors. Great for crafts. MOWER BLADES: 40” B oy s s i ze 1 1 , b r ow n i n c h b l a d e s , n e w . suede. $10.ea 477-9962 $125. (360)374-9332 $10.each. 457-3569 MISC: 32” Quasar TV, SINK: 32”x22” dual cabinet stand, and DVD MOWER: Riding lawn, kitchen, with faucet and 42” deck, 18 hp, runs disposal, great condition. player. $49. 681-3744 and cuts good. $150. $100. (360)683-0112 MISC: Chev drive-shaft, (360) 460-6419 fits 1972 pickup, 1/2 ton. SOUND SYSTEM: Phil$100. (360) 797-4230 PATIO SET: Cedar, 4 lips sound system with pieces, near new, glass- DVD player, 6 speakers. MISC: Collapsable dog top table. $195. $30. (360)681-2800 crate, 30.5” X 19.5” X (360)631-9211 21”. $60. Antique RockSTEREO: Sony 5 disc er. $40. (360)681-5137. P H OTO S : 2 2 0 ” X 3 0 ” changer, dual cassette deck, receiver. $60. framed photos of the MISC: Compact floures(360)681-4916 cent bulbs. $1 ea. Elec- P.A. Harbor. $100. (360)457-0033 tric carving knife. $8. STOOL: Milking, solid (360)683-2589 PRESSURE COOKER: wood, maple color, vinMISC: Little tikes lego Mirro 7 quart cooker and tage. $45/obo. (360)683-7435 table $50. Like new Fur- canner. $30. 452-7246 by with box $25. Penbo P RO PA N E S M O K E R : STOOLS: (3) Eurostyle, w/baby $25. 608-9645 Smokey Mountain, great adjustable, counter/bar, light gray seats. $200. MISC: Love seat and ot- shape. $50. 457-5696 (360)477-4004 t o m a n , w i c k e r, g o o d shape. $125. 681-8911 R E C L I N E R : V i n t a g e SWING SET: $40. 1940’s, wood finials and (360)928-9659 M I S C : M e t a l s t o r a g e trim, grey suede cloth. cabinet, 5 shelves. $50. $85. (360)477-1242 SWIVEL ROCKER: with Oak shelf unit. $135. matching ottoman, light (360)681-5295 ROOF BAG: Cargo can- blue, good shape. $35. vas pack, black, new. (360)582-0723 MISC: New Dish HD satellite antenna with tripod. $50. (360)928-3939 TABLE LAMP: Bronze $50.obo. (360)797-1918 RUG: Octagon, 50” di- base with Tiffany style ameter, brown, floral, shade, must see! $150. MISC: Radial arm saw (360)681-7579 r o l l e r t a b l e v a c u u m . multi color. $99. (360)775-0855 $150. (360)452-8750 TABLES: (3) Antique MISC: Radiator, fits 74’ SADDLE: Pony saddle $50. 1940’s dining, $50. Chev pick up. $75. Oak coffee table, $20. with blanket. $150. (360)460-6419 (360)452-9685 (360)457-3569
M ail to: Peninsula Daily News PO Box 1330 Port Angeles, WA 98362
TABLET: Haier #9041 9” tablet with accessories & Belkin G54/N150 router. $125. 797-1106
TENT: Kelty V2, 2 person tent with fly, collapsible poles, 2 entries. $40. (360)681-4916 THATCHER: Craftsman tow behind lawn thatcher. $50. 417-5339 TILLER/RUDDER: Sailboat, vintage, wood. $75. (360)683-9295 TIRES: Studded, mounted on wheels, 205-75R15, good tread. $100. (360)460-5694 TOOL BOX: Aluminum, for full size pickup. $50. (360)808-0525 TV: 18” Hardly used and like new. $20. (360)683-7339 TV: 19” Sanyo HDTV with remote, RGB/cable input. $40. 681-2800 VACUUM: Bissell turbo b a g l e s s, n ew i n b ox . $60. (360)417-0111 VAC U U M : M i e l e, l i ke new, power plus, swivel, attachments. $150. (360)683-5805 WA L L C A L E N D E R : 1964 “Fraction & Decimal equivalents”. $15. (360)452-6842
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Properties by
Inc.
RENTALS AVAILABLE COMMERCIAL HOMES APARTMENTS
PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM
PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM
505 Rental Houses 1163 Commercial Clallam County Rentals Properties by
Inc.
RENTALS AVAILABLE COMMERCIAL HOMES APARTMENTS
452-1326 452-1326
MOBILE: 1 BR 1 ba private, quiet, covered deck. $500 plus utilities. (360)461-3254
6045 Farm Fencing & Equipment
PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM
P.A.: 2 Br. 1 bath, car- BACKHOE: ‘75, Case p o r t , n o s m o k i n g , n o 480 B Diesel, ready to work. $8000. 477-3884 pets. $750.+ dep. (360)457-7012. John Deere Tractor, 2010. model# 3520 37 605 Apartments hp. turbo charged 4x4 Clallam County hydrostat, excellent running condition $19,500/obo. Properties by (360)670-1350 Inc.
RENTALS AVAILABLE COMMERCIAL HOMES APARTMENTS
452-1326
683 Rooms to Rent Roomshares SEQUIM: Fur nished 1 Br. $380, plus $350 deposit, plus electric. (360)417-9478
1163 Commercial Rentals O F F I C E S PAC E : 7 t h and Peabody St., $450 and $850. 683-3300
Visit our website at www.peninsula dailynews.com Or email us at classified@ peninsula dailynews.com
6050 Firearms & Ammunition RUGER: Beautiful GP 100, stainless, 357, 4” b a r r e l , n eve r f i r e d . $600. (360)504-3110
6055 Firewood, Fuel & Stoves
• No Pets, Livestock, Garage Sales or Firewood
6080 Home Furnishings
6105 Musical Instruments
TABLE: Antique Round O a k Ta b l e . B e a u t i f u l 1920’s era oak table & chairs, seats 4 round or 6 with leaf (see photos online). Original purchase Gregor y’s Fine Furniture (1916-1940), Tacoma, WA. $850. Call 360-452-3975.
DRUMS: Gretsch Catalina Club 4 pc. set with Gibraltar hardware and cymbals. Like new. $650 (360)457-1545
TABLE: Solid oak table with leaf 4 chairs, good cond. $400. (360)4774213 or 461-4972
PIANO: Ayres Console Oak, recently tuned, excellent condition, bought new in 1990. $700/obo. (360)797-4047
6115 Sporting Goods
6100 Misc. Merchandise
GARAGE SALE: July 14 & 15 8-6 p.m. 217 N Ryser Ave. Vintage vinyl records, VHS recorders, VHS movies, electronics, model trains and track, air compressor, shop vac and other miscellaneous items. All reasonably priced to sell.
8180 Garage Sales PA - Central
ADULT TRIKE: Comfy , 7030 Horses 24 speed, Fits wide height range, perfect, q u a l i t y ! $ 7 5 0 / O B O. MUST SELL-MAKE OF- PALOMINO: QH gelding, 10yr, 15+H, trail ridFER (360)554-4215. den, needs arena KAYAK: Necky 18’ tan- schooling, $2,500. (360)681-5030 dem. Has rudder, front and back hatches for M I S C : J a z z y Po w e r gear storage. $800 call Chair. $700. o.b.o. Mer(360)808-4153 7035 General Pets lin, LCD Magnifier, 19”. $ 3 7 5 . ( 3 6 0 ) 6 8 1 - 3 5 7 0 MOTORS: ‘77 Evinrude 9a.m. to 7p.m 35HP $450. ‘76 EvinMISC: Saab rims, 15”, rude 6HP $300. Shor t Qualifier radial studded shaft. On`e owner, well snow tires, 16”. $80ea. maint. Manuals incl. (360) 928-3167 obo. 4 Pc. wicker living M I S C : G r i l l : K a m a d o, original, made in Japan, excellent condition, $600. Singer : featherweight sewing machine. $250. Bench: 5’ cement, rabbit shaped. $250. (360)683-0146
room set, sofa, 2 chairs, coffee table, $300 obo. Bakers rack, $30 obo. Antique drop leaf dining table, $700 obo. (360)681-4019.
S E A K AYA K : W i l d e r ness systems “Tsunami” with rudder, 6’6”, 60#s $750. Yakima roller rack system $100. (360)749-6633
SPA: Hotspring Jetsetter, ‘07, por table, exc. 6140 Wanted FIREWOOD: $179 deliv- condition, need to sell & Trades ered Sequim-P.A. True due to health. $1,000. cord. 3 cord special (360)683-2589 WANTED: Old tools and $499. Gilbert, 808-3293 or (360)452-4675 (mess) STORAGE VAN: Truck hand planes. Call Les at (360)385-0822 montesbg@hotmail.com trailers (3) and steel or beams. van trailers: 26’ www.portangelesfire $900. 28’ $2,000. 40’ 6135 Yard & wood.com $2,000. steel beams: 2 Garden w 18” x 97lb per ft. x 40’, $1,550. 1 w 18” x 106lb MOWER: 3 Blade Cub 6080 Home per ft. x 50’. $1,060. Cadet, new deck bearFurnishings call (360)531-1383. i n g s, b e l t a n d m o t o r. FURNITURE: Two sofa UTILITY TRAILER: Like $1,000. (360)683-6927. sleepers, queen size, new. 5’4”x9’6” box with WHY PAY l i k e n e w. $ 2 5 0 . e a . ramp and wench. $1650. Glass dinette and four SHIPPING ON (360)681-7400 c h a i r s. $ 3 0 0 . D a n i s h INTERNET modern walnut dining taPLACE YOUR PURCHASES? ble and chairs. $500. AD ONLINE Cur ved love seat and With our new Classified Wizard curved sofa table. $150. SHOP LOCAL you can see your Lane cedar chest, old. ad before it prints! $150. Walnut and glass peninsula www.peninsula coffee table. $75. dailynews.com dailynews.com (360) 683-1006
NO PHONE CALLS
8142 Garage Sales 9820 Motorhomes Sequim
WANTED: Vendors for a Summer Arts/Craft/Food Fair. For cost and other info please email: moonunit76@gmail.com
G R OW E Q U I P M E N T: O l d g r ow e p u i p m e n t . From $50 obo. (360)631-9211
or FAX to: (360)417-3507 Email: classified@peninsuladailynews.com
AKC GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPPIES. G o r g e o u s , h e a l t hy, purebred AKC $1,200 males, $1,300 females. Taking deposits now. Avail.7-21 Going quick! 360-3007230. See Peninsula Daily online classifieds for more info and pic. Dog and puppy training. Basic dog training and puppy socialzation classes. Starting Saturday July 25. Classes run for 4 weeks. Please contact New Leash on Life, Cheryl 360-670-5860 for more info.
9820 Motorhomes GMC: 26’ Motorhome. 1976. $16,500. (360)683-8530
MOTORHOME: ‘96 30ft. Southwind Stor m. 51k miles. Custom interior, Roadmaster towing system, Banks Power Pack and other extras. Very nice cond. $18,500. (360)681-7824
9832 Tents & Travel Trailers
9050 Marine Miscellaneous
TRAILER: 22ft. Holiday Rambler, sleeps 4, roof AC, kitchen, needs work. $1,900. 461-3232
BOAT: ‘96 Sea Doo Jet boat. $4,500. (360)452-3213
5A246724
D A For items E $200 and under S E D A E FR E E R E F R F
9817 Motorcycles
BOAT: Lonestar, 17’ fiTRAILER: ‘89, HiLo, 25’, berglass. EZ Loader galvanized trailer. $600. $5,500. (360)683-3407. (360)928-9436 TRAILER: ‘99 Sierra, HARLEY: ‘06 Custom MOTORHOME: Dodge 2 5 ’ , n e e d s T L C . Deluxe. 25K miles. ‘76 Class C. 26’, new $7,000/obo. 417-0803. Comes with extras: rear tires, low miles, nonseat, windshield, sissy smoker, in PA. $2,500 bar. New tires. Harley firm. (360)460-7442. Custom Paint #123 of 9802 5th Wheels 150. Immaculate condiRV: ‘91 Toyota 21’.V-6, tion. $12,500. Call Lil C r u i s e c o n t r o l , ove r John Kartes. KOMFORT: ‘02 34’ triple drive, 90K miles. $9,900. B OAT: M o n k 4 2 ’ Tr i (360)460-5273 slide. New appliances, (360)477-4295 cabin, 1961. Great live good shape. $14,950. aboard, pristine. Diesel, Will deliver. 461-4374 full electronics. $39,000. H A R L E Y DAV I D S O N Boat house available. ‘03, Road King Classic, anniversary edition, exc. T E R RY: ‘ 9 6 , 2 6 ’ 5 t h Port Angeles. cond. with extras. 29K Wheel. $4,500/obo. (360)457-1185 ml., $8,500. (360)640-0111 (360)775-0370 BOAT: Tollycraft, ‘77, 9808 Campers & 2e q6u’ i p Sp eedd aa nn d, mwaei nl -l HD: ‘81 XLS Sportster. Canopies 1,000 cc, 9K. $2,500. tained classic, trailer, WINNEBAGO (360)683-5449 dingy and more. See at ‘02, BRAVE, 33’,. Class C A M P E R : O u t d o o r s 1 5 1 8 W. 1 1 t h a l l e y. A, Model 32V, Ford V10 HONDA: ‘02, 750 Shadgas engine with 2 slides, man, bed, refrigerator, $20,000/obo. ow Spirt. $3,200./obo (360)457-9162 Onan Generator, rear stove. $1,500. (360)912-2441 (360)477-4355 camera, tow package, B OAT T R A I L E R : ‘ 9 9 , l eve l e r s. S l e e p s t wo, 29’ Heavy duty, custom. HONDA: ‘06, Rebel 250, dinner for 4, party for six, $1,800. (360)775-6075 1 , 6 5 0 m i . ve r y n i c e , 42.8K miles, $29,800. $1,950. (360)683-9163. (407)435-8157 PEDDLE Boat: on trailNO TEXTING er, like new, $2,500. H O N DA : ‘ 8 4 S a b r e, (360)452-8607 1100cc. runs excellent. $1,200. (360)775-6075
WINNEBAGO: ‘87 Chieftain, 27’, 37,250 orig. miles, low hours on generator, nicely equipped kitchen, includes TV and microwave. New ver y comfortable queen mattress, lots of extras. $10,500. (360)461-3088
9832 Tents & Travel Trailers
TENT TRAILER: Coachman ‘11 Clipper 126 Spor t. Pop up, Queen bed on each end. Fr idge, stove, stereo, furnace, hot water heater, excellent condition. Ve r y l i t t l e u s e. Ta bl e with bench seats, sofa and table that folds into bed. Must see to appreciate! $6,500. Call (360)640-2574 or (360)640-0403.
9050 Marine Miscellaneous
MALLARD: ‘97, ready to roll, 24’, come and look. BOAT: ‘11, Grandy, 12’, $5800. (360)477-3884 rowing / sailing skiff, built T E N T T R A I L E R : ‘ 0 8 by the boat school in R o c k w o o d Fr e e d o m . 2011. Includes the full Sleeps 8, tip out, stove, sailing package, with gas/elec. fridge, furnace, oars and trailer. Good toilet with shower, king shape. $4,000/obo. (360)850-2234 and queen beds with heated mattresses. OutBOAT: 19’ Fiberglass, side gas bbq and showtrailer, 140 hp motor. er. Great cond. $7,495. $2,800. 683-3577 (360)452-6304
HONDA: ‘98 VFR 800. Red, fuel injected V-4, 100+hp, 23K mi., c l e a n , fa s t , ex t r a s . $4,500. (360)385-5694 SAILBOAT: ‘04 WWP19 5hp mtr, trailer, new radio and stereo. Ready to sail, garaged. $6,200. hermhalbach@wavecable.com or (360)504-2226
Scooter: Kymco People 50. 2009 Red 4 stroke 49cc with 1835 miles. MPG:80. Includes helmet, all weather riding cover, and battery tender. Purchased and serviced locally. $1,150. (360)477-0021. SUZUKI: ‘00 600 Katana. 5k ml. $2,200. (707)241-5977
SUZUKI: ‘96, 1400 Special Edition, lots of SEARAY, ‘88 Sundanc- chrome beautiful bike. er, boathoused in PA, $2,500. (360)457-6540 or (360)452-644. 800 engine hr., $35,000. (541)840-1122
9740 Auto Service
S I LV E R S T R E A K : 1 7 ’ & Parts H a r d t o p, a l u m i n u m . Brand new, 4 hrs. on 115 hp, plus 9.9 Yama- FORD: F900 534 enTRAILER: ‘04 Snowb. B OAT: ‘ 7 4 L i g h t n i n g h a , f u l l y e q u i p p e d . gine. Eaton 10 sp. Flatsailboat, 19’. On trailer. $45,000. Utility trailer. 4’x8’. $475. bed dump. $1000 obo. 460-6231 (360)565-6802 (360)683-8668 (360)461-1352
Classified
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
TUESDAY, JULY 14, 2015 B9
9740 Auto Service 9180 Automobiles 9180 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles 9434 Pickup Trucks & Parts Classics & Collect. Classics & Collect. Others Others Others Others PA R T S : ‘ 8 9 Po n t i a c Bonneville, par ts car. $500. (360)683-2196
9180 Automobiles Classics & Collect.
FORD: 1929-30 Custom Model A Roadster. Perfect interior, very clean, r uns great on Nissan p i ck u p r u n n i n g g e a r. Owner sunny day driver only. Teal green, black fenders vinyl top. 1930 Model A: In ex- $25,700 Real eye catchceptional condition, new- e r. ( 3 6 0 ) 7 7 5 - 7 5 2 0 o r l y r e b u i l t e n g i n e . (360)457-3161. $19,000. Call Jim. FORD: 1929 Model A (360)301-4581 Roadster, full fendered, BMW: ‘07 Z4 3.0 SI all mustang r unning R o a d s t e r. 4 7 K m i l e s, gear. $18,500. 460-8610 w e l l m a i n t a i n e d , l i ke new. $20,000. (360)477-4573
BUICK: ‘66 Skylark Custom Convertible, Custom paint, Ready for Summer.$16,500. 683-3408
FORD: 1950 Original Convertible. Beige interior and top on burgundy restoration featured in B u l b H o r n m a g a z i n e. Appeared in ads ran by Bon Marche. Mechanically sound and clean. Owner restored. $26,700. (360)775-7520 or (360)457-3161.
CHEV: ‘00 SS Camaro. Super Spor t package. New, wheels, tires, battery and license. Flow master exhaust system, F O R D : 1 9 5 2 P i c k u p, T.top, black leather in- Mustang front, 302, C4, terior , cherry red. NEV- 9” Ford rearend. $8,500. ER ABUSED! 81K ml. 460-8610 $6,000. (360)457-9331 JAGUAR: ‘83, 350 CheCHEVY: ‘56 Pickup, re- vy engine and transmisstored, 350 V8, AOD, sion, many new par ts. IFS. $18,000/obo. $2,500/obo. (360)452(360)683-7192 4156 or (360)681-7478.
FORD: ‘62 Thunderbird. Landau 116K mi. powder blue, white vinyl, new int., clean engine and trunk. $18,500. (360)385-5694 FORD: ‘70, 500, 4dr.,3 speed stick, 302, new ex h a u s t , n ew t i r e s / wheels. $2,650. (360)452-4156 or (360)681-7478 MERCURY: ‘65 Monterey, 2 dr. 390 massaged V8, stick. Add on A/C. Good Glass, body okay. No rust! Dad’s old car. $4,000. 683-2793
SEAT: ‘69, 600D. Made in Spain, Everything redone. $9,000/obo. (360)379-0593 VW BUG: ‘79. All new tires and wheels, adorable, black. $7,500. (360)461-0088
9292 Automobiles Others BUICK: Reatta ‘90, Conv, mint cond 106km, $7000. Pics. (360)6816388. jimfromsequim @olympus.net HONDA: ‘06 Civic. Clean, low miles. $11,000. (360)460-1843
BUICK: ‘08 Lucer ne CXL Sedan, 3.8L Series III V6, auto, 17” alloys, good tires, traction control, keyless, power windows, doors, seats and mirrows, cruise, tilt, AC, dual zone climate cont r o l , C D s t e r e o, i n fo c e n t e r, o n s t a r, d u a l front and side airbags. $12,995. GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com CHEVY: ‘05 Silverado, 1 5 0 0 C r e w C a b LT, 4x4, 5.3L Vortc V8, auto, flowmaster exhaust, lift kit, weld 17”, alloys, good tires, running boards, tow pkg, diamondplate, toolbox, tinted windows, keyless, power windows, locks, mirrors, and seats, cruise, tilt, AC, CD/cass e t t e s t e r e o, b o s e s o u n d , o n s t a r, d u a l front airbags. $17,995 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com
C H E V Y : ‘ 7 6 3 / 4 To n pick-up GREAT ENGINE New 454, carb, battery, radiator, fuel pump, turbo 400, short shaft. Must take entire truck. $2,000/obo. Before 6pm (360)461-6870 CHEVY: Volt, ‘13, Black with premium package. Mint condition with less than 5,800 miles on it! Includes leather seats, navigation, ABS brakes, alloy wheels, automatic temperature control, and much more. Still under warranty! $21,500. Call 360-457-4635
MAZDA: ‘02 Miata, 6 s p e e d , h a r d t o p, n ew brakes, timing belt, coolest car on the Peninsula. $8,500. (360)683-0146. NISSAN: ‘90, Stanza, 4 d o o r, l ow m i l e a g e, needs work. $900. (360)457-4138
FORD: ‘91 Thunderbird TOYOTA: ‘00 Camry. 4 Sport. High output 5 liter Cylinder, 5 speed, 125K V- 8 , Au t o m a t i c, r u n s miles. $4,300. good. $995. 460-0783 (360)477-6573 FORD: ‘92 Thunderbird. Low mileage. $2,000. (360)461-2809 or 4610533
FORD: ‘98 Ranger, Supercab, XLT 2WD, 3.0L V 6 , 5 s p e e d , a l l oy s, new tires, matching canopy, towball, keyless, power windows, C H RY : 3 0 0 C ‘ 0 6 , locks and mirrors, AWD, midnight blue, c r u i s e , t i l t A C , C D good condition, solid. stereo with aux input, $4,995. (360)327-3833 dual front airbags, only 16k miles! $6,995 DODGE: ‘91 Spirit. 3.0 GRAY MOTORS V 6 , AC. R u n s g r e a t . 457-4901 $900. (360)452-1694 graymotors.com evenings.
TOYOTA: ‘00 Celica GT. Beautiful, mechanically perfect, KBB pr ice is $4K with over $4K in professional performance modifications real value $8K-asking $5500/obo . For more information or to view. (360)460-6231.
V W: ‘ 1 3 J e t t a T D I , 4 door, diesel, sunroof, GPS, 75K miles. H O N DA : ‘ 0 6 A c c o r d . $24,000. (320)232-5436 FORD: ‘09 Ranger, Su- C l e a n , l o w m i l e a g e . per Cab, 4x4, 4.0L 6 $10,000 OBO cash. 9434 Pickup Trucks Cyl, auto, alloys, match(360)374-5060 Others ing canopy, bedliner, tow pkg, privacy glass, LINCOLN: ‘99 Naviga4 doors, keyless, power tor, 107K ml. exc. condi- CANOPY: Leer, carpeted head liner, cab light, w i n d o w s , d o o r s a n d tion. $5,500. break light, window locks, MP3 stereo, dual (360)452-3436 s c r e e n , f r o n t w i n d ow front airbags. MINI COOPER: ‘06. 61k slider, dark red. Fits first $17,995 miles, ex. condition, au- generation F350 super GRAY MOTORS duty ‘99-’07 short box. tomatic. $8,500. 457-4901 $900 (360)457-0780. (360)461-0088 graymotors.com
9556 SUVs Others
9730 Vans & Minivans Others
CHEVY: ‘99 Suburban, 4 W D, V 8 , s e a t s 8 . $3,200. (360)808-2061
MERCURY: ‘05 Mountaineer. AWD, V-8, loaded, leather, 3rd row seat, p w r eve r y t h i n g . 1 1 0 k miles. $6,995 obo. DODGE: ‘02 Grand CHEVY: ‘85, 4x4, many (360)452-6458 no calls Caravan. Spor t model, new parts. $1,700. 3.3L V6, red, roof rack, after 8pm. (360)452-4156 or good condition, 186k (360)681-7478. miles, $2,200. 9730 Vans & Minivans (360)928-3761 D O D G E : ‘ 9 7 D a ko t a , Others VW: ‘89 Vanagon Carat. 4x4, V6, 5 spd, 82K ml. Sleeps 2, with table, 7 $2,500. (360)457-4383. CHEVY: ‘94 Van, short seats, extremely clean, FORD: ‘86 F250, 4x4, 4 b a s e 2 0 , M a r k I I I . a u t o , a x l e r e b u i l d . $7,900 obo. 461-3232 speed, with canopy, 6.9 $700/obo. 452-0987 D i e s e l , 8 , 0 0 0 l b wa r n winch, 16’ custom aluminum wheels, exel. tires. 9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices Clallam County Clallam County Clean interior. $6,500 obo (206)795-5943 after No. 15 4 002368 4:30pm weekdays. PROBATE NOTICE TO CREDITORS FORD: ‘94 F-150 Pickup, 4cyl. Excellent tires, IN THE SUPERIOR COURT FOR a l u m i n u m r a ck , r u n s THE STATE OF WASHINGTON good. Perfect work/garIN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF CLALLAM dening truck. $950.00 Estate of ROBERTA LEE NALLEY Deceased. obo. 360-821-9596 The Personal Representative named below has been appointed as Personal Representative of this FORD: ‘97 Diesel 4WD estate. Any person having a claim against the decePower stroke with bed- dent must, before the time the claim would be liner, canopy, new tires, barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limitransmission overhauled taitons, present the claim in the manner as provided $7,900. (360)461-3232 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 9556 SUVs of the claim and filing the original of the claim with Others the court. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) Thirty days after the Personal RepreCHEVY: ‘11 Tahoe, low sentative served or mailed the notice to the creditor miles, new tires / front as provided under RCW 11.40.020(3); or (2) four b r a ke s, 3 r d r ow, t ow months after the date of first publication of the nopackage, power seats, tice. If the claim is not presented within this time navigation system, xm, frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherb a c k u p c a m e r a . wise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. $28,150 KBB. This bar is effective as to claims against both the (360)477-2532 decedent’s probate and nonprobate assets. J E E P : ‘ 9 7 , W ra n g l e r, DATE OF FIRST PUBLICATION: July 14, 2015 Sahara. Low mileage, Personal representative: Craig Allen Nalley r e c e n t e n g i n e w o r k . Attorney for Estate: Some r ust, r uns well. Michael R. Hastings, P.S. R e m o v a b l e t o p a n d Address for Mailing or Service: doors. Must sell. $2900. 718 N. 5th Avenue, Sequim, WA 98382 Telephone: (360) 681-0608 In Sequim. Pub: July 14, 21, 28, 2015 Legal No. 644723 (303)330-4801.
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WeatherBusiness
TUESDAY, JULY 14, 2015 Neah Bay 61/54
g Bellingham 70/56
➡
Olympic Peninsula TODAY Port Townsend 68/54
Port Angeles 67/54
Sequim Olympics 69/54 Freeze level: 10,500 feet Port Ludlow 73/54
Forks 72/54
➡
Aberdeen 69/55
Yesterday
National forecast Nation TODAY
Statistics for the 24-hour period ending at noon yesterday. Hi Lo Rain YTD Port Angeles 71 59 0.07 13.66 Forks 68 57 0.18 39.61 Seattle 79 61 0.00 16.47 Sequim 70 61 0.06 7.78 Hoquiam 70 60 0.00 19.85 Victoria 73 57 0.10 13.75 Port Townsend 76 59 **0.07 8.63
Forecast highs for Monday, July 13
Last
New
First
Sunny
Billings 92° | 62°
San Francisco 70° | 59°
Minneapolis 89° | 67°
Denver 84° | 62°
Chicago 86° | 70°
Los Angeles 77° | 63°
Miami 91° | 77°
Fronts
Low 54 Peninsula under cover
THURSDAY
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
67/54 69/55 69/56 67/54 Sun may make Sun, clouds, Old Sol calls, Sun, clouds share the sky brief appearance showers possibly “Come out”
Marine Conditions
CANADA Victoria 69° | 55° Seattle 72° | 59°
Ocean: W wind 5 to 15 kt becoming NW 10 to 20 kt in the afternoon. Wind waves 1 to 3 ft. Tonight, W wind 15 to 25 kt. Wind waves 2 to 4 ft.
Olympia 76° | 58°
Spokane 82° | 60°
Tacoma 73° | 59° Yakima 82° | 60°
Astoria 69° | 58°
ORE.
Tides
TODAY
© 2015 Wunderground.com
Albany, N.Y. Albuquerque Amarillo Anchorage Asheville Atlanta Atlantic City Austin Baltimore Billings Birmingham Bismarck Boise Boston Brownsville Buffalo
High Tide Ht 12:03 a.m. 8.6’ 1:28 p.m. 6.9’
Low Tide Ht 7:02 a.m. -1.6’ 6:57 p.m. 2.2
Port Angeles
8:17 a.m. -1.4’ 12:46 a.m. 6.6’ 4:04 p.m. 6.8’ 8:43 p.m. 5.4’
1:32 a.m. 6.4’ 4:42 p.m. 7.0’
Port Townsend
2:23 a.m. 8.1’ 5:41 p.m. 8.4’
Dungeness Bay*
1:29 a.m. 7.3’ 4:47 p.m. 7.6’
Hi 87 90 98 72 85 93 85 93 85 88 95 94 88 89 92 83
9:10 p.m. 5:29 a.m. 5:28 a.m. 7:55 p.m.
Lo Prc Otlk 65 Cldy 62 PCldy 70 Clr 57 .05 Cldy 67 Cldy 71 .01 Cldy 66 Cldy 72 Clr 66 Cldy 61 PCldy 76 Clr 62 .08 Cldy 58 Cldy 70 Cldy 81 Clr 64 PCldy
THURSDAY High Tide Ht 12:47 a.m. 8.6’ 2:07 p.m. 7.0’
Low Tide 7:42 a.m. 7:41 p.m.
Ht -1.6’ 2.1’
8:56 a.m. -1.4’ 9:33 p.m. 5.2’
2:18 a.m. 6.2’ 9:34 a.m. 5:17 p.m. 7.0’ 10:20 p.m.
-1.3’ 5.0’
9:30 a.m. -1.6’ 9:56 p.m. 6.0’
3:09 a.m. 7.9’ 10:09 a.m. -1.6’ 6:19 p.m. 8.6’ 10:46 p.m. 5.8’
3:55 a.m. 7.6’ 10:47 a.m. 6:54 p.m. 8.7’ 11:33 p.m.
-1.4’ 5.5’
8:52 a.m. -1.4’ 9:18 p.m. 5.4’
2:15 a.m. 7.1’ 9:31 a.m. -1.4’ 5:25 p.m. 7.7’ 10:08 p.m. 5.2’
3:01 a.m. 6.8’ 10:09 a.m. 6:00 p.m. 7.8’ 10:55 p.m.
-1.3’ 5.0’
*To correct for Sequim Bay, add 15 minutes for high tide, 21 minutes for low tide.
-10s
Burlington, Vt. 89 Casper 90 Charleston, S.C. 92 Charleston, W.Va. 81 Charlotte, N.C. 92 Cheyenne 86 Chicago 83 Cincinnati 87 Cleveland 76 Columbia, S.C. 96 Columbus, Ohio 80 Concord, N.H. 92 Dallas-Ft Worth 96 Dayton 84 Denver 94 Des Moines 93 Detroit 78 Duluth 78 El Paso 98 Evansville 92 Fairbanks 76 Fargo 90 Flagstaff 78 Grand Rapids 83 Great Falls 83 Greensboro, N.C. 88 Hartford Spgfld 89 Helena 84 Honolulu 87 Houston 95 Indianapolis 86 Jackson, Miss. 94 Jacksonville 98 Juneau 63 Kansas City 92 Key West 90 Las Vegas 101 Little Rock 95
-0s
0s
MCCLATCHY NEWS SERIVCE
Summer jobs of past About 150 respondents listed such teen jobs as camp counselor, landscaper, clerk, caddie, campground maintenance, server, pizza cook, secretary, light manufacturing, phlebotomist, library assistant, lab assistant, printer’s devil, construction worker, usher, farmworker, janitor, maid, hospital candy striper and fast-food worker. But that was then. Fifteen years of economic turbulence has profoundly changed opportunities for young workers. First was the “Lost Decade” of the 2000s beginning with a downturn, followed by anemic job growth and winding up with the Great Recession. Second was the weakness of the recovery. According to a 2014 report from the Brookings Institution, “teens aged 16-19 and young adults aged 20-24 have been among the most adversely affected by the constricted labor market.” For some groups, espe-
MCCLATCHY NEWS SERVICE
Young workers box pizzas at a Pagliacci Pizza in Seattle. Adults now often fill jobs at fast-food restaurants rather than teens.
Tech kills jobs Technology has killed many clerical and other positions. No bag boys means higher stock prices and better compensation for top executives. Many other low-skill jobs, especially in manufacturing, have gone offshore. Adults are often found in jobs once filled by teens, such as fast-food workers. More households are wealthier today than 40 years ago (and more are poorer). For teens with means,
they may spend summers preparing for college, traveling or enjoying leisure. Also, school years last longer. However, most teens who want work have a much harder time finding it. For example, the unemployment rate for ages 16 to 19 was 23.2 percent in Washington last year. In 2010, just after the recession, it was more than 34 percent. The situation is especially bleak for those with less education and from poorer families. In 2011, only half of teens not enrolled in postsecondary education and 30 percent of high-school dropouts worked in a given month.
Disadvantages The report states, “On its own, having no more than a high-school diploma is a major employment and earnings disadvantage; the combination of being a high-school dropout or having no more than a highschool diploma and being out of work can be crippling, both for current and future economic self-sufficiency.” Federal funds to support teenage employment have virtually dried up in recent years. Some cities are trying to fill the gap with their own programs, such as the Mayor’s Youth Employment Initiative in Seattle.
Pressure Low
High
20s 30s 40s
50s 60s
70s 80s 90s 100s 110s
Cartography © Weather Underground / The Associated Press
BY JON TALTON
cially the poor and minorities, the results have been disastrous. Overall, teens experienced the greatest employment decline since World War II. The 16- to 19-year-olds’ employment rate fell from 45 percent in 2000 to 26 percent in 2011. In 2014, it stood at 27.3 percent. In Washington, the employment rate of teens fell from nearly 48 percent in 2000 to less than 24 percent in 2011. It mirrored the national level last year. By contrast, national employment among primeage workers, 25 to 54, fell from around 82 percent to 75 percent from 2000 to 2011. A look at the jobs listed above yields some obvious answers.
10s
67 PCldy Los Angeles 50 Clr Louisville 77 Cldy Lubbock 71 .09 Rain Memphis 72 .01 Cldy Miami Beach 61 Cldy Midland-Odessa 68 .29 Rain Milwaukee 67 .14 Rain Mpls-St Paul 64 .45 Rain Nashville 76 PCldy New Orleans 66 2.24 Cldy New York City 64 Cldy Norfolk, Va. 77 Clr North Platte 67 .02 Rain Oklahoma City 63 Cldy Omaha 78 PCldy Orlando 63 .01 Cldy Pendleton 62 .84 Cldy Philadelphia 76 PCldy Phoenix 75 Cldy Pittsburgh 54 .01 Cldy Portland, Maine 67 .08 Rain Portland, Ore. 48 Cldy Providence 64 Rain Raleigh-Durham 51 PCldy Rapid City 71 .09 Cldy Reno 65 Cldy Richmond 58 .01 PCldy Sacramento 80 .07 PCldy St Louis 76 Clr St Petersburg 68 Rain Salt Lake City 76 PCldy San Antonio 73 .04 PCldy San Diego 56 .98 Rain San Francisco 76 PCldy San Juan, P.R. 81 PCldy Santa Fe 80 PCldy St Ste Marie 77 Clr Shreveport
Jobs for teens mean more than money in their pockets I was talking with babyboomer friends last week when the subject of our teenage summer jobs came up. We all wanted to work — had to work — none being scions of wealth. Nor did we need social scientists to tell us that employment was important to learning, becoming adults and getting on the way to being self-sufficient. Jobs meant independence. Jobs could be fun. As important, there was work to be had, even in the 1970s, a decade now remembered for hard economic times. What did we do? Bagged groceries. Clerked. Sold popcorn and candy at the movies. Sold ads for the newspaper. I spent one summer with three college students where we manually took inventory of everything in Arizona’s Scottsdale School District. Yes, from boxes of pencils to desks and chairs, we counted them in a dozen or more schools. I asked the question on Facebook.
Warm Stationary
July 23 July 31
Sunset today Sunrise tomorrow Moonrise tomorrow Moonset today
TOMORROW
Low Tide Ht 6:19 a.m. -1.5’ 6:10 p.m. 2.4’
LaPush
High Tide Ht 12:45 p.m. 6.7’
July 15
Nation/World
Washington TODAY
Strait of Juan de Fuca: W wind 5 to 15 kt becoming NW 10 to 20 kt. Wind waves 1 to 3 ft. Tonight, W wind 15 to 25 kt. Wind waves 2 to 4 ft.
Aug. 6
But these can’t make up for a national approach and resources. Brookings makes several recommendations. Among them are: ■ Expand apprenticeships. ■ Integrate work-based learning programs in high schools and colleges. ■ Better connect highschool students to postsecondary education credentials. ■ Increase emphasis on technical and career education, career counseling and job placement. Another idea that can especially aid older teens and young adults is to focus education and training on the needs of the regional labor market. Washington’s Centers of Excellence is cited for targeting such sectors as allied health, information technology and manufacturing with community-college programs. I moved into a job with adult responsibilities almost immediately after graduating from high school. But I succeeded in it and future work in no small measure from the skills, habits and ethos I developed by working every summer during high school. Fewer teenagers have that opportunity. As it stands, we’re watching as a generation is lost in an economy that is ever more fickle about creating jobs.
à 111 in Death Valley, Calif. Ä 37 in Truckee, Calif.
Atlanta 94° | 73°
El Paso 99° | 70° Houston 97° | 75°
Full
New York 83° | 71°
Detroit 81° | 63°
Washington D.C. 81° | 70°
Cartography C artogra artography t phy by y Keith Keith ith Thorpe Th horp / © Peninsula Daily News h
WEDNESDAY
Cloudy
TEMPERATURE EXTREMES for the contiguous United States:
Cold
TONIGHT
Pt. Cloudy
The Lower 48
Seattle 72° | 59°
Almanac
Brinnon 72/55
OUTDOOR BURN BAN IN EFFECT PENINSULA-WIDE
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
81 91 93 94 92 98 77 89 92 95 89 82 96 93 95 96 84 90 106 80 90 83 88 86 95 82 85 86 96 87 91 94 76 74 84 88 83 96
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
92 65 Clr 65 Clr Sioux Falls 77 .36 Rain Syracuse 84 63 Cldy 69 Clr Tampa 88 77 PCldy 79 PCldy Topeka 93 76 PCldy 79 PCldy Tucson 103 77 .02 Cldy 73 Clr Tulsa 95 79 Clr 65 .37 Rain Washington, D.C. 88 74 Cldy 66 1.89 PCldy Wichita 95 75 Clr 74 .02 PCldy Wilkes-Barre 86 64 PCldy 78 PCldy Wilmington, Del. 87 69 Cldy 74 PCldy _______ 73 Rain 61 Cldy Hi Lo Otlk 72 Clr 58 51 Wind/Rain 78 PCldy Auckland Beijing 90 70 Cldy 74 Cldy 70 58 Sh 63 Cldy Berlin 75 61 Sh 72 Cldy Brussels 96 74 Clr 89 Clr Cairo Calgary 71 51 Ts 66 .03 Cldy 80 58 Ts 65 Cldy Guadalajara 92 79 Rain 63 .03 Cldy Hong Kong 87 67 Clr 68 Cldy Jerusalem 67 42 Wind/Clr 71 .55 Cldy Johannesburg Kabul 96 68 Clr 56 .01 Clr 74 62 Sh 60 Clr London 77 55 PCldy 69 Rain Mexico City 85 58 Ts 62 Clr Montreal 67 51 Sh 80 PCldy Moscow 94 82 PCldy 79 .19 PCldy New Delhi 79 59 PCldy 71 Clr Paris Clr 77 Clr Rio de Janeiro 83 68 93 70 Clr 66 Cldy Rome Ts 63 Cldy San Jose, CRica 80 68 60 44 PCldy 76 .39 Cldy Sydney 87 74 Sh 55 .24 PCldy Tokyo 75 59 Ts 63 Cldy Toronto 76 Clr Vancouver 71 56 PCldy
$ Briefly . . . Electric car tax break is extended OLYMPIA — Lawmakers have extended a sales tax break on electric vehicle purchases to 2019 with some changes. The state Department of Revenue said the exemption applies to sales of cars, light duty trucks and other vehicles powered by electricity, natural gas, hydrogen or other alternative fuels. The exemption will also cover plug-in hybrids that can travel at least 30 miles on battery power alone. But the tax break is now limited to sales of $35,000 or less, after some questioned whether the state should subsidize purchases for consumers who could afford more expensive electric vehicles. Used vehicles will no longer qualify under the new break. The previous sales tax break expired July 1. Washington records show there were nearly 12,000 registered electric cars by the end of last year.
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Market watch July 13, 2015
Dow Jones industrials
17,977.68
Nasdaq composite
5,071.51
Standard & Poor’s 500
2,099.60
+217.27
Russell 2000
+73.82
+22.98
+13.33 1,265.35
NYSE diary Advanced: Declined: Unchanged: Volume:
2,291 838 120 3.0 b
Nasdaq diary Advanced: Declined: Unchanged: Volume:
1,998 802 133 1.6 b
AP
more time using tablets and phones for entertainment. The new service, called Stream, will be available to Comcast Internet customers and cost $15 a month. It will include only broadcast networks like FOX and NBC in addition to HBO, but no cable channels like AMC or TNT. Comcast’s service, which is only for its customers, Windows 10 follows the launch earlier REDMOND — Micro- this year of Dish Network’s soft will launch Windows nationwide Internet TV service, Sling TV, which 10 on July 29. The upgraded operat- sells for $20 a month and includes cable channels ing system will allow like ESPN, AMC and Food users to switch seamNetwork. lessly between personal Comcast Corp. said computers, tablets, Monday that it will launch smartphones and other the service in Boston at the gadgets. end of the summer, folWindows 10 is lowed by Chicago and Seatintended to give apps a similar feel on all devices tle. It plans to make it and comes with a new available to all its Internet Web browser integrated service customers by early with Cortana, the com2016. pany’s voice-activated The service comes with answer to Apple’s Siri. limitations. Customers can Microsoft Corp. said watch live TV through Monday that Windows 10 will be available as a Stream at home, but there are rights restrictions for a free upgrade for a limlot of live content if they ited time for anyone watch on a phone outside whose devices use Winthe home network. dows 8/8.1 or 7, which are previous versions of the software. Gold and silver Gold for August shed Streaming service $2.50, or 0.2 percent, to NEW YORK — Com- settle at $1,155.40 an ounce Monday. cast, the country’s largSeptember silver slid est cable company, is down by 2.4 cents, or offering its own online video alternative as peo- 0.2 percent, to $15.457 an ounce. ple spend fewer hours watching live TV and The Associated Press