Monday
Stymied by the starter
Some clouds on West End; sun elsewhere B10
Sprint boat win eludes PA team with tech woes B1
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS August 24, 2015 | 75¢
Port Angeles-Sequim-West End
Seminar to detail rise of oceans
PA arts center’s top post to be cut Director’s position to be eliminated, along with funding BY DIANE URBANI
DE LA
Peninsula impact is topic Thursday
PAZ
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — The city will eliminate the Port Angeles Fine Arts Center’s director position at the end of the year, according to city Parks and Recreation director Corey Delikat. Director Robin Anderson, who Delikat said last week is at the top end of the salary range — earning $66,000 annually — will depart after three years in the position. “I’ve got until Jan. 1,” Anderson said, adding that she’s “actively looking for work.” The city will also phase out its $27,500 annual contribution to the fine arts center’s budget, Delikat said. This will happen over three years, starting in 2016. Anderson succeeded longtime director and curator Jake Seniuk at the fine arts center, which will mark its 30th anniversary next year. The gallery and surrounding Webster’s Woods art park at 1203 E. Lauridsen Blvd. were bequeathed to the city of Port Angeles by Esther Webster, an artist and the wife of Charles Webster, publisher of Peninsula Daily News predecessor the Port Angeles Evening News. The city has managed it since, though the fine arts center maintains its own budget with fundraisers, donations, art sales and money from the Webster trust.
BY CHRIS MCDANIEL PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
DIANE URBANI
DE LA
PAZ/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Port Angeles Fine Arts Center foundation president Phillis Olson speaks at the entrance to Webster’s Woods, where the “Spirit” sculpture behind her was dedicated Friday.
Center foundation president Phillis Olson said the center will roll with the changes. Its annual budget is about $130,000, Olson said; most of that comes from the Webster trust and from the center’s own fundraising efforts. ‘Middle man’ “We will be applying for numerous grants starting next year,” she said, Delikat said he was “like a middle adding that she looks forward to being man” handling the center’s funds. Back in March, the Port Angeles City independent from the city. “With financial reorganization, we Council held a priority-setting session will do very well,” said Olson. in which members decided its fine arts The foundation president believes center funding is a non-essential cost, that this place could do and be even said Mayor Dan Di Guilio. With police and fire funding consid- more than it has been over the past three decades. ered indispensable, the art museum To move through the transition, and park fell to “the bottom of the list,” board member Anne Dalton said an ad he added. hoc committee has been set up. Meantime, Port Angeles Fine Arts
SEQUIM — Port Townsend faces the possibility of more flooding by 2030 while Port Angeles and Neah Bay are so far keeping pace with sea level rise, but that could change within the next 85 years, according to a climate change study that will be discussed at a free seminar this week. Ian Miller, a coastal hazards specialist with Washington Sea Grant, and Cindy Jayne of the North Olympic Development Council, will discuss the impacts of sea level rising over the next several decades on communities on the North Olympic Peninsula at the Thursday seminar. The preliminary results of the nearly completed study will be presented from 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. at the Dungeness River Audubon Center, 2151 W. Hendrickson Road, Sequim.
Washington Sea Grant
“There are many things we could do … we could have some kind of administrator,” she said. “We could have an interim director. At this point, we don’t know. We need to meet.” No date is set for such a meeting, said Olson.
The climate change vulnerability assessment and adaptation planning study is being conducted by Washington Sea Grant, an extension of the University of Washington. During the seminar, Miller will speak about sea level rise, ocean acidification, marine debris, tsunamis, beach erosion, Washington coastal ecology, coastal sediment transport and geomorphology — the study of the physical features of the surface of the earth and their relation to its geological structures.
Upcoming events Anderson and the fine arts center’s board have been busy, she said, planning for Paint the Peninsula, a plein air painting festival and show Sept. 7-13, and hosting another major happening: two weekends of Shakespeare in Webster’s Woods. TURN
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Rates to accelerate The assessment suggests “that rates of sea level rise are almost certain to accelerate in the coming decades and that sea level rise will almost certainly lead to shoreline impacts for all three communities by 2100, and probably much sooner — especially for Port Townsend and Port Angeles,” Miller said. TURN
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Rapid rise, decline of bacteria a mystery Spike, drop at Cline Spit puzzles BY CHRIS MCDANIEL PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
SEQUIM — A Clallam County environmental health official is mystified by the sudden rise and fall of bacteria in the water off Cline Spit Beach. Cline Spit, located on Dungeness Bay north of Sequim, was closed to swimming and wading Aug. 14 because of high levels of enterococcus bacteria, which is found in the feces of warm-blooded creatures, including humans. The beach was reopened for recreation Friday after results of
tests on samples taken Wednesday arrived. Bacteria levels reached as high as 19,863 per 100 milliliters at one site Aug. 17, then fell to less than 10 bacteria per 100 milliliters of water by Wednesday. The Environmental Protection Agency and Washington BEACH program’s threshold level for automatic closure is an average of 276 bacteria per 100 of milliliters of water. “If you get to 276, then you have to close the beach,” said Carol Creasey of the Clallam
County Health and Human Services Environmental Health Section. If levels subsequently fall below 104 bacteria per 100 milliliters of water, the beach may be reopened. The origin of the bacteria discovered this month is unknown, Creasey said. The park receives drainage from nearby farms and homes served by septic systems. The reason for the bacteria’s rapid dissolution also is unknown, Creasey said. It is possible the bacteria “either got diluted or flushed out” by seawater currents, “or some
type of combination. It is a real ters, site B had 4,106 per 100 milliliters and site C had 17,329 per puzzle,” she said. More samples will be collected 100 milliliters. “That is very large,” Creasey for study today. said. How much bacteria? “That is the highest I have seen since I have been here.” The Aug. 14 closure came after She said the beach, which a sample taken Aug. 11 showed incorporates about 240 feet of the presence of 1,014 bacteria per tidelands a half-mile west of 100 milliliters of water. Dungeness Landing County Park, The largest concentration of saw a maximum of just 52 bactebacteria was discovered in sam- ria per 100 milliliters of seawater ples taken Aug. 17 at three sepa- in the entirety of 2014. rate sites. The closure did not affect fish“We sample at three locations, ing or crabbing, although people and all those values were high,” were advised to avoid contact Creasey said. with the water. Creasey noted that on Aug. 17, TURN TO CLINE/A8 site A had 19,863 per 100 millili-
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The Associated Press
Newsmakers Celebrity scoop ■ By The Associated Press
Rapper Dre to women he’s hurt: Sorry DR. DRE HAS issued a statement to the New York Times apologizing to “the women I’ve hurt” without specifically acknowledging the reason for the apology. The 50-year-old music mogul said in comments published Friday on the New York Times web- Dr. Dre site that he “deeply regret(s) what I did and know that it has forever impacted all of our lives.” Dre pleaded no contest to criminal battery charges following allegations he violently attacked journalist Dee Barnes in 1991. Barnes published a story online this week about the assault. Other women, including Dre’s former girlfriend Michel’le, have also claimed he was violent toward them. Attention on the decades-old charges resurfaced after last week’s release of the hit biopic “Straight Outta Compton,” which omits mention of the Barnes incident or any
SOLUTION TO SUNDAY’S PUZZLE
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
JARREAU
AT JAZZ FESTIVAL
Al Jarreau performs during Alexander Zonjic’s Shoreline Jazz Festival at Heritage Landing in Muskegon, Mich., on Saturday. allegations of violence against Dre.
Fox, Green split Actress Megan Fox has filed for divorce from actor Brian Austin Green after five years of marriage. The “Transformers” star cited irreconcilable differences for the breakup. The pair has two sons together, and the 29-yearold actress is seeking joint custody. Fox and Green began dating in 2004 and married in 2010. She listed June 15 as
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS PENINSULA POLL Fox
Green
their date of separation, and her filing indicates they do not have a prenuptial agreement. The 42-year-old Green starred on the television series “Beverly Hills, 90210” and appeared on the FX series “Anger Management.”
Yes No Undecided
86.4% 8.8% 4.7% Total votes cast: 803
Passings
Vote on today’s question at www.peninsuladailynews.com
By The Associated Press
SASHA PETRASKE, 42, who helped restore lost luster to the venerable cocktail as the founder of the New York cocktail bar Milk & Honey and other polished drinking spots around the world, was found dead Friday morning at his home in Hudson, N.Y. His wife, Georgette Moger, said he had died overnight. The cause had not been deterMr. Petraske mined, she said. Mr. Petraske’s role in the modern cocktail revival is difficult to overstate. The opening of Milk & Honey in 1999, in a narrow space on a dark, little populated block of the Lower East Side, has been called instrumental in the revival of cocktail culture across the United States and beyond. Though unmarked and unadvertised, Milk & Honey became a phenomenon, known for its unapologetic dedication to expertly crafted, pre-Prohibition era cocktails, not to mention its eccentric reservation system and exacting rules of decorum. Mr. Petraske went on to open similarly urbane and serious-minded bars with a number of partners, many
FRIDAY/SATURDAY QUESTION: Do you think federal workers who used Internet connections in their offices to access the cheating website Ashley Madison have opened themselves up to blackmail?
of them former Milk & Honey bartenders. These included Little Branch in Greenwich Village; Dutch Kills in Long Island City, Queens; Middle Branch in Midtown Manhattan; the Varnish in Los Angeles; and the Everleigh in Melbourne, Australia. Mr. Petraske also opened a roomier version of Milk & Honey in London with Jonathan Downey, a British entrepreneur. Mr. Petraske’s influence can be seen in myriad details now common to cocktail bars around the world, including hidden entrances, a focus on classic cocktails and a formal attire adopted by bartenders.
the Curt Hugo Reisinger professor of Slavic languages and literatures and comparative litera- Dr. Boym ture. An essayist, photographer, novelist and playwright as well as the author of myriad scholarly articles, Dr. Boym was best known to a general readership for The Future of Nostalgia, her widely praised book of 2001. In that work, which ranges meditatively over philosophy, history, art, literature and the experience of displaced persons, she explored the web of memory and mythologizing that underpins the human longing for vanished worlds. Her preoccupation with the subject was rooted partly in her own history as a Jewish émigré from the former Soviet Union.
NOTE: The Peninsula Poll is unscientific and reflects the opinions of only those peninsuladailynews.com users who chose to participate. The results cannot be assumed to represent the opinions of all users or the public as a whole.
Setting it Straight Corrections and clarifications The Peninsula Daily News strives at all times for accuracy and fairness in articles, headlines and photographs. To correct an error or to clarify a news story, phone Executive Editor Leah Leach at 360-4173530 or email leah.leach@peninsuladailynews.com.
Peninsula Lookback From the pages of the PENINSULA DAILY NEWS and Port Angeles Evening News
1940 (75 years ago)
1990 (25 years ago)
Tougher federal restrictions on exporting logs felled in Washington’s public forests could divert an estimated 350 million board feet of timber to _______ domestic mills next year, SVETLANA BOYM, authorities said Thursday. 56, a scholar and artist That’s enough timber to whose work illuminated keep two or three mediumthe haunting, quicksilver sized sawmills running for counterpoint of myth, one year, according to memory and identity, died industry usage estimates. Aug. 5 in Boston. But slackening demand 1965 (50 years ago) Her death, from cancer, in lumber and plywood Pacific Northwest Bell was announced by Harvard markets may keep mills ad: University, where she was from fully realizing the Picture of lady who was expected benefits of the Laugh Lines seven minutes along on new restrictions, according Seen Around eight-minute frosting when to one Tacoma-based trade NEW RESEARCH Peninsula snapshots FOUND that couples who good old Aunt Emma association. publicly share things about decided to call up for a The restrictions, signed WANTED! “Seen Around” their relationship on Face- chat. items recalling things seen on the into law Monday by PresiNorth Olympic Peninsula. Send book are more committed (Do you smell something dent Bush, are designed to them to PDN News Desk, P.O. Box to each other. burning?) offset lower logging levels 1330, Port Angeles WA 98362; fax Of course, they have to Picture of what it costs as the government moves 360-417-3521; or email news@ be because nobody else will to have a kitchen extension to protect old-growth forpeninsuladailynews.com. Be sure talk to them. you mention where you saw your phone. ests and the northern spot“Seen Around.” Seth Meyers ($1.25 a month.) ted owl. Prize list for the Port Angeles Salmon Club’s seventh annual Salmon Derby (included in the Evening News’ special edition): ■ Grand prize: 1940 Oldsmobile six four-door touring sedan. ■ Second prize: Chevrolet “85” standard town sedan. ■ Third prize: Ford “85” V-8 business coupe.
Looking Back From the files of The Associated Press
TODAY IS MONDAY, Aug. 24, the 236th day of 2015. There are 129 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: ■ On Aug. 24, A.D. 79, longdormant Mount Vesuvius erupted, burying the Roman cities of Pompeii and Herculaneum in volcanic ash; an estimated 20,000 people died. On this date: ■ In 1572, the St. Bartholomew’s Day massacre of French Protestants at the hands of Catholics began in Paris. ■ In 1814, during the War of 1812, British forces invaded Washington, D.C., setting fire to the Capitol, which was still under construction, and the White House, as
well as other public buildings. ■ In 1821, the Treaty of Cordoba was signed, granting independence to Mexico from Spanish rule. ■ In 1912, Congress passed a measure creating the Alaska Territory. Congress approved legislation establishing Parcel Post delivery by the U.S. Post Office Department, slated to begin Jan. 1, 1913. ■ In 1932, Amelia Earhart embarked on a 19-hour flight from Los Angeles to Newark, N.J., making her the first woman to fly solo, nonstop, from coast to coast. ■ In 1954, President Dwight D. Eisenhower signed the Communist Control Act, outlawing the Communist Party in the
United States. ■ In 1970, an explosives-laden van left by anti-war extremists blew up outside the University of Wisconsin’s Sterling Hall in Madison, killing 33-year-old researcher Robert Fassnacht. ■ In 1989, Baseball Commissioner A. Bartlett Giamatti banned Pete Rose from the game for betting on his own team, the Cincinnati Reds. ■ In 1992, Hurricane Andrew smashed into Florida, causing $30 billion in damage; 43 U.S. deaths were blamed on the storm. ■ In 2006, the International Astronomical Union declared that Pluto was no longer a planet, demoting it to the status of a
“dwarf planet.” ■ Ten years ago: Tropical Depression 12 strengthened into Tropical Storm Katrina over the central Bahamas. ■ Five years ago: A Chinese passenger jet broke apart and burst into flames as it hit the runway, killing 42 people and injuring 54 others. A suicide bomber and gunmen attacked a hotel near Somalia’s presidential palace; at least 32 people were killed, along with two militants. ■ One year ago: A magnitude-6.0 earthquake struck Northern California, causing extensive damage in Napa and the surrounding area.
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Monday, August 24, 2015 P A G E
A3 Briefly: Nation Reid: He will support Obama’s Iran nuke deal WASHINGTON — Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid on Sunday threw his full support behind President Barack Obama’s nuclear agreement with Iran, saying “it is the best path to stop Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon. “I strongly support the historic agreement and will do everything in my power to ensure that it stands,” said Reid, D-Nev., in a news Reid release. Reid is the 27th Senate Democrat to back the deal and the highest ranking in the Senate. His support will make it difficult for opponents to muster the veto-proof numbers needed in the Senate, and therefore, in Congress to scuttle the agreement. In the Senate, only two Democrats — Chuck Schumer and Robert Menendez of New Jersey — have announced opposition to the deal.
panda mom Mei Xiang, they have a template to follow that gives the cubs a strong chance of survival. Pandas won’t usually nurse twins if left to their own devices. They’ll care for one and allow the other to die. But in the past decade, Chinese breeders have come up with a system: Every several hours, they swap out the cubs, giving each one the critical time it needs to nurse and bond with its mother. Meanwhile, the other one is kept in an incubator. Panda keepers at the Smithsonian’s National Zoo will continue performing these delicate swaps as long as it’s needed and as long as Mei Xiang lets them. By late Sunday afternoon, the twins had traded places three times without incident, with Mei Xiang cradling them in turn.
Trooper shot in head
LAKE CHARLES, La. — Louisiana State Police say a trooper was shot in the head and critically injured when he tried to stop a driver suspected of being drunk or drugged in southwest Louisiana. A message from the head of state police on the department’s Facebook page says other drivers stopped the alleged gunman and helped the officer until Twin pandas’ chances paramedics arrived Sunday. Capt. Doug Cain confirms WASHINGTON — In more that the officer was shot in the than three decades of trying to head. breed pandas at the National Col. Mike Edmonson, head of Zoo, there’s been plenty of heartstate police, said the trooper’s break. name and status will be More cubs born in Washingreleased as the investigation ton have died than survived, continues. He asked for prayers and news of a birth has often and well-wishes for the officer been greeted warily. and his family. But on Sunday, zoo officials The Facebook message’s subwere nearly giddy. ject line read “Trooper Critically They don’t just have an Injured — Prayers Needed.” apparently healthy pair of twins, born Saturday night to The Associated Press
Activists: ISIS razes 2,000-year-old temple grounds, the blast so powerful it also damaged some of the Roman columns around it. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said Sunday night that the temple was blown up a month ago. Turkey-based activist Osama al-Khatib, who is originally from BY BASSEM MROUE Palmyra, said the temple was THE ASSOCIATED PRESS blown up Sunday. Both said the extremists used BEIRUT — Islamic State militants have destroyed a temple at a large amount of explosives to Syria’s ancient ruins of Palmyra, destroy it. activists said Sunday, realizing the worst fears archaeologists had Contradictory information for the 2,000-year-old Roman-era Both activists relied on inforcity after the extremists seized it mation from those still in Paland beheaded a local scholar. myra, and the discrepancy in Palmyra, one of the Middle their accounts could not be immeEast’s most spectacular archaeo- diately reconciled, though such logical sites and a UNESCO World contradictory information is comHeritage site, sits near the mod- mon in Syria’s long civil war. ern Syrian city of the same name. The fate of the nearby Temple Activists said the militants of Bel, dedicated to the Semitic used explosives to blow up the god Bel, was not immediately Baalshamin Temple on its known.
Syrian ruins were World Heritage site
Islamic State group supporters on social media also did not immediately mention the temple’s destruction. The Sunni extremists, who have imposed a violent interpretation of Islamic law across their self-declared “caliphate” in territory they control in Syria and Iraq, claim ancient relics promote idolatry and say they are destroying them as part of their purge of paganism. However, they are also believed to sell off looted antiquities, bringing in significant sums of cash. Al-Khatib said the Baalshamin Temple is about 550 yards from Palmyra’s famous amphitheater where the group killed more than 20 Syrian soldiers after they captured the historic town in May. The temple dates to the first century and is dedicated to the Phoenician god of storms and fertilizing rains.
Briefly: World Korea talks resume amid troop moves PYONGYANG, North Korea — Senior officials from North and South Korea on Sunday were in their second day of marathon talks meant to pull the rivals back from the brink, even amid reports of unusual North Korean troop and submarine movement that Seoul said indicated continued battle preparation. While it was not clear whether any progress was made during the first round of talks, which started Saturday evening and finished just before dawn Sunday, the second day of diplomacy pushed aside the heated warnings of imminent war. These are the highest-level talks between the two Koreas in a year. The length of the first round of talks — nearly 10 hours — and the lack of immediate progress are not unusual.
UN chief in Nigeria ABUJA, Nigeria — U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon arrived in Nigeria on Sunday to commemorate the Boko Haram bombing of his organization’s headquarters and focus new
attention on 219 schoolgirls held by the extremists. Ban will meet with Nigeria’s new president, Muhammadu Buhari, today Ban amid plans to launch a long-delayed regional offensive against the West African country’s Islamic insurgents. Ban also is scheduled to meet the Bring Back Our Girls group, which demands government action to free 219 abducted schoolgirls held now for nearly 500 days, according to the group.
British hostage freed DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — The United Arab Emirates said Sunday that its military freed a British hostage who was kidnapped 18 months ago by al-Qaida in Yemen, which has expanded its reach amid fighting between Shiite rebels and their opponents. A statement carried by the UAE’s official WAM news agency identified the British hostage as Robert Douglas Semple, after initially referring to him as Douglas Robert Semple. The Associated Press
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
TRAVEL
IN THE TIME OF MONSOONS
Bangladesh bicycle rickshaw drivers pedal under heavy rain in Dhaka, Bangladesh, on Sunday. Bangladesh receives its monsoon rains from June to October. Bangladesh will soon enter its cool, dry winter months.
U.S. airman: Train attacker was ‘ready to fight to end’ BY ELAINE GANLEY MAGGY DONALDSON
AND
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
PARIS — Three American travelers say they relied on gut instinct and a close bond forged over years of friendship as they took down a heavily armed man on a passenger train speeding through Belgium. U.S. Airman Spencer Stone, recounting for the first time Sunday how a likely catastrophe was averted two days earlier, said the gunman, an assault rifle strapped to his bare chest, seemed like he was “ready to fight to the end.” But he added, “So were we.” Without a note of bravado but
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a huge dose of humility, the three described Friday’s drama on an Amsterdam-to-Paris fast train. His arm in a sling, Stone, 23, said he was coming out of a deep sleep when the gunman appeared. One of his friends, Alek Skarlatos, a 22-year-old National Guardsman recently back from Afghanistan, “just hit me on the shoulder and said, ‘Let’s go.’”
Legion of Honor French President Francois Hollande and a bevy of officials are presenting the Americans with the prestigious Legion of Honor today. A French citizen who first
came across the gunman near a train bathroom and a British man who joined to help tie up the assailant also are being honored with the award, according to the president’s office. The gunman, identified as 26-year-old Moroccan Ayoub ElKhazzani, is detained and being questioned by French counterterrorism police outside Paris. French and Spanish authorities said El-Khazzani is an Islamic extremist who may have spent time in Syria. El-Khazzani’s lawyer said Sunday that he was homeless and trying to rob passengers on the train to feed himself.
. . . more news to start your day
Nation: NYC joins 60 cities in topless parade
Nation: ‘Compton’ keeps seat at top of box office
World: Thousands of migrants close in on EU
World: Dozens hurt in 2nd day of Beirut trash protests
BROADWAY PUT ON a very different kind of matinee Sunday: dozens of bare-chested women and men parading down the Great White Way to Times Square. The GoTopless Pride Parade took to the streets of midtown Manhattan to counter critics complaining about topless tip-seekers in Times Square. Appearing topless has been legal in New York since 1992. But Mayor Bill de Blasio and police Commissioner Bill Bratton say the bodypainted women in the square who take photos with tourists are a nuisance. The mayor suggested doing away with the pedestrian plaza.
“STRAIGHT OUTTA COMPTON” easily maintained its box-office lead with an estimated $26.8 million in ticket sales over a sleepy late summer weekend at North American multiplexes, according to studio estimates Sunday. Universal’s NWA biopic, a much buzzed-about hit, dominated over the late August releases that often characterize Hollywood’s dog days of summer. It has now made $111.5 million in two weeks and continued to drive moviegoers, both male and female, despite renewed charges of misogyny in NWA lyrics and the film overlooking claims of Dr. Dre’s abuse of women.
THOUSANDS OF BELEAGUERED migrants — mostly Syrians, Iraqis and Afghans fleeing bloody conflicts — crammed into trains and buses in Macedonia that brought them one step closer to the European Union on Sunday, a day after they stormed past police trying to block them from entering from Greece. On Saturday, about 2,000 rainsoaked migrants rushed past batonwielding Macedonian officers, who had been sealing the border for three days. Police fired stun grenades, and dozens of people were injured as the migrants leapt over barbed wire or ran across a field not protected by the fence.
LEBANESE RIOT POLICE battled in the streets of downtown Beirut for a second night Sunday after demonstrators rallied over government corruption and an ongoing trash crisis, violence that wounded at least 44 people and 30 police officers, authorities said. The violence came hours after Prime Minister Tammam Salam hinted he might step down after violent protests Saturday injured more than 100. The demonstrations, the largest in years, seek to upend what protesters see as a corrupt and dysfunctional political system that has no functional Cabinet or parliament, nor a president for more than a year.
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WA residents snap up U.S. State Silver Bars First strike WA State Silver Bars sealed away in only existing Vault Bricks now being handed over to Washington residents WASHINGTON – You wish you could have found these heavy bars of solid silver buried in grandpa’s old coffee cans. But thanks to an extended deadline put in place, U.S. State Silver Bars each weighing a full Troy ounce of solid .999 pure fine silver sealed away in heavy Vault Bricks are being handed over free for the next 3 days to every Washington resident. This is not a misprint. U.S. State Silver Bars are being given away free to Washington residents who beat the order deadline for the sealed Vault Bricks containing six U.S. State Silver Bars each weighing a full Troy ounce of solid .999 pure fine silver and the United States Commemorative Gallery is giving up the remaining five U.S. State Silver Bars for just $ 57 each, that’s over one hundred and eighty-six grams of solid .999 pure fine silver. Just a few weeks ago, nobody knew that these valuable U.S. State Silver Bars locked away in the private vaults of the Lincoln Treasury would be allocated to the U.S. Commemorative Gallery for a limited release to Washington residents. These Silver Bars bearing the State of Washington double forged proclamation are now the talk of the town and that's why everyone's trying to get them. “As Executive Advisor to the Lincoln Treasury, I get paid to know when there's precious metal to be had. So when I was informed that these solid U.S. State Silver Bars had finally surfaced and thousands are actually being handed over free to residents of the state of Washington who beat the order deadline, I pushed for this announcement to be widely advertised. “These heavy bars are solid .999 pure fine silver and will always be a valuable precious metal which is why everyone is snapping up as many as they can before they're all gone,” said Mary Ellen Withrow, the now retired 40th Treasurer of the United States of America. The former Treasurer wants to make one thing very clear. Washington residents only have three days to call the Toll Free order Hotlines to get the U.S. State Silver Bars for free. “Pride runs deep in Washington and we know residents can't wait to get their hands on these heavy Silver Bars bearing the state of Washington double forged proclamation, but we’ve never seen anything like this before. The phone lines are ringing off the hook,” said Timothy J. Shissler, Executive Director of Vault Operations at the private Lincoln Treasury. These valuable U.S. State Silver Bars are impossible to get at banks, credit unions or the Government since they do not mint silver bars. In fact, they're only being handed over to residents of the state of Washington who call the
“With a free U.S. State Silver Bar being given away free to Washington residents who beat the order deadline for the sealed Vault Bricks containing a total of six U.S. State Silver Bars, nearly everyone calling is taking three and four at a time before the order deadline ends because these solid .999 pure silver State Bars struck by the Lincoln Treasury are the only known to exist.” –Mary Ellen Withrow, retired 40th Treasurer of the United States of America
N LOADED WITH FREE U.S. STATE SILVER BARS: These heavy State of Washington Vault Bricks contain the only existing U.S. State Silver Bars bearing the State of Washington double forged proclamation. Each sealed Vault Brick contains six U.S. State Silver Bars, each bar weighing a full Troy ounce of solid .999 pure fine silver. All Washington residents taking the Vault Bricks are getting one U.S. State Silver Bar free and the U.S. Commemorative Gallery is giving up the remaining five U.S. State Silver Bars for just $57 each, that's over one hundred and eighty-six grams of solid .999 pure fine silver. No free U.S. State Silver Bars will be given away to non Washington residents. Toll Free Hotline before the deadline ends three days from today's publication date. “All the heavy Silver Bars in the State of Washington Vault Bricks will soon be gone because it would be foolish for anyone to pay for a single silver bar. So Washington residents better hurry and call right now to get the sealed Vault Bricks loaded with a free U.S. State Silver Bar,” said Shissler. “These heavy Vault Bricks loaded with over one hundred and eighty-six grams of solid .999 pure fine silver are being released until our last remaining U.S. State Silver Bars are completely gone,” Shissler said. To make it fair, special Toll Free Overflow Hotlines have been set up to ensure all residents have an equal chance to get them. Rapid shipments to Washington residents are scheduled to begin with the first calls being accepted at precisely 8:30am today. “We’re bracing for all the calls and doing everything we can to make sure no one gets left out, but the U.S. State Silver Bars are only being given away free for the next three days or until they’re all gone, whichever comes first. For now, residents can claim the U.S. State Silver Bars free just as long as they call before the order deadline ends,” confirmed Shissler. “Thousands of Washington residents are expected to call because it just doesn't make any sense to let non Washington residents get these heavy Silver Bars before Washington residents do. So if lines are busy keep trying, all calls will be answered,” said Shissler. N
WASHINGTON RESIDENTS: GET U.S. STATE SILVER BAR FREE call
1-888-251-7536 Ext.SWA101 beginning at 8:30am 1. if all lines are busy call this special toll free overflow hotline: 1-800-495-5615 Ext.SWA101
2. if you are a resident of the state of Washington call now to claim a u.s. state silver bar free. all Washington residents taking the vault bricks are getting a u.s. state silver bar free and the U.S. Commemorative Gallery is giving up the remaining five u.s. state silver bars for just $57 each, that's over one hundred and eighty-six grams of solid .999 pure fine silver all for just two hundred eighty-five dollars and that's a real steal because non Washington residents must pay over eight hundred dollars for the state of Washington vault bricks. just be sure to call the toll free hotline before the deadline ends three days from today's publication date.
NON WASHINGTON RESIDENTS: MUST REMIT $134 PER STATE SILVER BAR 1. no free u.s. state silver bars will be issued to non Washington residents 2. call the non Washington resident toll free hotline beginning at 11:00am at:1-800-680-1164 Ext.SWA101 3. use this code to remit your payment: SWA101 4. if you are a u.s. resident living outside of the state of Washington you are required to pay $134 for each Washington state silver bar for a total of eight hundred four dollars and s&h for each sealed state of Washington vault brick loaded with six u.s. state silver bars. UNITED STATES COMMEMORATIVE GALLERY INC. AND LINCOLN TREASURY, LLC ARE NOT AFFILIATED WITH THE U.S. GOVERNMENT, A BANK OR ANY GOVERNMENT AGENCY. IF FOR ANY REASON WITHIN 30 DAYS YOU ARE DISSATISFIED, RETURN THE PRODUCT FOR A REFUND LESS SHIPPING AND RETURN POSTAGE. REFUNDS WILL BE ISSUED ON PROMOTIONAL OFFERS UPON THE RETURN OF ANY FREE PRODUCTS INCLUDED. DUE TO THE FLUCTUATING PRICE IN THE WORLD GOLD AND SILVER TRADES, PRICES ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE. U.S. COMMEMORATIVE GALLERY 7800 WHIPPLE AVE., N. CANTON OH 44720 ©2015 LINCOLN TREASURY S0420 P6911
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Participation in program low despite good results Project Lifesaver helps find vulnerable residents BY CHRIS MCDANIEL PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — Enrollment in Project Lifesaver, which helps police locate missing people, remains low in Clallam and Jefferson counties despite success stories. The service has helped police locate three people on the North Olympic Peninsula this year, authorities said. The service is designed to track people with cognitive disabilities — such as Alzheimer’s disease, dementia, autism or Down syndrome — who tend to wander. Each client is equipped with a Project Lifesaver transmitter the size of a wrist watch. The transmitter emits a specific radio frequency unique to the individual every second, allowing searchers to track the device with a receiver.
Nineteen in Clallam Nineteen people are signed up for the program in Clallam County, a growth of six clients since May. Eleven are participating through the Sequim Police Department, which started the program in early 2008. “We need a lot more,” said Victoria Ormand, coordinator for the Sequim Police Department’s Volunteers in Police Service Program. “I feel very strongly that this is just a wonderful tool that caregivers of [people with] cognitive disorders can use,” she added. “It can provide such relief from that constant worry — is their loved one walking out the back door somewhere? Or did they make it in from the car?” Eight people are participating through the Clallam County Sheriff ’s Office, which began using the system in 2009. It offers the program to all residents west of Deer Park Road in Port Angeles, Forks and unincorporated communities. “We have a young boy with Down Syndrome and elderly people suffering from dementia and Alzheimer’s” signed up, said Lorraine Shore, Clallam County Sheriff ’s Office administrative coordinator.
CLALLAM COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE
Clallam County Sheriff’s Deputy Josh Ley demonstrates how to use a Project Lifesaver receiver designed to pick up signals from small transmitters worn by clients with cognitive disabilities. than in May because one former participant was admitted into a nursing home and no longer required the service, said Patrick Nicholson, a reserve deputy. “We have 13 trained responders consisting of sheriff deputies, Sheriff Department volunteers, and Jefferson Search and Rescue members,” Nicholson said. “We have four tracking receivers deployed throughout the county that are accessible by our trained search technicians.”
None on West End No one has registered for the program on the West End, Shore said. However, deputies there are trained to offer the program if anyone does sign up. “That is an area we know is underserved as we’ve had only two clients out there and currently don’t have anyone west of Port Angeles on the program,” Shore said. “It’s really unfortunate as we have a brand new Project Lifesaver transmitter and receiver pack just for the West End since it’s so far from Port Angeles, which means the response time is great if we had a missing person call on a Project Lifesaver client.”
Enrollment Six in Jefferson County In Jefferson County, six people have registered for the program through the Sheriff ’s Office, which began using the system in 2011. That is one less client
Family members, guardians or caregivers of at-risk individuals in Clallam County can enroll a person into the program for a onetime fee of $50. No fee is charged for Jefferson County residents.
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — A plea offer is on the table for a Sequim man accused of beating a Joyce woman to death with a car jack last September. Ari Lee King, 42, is charged with second-degree murder for the death of Diane Cunningham, 65. His trial is scheduled for Nov. 16. King remained Sunday in the Clallam County jail on $1 million bail.
Clallam County Chief Criminal Deputy Michele Devlin said Friday that she does not expect a response on the plea offer until the results of a psychological examination become available.
Conference moved A pre-trial status conference scheduled for Friday was moved to Sept. 18. “We still have some additional lab testing being done,” Devlin said in a later
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
So far this year, two clients who have wandered off in Clallam county and one in Jefferson County have all been found safe thanks to the Project Lifesaver program. The most recent incident was Aug. 15, when a 69-year-old Port Angeles woman was reported missing from St. Andrew’s Place assisted living community at 7:36 p.m. and was found about 800 feet west of the assisted living community at 8:11 p.m., police said. The woman with dementia had been outfitted with a Project Lifesaver transmitter 10 days earlier. On July 9, an 88-year-old Port Townsend man who wore the device was located by law enforcement about an hour after police received a report at 6:21 p.m. that he had wandered from his home. For more information about the program in Clallam County, contact the Sheriff’s Office at 360-4172262 or http://tinyurl. com/PDN-Clallamproject lifesaver or the Sequim Police Department at 360683-7227 or http://tinyurl. com/PDN-Sequimproject lifesaver. For more information
That was the second time the system had been used successfully in Jefferson County since implementation of the program in 2011. On April 24, a 76-year-old Port Angeles man who had wandered away from an assisted living facility was located about one block away using a radio receiver and returned to the facility. Sequim Police have not had to use the tracking system for the past couple of years, said Victoria Ormand, coordinator for the Sequim Police Department’s Volunteers in Police Service Program. However, police are in contact with clients at least once a month to change batteries on their tracking devices. “We kind of keep on eye on everybody and become friends,” Ormand said. “I love seeing them. It is really great as far as I am concerned.” about the Project Lifesaver program in Jefferson County, call 360-344-9779 or email projectlifesaver@ co.jefferson.wa.us.
________ Sequim-Dungeness Valley Editor Chris McDaniel can be reached at 360-681-2390, ext. 5052, or at cmcdaniel@peninsuladailynews. com.
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
interview. Delays with DNA testing at a State Patrol crime labor a t o r y scratched p r e v i o u s King trial dates of Jan. 5, May 4 and July 13. Defense attorney Loren Oakley of Clallam Public Defender told Superior Court Judge Erik Rohrer last week that he was still waiting for the results of psychological tests on King, Devlin said. If the case goes to a jury,
the trial is expected to take one week. Cunningham was last seen Sept. 28, 2014, on surveillance footage from 7 Cedars Casino and the Port Angeles Walmart. She was accompanied by King. Her body was found in the bedroom of her home Oct. 6. An autopsy showed that Cunningham died of blunt force trauma to the head. King was arrested in Malheur County, Ore., last Nov. 13. He was transferred the next day to the Clallam County jail.
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BELLEVUE — FamilySearch International has opened a family research center in Bellevue, the first to open outside its headquarters in Salt Lake City, Utah. The Seattle Family Discovery Center is located inside the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints facility at 15205 SE 28th St., Bellevue. It is free to the public. It is open by appointment only. To schedule an appointment, go to FamilySearch. org/discoverycenter/seattle. Visitors to the center are provided with tablet computers as personal guides to interface with large touch screens, where they learn more about themselves, view family origins and discover how ancestors may have lived and even dressed. The center also features a video recording studio, where visitors can answer questions about their life stories and archive the recording for long-term preservation. Visitors also can bring USB drives to take home copies of the recording.
placed the gun to his head, spoke briefly to deputies and then pulled the trigger. The teen was transported to Harborview Medical Center with an injury that does not appear to be life-threatening.
WSU hack attempt PULLMAN — Washington State University administrators say they are trying to stop a sophisticated hacking attempt they discovered more than a month ago. The Spokesman-Review reported that administrators notified students and staff Thursday that they noticed suspicious activity in the school’s email and directory systems July 8. The university said it began an investigation with help from federal investigators and a private security firm. According to the school, there is no evidence that hackers have accessed Social Security numbers or banking information. But it’s possible that they could have stolen student and staff user names and passwords for university Web services. Washington State University urged people to change their passwords. Interim President Daniel Bernardo said the school waited to notify students and staff to avoid tipping off the hackers.
Bomb threat SUMNER — The Washington State Patrol says a man appeared to be heavily under the influence when he told drivers he had a bomb in his car. Traffic was backed up for hours Saturday on state Highway 167 near Sumner while a bomb squad investigated. No explosives were found. KIRO-TV reported that a suspect was taken into custody.
Wreck injures 3 VANCOUVER, Wash. — Three people were injured when they were struck head-on by a motorist driving the wrong way on a one-way street as he fled police in Vancouver, Wash. The State Patrol said a 5-week-old child in the car escaped injury in the Friday crash. The driver, a 22-year-old woman from Camas, and two passengers from Vancouver were taken to a hospital. The Columbian reported that the wrong-way driver, a 24-year-old Vancouver man, was not hurt. He was booked in the Clark County Jail and faces potential charges of drunken driving, attempting to elude a police officer and reckless endangerment, among others.
Teen inmate
Sentence in rape
SEATTLE — A teen inmate who was helping fight fires near Chelan is recovering in a Seattle hospital after escaping from a fire camp and then shooting himself. Officials from the Chelan County sheriff’s office told KOMO-TV the 16-year-old from the Naselle Youth Camp assaulted a guard Friday night and escaped. He was found Saturday morning near Chelan Falls. When deputies approached him, he started running. Dave Helvey from the Sheriff’s Office said that when he stopped running, he turned to the deputies and pulled a small handgun from his bag. He
CLARKSTON — A Clarkston man convicted of raping a woman delivering a box of food was sentenced to more than 25 years in prison. An Asotin County judge issued the sentence Thursday for 33-year-old Zachary J. Biggs. Prosecutors said Biggs threatened to kill the victim if she didn’t go into a bedroom. Authorities said he raped her and tormented her over a three-hour period with a machete and sharpening stone. The Lewiston Tribune reported that Biggs plans to appeal and said the sexual acts were consensual. Peninsula Daily News and The Associated Press
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SEQUIM — Applications are due by 4 p.m. Sept. 4 to fill a vacancy on the Sequim Arts Advisory Commission. The term for this position expires Dec. 31, 2018. The voluntary commission advises the city on arts and culture. Applicants must live in Sequim or be employed with a business located within the Sequim city limits. Commission members are appointed upon the basis of demonstrated interest, knowledge and support of the arts. For more information, see http://tinyurl.com/ PDN-Sequimartspanel. Applications are available at the Sequim Civic Center, 152 W. Cedar St., by calling 360-683-4139 or visiting www.sequimwa.gov. Applications are to be submitted to City Clerk Karen Kuznek-Reese at the Sequim Civic Center or electronically at kkuznek@ sequimwa.gov.
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PORT ANGELES — The Clallam County United Way board of directors will host a farewell reception for Jody Moss, former executive director of the United Way of Clallam County, at the Vern Burton Community Center, 308 E. Fourth St., at 3 p.m. Monday, Aug. 31. The public is invited.
3 Peninsula clients found with service this year
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Briefly . . .
Farewell reception
Plea possible for man accused in Joyce woman’s beating death Attorneys await results from psychological examination
MONDAY, AUGUST 24, 2015
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MONDAY, AUGUST 24, 2015
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Smoke from eastern blazes blankets region Clearer air expected as winds reverse BY ARWYN RICE PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
The Olympic Mountains were obscured in a haze, and air in some areas of the North Olympic Peninsula smelled of smoke over the weekend, a result of wildfires burning on hundreds of thousands of acres of grass and timber in Eastern Washington. Clallam County emergency dispatchers fielded dozens of reports Saturday that the air smelled and looked smoky. An offshore flow brought the smoke from the fires westward Saturday, blanketing Western Washington with haze, but the winds reversed Sunday afternoon and were expected to clear out most of the smoke, said Logan Johnson, meteorologist for the National Weather Service in Seattle. Brian Smith, Port Angeles deputy police chief, said people should ascertain something nearby actually is on fire before they call 9-1-1 to report smoke or its smell. “None of them are actual fires,” Smith said of the 20 to 30 reports he said had been logged Saturday by Clallam County Fire District No. 2 and the Port Angeles Fire Department, with another 10 or more reports to Clallam County Fire District No. 3. “We want to make people aware that calling the fire department or 9-1-1 in these circumstances is not wise,” Smith said.
Air quality Port Angeles air quality measurements Saturday reached “unhealthy for sensitive groups,” while the Port Townsend area monitor showed smoke pollution created “moderate” air quality impacts, according to Olympic Region Clean Air Agency (ORCAA) monitors in those communities. ORCAA has three air quality monitoring stations on the North Olympic Peninsula. As of 5 p.m. Sunday, the North Olympic Peninsula’s monitoring stations showed the worst air quality advisory values for the weekend were: ■ Port Angeles at Stevens Middle School — 106 at 5 p.m. Saturday. ■ Port Townsend on San Juan Avenue — 66 at 6 p.m. Saturday.
■ Cheeka Peak near Neah Bay — 39 at 3 a.m. Sunday. Air quality advisory categories are: ■ Good — 0-49. ■ Moderate — 50-99. ■ Unhealthy for sensitive groups — 100-149. ■ Unhealthy — 150199. ■ Very unhealthy — 200-249. ■ Hazardous — 250 and above. Current ORCAA air quality scores can be monitored online at www.orcaa.org.
PORT ANGELES FIRE DEPARTMENT (2)
Clallam County Fire District No. 2 firefighter Katie Babcock, center with goggles on hat, and Port Angeles Fire Lt. Kelly Ziegler, right of Babcock, assemble with other firefighters at the Okanogan Complex Fire in Eastern Washington.
Peninsula fires Some smoke was expected to remain in the area as long as several fires in the Olympic Mountains continued to burn. ■ The Paradise Fire, about 12 miles inside Olympic National Park boundaries in the Queets River valley, had burned 2,599 acres as of Sunday morning. The Paradise Fire was more active over the weekend and was putting out smoke as unburned areas in the interior of the fire’s footprint blazed up in the warm, dry conditions, fire managers said in Sunday’s fire conditions update. ■ The Hungry Fire is located near the Dosewallips area in the area of Olympic National Park’s Dose Forks Campground, a backcountry area about 16 miles northwest of Brinnon. The one-quarter acre fire was producing more smoke from burns within established boundaries, but there was no additional fire growth.
More Peninsula firefighters ready to aid with wildfires Quilcene team waiting for its assignment BY ARWYN RICE PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
QUILCENE — A team of Quilcene Fire Rescue firefighters is ready to deploy and join other North Olympic Peninsula personnel in helping to protect homes from the raging wildfires that have engulfed areas of Eastern Washington. The engine crew has been selected and was waiting for assignment Sunday, said Clallam County Fire District No. 3 Chief Ben Andrews. As soon as four to six additional engine teams are assembled from other departments across the state and a strike team commander is identified, the Quilcene team will be assigned to one of the many fires burning east of the Cascades, Andrews said. At least 19 first responders from Clallam and Jefferson counties are now battling wildfires or resultant structure blazes in Eastern Washington.
Gold Cabin Complex Two fires of the Gold Cabin Complex in Olympic National Forest sparked by a lightning storm Aug. 12. The Gold and Cabin Creek fires were renamed the Gold Cabin Complex as a single managed fire system. ■ The Gold Fire, located near Bon Jon Pass 10 miles south of Blyn, remained at about 10 acres and was not active as of Sunday morning. ■ The Cabin Creek Fire, 3 miles northeast of Lena Lake and the Hamma Hamma campgrounds, remained at 8 acres. The fire produced some smoke from the interior Saturday and into Sunday morning but remains contained within fire lines.
Wildland training In most bad fire years, the larger fire departments in the county — from Sequim and Port Angeles — send firefighters to assist at blazes in other parts of the state. Both fire departments maintain wildland fire training for their crews, and they have their “red card” wildland firefighter certification prepared as needed.
BY DONNA BLANKINSHIP AND BRIAN SKOLOFF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
________
PDN reporter James Casey contributed to this report.
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OKANOGAN — The massive cloud of smoke was expected to lift over Washington wildfires Sunday, but as air quality improves, the fire’s behavior could become more erratic and intense, fire officials said. “It’s like a flue opening in a fireplace,” said Suzanne Flory, spokeswoman for the U.S. Forest Service and the Rocky Mountain Incident Management Team. “Smoke serves as a cap on the fire.” The Okanogan Complex of wildfires was measured at 374 square miles Sunday morning, after growing
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more than 100 miles larger Saturday in what fire officials said was a relatively calm fire day. Sunday was expected to be a different story. Once the smoke lifts, humidity drops, heat rises and fires flare up.
10 percent contained The complex of fires was estimated to be about 10 percent contained as of Sunday morning, fire spokesman Dan Omdal said. Containment does not mean the fire has stopped burning. It means it has run out of fuel to burn in that area, either because it has hit a man-made fire
________ Reporter Arwyn Rice can be reached at 360452-2345, ext. 5070, or at arice@peninsula dailynews.com.
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Sarah Miller, a spokeswoman with Okanogan County Emergency Management, said residents have been warned to be ready to leave at any time and to not drive around looking at the fires. “People driving around are getting in the way of fire operations,” Miller said.
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“We tell firefighters, if you see blue sky, heads up,” Flory said. Meanwhile, local officials have downgraded some evacuation notices, allowing some people to return to their homes. Thousands remain under evacuation notices.
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line, a drop from airplanes of fire retardant, a road or a lake. Some of the land within the fire lines is burning still, but other sections have burned out. “We call it a wildfire, but much of the fire has been tamed,” Omdal said. “We are making progress,” The good news for Sunday is that less smoke means restrictions on air travel will be lifted and more fire tankers can drop water and chemical retardant, Flory said. Air quality, which has been dangerously bad, also will improve when the smoke cloud lifts, but firefighters won’t be able to take a breather.
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deploy Tuesday to the Kettle Complex for field training as a type 3 incident commander, said he is planning to organize training for at least one experienced structure fire crew and possibly offer training to others in the North Olympic Peninsula. Not all qualified crews will be deployed. Some crews will remain home to be available for fires that may break out on the North Olympic Peninsula, he said.
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Most North Olympic Peninsula firefighters are trained only for structure fires, which is different than wildland firefighting and typically requires different gear and different fire engines, Andrews said. Wildland fire training requires 40 hours for certification, and many of the smaller fire departments that rely on volunteers have been unable to schedule the time-consuming training, he said. However, he said, this is not a typical year, and qualified, experienced firefighters are in great demand. Andrews, who is preparing to
Less smoke could mean more fire
Reporter Arwyn Rice can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 5070, or at arice@peninsuladailynews.com.
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An engine from the Port Angeles Fire Department, temporarily designated unit 2161, is parked near the Okanogan Complex Fire between Twisp and Omak.
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
MONDAY, AUGUST 24, 2015
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State justices make Peninsula plans State Supreme Court will visit classrooms during Forks trip BY JAMES CASEY PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
FORKS — The state Supreme Court will travel to Forks to visit schoolrooms Sept. 9 and hear oral arguments in appeals of three criminal cases, and answer questions from residents Sept. 10. The trip from the court’s seat in Olympia will be a homecoming for Justice Susan Owens, who served 19 years as a Clallam County District Court judge and who spent five years as the Quileute tribe’s chief judge and six as chief judge for the Lower Elwha Klallam tribe.
Although an itinerary for their appearance isn’t yet set, the justices probably will visit classrooms Wednesday, Sept. 9, and hear oral arguments in the cases Thursday, Sept. 10, in the Great Room of the Rainforest Art Center, 35 N. Forks Ave.
Court’s schedule Their second-day schedule Sept. 10: ■ 9 a.m. to 9:40 a.m. — Welcoming comments and oral arguments in State of Washington vs. Tammera M. Thurlby.
■ 9:55 a.m. to 10:35 a.m. — Oral arguments in State of Washington vs. Troy J. Wilcoxon. ■ 10:35 a.m. to 11 a.m. — Q u e s t i o n - a n d - Owens answer session with members of the audience. ■ 11 a.m. to noon — Justices’ conference. ■ Noon to 1 p.m. — Lunch. ■ 1:30 p.m. to 2:10 p.m. — Oral arguments in State of Washington vs. Spencer L. Miller/Darryl Henderson. In the first case, Thurlby argues she was improperly convicted of three counts of delivery of a controlled substance within
1,000 feet of a school bus stop because the Cowlitz County Superior Court judge resumed a second day of proceedings in her absence at her 2012 trial. In State vs. Wilcoxon, the defendant alleges his conviction for second-degree burglary, firstdegree theft and conspiracy to commit burglary should be overturned because Asotin County Superior Court did not sever his trial from a codefendant’s and because it permitted inexpert testimony involving cellphone traffic. The case stems from the 2013 burglary of a casino-bowling alley in Clarkston. In the Miller/Henderson case, the state seeks reinstatement of a mitigated sentence handed down on two counts of attempted first-
degree murder in a 2001 shooting in Pierce County.
Court on the road The state Supreme Court for 20 years has gone “on the road” to allow citizens to watch it in session in their local communities, said Wendy K. Ferrell, judicial communications manager for Washington courts. “It’s a great opportunity for anyone interested in learning more about the judicial branch of government to see the workings of the highest court up close and personal.”
_______ Reporter James Casey can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 5074, or at jcasey@ peninsuladailynews.com.
Residents to provide input at Sequim meet BY CHRIS MCDANIEL PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
SEQUIM — A town hall meeting this week will take residents’ input on downtown neighborhood needs. The meeting concerning the city’s downtown neighborhood revitalization program is sponsored by the city in partnership with Habitat for Humanity of Clallam County. It will be at 6 p.m. Wednesday in City Council chambers at the Civic Center at 152 W. Cedar St. Habitat for Humanity of Clallam County has selected the city of Sequim as a Neighborhood Revitalization focus location and has allocated $5,000 from private donations and fundraising efforts for the Sequim project. In addition to the funding provided by Habitat, the Sequim Sunrise Rotary has approved a $3,500 grant, which the Rotary Foundation district community grant will match to total $12,000 for neighborhood revitalization in Sequim.
Typical projects
Habitat traditionally helps lowincome people build and own their own homes. While new home construction continues to play a vital role, a bigger toolbox that includes repairs and other services allows Habitat to serve more families, according to the group’s website, www.habitat clallam.org. Labor for the projects will come from qualified Neighborhood Revitalization applicants, Habitat volunteers, Sequim Sunrise Rotarians and volunteers from other Sequim community groups.
Survey Habitat for Humanity will conduct a “Saturday Survey” from 9 a.m. to noon Sept. 19, with volunteers going door-to-door in the neighborhoods west of Sequim Avenue between U.S. Highway 101 and Fir Street to evaluate neighborhood needs. For more information, contact Joe Irvin, assistant to the city manager, at 360-582-2457 or jirvin@sequimwa. gov.
________ Typical Habitat Neighborhood Revitalization projects include Sequim-Dungeness Valley Editor Chris weatherization, critical repair and McDaniel can be reached at 360-681-2390, ext. rehabilitation of residential proper- 5052, or at cmcdaniel@peninsuladailynews. com. ties.
Poets, prose writers are invited to Friday reading PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
SEQUIM — A gala open-mic reading for poets and prose writers is set for this Friday at The Lodge at Sherwood Village, 660 Evergreen Farm Way just off Fifth Avenue. Admission is free for writers and listeners at the 6:30 p.m. gathering. “Pick out your best poem or shortshort story and come read,” said Ruth Marcus, an organizer of this event, which is part of the Fourth Friday Reading series sponsored by Writers on the Spit. She asks that readers rehearse
their pieces to ensure that they’re under the five-minute time limit. This and other Fourth Friday Readings also have a table where writers may place fliers and postcards about forthcoming events, workshops and any services relating to writing. Published authors and poets also are encouraged to bring their books to sign and sell before and after the reading. Everyone, Marcus added, is invited to come early for supper or coffee at The Lodge’s bistro. For more information, email Rmarcus@olypen.com.
DAVE LOGAN/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
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Several brave souls jump off the cliffs Saturday into the Devil’s Punch Bowl on Lake Crescent in Olympic National Park. The Devil’s Punch Bowl is a small cove with shear cliffs on three sides and bridged by the Rainbow Bridge, which is part of the Spruce Railroad Trail. The trail is currently closed so all of the daredevil divers came to the location by boat.
State health officials to appeal a portion of a federal judge’s ruling BY MARTHA BELLISLE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SEATTLE — The state is appealing a portion of a federal judge’s ruling that sought to ensure timely competency services for mentally ill defendants. Health officials said they are only appealing the portion that mandates competency evaluations within seven days of a judge’s order. They said one week was not enough time to allow some defendants who may be under the influence of alcohol or drugs to stabilize. Evaluators send people to hospitals before their
mental state is fully understood, officials said. “We have concerns about false-positives,” said Jane Beyer, assistant secretary for the Behavioral Health and Service Integration Administration.
Started with lawsuit When evaluations are done too quickly, more defendants are found to be incompetent than actually suffer from a mental illness, Beyer said. A federal lawsuit was filed by mentally ill criminal defendants who were forced to wait weeks or months in jails for compe-
tency evaluations. If those defendants were found incompetent to help with their defense, it could be weeks or months before they were moved to one of the state’s two forensic hospitals to receive treatment to have their competency restored. U.S. District Judge Marsha Pechman ruled in favor of the defendants, saying the state’s Department of Social and Health Services was violating their constitutional rights. Pechman issued a permanent injunction in April that requires the state to conduct evaluations and restoration treatment
within one week of a judge’s order. “Our jails are not suitable places for the mentally ill to be warehoused while they wait for services,” Pechman said. “Punitive settings and isolation for 23 hours each day exacerbate mental illness and increase the likelihood that the individual will never recover.” Pechman said the agency has been hampered in providing competency services because the state has failed to adequately fund its mental health system. She also blamed the department for failing to change its procedures “to
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explaining why. The state’s lawyers have not yet filed their opening brief. Lawyers with Disability Rights Washington who filed the class action lawsuit could not immediately be reached for comment Friday. As of June 5, there were 195 people on the wait list for competency services at Western State Hospital, with 57 of those people waiting in jail for more than seven days, according to the department.
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respond to this ongoing crisis.” The judge appointed a monitor to track the state’s efforts to fix the problem and set a nine-month deadline for full implementation of the changes.
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MONDAY, AUGUST 24, 2015 — (C)
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Congress out until Sept. 8 PENINSULA DAILY NEWS NEWS SERVICES
WASHINGTON — Congress is on summer recess until Sept. 8.
Contact legislators (clip and save) “Eye on Congress” is published in the Peninsula Daily News every Monday when Congress is in session about activities, roll call votes and legislation in the House and Senate. The North Olympic Peninsula’s legislators in Washington, D.C., are Sen. Maria Cantwell (D-Mountlake Terrace), Sen. Patty Murray (D-Seattle) and Rep. Derek Kilmer (D-Gig Harbor). Contact information — The address for Cantwell and Murray is U.S. Senate, Washington, D.C. 20510; Kilmer, U.S. House, Washington, D.C. 20515. Phone Cantwell at 202224-3441 (fax, 202-2280514); Murray, 202-2242621 (fax, 202-224-0238); Kilmer, 202-225-5916. Email via their websites: cantwell.senate.gov; murray. senate.gov; kilmer.house.gov. Kilmer’s North Olympic Peninsula is located at 332 E. Fifth St. in Port Angeles. Hours are 9 a.m. to noon Tuesdays and from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesdays and Thursdays. It is staffed by Judith Morris, who can be contacted at judith.morris@ mail.house.gov or 360-7973623.
Eye on Congress State legislators Jefferson and Clallam counties are represented in the part-time state Legislature by Rep. Kevin Van De Wege, D-Sequim, the House majority whip; Rep. Steve Tharinger, D-Sequim; and Sen. Jim Hargrove, D-Hoquiam. Write Van De Wege and Tharinger at P.O. Box 40600 (Hargrove at P.O. Box 40424), Olympia, WA 98504; email them at vandewege. kevin@leg.wa.gov; tharinger. steve@leg.wa.gov; hargrove. jim@leg.wa.gov. Or you can call the Legislative Hotline, 800-5626000, from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Mondays through Fridays (closed on holidays and from noon to 1 p.m.) and leave a detailed message, which will be emailed to Van De Wege, Tharinger, Hargrove or to all three. Links to other state officials: http://tinyurl.com/ pdn-linksofficials.
Learn more Websites following our state and national legislators: ■ Followthemoney. org — Campaign donors by industry, ZIP code and more ■ Vote-Smart.org — How special interest groups rate legislators on the issues.
Jim Nyby will bring ballads, blues and gospel music to Port Townsend’s Trinity United Methodist Church this Thursday.
Nybys concert to benefit children’s center in PT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT TOWNSEND — Jim and Kellie Nyby will bring favorite ballads, blues and gospel songs to Trinity United Methodist Church for a public Candlelight Concert this Thursday evening. Doors will open at 6:30 p.m. for the 7 p.m. performance at Trinity, which is uptown at 609 Taylor St. A donation of $10 is suggested for adults, while admission is free
for children. Proceeds from this concert will benefit Jumping Mouse Children’s Center, a play-therapy and family counseling center in Port Townsend. Jim Nyby is one of Port Townsend’s musical mainstays, having played in the area for the past 15 years. Thursday evening, he’ll sing, play Trinity’s Czechoslovakian Petrof grand piano and perform
some duets with Kellie. Jim, who plays regularly with his F Street Band, specializes in covers. The American songbook is so rich, he said, that he doesn’t feel the need to compose new songs. “Nothing excites me more than rediscovering an old, forgotten song and attempting to breathe new life into it,” Jim said. For more information about this and future Candlelight Concerts, phone 360-774-1644.
Arts: Volunteers Cline: Serious illness possible CONTINUED FROM A1 West End; then they will display and sell their paint“A Midsummer Night’s ings at the fine arts center Dream” opened last Friday for six days straight. Then comes the Sept. 13 night in the 5-acre art Panache! Festival of Colors: park’s meadow. The play, directed by more live art-making, Anna Andersen and featur- awards for the best painting a cast of more than 25 ings and drawings, a barbechildren, teens and adults, cue and other activities in will have its final perfor- Webster’s Woods. Olson spoke at last Frimances at 5 p.m. this Friday’s dedication of a new day, Saturday and Sunday, sculpture at the entrance to Aug. 28-30. Admission is free, while the woods: “Spirit,” by Calidonations — $10 is sug- fornia artist James T. Hubbell, was donated to the arts gested — are welcome. center by longtime Port Angeles resident and Story Paint the Peninsula People of Clallam County As for Paint the Penin- founder Josephine Pedersen. sula, Dalton said Anderson In her remarks, Olson is stepping away from it. said she hopes to work with Dalton is taking the the center’s volunteers — of reins of the event, which which there are more than will draw artists from 100 — to spruce up Webacross and beyond the ster’s Woods and spread the Olympic Peninsula. word about its existence. “We don’t want to be the They first will fan out across the area, from Olym- art center on the hill that’s pic National Park to the looking down on everybody,” she added in an interview. “We need to freshen ourGrowing pains? selves.” Andrew May’s garden column. Sundays in
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
CONTINUED FROM A1 can cause diarrhea or vomiting. Children and elderly Contact with fecal-contaminated water — espe- people may be more suscepcially through a lesion in tible to water-borne illthe skin — can cause skin nesses, health officials said. rashes, gastroenteritis and upper respiratory infec- Hollywood Beach tions. The Cline Spit closure Swallowing water with came a week after Hollyhigh levels of enterococcus wood Beach in downtown
Port Angeles was reopened following its latest short closure for similar pollution. Hollywood Beach in Port Angeles was closed Aug. 6, just more than a month after it had been shut down for fecal bacteria-contaminated water over the Fourth of July weekend. Touch tanks at the Feiro
Marine Life Center on City Pier also were closed. In both Hollywood Beach closures, the origin of the bacteria was unknown.
________ Sequim-Dungeness Valley Editor Chris McDaniel can be reached at 360-681-2390, ext. 5052, or cmcdaniel@peninsuladailynews. com.
Level: Future of downtown PT
CONTINUED FROM A1 the idea of stable sea level. So, from that standpoint, “Our projections suggest, it’s not normal.” Globally much of rising for example, that there is a reasonable chance that sea level can be attributed there will be a noticeable to two factors, Miller said. These are increases in increase in the flooded areas in downtown Port the amount of heat stored Townsend during winter in the ocean, which causes storm events by 2030,” the water to expand, and the addition of new water Miller said. A rise in sea level can be volume to the oceans as a normal geological devel- land-grounded ice in Greenopment depending on how land and Antarctica melts. “Once you narrow your ________ you look at it, Miller said. focus to the regional, things “Certainly sea level has Features Editor Diane Urbani get much more complicated, changed over the geologic de la Paz can be reached at 360as complex patterns of heat 452-2345, ext. 5062, or at diane. record, but modern developurbani@peninsuladailynews.com. ment is largely premised on distribution in the ocean or patterns of large-scale winds and pressure over the ocean can alter sea level patterns,” Miller said.
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Analysis of the study suggests that “eustatic” sea level — the level of the sea irrespective of a change of land elevation due to tectonic events — has risen at a rate of 3 to 4 inches per century since about 1940. “However, the land is also moving at different rates in the different communities on the Olympic Peninsula,” Miller said. The Olympic Peninsula sits on the North American Plate. To the west lies the Juan de Fuca Plate, which is subducting, or slipping beneath, the northerly portion of the western side of the North America Plate at the Cascadia subduction zone, according to geologists. The subduction zone includes a large western portion of the Olympic Peninsula. As the Juan de Fuca Plate slowly slips beneath the North American Plate,
it causes the land to rise. Because of the rising land mass, “we also need to consider ‘relative’ sea level, which is the level of the sea relative to the land,” Miller said. “There, the story is a bit more complicated.” In Neah Bay, for example, “the land is rising rapidly and has outpaced sea level rise,” Miller noted. “As a result, relative sea level has fallen in Neah Bay at a rate of approximately 7 inches per century.” In Port Townsend “the land appears to be subsiding, and therefore relative sea level has risen faster than the eustatic rate, at about 6 inches per century,” Miller said. In Port Angeles “it appears that the land is rising, but at a much slower rate than in Neah Bay, and [has] largely kept pace with rising sea levels over the past 40 years or so.” However, that is expected to change over the next 85 years, with sea levels creeping up in the Port Angeles area, he said. It remains to be seen how sea level rise will ultimately impact communities in Jefferson and Clallam counties, Miller said.
Myriad vulnerabilities “There are a variety of sea level rise vulnerabilities in Jefferson and Clallam counties, typically associated with development in low-lying areas — residential development on the Dungeness River delta for example — and on coastal bluffs, the erosion of which is likely to accelerate with increased rates of sea level rise,” Miller said.
Risk, though, “is a function of both the hazard — in this case erosion and flooding of the shoreline — and vulnerability, i.e. development along the shoreline that puts people and infrastructure in harm’s way.” Local communities can mitigate their “vulnerability by modifying the ways that we use and develop the shoreline,” Miller said. “Such actions will reduce our risk to sea level rise.”
Stemming the tide When asked if anything could be done to prevent increasing sea levels, Miller replied, “over the short term, not really.” But, “in thinking about sea level rise projections for the coming century, the answer is yes,” he said. “The magnitude of sea level rise over the coming century is governed to a large extent by how much greenhouse gases are added to the atmosphere.” Miller works out of Peninsula College in Port Angeles as well as the University of Washington’s Olympic Natural Resources Center in Forks. His work is to help Olympic Peninsula coastal communities increase their ability to plan for and manage coastal hazards, including tsunami, chronic erosion, coastal flooding and hazards associated with climate change. He has a blog at http:// coastnerd.blogspot.com.
________ Sequim-Dungeness Valley Editor Chris McDaniel can be reached at 360-681-2390, ext. 5052, or cmcdaniel@peninsuladailynews. com.
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Monday, August 24, 2015 PAGE
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Mother Nature’s revenge HERE’S MY BET about the future of Sunni, Shiite, Arab, Turkish, Kurdish and Israeli relations: If they don’t end their long-running conflicts, Mother Nature is going to destroy them all long before they destroy one another. Let me point out a few Thomas L. news items you Friedman may have missed while debating the Iran nuclear deal. On July 31, USA Today reported that in Bandar Mahshahr, Iran, a city adjacent to the Persian Gulf, the heat index soared to 163 degrees “as a heat wave continued to bake the Middle East, already one of the hottest places on Earth. “That was one of the most incredible temperature observations I have ever seen, and it is one of the most extreme readings ever in the world,” AccuWeather meteorologist Anthony Sagliani said in a statement. “While the temperature was ‘only’ 115 degrees, the dew point was an unfathomable 90 degrees. . . . “The combination of heat and humidity, measured by the dew point, is what makes the heat index — or what the temperature actually feels like outside.”
Hot under the collar Then we saw something we’ve not seen before: An Iraqi government was sacked over its failure to deliver air conditioning. Two weeks ago, the prime minister, Haider al-Abadi, abolished all three vice presidential posts and the office of deputy prime minister and proposed sweeping anti-corruption reforms
to get worse, given climate projections for many of these places. . . . “Governments that are responsive to publics in the face of these stresses are likely to strengthen the social contract, while those who are unresponsive are likely to weaken it. And for the most part, we’re seeing inadequate responses.” Indeed, see Syria: Its revolution was preceded by the worst four-year drought in the country’s modern history, driving nearly a million farmers and herders off the land, into the cities where the government of Bashar al-Assad completely failed to help them, fueling the revolution.
‘Playing with fire’ after weeks of street protests over the fact that the government could supply electricity for air conditioning for only a few hours a day during weeks of 120-degree temperatures. As The New York Times’ Anne Barnard reported Aug. 1, the heat issue in Iraq “has even eclipsed war with the Islamic State. “The prime minister . . . declared a four-day weekend to keep people out of the sun . . . and ordered an end to one of the most coveted perks of government officials: round-the-clock power for their air conditioners. . . . “Several thousand people — workers, artists and intellectuals — demonstrated Friday evening . . . in the center of Baghdad, chanting and carrying signs about the lack of electricity and blaming corruption for it. . . . “Some men stripped to their shorts and lay down in the street to sleep, a strong statement in a modest society. . . . The protest was unusual in that it did not appear to have been called for by
any major political party.” On Feb. 19, 2014, The Associated Press reported from Iran: “The first cabinet decision made under Iran’s new president, Hassan Rouhani, wasn’t about how to resolve his country’s nuclear dispute with world powers. “It was about how to keep the nation’s largest lake from disappearing. Lake Oroumieh, one of the biggest saltwater lakes on Earth, has shrunk more than 80 percent to . . . [nearly 400 square miles] in the past decade, mainly because of climate change, expanded irrigation for surrounding farms and the damming of rivers that feed the body of water, experts say. “‘The lake is gone. My job is gone. My children are gone. Tourists, too,’ said Mozafar Cheraghi, 58, as he stood on a dusty platform that was once his bustling teahouse.” Francesco Femia and Caitlin Werrell run the indispensable Center for Climate and Security in Washington, D.C., that tracks these trends.
They noted that the South Asia scholar Michael Kugelman recently observed “that in Pakistan, more people have died from the heat wave than from terrorism this year. “We would emphasize that there shouldn’t be a competition between ‘terrorism’ and ‘climate stress,’ but that the resources spent on the former vastly outstrip the latter.”
Getting hot over here Femia and Werrell added, “A 2011 study from the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration found strong evidence that winter precipitation decline in the Mediterranean littoral and the Middle East from 1971 to 2010 was likely due to climate change, with the region experiencing nearly all of its driest winters since 1902 in the past 20 years.” Finally, they noted: “The social contract between governments and their publics is being stressed by these extreme events, and that matters are only likely
All the people in this region are playing with fire. While they’re fighting over who is caliph, who is the rightful heir to the Prophet Muhammad from the seventh century — Sunnis or Shiites — and to whom God really gave the holy land, Mother Nature is not sitting idle. She doesn’t do politics — only physics, biology and chemistry. And if they add up the wrong way, she will take them all down. The only “ism” that will save them is not Shiism or Islamism but “environmentalism” — understanding that there is no Shiite air or Sunni water, there is just “the commons,” their shared ecosystems, and unless they cooperate to manage and preserve them (and we all address climate change), vast eco-devastation awaits them all.
________ Thomas Friedman is a three-time Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist for The New York Times. His column appears in the Peninsula Daily News on Mondays. Contact Friedman via www. facebook.com/thomaslfriedman.
Attacks on Coca-Cola fall flat CHAMPIONS OF RIGHTEOUS eating have been saying terrible things of late about Coke. They’re now focusing their wrath on a cor- Froma porate camHarrop paign to place Coca-Cola in the context of a healthy diet. A New York Times editorial accuses Coke and other beverage-makers of forming “innocentsounding front groups to spread the message that sugary sodas have no deleterious effect on health.” Actually, their paid consultants have said no such thing. They did say that dieters working on portion control might favor the 7.5-ounce mini-Coke over the traditional 12-ounce size. Also, they said those seeking to lose weight should consider exercising more. But yes, Coke is guilty — guilty — of saying nice things about its products. “In a particularly brazen move,” the Times fulminates, a dietitian suggested that “a minican of Coke would make a good snack food.” “Refreshing beverage option” was the dietitian’s exact quote. The standard-bearers of chaste eating habits have themselves lost control in apportion-
ing blame for the “obesity epidemic” on sugared drinks. Why is soda taking so much of the rap? There’s a habitual suspicion of the profit motive as it applies to other people’s businesses. In a similar vein, many harbor an intense disapproval of others’ unhealthy food choices. Hence the drumbeat demand for a tax on soda. That would be a neat way to extract more money from lowincome people, not unlike the stiff sin tax on beer. But if we’re going in this direction, why not tax the extrafat “European-style” butter you find at Whole Foods? A 1-ounce pat has more calories than a mini-Coke. How about a fat tax on French Brie — and triple the tax for triple-creme? This is not to dismiss the genuine concern about the huge amount of sugar many Americans ingest. But the remedy should be education. Help citizens understand their sugar intake and, if need be, reduce it. Do note that American consumption of full-calorie soda has plunged 25 percent since the late 1990s, and obesity rates are starting to come down. The enduring soft drink hysteria comes from places like the recent documentary “Fed Up.” Produced by Katie Couric and Laurie David, the movie strongly argues that dieting and exercise
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can’t really help obese kids as long as sugar exerts its evil power. One of its star “experts” is Dr. Mark Hyman, who asserts: “Your brain lights up with sugar just like it does with heroin or cocaine. “In fact, sugar is eight times more addictive than cocaine.” Hyman is known for spreading the crank theory that vaccines cause autism. And his work has earned a place on Quackwatch’s list of crackpot books. Anyhow, scientists at the University of Edinburgh decided to investigate the claim that sugar is addictive like a drug and found little evidence for it. “People try to find rational explanations for being overweight, and it is easy to blame food,” researcher John Menzies told BBC News. In sum, those who believe themselves addicted to sugar need a shrink more than they do a nutritionist. One last point. Coca-Cola had been on grocery shelves for about a century before there was any “obesity epidemic.” You have to ask, How did we all survive that long?
________ Froma Harrop is a columnist for the Providence (R.I.) Journal. Her column appears Mondays. Contact her at fharrop@gmail. com or in care of Creators Syndicate Inc., 737 Third St., Hermosa Beach, CA 90254.
NEWS DEPARTMENT Main office: 305 W. First St., P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362 ■ MICHAEL FOSTER, managing 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
ÁNGEL BOLIGÁN
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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Soul recovery class to help participants connect to inner joy PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
STEALS INTO PA
wholeness, serenity and success, according to a news release. Members will follow the 12 metaphysical keys, which are based on a 12-step structure and include an opportunity to join in a Radical Forgiveness ceremony, Affirmative Prayer class and other tools of empowerment. For registration and information, phone Rose Marschall at 360-457-1515.
PORT ANGELES — Natural Healing Clinic, 162 S. Barr Road, will host “Remembering,” a 12-week class to reconnect with inner joy, starting Monday, Sept. 14.
12-step program The class uses the book Soul Recovery and provides support and concrete steps and tools to help participants find their joy through
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Seen from the bluff over downtown Port Angeles, The Landing mall and City Pier’s tower face the Strait of Juan de Fuca at dawn. With just about a month left of summer, sunrise arrives at 6:20 a.m. today.
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Monday, August 24, 2015 SECTION
CLASSIFIEDS, COMICS, WEATHER In this section
B
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Robinson Cano runs the bases and blows a bubble after hitting a two-run home run during the fifth inning Sunday.
Mariners hold on to beat Chicago BY JIM HOEHN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SEATTLE — Robinson Cano had a two-run homer and Nelson Cruz doubled in two runs to help the Seattle Mariners beat the Chicago White Sox 8-6 on Sunday to avoid a three-game sweep. Seattle built a 7-1 lead through five innings, but the White Sox cut it to 7-6 with five runs in the sixth behind a pair of two-run homers. Next Game Adam Eaton Today singled with one out in the sixth vs. Athletics and scored on at Safeco Field Tyler Saladino’s Time: 7 p.m. double. Jose On TV: ROOT Abreu followed with his 23rd home run. After Melky Cabrera grounded out, Avisail Garcia singled, chasing starter Taijuan Walker. Logan Kensing, called up earlier in the day from Triple-A Tacoma, relieved and allowed a two-run homer to Adam LaRoche, his 12th. The Mariners added a run in the eighth on Ketel Marte’s sacrifice fly. Walker (9-7) got the victory despite allowing five runs on seven hits in 52/3 innings. TURN
TO
JEFF HALSTEAD (2)/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Mel Craven and Chris Ebert in the Showtime No. 5 boat take on water during a qualifying round in the Modified class competition at Extreme Sports Park in Port Angeles.
Best saved for last Canadian crew takes first in PA BY MICHAEL CARMAN PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — A full day of thrills and spills at the American Sprint Boat Racing Association races at Extreme Sports Park ended with a bummer for one area team. The Port Angeles-based Wicked Racing No. 10 boat of Dan Morrison and Cara McGuire, ended up derailed by a persistent problem with its starter and unable to compete in the final lap of Saturday’s Unlimited class race. Canadians Cory Johnson and Gary McNeil in the No. 55 boat nabbed the checkered flag with the second-fastest time of the day, 44.517 seconds. “We call it Leighton Minnell,” McNeil said of the team’s strategy to only open up their boat so much before the finals. “He’s an old sprint boat veteran down in New Zealand, and we went down for the world
Cory Johnson and Gary McNeil guided the No. 55 boat to a first-place in the Unlimited class. [championships] and we were pretty fresh. “And he said, ‘Just go as hard as you need to.’ And he’s right. You can crash, you can wreck [equipment], there’s a million things can go wrong.”
Johnson was quick to point out the strategy’s effectiveness. “Look at the eliminations,” Johnson said. “Two of the boats ran themselves out of it before they could get a shot at it.” He was referring to the No.
907 boat driven by Eric and Rhonda Werner, which did not finish in the quarterfinals, and the Morrison’s troubled starter that gave them grief earlier in qualifying. TURN
TO
SPRINT/B3
M’S/B3
M’s cut ties with Rodney BY JIM HOEHN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SEATTLE — Another collapse by the bullpen cost the Seattle Mariners more than a victory. The Chicago White Sox scored two runs in the ninth inning to tie the game and then took advantage of the Seattle bullpen’s wildness for a threerun 10th in a 6-3 victory over the Mariners on Saturday night. Immediately after the game, losing pitcher Danny Farquhar, who failed to retire any of the four batters he faced in the 10th, was optioned to Triple-A Tacoma. Also, veteran Fernando Rodney (5-5, 5.68 ERA with six blown saves) was designated for assignment. “The fact is, we are just not getting it done,” Mariners manager Lloyd McClendon said. “That is the 17th blown save and the 22nd loss in the opponent’s last at-bat.” To fill the roster spots, lefthander Roenis Elias and righthander Logan Kensing will be brought up from Tacoma on Sunday, the Mariners said. TURN
TO
RODNEY/B3
DAVE LOGAN/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
BACK
FROM
BRAZIL
Elise Bueke sits while her coach Rodrigo Rodrigues stands in the water next to her practice shell on the shore of Lake Crescent at Log Cabin Resort on Saturday. The Olympic Peninsula Rowing Association was holding a celebration to honor Beuke and Rodrigues for their participation in the World Junior Championships in Brazil earlier this month. Beuke helped the United State place seventh in the women’s double sculls and Rodrigues was one of the coaches for the U.S. Junior Team. The celebration, which included a potluck picnic, also served as a farewell to João Borges, who served as the Olympic Peninsula Rowing Association’s coach this summer while Rodrigues was coaching the U.S. team. Beuke, a 2015 Sequim High School graduate, will be a freshmen for the University of Washington’s women’s crew starting this fall.
B2
SportsRecreation
MONDAY, AUGUST 24, 2015
Today’s
can be found at www. peninsuladailynews.com.
Area Sports Slowpitch Softball Port Angeles Parks and Recreation Coed League Standings Silver Division W L Killa Beez 7 1 Stamper Chiropractic 7 1 Olympic Medical Center Scrubs 4 4 American’s Elite 3 5 Sports Fit 3 5 Brew Crew 0 8 Gold Division W L Pacific Family Internal Medicine 7 1 Daily Grind 5 3 Sergio’s 5 3 Butch’s Ballers 3 5 Elwha River Casino 2 6 Shirley’s Cafe 2 6
Thursday’s Games Washington 21, Detroit 17 Buffalo 11, Cleveland 10 Friday’s Games N.Y. Jets 30, Atlanta 22 Kansas City 14, Seattle 13 Saturday’s Games Philadelphia 40, Baltimore 17 Carolina 31, Miami 30 New England 26, New Orleans 24 Chicago 23, Indianapolis 11 N.Y. Giants 22, Jacksonville 12 Minnesota 20, Oakland 12 Denver 14, Houston 10 San Diego 22, Arizona 19 Sunday’s Games Pittsburgh 24, Green Bay 19 Dallas at San Francisco, late. St. Louis at Tennessee, late. Monday’s Game Cincinnati at Tampa Bay, 5 p.m.
9 a.m. (26) ESPN Baseball Little League, World Series (Live) 11 a.m. (26) ESPN Baseball Little League, World Series (Live) Noon (304) NBCSN Soccer EPL, Liverpool at Arsenal (Live) 1 p.m. (26) ESPN Baseball Little League, World Series (Live) 3 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Baseball Little League, World Series, Guadalupe vs. Mexico (Live) 5 p.m. (26) ESPN Football NFL, Cincinnati Bengals at Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Preseason (Live) 5 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Baseball Little League, World Series (Live) 7 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Baseball MLB, St. Louis Cardinals at Arizona Diamondbacks (Live) 7 p.m. (25) ROOT Baseball MLB, Oakland Athletics at Seattle Mariners (Live)
Chicago Milwaukee Cincinnati
71 51 53 72 51 71 West Division W L Los Angeles 67 56 San Francisco 66 57 Arizona 62 61 San Diego 61 63 Colorado 49 73
DAVE LOGAN/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
YEE-HAW Seth Shelton of Richland is tossed violently but still stays on his horse for 8 seconds in the bareback riding competition during the rodeo at the Clallam County Fair in Port Angeles on Sunday. Staying on their horses for 8 seconds and their skill in doing so are how the riders are judged in bareback competition. Friday, Aug. 28 New England at Carolina, 4:30 p.m. Tennessee at Kansas City, 5 p.m. Detroit at Jacksonville, 5 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 29 Pittsburgh at Buffalo, 1 p.m. Minnesota at Dallas, 4 p.m. Cleveland at Tampa Bay, 4 p.m. Atlanta at Miami, 4 p.m. N.Y. Jets at N.Y. Giants, 4 p.m. Chicago at Cincinnati, 4:30 p.m. Washington at Baltimore, 4:30 p.m. Seattle at San Diego, 5 p.m. Philadelphia at Green Bay, 5 p.m. Indianapolis at St. Louis, 5 p.m. San Francisco at Denver, 6 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 30 Houston at New Orleans, 1 p.m. Arizona at Oakland, 5 p.m.
Baseball Mariners 8, White Sox 6 Chicago Eaton cf Saladin 3b Abreu dh MeCarr lf AvGarc rf LaRoch 1b AlRmrz ss Soto c Shuck ph CSnchz 2b
Football NFL Preseason
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Go to “Nation/World” and click on “AP Sports”
SPORTS PIC OF THE DAY
American Sprint Boat Racing Association Extreme Sports Park - Port Angeles Saturday MODIFIED CLASS Finals 1. Fat Buddy No. 9: 47.966 seconds 2. Overkill No. 69: 48.327 Semifinals Fat Buddy No. 9, 48.089; Overkill No. 69, 49.316; Fat Buddy No. 54, 50.986; Obsession No. 49, DNF. Quarterfinals Overkill No. 69, 47.765; Obsession No. 49, 47.765; Fat Buddy No. 9, 49.081; Fat Buddy No. 54, 50.913; TNT No. 99, 51.357; Showtime No. 5, 57.534; Fat Buddy No. 59, DNF; Fear Not No. 623, DNF. Qualifying Times Fat Buddy No. 9: 58.197, 50.737, 48.922, 48.392. Overkill No. 69: 55.844, 50.353, 49.804, 48.168. Showtime No. 5: DNF, 58.620, 57.165, 61.229. Obsession No. 49: DNF, DNF, DNF, 49.856. Fear Not No. 623B: 65.607, 62.546, 62.093, 63.103. Fat Buddy No. 59: 59.073, 49.760, DNF, 49.551. Fat Buddy No. 54: 52.810, 51.027, 50.474, 50.696. Jolly Roger No. 146: DNF, DNF, DNF, DNF. 400 CLASS Finals 1. Wicked Racing No. 1: 48.936 seconds 2. Bandit Racing No. 76: 50.319 Semifinals Wicked Racing No. 1, 49.350; Bandit Racing No. 76, 50.262; TNT Live Wire No. 2, 52.100. Quarterfinals Wicked Racing No. 1, 51.221; Bandit Racing No. 76, 52.136; TNT Live Wire No. 2, 61.770. Qualifying Times Bandit Racing No. 76: 51.465, 50.449, 52.748, 51.429. TNT Live Wire No. 2: 51.693, 49.732, 51.050, 50.601. Bandit Racing No. 47: DNF, DNF, DNF, DNF. Wicked Racing No. 1: DNF, DNF, 50.907, 49.953. Fat Buddy No. 13: DNF, 54.943, 52.107, DNF. UNLIMITED CLASS Final 1. No. 55: 44.417 seconds 2. Wicked Racing No. 10: DNS Semifinals Wicked Racing No. 10, 44.896; No. 55, 51.369. Quarterfinals Wicked Racing No. 10, 44.828; No. 55, 49.03; No. 907, DNF. Qualifying Times Bootlegger No. 19: DNF, DNF, DNF, DNF. No. 33: 65.416, 62.968, DNF, DNS. No. 051: 72.453, 71.047, 72.593, DNS. No. 55: 56.170, DNF, 48.604, 46.744. Sinister No. 4: 52.960, 48.698, 46.450, DNF. Wicked Racing No. 10: DNF, 44.594, DNS, 43.953.
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Totals
Sunday’s Game Seattle ab r hbi ab r hbi 3 1 1 0 KMarte ss 4111 4 1 1 1 AJcksn cf 4221 4 1 2 2 N.Cruz rf 5112 4 0 0 0 Cano dh 2112 4 1 1 0 Gutirrz lf 3011 4 2 2 2 Seager 3b 4010 4 0 1 1 Trumo 1b 3110 3 0 0 0 Morrsn 1b 0000 1 0 0 0 BMiller 2b 3110 3 0 0 0 Sucre c 1111 S.Smith ph 1 0 0 0 Zunino c 1010 34 6 8 6 Totals 31 811 8
Chicago 010 005 000—6 Seattle 004 030 01x—8 DP—Chicago 1, Seattle 1. LOB—Chicago 2, Seattle 7. 2B—Saladino (3), LaRoche (19), N. Cruz (22), Trumbo (8). HR—Abreu (23), LaRoche (12), Cano (14). SB—K.Marte (2). S—B.Miller. SF—K.Marte. IP H R ER BB SO Chicago Joh.Danks L,6-11 5 8 7 7 3 4 M.Albers 11/3 1 0 0 1 0 2/ Duke 0 0 1 1 3 0 Petricka 1 2 1 1 1 1 Seattle T.Walker W,9-7 52/3 7 5 5 0 4 Kensing H,1 1 1 1 1 1 2 Ca.Smith H,14 11/3 0 0 0 0 0 Wilhelmsen S,3-3 1 0 0 0 0 1 Joh.Danks pitched to 1 batter in the 6th. Umpires—Home, Jim Wolf; First, Lance Barksdale; Second, Quinn Wolcott; Third, Gary
Cederstrom. T—2:48. A—30,537 (47,574).
Cleveland
White Sox 6, Mariners 3, 10 innings Saturday’s Game Seattle ab r hbi Eaton cf 4 0 1 0 KMarte ss Saladin 3b 4 1 0 0 Seager 3b Abreu 1b 5 0 1 0 N.Cruz dh MeCarr lf 4 1 0 0 Cano 2b AvGarc dh 4 2 1 1 Gutirrz lf TrThm rf 3 1 2 1 AJcksn cf Shuck ph-rf 1 1 0 0 JMontr 1b AlRmrz ss 5 0 1 1 Morrsn 1b CSnchz 2b 4 0 1 1 BMiller rf Flowrs c 1 0 1 0 Zunino c LaRoch ph 1 0 0 1 Soto c 10 00 Totals 37 6 8 5 Totals Chicago
ab r hbi 2000 5000 4110 5120 4132 5020 3000 1000 4000 3000 36 3 8 2
Chicago 010 000 002 3—6 Seattle 000 003 000 0—3 E—C.Sanchez (4), Cano (6). DP—Chicago 2, Seattle 1. LOB—Chicago 9, Seattle 9. 2B— Abreu (25), C.Sanchez (20), N.Cruz (21), Gutierrez (9). HR—Tr.Thompson (2). S—C.Sanchez, K.Marte. IP H R ER BB SO Chicago Rodon 7 6 3 1 4 8 Da.Jennings 1 2 0 0 0 1 N.Jones W,1-0 1 0 0 0 1 2 Robertson S,25-31 1 0 0 0 0 1 Seattle Nuno 6 2/ 3 5 1 1 1 4 Wilhelmsen H,7 11/3 0 0 0 1 0 Ca.Smith BS,4-17 1 2 2 2 1 0 Farquhar L,0-4 0 1 3 1 3 0 Olmos 1 0 0 0 0 1 Farquhar pitched to 4 batters in the 10th. HBP—by Nuno (Eaton). PB—Zunino 2. Umpires—Home, Gary Cederstrom; First, Jim Wolf; Second, Lance Barksdale; Third, Quinn Wolcott. T—3:23. A—32,085 (47,574).
American League East Division W L Toronto 69 55 New York 68 55 Baltimore 62 61 Tampa Bay 62 62 Boston 56 68 Central Division W L Kansas City 75 48 Minnesota 63 61 Detroit 59 64 Chicago 58 64
Pct GB .556 — .553 ½ .504 6½ .500 7 .452 13 Pct GB .610 — .508 12½ .480 16 .475 16½
Houston Texas Los Angeles Seattle Oakland
58 65 West Division W L 69 56 64 59 63 61 57 67 54 71
.472
17
Pct GB .552 — .520 4 .508 5½ .460 11½ .432 15
Saturday’s Games N.Y. Yankees 6, Cleveland 2 Minnesota 3, Baltimore 2 Texas 5, Detroit 3 Kansas City 6, Boston 3 Houston 3, L.A. Dodgers 1 Tampa Bay 5, Oakland 4 Toronto 15, L.A. Angels 3 Chicago White Sox 6, Seattle 3, 10 innings Sunday’s Games Cleveland 4, N.Y. Yankees 3 Texas 4, Detroit 2 Kansas City 8, Boston 6 Minnesota 4, Baltimore 3, 12 innings Houston 3, L.A. Dodgers 2, 10 innings Toronto 12, L.A. Angels 5 Oakland 8, Tampa Bay 2 Seattle 8, Chicago White Sox 6 Monday’s Games Cleveland (Kluber 8-13) at Chicago Cubs (Lester 8-9), 11:05 a.m. Houston (Feldman 5-5) at N.Y. Yankees (Eovaldi 13-2), 4:05 p.m. Detroit (Farmer 0-2) at Cincinnati (Sampson 2-2), 4:10 p.m. Baltimore (U.Jimenez 9-7) at Kansas City (Medlen 1-0), 5:10 p.m. Boston (J.Kelly 6-6) at Chicago White Sox (Samardzija 8-9), 5:10 p.m. Oakland (Doubront 1-1) at Seattle (Iwakuma 5-2), 7:10 p.m. Tuesday’s Games Houston at N.Y. Yankees, 4:05 p.m. L.A. Angels at Detroit, 4:08 p.m. Milwaukee at Cleveland, 4:10 p.m. Minnesota at Tampa Bay, 4:10 p.m. Toronto at Texas, 5:05 p.m. Baltimore at Kansas City, 5:10 p.m. Boston at Chicago White Sox, 5:10 p.m. Oakland at Seattle, 7:10 p.m.
National League East Division W L New York 67 56 Washington 62 61 Atlanta 53 71 Miami 50 74 Philadelphia 50 74 Central Division W L St. Louis 78 45 Pittsburgh 73 48
Pct .545 .504 .427 .403 .403
GB — 5 14½ 17½ 17½
Pct GB .634 — .603 4
.582 6½ .424 26 .418 26½ Pct GB .545 — .537 1 .504 5 .492 6½ .402 17½
Saturday’s Games Chicago Cubs 9, Atlanta 7 Pittsburgh 3, San Francisco 2 Washington 6, Milwaukee 1 Arizona 11, Cincinnati 7 Houston 3, L.A. Dodgers 1 Philadelphia 4, Miami 2 N.Y. Mets 14, Colorado 9 San Diego 8, St. Louis 0 Sunday’s Games Arizona 4, Cincinnati 0 Philadelphia 2, Miami 0 Washington 9, Milwaukee 5 Houston 3, L.A. Dodgers 2, 10 innings Chicago Cubs 9, Atlanta 3 N.Y. Mets 5, Colorado 1 St. Louis 10, San Diego 3 San Francisco at Pittsburgh, late. Monday’s Games Cleveland (Kluber 8-13) at Chicago Cubs (Lester 8-9), 11:05 a.m. N.Y. Mets (deGrom 12-6) at Philadelphia (Morgan 4-4), 4:05 p.m. Colorado (J.De La Rosa 7-5) at Atlanta (Teheran 8-6), 4:10 p.m. Detroit (Farmer 0-2) at Cincinnati (Sampson 2-2), 4:10 p.m. Pittsburgh (Happ 1-1) at Miami (Koehler 8-11), 4:10 p.m. St. Louis (Lynn 9-8) at Arizona (Ray 3-9), 7:10 p.m. Tuesday’s Games N.Y. Mets at Philadelphia, 4:05 p.m. San Diego at Washington, 4:05 p.m. Colorado at Atlanta, 4:10 p.m. L.A. Dodgers at Cincinnati, 4:10 p.m. Milwaukee at Cleveland, 4:10 p.m. Pittsburgh at Miami, 4:10 p.m. St. Louis at Arizona, 6:40 p.m. Chicago Cubs at San Francisco, 7:15 p.m.
College Football The AP Preseason Top 25 The Top 25 teams in The Associated Press preseason college football poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, 2014 records, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote, and 2014 final ranking: Record Pts Pv 1. Ohio St. (61) 14-1 1,525 1 2. TCU 12-1 1,428 3 3. Alabama 12-2 1,322 4 4. Baylor 11-2 1,263 7 5. Michigan St. 11-2 1,256 t5 6. Auburn 8-5 1,192 22 7. Oregon 13-2 1,156 2 8. Southern Cal 9-4 1,085 20 9. Georgia 10-3 991 9 10. Florida St. 13-1 959 t5 11. Notre Dame 8-5 873 NR 12. Clemson 10-3 862 15 13. UCLA 10-3 698 10 14. LSU 8-5 675 NR 15. Arizona St. 10-3 605 12 16. Georgia Tech 11-3 588 8 17. Mississippi 9-4 563 17 18. Arkansas 7-6 410 NR 19. Oklahoma 8-5 394 NR 20. Wisconsin 11-3 393 13 21. Stanford 8-5 347 NR 22. Arizona 10-4 311 19 23. Boise St. 12-2 240 16 24. Missouri 11-3 219 14 25. Tennessee 7-6 114 NR Others receiving votes: Mississippi St. 100, Texas A&M 61, Oklahoma St. 46, Virginia Tech 42, Utah 36, Penn St. 20, Louisville 12, Cincinnati 8, Nebraska 6, Kansas St. 5, Florida 4, NC State 4, Texas 3, BYU 2, Michigan 2, N. Illinois 2, California 1, W. Kentucky 1, West Virginia 1.
Usain Bolt beats Justin Gatlin for gold in 100 at worlds BY EDDIE PELLS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
BEIJING — A heart-stopper. A lean at the line. A next-to-nothing margin over a more-than-game challenger. Sure, for Usain Bolt, the winning result, the bow-and-arrow victory celebration and even the setting may have been the same as 2008. But the show he put on Sunday in a .01-second victory over Justin Gatlin at the Bird’s Nest was something very different. Bolt crossed the line in 9.79 seconds — pedestrian by his stan-
dards. Yet it very well may have been his greatest race ever. “My coach said, ‘You’ll have to run 100 meters if you’re going to win the race,’” Bolt said after capturing his record ninth career gold medal at world championships. “So I ran 100 meters.” The 29-year-old Jamaican came in hurting and anything but race ready — a far cry from seven years ago, when he put his stamp on the Beijing Olympics in the same stadium by slowing down and bringing his hands out to his side to start the celebration with 20 meters left. Even with that, he
crossed the line in a then-worldrecord time of 9.69 seconds. By now, that’s ancient history, and the proof was in the results from the last two years. Gatlin has been dominating the sprint game, while Bolt has spent more time rehabbing than racing. The problems carried right into Sunday. Bolt’s semifinal run — normally a stress-free jog — turned dicey when he stumbled on his fifth step out of the starting block. He was in sixth place more than halfway through and had to push to beat out Trayvon Bromell. In the next semifinal race, Gat-
lin breezed, just as he had the night before in the heats. Set against each other, those performances turned Gatlin into the betting favorite, and who could argue? And so, the stakes were set: The world-record holder and track’s happy warrior against a twice-convicted doper, who also won the 100 at the 2004 Olympics and the world championships in 2005. That Gatlin burst from the blocks faster was no surprise; Bolt was his typically slow self in unfurling his 6-foot-5 frame from the start.
That Gatlin was winning at the halfway point wasn’t too shocking, either. “The best part of my race is usually the end,” Bolt said. At 80 meters, the math started changing. Bolt drew to within a step but Gatlin was holding him off. Then, with about 15 meters left, Gatlin over-strided, then did it again, then started leaning toward the line. Bolt stayed upright, crossed with a big kick and with his chest pushed forward. A sliver of space for a man who wins by body lengths.
SportsRecreation
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
MONDAY, AUGUST 24, 2015
B3
JEFF HALSTEAD (2)/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
At left, Doug Wickman and Ben Graham get some air in the Jolly Roger No. 146. Port Angeles-based Wicked Racing No. 1, at right, driven by Doug Hendrickson and navigated by Nichole Heaton-Muller, won the 400 class.
Sprint: Wicked No. 1 finishes 1st in 400 class CONTINUED FROM B1 prepare for the final race of the season, in St. John, Johnson and McNeil repairs already were begincredited their crew’s engine ning Saturday for Morrison specialist, Alex Haxby, for and the Wicked Racing crew. the victory. “We really wanted to get “We were out here late last night using flashlights out there and go,” Morrison to get everything in order,” said. “They put up such a McNeil said. “I’m not sure if Cory and great time to chase, we I were convinced it was really wanted to let her ready, but Alex was confi- loose. “I held off a bit in some dent. of the laps today, but I had “He was right.” With the win, Johnson plenty of juice left to win. “And we put up the fastand McNeil vaulted into first place in the overall est time of the day [43.9530 national finals race and seconds].” The results weren’t all lead the race for the world championship, which would disappointing for Wicked earn them an extra $10,000 Racing. The No. 1 boat, driven by payday. “We’re in a good spot,” Doug Hendrickson and Nichole Heaton-Muller, Johnson said. “If we can keep it clean overcame some early trouat St. John we’ll be happy.” ble navigating the course to With less than a week to win in the 400 class with a
time of 48.936 seconds. The Bandit Racing No. 76 team of Brian and Aubrey Swindahl came in second in 50.319 seconds. “We were having a tough time making it through in the qualifying,” Hendrickson said after his boat picked up Did Not Finishes on its first two passes. “My navigator Nichole missed a turn and I missed one, but we got it together and got the boat dialed in and put up a good time. “It feels good to get back up on top of the podium.” Sequim’s Paul and Josh Gahr finished third in the TNT Live Wire No. 2, the team’s best result on the summer. The Gahr’s were edged out by just under two seconds in the semifinals. Fat Buddy Racing’s youngest competitors, col-
lege student Jesse Miller and recent high school graduate Logan Evans in the No. 9 boat, put together a clean day of racing to win the Modified class. They laid down a time of 47.966 seconds to edge Dennis Hughes and Matia Haskey in the Overkill No. 69 (48.327 seconds). It was Miller’s first-ever win in four years of sprint boat racing. “It’s been a long journey here, but it feels really good that it’s finally come,” Miller said. “Most people seemed to have a hard time with the rotation today, but we had it down pat from the start and we took it and ran with it.” Evans, the team’s navigator, enjoyed the chaos caused by the track rotation. Teams had trouble navi-
gating a straightaway that transitioned into a turn at the No. 7 spot on the course. An edge of an island sticks out in the channel making it tough going for boats that try to cut the corner tightly. That spot caused two boats to flip earlier in the day, much to the crowd’s delight. McNeil, was navigating aboard one of those boats, the Fat Buddy No. 13, when it bumped the island, bounced upside down and ended up submerged in the finish channel. “A little woozy there for a second, sure, but those roll cages are designed to take the brunt of it,” McNeil said. The No. 9 boat steered clear of trouble all day. “It was nice to be able to go out there take the corners smoothly and run the
course the way it was supposed to be ran,” Evans said. Despite a strong day of racing, Sequim’s Dillon Cummings and Teri Cummings and their TNT Jeepers Creepers No. 99 boat were knocked out by less than fourth-tenths of a second in the Modified quarterfinals. The last race of the season can be seen online through Livestream at tinyurl.com/ PDN-SprintRace. Racing starts at Webb’s Slough in St. John at 10 a.m. Viewers will need to create a Livestream account or login with a Facebook account.
________ Sports reporter Michael Carman can be contacted at 360-4522345, ext. 5250 or at mcarman@ peninsuladailynews.com.
Wagner paid and having fun but M’s: Home run is motivated by Super Bowl loss BY GREGG BELL MCCLATCHY NEWS SERVICE
RENTON — Bobby Wagner interrupted another mundane drill for linebackers running through padded bags with . . . handstands? His blue Seattle Seahawks helmet on, chin straps unsnapped, he turned his All-Pro, $43 million body upside down and began covering the practice field’s grass with his hands instead of his feet. When he got back upright, the centerpiece to the NFL’s best defense the past three seasons began dancing those hands from side to side, hula style. “Just having fun, man,” he said after Wednesday’s practice, his sideshow ending the 20th and final day of Seattle’s training camp at team headquarters. “Camp is a grind, so gotta do something to have fun. “You definitely want to THE ASSOCIATED PRESS get the learning down, but Seattle’s Bobby Wagner does a handstand you’ve got to have the right balance to grindin’ and hav- between drills during training camp, last week. ing fun. “It makes practices not seem as long. Whether it’s “We could have stopped them and not even shooting basketballs or put the offense in that position.” playing pingpong or doing BOBBY WAGNER handstands, just have fun.” Regarding the defense’s role in the Seahawks’ Super Bowl loss
Pay raise
this month. Really, he insists nothing is different. No big purchases? “Nothing. Just chillin’,” Wagner said with a grin. “Nothing, other than . . . I can’t really say much has changed. I live a pretty simple life. “It’s just been chill — and focused on football.” What exactly is keeping him grounded? Why does he say the money hasn’t and won’t change him? It is not just the memory of his Seahawks blowing their chance to win a second consecutive Super Bowl on the 1-yard line in the final seconds Feb. 1 against New England. It’s Wagner’s burden of knowing he could have helped prevent Malcolm Butler and Ricardo Lockette from becoming interna-
tionally known stars of the most mind-numbing ending to a Super Bowl. Seattle led 24-14 with 8 minutes left Super Bowl 49. Then its historic defense allowed Tom Brady to throw two touchdown passes in the 28-24 loss most will remember for Butler intercepting Russell Wilson at the goal line. “You know, as much as everyone puts it on the offense for not running the ball at the 1-yard line, we could have stopped them and not even put the offense in that position,” Wagner said Wednesday. “So we’ve got a lot of talented guys who are going to continue to work hard and grind. I think we have a lot of room for improvement. That’s great. And we feel like we’ve improved so far.”
Showed value in 2014 Relatively soft-spoken with a life that’s as simple as his linebacker credo, Wagner remains the central key to Seattle’s defense and thus the team’s core. The Seahawks were scuffling at 6-4 last season as Wagner was finishing a five-game absence because of a turf-toe injury. Immediately upon his return Seattle won eight consecutive games to make another Super Bowl. His status as indispensable has only increased this month while team leader and strong safety Kam Chancellor continues his holdout that has no end in sight. That’s the source of what Wagner sees as perhaps the only change in his life this month. “I feel like I’ve always had the respect from the league, from other players. So for me, nothing has changed. I have this mindset,” he said. “Maybe I just speak a little more [with the contract and Chancellor gone]. But nothing’s changed on my end.”
Rodney: DFA CONTINUED FROM B1 He was an All-Star last year, set a franchise record in saves,” McClendon said. Elias was 4-6 with a “It just did not work for 4.27 ERA in 13 starts earhim, whatever the reason lier this season with the was, this year. He could not Mariners, and 4-2 with a get it done, could not get it 7.34 ERA at Tacoma after going. It’s very unfortunate. being sent down in early We wish him the best.” July. Rodney, whose 236 Kensing was 2-0 with career saves are sixth 2.23 ERA in 19 relief among active players, said appearances with Tacoma. the move was not unexRodney, an All-Star in pected. 2014 with Seattle and an “No surprise,” the AL-best 48 saves, but lost 13-year veteran said. “You the closer role after strugknow when you have not gling this season. been doing your job. I have “This is a funny game. been waiting.”
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He’s having fun. But he’s definitely not content. On Aug. 1 he signed a $43 million, four-year extension with nearly $22 million in guarantees. It made him the NFL’s highest-paid middle linebacker, to go with his reputation as the best one. Wagner, who was guaranteed $2,158,753 with his rookie contract in 2012, received a whopping raise of almost 10 times the guaranteed money with his new deal. Now he’s getting $21.977 million in guarantees through the 2019 season. That’s a 918 percent raise. Yet Wagner, who turned 25 in June, said his “simple” life hasn’t changed in these first days since an $8 million signing bonus entered his bank account
He’s in the middle of perhaps the least-dramatic position group in Seattle’s preseason. Though Kevin PierreLouis was sharing firstteam time in practice until injuring his shoulder earlier this month, all three starting linebackers are back: Wagner, flanked by recently re-signed K.J. Wright and Bruce Irvin, who is ultramotivated entering the final year of his contract. The linebackers’ mantra has stayed constant even as new position coaches Michael Barrow and Lofa Tatupu have replaced Ken Norton. Oakland hired Norton, the man whom Wagner credits for his development, to be its defensive coordinator this spring. “Out-hit everyone. Make sure you out-hit everyone,” Wagner said. “And get the ball.”
CONTINUED FROM B1 came home on Jackson’s single to make it 5-1. With Tom Wilhelmsen pitched two out, Cano hit his 14th a perfect ninth for his third home run, a two-run shot over the wall in right. save. John Danks (6-11) was Cruz on base (again) tagged for seven runs on eight hits in five innings. Cruz’s third-inning douNelson Cruz doubled in ble extended his on-base two runs to key a four-run streak to a career-high 33 third as the Mariners consecutive games. erased a 1-0 deficit. Mark Trumbo doubled Up next to open, advanced on Brad Miller’s sacrifice and scored Seattle’s red-hot Hisashi on Jesus Sucre’s single. Iwakuma (5-2, 3.74) opens After Marte struck out, a three-game series at Austin Jackson singled and home against Oakland Cruz followed with a twotoday. run double to right-center Over his last four starts, to make it 3-1. Franklin the right-hander is 3-0 Gutierrez singled home with a 1.71 ERA, including Cruz. a no-hitter against BaltiIn the fifth, Marte more on Aug. 12. reached on a fielder’s The A’s counter with choice, stole second and left-hander Felix Doubront.
B4
MONDAY, AUGUST 24, 2015
Dilbert
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Classic Doonesbury (1985)
Frank & Ernest
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DEAR ABBY: I’m nearly 100 percent sure my husband is cheating on me. I tracked him a couple of times using the GPS on his phone and saw he wasn’t where he told me he would be. I know he has a female acquaintance who lives in the general area of where he was, so I did a little investigating. Sure enough, she lives exactly where he was. I don’t know whether to confront him now or wait to try to catch him at her house so there will be no denying it. My husband is the last person on Earth I thought would cheat. When it comes to everything else in life, he’s a man of high standards and integrity. I’m afraid to be on my own because I never have been. I don’t see how I/we can afford a divorce. Please help! In Shock in Florida
by Lynn Johnston
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by G.B. Trudeau
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by Bob and Tom Thaves
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the person and say you are thinking Van Buren about him or her, and ask how your friend is doing. During the conversation, allude to the fact that you’ll be having a celebration and mention that if he or she is feeling up to it, the invitation is open. Your friend may surprise you and accept because there is no timetable for grief, and much of the grieving may have been done while the deceased was alive and ailing. However, if your friend declines, at least he/she will know you were thinking about him/her, and that’s very important at a time like this.
Abigail
Dear Abby: Our bright, attractive daughter recently told us that she’s seeing a transgender man. For financial reasons, this man has not had a complete sex change. He still has a female body part. This has caused deep division within our family because, while we love our daughter, we also refuse to see this as being “normal” and believe it will have a negative impact on our daughter professionally. Please advise. Living a Nightmare in New Mexico Dear Living a Nightmare: Unless the person your daughter is seeing wears a sign describing his genitalia, your daughter’s career should not be affected. This should be nobody’s business — including yours. Because you love your daughter, concentrate less on what’s “missing” and more on what they share together and the happiness they bring each other, and you’ll all be better off.
Dear Abby: Would it be rude to invite someone to a festive occasion weeks after he or she lost a loved one? Is there a time frame or an etiquette reference? It seems callous to issue an invitation, but if I didn’t, I’d feel like I’m shunning or forgetting the person. ________ I am looking for a mature way to Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, approach this. Have you any also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was thoughts you can offer? founded by her mother, the late Pauline PhilTreading Lightly in NYC lips. Letters can be mailed to Dear Abby, P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069 or via email by logging onto www.dearabby.com.
Dear Treading Lightly: Call by Brian Basset
The Last Word in Astrology ❘ ARIES (March 21-April 19): Use creative expression to reach your goals. It’s how you approach others and the way you present who you are that will bring you closer to the success you are searching for. Make romance a priority. 5 stars
Rose is Rose
DEAR ABBY
Dear In Shock: You must have suspected that something wasn’t right, or you wouldn’t have been tracking your husband’s whereabouts. Now that you know for certain he hasn’t been truthful, protect yourself by consulting an attorney who specializes in family law. This does not mean I’m suggesting you divorce your husband. However, you will be enlightened about what your rights are as his wife. Armed with that information, if you decide to drop by the woman’s house while your husband is there and confront them, it may help your husband recognize that a divorce isn’t in his financial interest and give him an incentive to repair your marriage.
by Jim Davis
Red and Rover
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Hubby lies about his whereabouts
by Scott Adams
For Better or For Worse
Garfield
Fun ’n’ Advice
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Try to keep things running smoothly at home. Now is not the time to rock the boat or take on physical tasks that are too challenging. Concentrate on gathering facts that will help you gain respect and popularity. 3 stars
by Pat Brady and Don Wimmer
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Indecision will surface due to conflicting options. Don’t make a decision based on what other people want. Consider what will make you happy and feel your best about who you are and how you look. Love is highlighted. 3 stars
ZITS ❘ by Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman
CANCER (June 21-July 22): An open mind will lead to knowledge and future prospects. Set up a place at home that is conducive to developing the projects you want to pursue. An encounter with someone with similar goals will result in a trusted alliance. 3 stars LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Mix business with pleasure
Dennis the Menace
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by Hank Ketcham
Pickles
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by Brian Crane
by Eugenia Last
and you will advance. Express your feelings and show passion in all that you do, and people will take note. A proactive approach both personally and professionally will separate you from the competition. 5 stars
Don’t act hastily just because someone puts pressure on you. Step back and do your best to physically prepare for any challenges you see coming. Avoid emotional disputes. 3 stars
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): You will face opposition at an emotional level. Do your own thing and forget about discussing your plans until you feel certain that you can do so in a practical manner. Walk away from any situation that leaves you feeling vulnerable. 2 stars
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): The less said about your plans, the better. Develop your game plan and initiate what you want to see happen. It’s important to remain in control if you want to reach your goals. A financial gain will come from an unexpected source. 3 stars
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): An emotional situation will cost you if you are impulsive or give in to manipulation. Stand up for your rights and make sure you do what’s best for you. Concentrate on personal improvements and being with the people you love. 4 stars SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Revisit your past goals. Get involved in an event or activity that will bring you closer to your dreams. Keep an open mind and develop a creative strategy and you will bring about a positive change. 3 stars
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Take charge and do your thing. Don’t let uncertainty creep into your head when it’s important that you follow through with your plans. A positive change in an important relationship will unfold if you exhibit confidence. 4 stars
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Make sure you have your facts straight before you share information with someone you want to partner with. It’s important that you are open to suggestions and willing to compromise. Honesty SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): You’ll find it diffi- will play a major role in your cult to make up your mind. ability to find success. 2 stars
The Family Circus
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by Bil and Jeff Keane
Classified
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
MONDAY, AUGUST 24, 2015 B5
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Office Assistant 2: Par t-time. Peninsula College is recruiting for an Office Assistant to provide clerical assistance in the Human Resource Office. Salar y: $11.93 hr. Position infor mation and on-line application form available at www.pencol.edu. EEO
3010 Announcements DONATION and VOLUNTEERS NEEDED: To sew lap quilts for d i s a bl e d ve t s. A t t h e s e n i o r c e n t e r. E ve r y Tuesday from 1-4 p.m,. (360)457-7004
3020 Found
FOUND: Ferrett. Black and white. Found above W e n d y ’s R e s t a u r a n t 8/21. (360)775-5154 FOUND: Grey tabby kitten with white feet. Male, small. (360)452-3156 FOUND: Misc. women’s clothing (outerwear, undies, sz. 10 shoes.) and 3 laptops. 417-2268
3023 Lost LOST: CoonTabby Cat. Black and tan, long hair, male, 25 lbs. 5th and E, area. (360)452-5009 LOST: terr ier-pit mix, bor n deaf, white with brown spots, Dungeness river. (360)808-1605
4070 Business Opportunities Restaurant/cafe for s a l e. B e a u t i f u l wa t e r view, great location in downtown Por t Townsend on the main street. $65,000 negotiable. (360)316-9577
4026 Employment General
7 CEDARS RESORT IS NOW HIRING FOR THE FOLLOWING PT/FT POSITIONS: S l o t C a s h i e r, A s s t . Fo o d a n d B eve ra g e Mgr., Grocery Cashiergrave yard shift, Line Cook, Prep Cook, Busser/Host, Dishwasher, Customer Service Offic e r, D e l i / E s p r e s s o Cashier, IT Sys. Administrator III, Table Games Dealer, Porter Bingo Sales Clerk, Totem Rewards Rep. For more information and to apply online, please visit our website at www.7cedars resort.com. Native American preference for qualified candidates.
Delivery Technician P/T 20-30 hrs/week evening shift, M-F, rotating weekends. Clean driving record req. Apply at Jim’s Pharmacy & Home Health, 424 E. 2nd St., P.A. EOE. DENTIST: Part time 24 hrs. month for exams, fili n g s a n d ex t ra c t i o n s, hours flexible. Salary negotiable. 9/mo. contract. HYGENTIST: Part time 32 hrs. month for patient c a r e , h o u r s f l ex i b l e . Salary negotiable. 9/mo. contract. Contact Susan at Sgile@vimoclinic.org.
EARLY CHILDHOOD M e d i c a l A s s i s t a n t ’s SERVICES Olympic Community Ac- W a n t e d . H a r r i s o n t i o n P r o g r a m s E a r l y H e a l t h Pa r t n e r s S e Childhood Ser vices is q u i m D e r m a t o l o g y hiring for the following Clinic has two full time positions in Clallam and Certified Medical AsJefferson County for the sistant positions open. 2 0 1 5 - 2 0 1 6 P r o g r a m Competitive pay and Year: Teacher Assistant; benefits. Must have Itinerant Teacher Assist- minimum high school a n t a n d S u b s t i t u t e or equivalent and Te a c h e r A s s i s t a n t . Washington State CerHours and Weeks vary tification as a Medical by site for all listed posi- A s s i s t a n t . C u r r e n t tions. Applications at CPR also required. ExOlyCAP, 823 Commerce p e r i e n c e p r e fe r r e d . Loop, Por t Townsend, Apply at jobs.harrisonWA (360) 385-2571; or medical.org 228 W. First St., Por t Angeles, WA (360) 452MEDICAL SCRIBE 4 7 2 6 , o r w w w . o l y - Pa r t - t i m e S c r i b e f o r cap.org. Closes when busy, high-volume medifilled. EOE. cal office. Duties; scribing, scanning and data entr y. Must type effiHOME HEALTH AID F T, P T, m u s t h a v e ciently and accurately. m i n . 7 0 h o u r s p r i o r Medical terminology pretraning. Call Rainshad- fe r r e d . C h e e r f u l n e s s, ow Home Services at team player, ability to multi-task and work well (360)681-6206. under pressure required. Email resumes with references to clinicresumes@olypen.com. HOUSEKEEPING Looking for energetic team members. Apply in person 140 Del Guzzi Drive Port Angeles INSULATOR: Part to full time, must have vailid drivers lisc. Call (360) 681-0480
JEFFERSON CO BLDG INSPECTOR. Full-time, $20.86 hr plus benefits DELIVERY ROUTE Info at www.co.jefferEarly morning, approx. son.wa.us or at County 3 5 - 4 0 m i l e s, S e q u i m Courthouse. Deadline is area, 2.5 hrs. per day. 4:00 PM, Sept 18, 2015 $1,200/mo. EOE (360)457-4260. Blue Mountain Animal Clinic is hiring. Join our fabulous clinical pet care LINE COOKS: Experienced, competitive wagteam, FT/PT. es. Full time or part time. EXP REQUIRED Resume/cover letter to Apply in person at Black Bear Diner in Sequim. BMAC2972@gmail.com
BUILD AIRPLANE PA RT S . AC T I i n Po r t Angeles offers full time w o r k , p a i d va c a t i o n , benefits and a 401k with matching! We are looking for lab techs, layup fabr icators and tr im techs. For job information and application contact WorkSource, 228 W First Street, Por t Angeles or call 360.457.2103. Only people who can pass a preemployment drug screen please. CAREGIVER: Ideally available for all shifts, including weekends. Apply in person at Park View Villas, 8th & G Streets, P.A.
Dental Practice Manager: We’re seeking just the right person to join our dental practice. If you have experience in management that includes knowledge of accounting and human resources’, you possess strong wr itten and verbal communication skills and enjoy working in a team environment you might fit our needs. This is a salaried position with an attractive benefit package that includes health insurance, dental benefits, 401k match plan and vacation. Please submit your resume and c ove r l e t t e r i f yo u r skills and experience match our needs. Mail resume and cover letter to 620 East 8th Street Por t Angeles, WA 98362 or email to atlast@irwindentalcenter.com. Position closes on 8/31/15
Licensed Nurse needed, flexible hours, with benefits. 3+ shifts per we e k . C a l l D o n n a . (360)683-3348.
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
NW DRIVING SCHOOL Of Por t Angeles, Por t Townsend and Forks are accepting apps for a 4 mo. training program/incar instructor. Part time position with bonus/wages upon completion of training. Training is TTh-Fri. 8 a.m. to 4 p.m Starting Sept. 8, 2015 Apply at: northwestdriving schoolinc.com/ employment.htm NW DRIVING SCHOOL Port Angeles office is accepting apps for Par t time office assistant. Tech savy, WSDL and over 21. Pay $11.00 Apply at: northwestdriving schoolinc.com/ employment.htm SERVER: Par t time, dining room, in upscale nonsmoking retirement center. Pleasant work environment, m u s t b e f l ex i bl e t o w o r k d a y, n i g h t o r weekend shifts. Apply at The Lodge at Sherwood Village, 660 Eve r g r e e n Fa r m Way, Sequim. United Way of Clallam County seeks Inter im CEO with senior mana g e m e n t ex p e r i e n c e. Ideal candidate must be mission-dr iven with strong people skills, problem-solving abilities & commitment to leadership. More at: h t t p : / / w w w. u n i t e d way clallam.org/news/job opening-united-way S e n d c ove r l e t t e r / r e sume to: United Way, Attn: Linty Hopie, PO Box 937, Port Angeles WA, 98362 WELDER / FABRICATOR For in shop, structural steel and ornamental steel fabr icator in Carlsborg, WA. Selfstar ter, able to work unsupervised. Must have a valid DL & good driving record. Must be detail oriented. Good communication skills required. Experience required. FT. Wages DOE. Email resume to Kate@Allfor mWelding.com or fax to 360-681-4465.
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4026 Employment 4080 Employment 105 Homes for Sale General Wanted Clallam County Seasonal help needed. AFSCME local #1619 represented. No benefits. $11.57 per hour. Application deadline is 8/26/15. Please apply at wa-portangeles.civicplus .com or pick up an application at 321 E. 5th St. COPA is an EOE.
12 Unit apartment Located in downtown Por t Angeles. Price includes two vacant lots, one on each side of the apartment building. Plenty of room for expansion, a n o t h e r u s e o r m i xe d use. Current scheduled rent is $8340.00 per month or $100,080 per year. MLS#291629 $595,000 Quint Boe (360)457-0456 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES
4080 Employment Wanted
LAWN AND GARDEN MAINTENENCE: Debri removal. (360)477-7922
ALL-PHASE SERVICES Pressure washing, gutter cleaning, other services avail. Call anytime (360)775-5737
Private Caregiver: Available, 8 years experience, flexible hours. Call Marc (360)477-9416 New listing! leave message. This well maintained 3 br, 2 ba home with eat-in kitchen has tile entr y, PRIVATE HOME: Pri- heat pump, new carpets, va t e h o m e , p r i va t e fresh paint and is ready room, 35 yrs experi- to move-in. It features a ence, 24 hour loving large master with walk-in care for senior lady. s h ow e r. L ow m a i n t e (360)461-9804. nance landscaping with drip system and the parYoung Couple Early 60’s tially fenced back yard available for seasonal gives privacy to the large cleanup, weeding, trim- c o v e r e d d e c k . T h i s ming, mulching & moss home is close to town so removal. We specialize you can easily enjoy all in complete garden res- the activities Sequim has torations. Excellent ref- to offer. $199,900 erences. 457-1213 Team Tenhoff Chip & Sunny’s Garden Blue Sky Real Estate Tr a n s f o r m a t i o n s . L i Sequim c e n s e # C C 206-853-5033 CHIPSSG850LB.
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. HANDYWORK: Active G ra n d m a s e e k s wo r k house cleaning, painting, landscaping ect. $20 per hour. Taking new clients. (360)461-0743
GARAGE SALE ADS Call for details. 360-452-8435 1-800-826-7714
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43CHANGE
Coordinators The Boys Girls Clubs of the Olympic Peninsula Port Angeles Unit is looking for multiple positions including; Kitchen, Ar t Room, and Games Room Coordinators. Please apply in person.
Advertising coordinaCARRIER tor: needed for media for ads, news releases, pro- Peninsula Daily News motions materials and and Sequim Gazette event planning. See Combined Route hartnagels.com for deSequim area. Interesttails. ed par ties must be 18 yrs. of age, have a valid Automotive Washington State DrivTechnicians needed ers License, proof of inGrowing shop needs ad- surance and reliable veditional professional au- h i c l e . E a r l y m o r n i n g tomotive technicians to delivery Monday through wo r k i n a fa s t p a c e d Friday and Sunday. f r i e n d l y e nv i r o n m e n t . jbirkland@sequim Position requires 3 years gazette.com shop experience. Wages DOE and certifications, CASHIER: P/T Looking range is 14.00 to 30.00. for a friendly, energetic Preference is given to person who is able to Diesel, Electrical Diag- multi-task and enjoys nosis, and Suspension working with the public. technicians. This posi- Flexible schedule retion is full time with a quired, must be able to Monday through Friday work weekends. Wages work week. Benefits in- DOE. Apply in person at: clude uniform service, The Co-Op Far m and latest diagnosis equip- Garden, Sequim. ment and special tools, (360)683-4111 paid training, paid time off, performance incenCommunity Services tives, and objective boDirector nuses. 401K and medic a l i n s u r a n c e i s The CSD runs these available for those who programs: Weatherization, Energy Assistance, qualify. Send resume to: JARC, Community CenPeninsula Daily News ters, Nutrition, RSVP/Vet PDN#722 / Auto Tech Connect, Encore/Arts & Port Angeles, WA Minds, Home Fund. Re98362 sponsible for all funding sources supporting Community Ser vices AVAILABLE ROUTE Programs. Qualificain PORT TOWNSEND Peninsula Daily News tions: Bachelors degree; minimum of two years Circulation Dept. Looking for individuals work experience in sointerested in Port Town- cial services, human sersend area route. Inter- vice, case management ested parties must be 18 or related field. Experiyrs. of age, have a valid ence in managing proWashington State Driv- grams, budgets and perers License, proof of in- sonnel. Applications and surance and reliable ve- more details at www.olyh i c l e . E a r l y m o r n i n g cap.org. Closes when delivery Monday through filled. EOE. Fr i d a y a n d S u n d a y. . COOK: Experience deCall Jasmine at (360)683-3311 Ext 6051 sired. Full-time, benefits, pay doe, to join our team Or email at the Fifth Avenue Rejbirkland@ peninsuladailynews.com tirement Center. Pleasant work environment , must be flexible to work all shifts, including weekend shifts. Must be able to interact comfortable BARTENDERS: Please with our residents and guests. Apply at Sherbring in resume to: wood Assisted Living, VFW Post 4760 5 5 0 W. H e n d r i c k s o n 169 E. Washington St. Road, Sequim. Sequim, WA 98382
5000900
FOUND: 2 fawn pugs, Lauridsen and Race St. on 8/21 No collar or chip. (360)775-5154
4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment General General General General General
91190150
ATTENTION ADVERTISERS: No cancellations or corrections can be made on the day of publication. It is the Advertiser’s responsibility to check their ad on the first day of publication and notify the Classified department if it is not correct. Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., is responsible for only one incorrect insertion. All advertising, whether paid for or not, whether initially accepted or published, is subject to approval or rescission of approval by Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc. The position, subject matter, form, size, wording, illustrations, and typography of an advertisement are subject to approval of Northwest Media (Washington), L.P., which reserves the right to classify, edit, reject, position, or cancel any advertisement at any time, before or after insertion. Neither Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., investigates statements made directly or indirectly in any advertisement and neither makes any representations regarding the advertisers, their products, or their services or the legitimacy or value of the advertisers or their products or services. In consideration of publication of an advertisement, the Advertiser and any advertising agency that it may employ, jointly and severally, will indemnify and hold harmless Black Press Ltd./ Sound Publishing, Inc., their officers, agents, and employees against expenses (including all legal fees), liabilities, and losses resulting from the publication or distribution of advertising, including, without limitation, claims or suits for libel, violation of privacy, copyright or trademark infringement, deception, or other violations of law. Except as provided in this paragraph, neither Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., shall be liable for any damages resulting from error in or non-publication of ads, whether paid for or not, including but not limited to, incidental, consequential, special, general, presumed, or punitive damages or lost profits. The sole and exclusive remedy against Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., for any error in, or non-publication of, an ad shall be a refund of the cost of the ad or the printing of one make-good insertion, at the discretion of the Publisher; provided that Advertiser and/or its agency has paid for the ad containing the error or which was not published; otherwise, the sole remedy shall be one make-good insertion. No claim for repetition shall be allowed. No allowance shall be made for imperfect printing or minor errors. Neither Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., shall be liable for failure to print, publish, or circulate all or any portion of an advertisement or of advertising linage contracted for, if such failure is due to acts of God, strikes, accidents, or other circumstances beyond the control of Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc. Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., shall not be liable for errors in or non-publication of advertisements submitted after normal deadlines. Any legal action arising from these terms and conditions or relating to the publication of, or payment for, advertising shall, if filed, be commenced and maintained in any court. Other terms and conditions, stated on our Advertising Rate Cards and Contracts, may apply. This service is not to be used to defraud or otherwise harm users or others, and Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., reserves the right to disclose a user’s identity where deemed necessary to protect Black Press Ltd./Sound Publishing, Inc., or others or to respond to subpoenas or other lawful demands for information. All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation, or discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin, or intention to make any such preference, limitation, or discrimination.” We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis.
Classified
B6 MONDAY, AUGUST 24, 2015
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. REGIONAL PLAYOFFS Solution: 7 letters
S O C C E R N R E T S E W M L
T N C F L N R A U S H T I S L
DOWN 1 Refuse receptacle 2 Like some regular news updates 3 Claim without proof 4 Satirist Mort 5 Novelist Umberto 6 Comical Costello 7 __ Butterworth 8 Iron-poor blood condition 9 Place for books 10 Racetrack near Miami 11 Reach, as a destination 12 Animation still 13 __ lime pie 18 Collar attachment 22 Vacation stopover 24 Apple discard 25 Adaptable, electrically 26 “Waiting for Godot” playwright Samuel 27 Writer __ Stanley Gardner 28 Film cameo, e.g. 33 Mix in 34 Hog’s home
8/24/15
Friday’s Puzzle Solved Saturday’s Puzzle Solved
Opportunity is Knocking PRICE REDUCED! This proper ty is literally “Good to Go” with its commercial location and v i s i b i l i t y. B L D G h a s been used as a popular deli/bakery/grocery store w/coffee/espresso/soup etc. Great visibility, drive thru window, DBL city lot, lots of improvements including newer green house. MLS#290081 $199,000 Ania Pendergrass 360-461-3973 Remax Evergreen
T I T O S E E E O T I A O N S
E M Y R R G M S H A C I T M A
G I P E D A S S C N K N A S B
N L F U N E E G T E E E T L S
©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.
ODWUN ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
35 Hyphen-like punctuation 36 Cookie with a Thins variety 37 Rascal 39 __ buco: veal dish 40 “Once __ a time ...” 43 Nonstop 45 Secret supply 47 Compete for a seat 48 ’50s nuclear trials
8/24/15
50 Strasbourg’s region 51 Spy on 52 Balance sheet heading 54 Artist’s flat hat 57 Once-sacred snakes 58 Baltic, for one 59 Directional suffix 61 Color chart listing 62 Land in la mer 63 Domino dot
NEARING COMPLETION 3 b r, 2 b a , 2 , 3 3 7 s f home in Cedar Ridge. Open concept floor plan, and 9’ ceilings. 832 sf attached 3-car garage! MLS#291515/820232 $495,000 Alan Burwell Windermere Real Estate Sequim East (360) 460-0790
ROOM TO GROW 1,608 sq. custom-built, 1 br home nestled on over 7 acres of privacy with a 3 br septic and plenty of r o o m t o g r o w. 2 d e tached garages and deer-proof gardens compliment this off-the-grid capable home on three, split-able lots. If you desire your own personal oasis, surrounded by nature, this is the home you have been waiting for. MLS#291391/813898 $345,000 Doc Reiss (360)461-0613 TOWN & COUNTRY STRAIT VIEW FOR SALE BY OWNER! Island Vista Way 2 br., 2 ba., 14 X 66 ‘77 Fleetwo o d M o b i l e o n 4 / 1 0 acre. Storage shed, newer carpet, vinyl, upd a t e s . Pa r t i a l w a t e r view, large front yard, forest out back. $89,000. (360)417-6867
SALT WATER AND MOUNTAIN VIEWS! 4 br., 2 full ba., 2,434 finished sf / 1,340 unfinished sf, 2 stor y with basement, charm of the 40’s with updated features, original oak floors, new plumbing, electric, roof, vinyl double pane w i n d ow s, n i c e h o m e, centrally located, MLS#291641 $249,000 Team Thomsen UPTOWN REALTY (360)808-0979
FETEFC
B O W L I N G L K C U P P I I
T E N N I S U M P I R E S F G
8/24
MTRYHH Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
Print your answer here: Yesterday's
Very open A bu n d a n c e o f n a t u ra l light in this contemporary style 3 bd, 2.5 bath home. Living, kitchen and dining area surrounded by large windows to enjoy the wonderful views of the straits. Large master with access to hot tub. All sitting on a large lot with fruit trees. MLS#291699 $319,000 Rhonda Baublits (360)461-4898 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES
308 For Sale Lots & Acreage
F S B O : H a p py Va l l e y acreage, live in a cottage while building your dreamhome. 8.3 acres with all services on site, septic for 3 Br. home. Cottage currently rented to tenant. $260,000. Call owner at (360)808-3909. LOT/ACRE: 3937 Solar Lane .59 acre in city lot that’s level with all underground utilities. This lot is level and ready to be built on. Recent survey markers still on site. Southern border is the county and just off to the west is Hurricane Ridge road. quiet end of culdes a c l o t , e a s y C C R ’s must see!!! $44,900. (360)477-6668
OPEN HOUSE - FSBO Sat.-Sun. 11-5 1020 Talus, Sequim 1961 sf, 2Br., 2ba. Den w/fireplace. Like new, upgrades++, light, bright, mt. view. Soak tub, all appliances, lots of closets, wall bed. (360)232-4223
(360)
417-2810
HOUSES/APT IN PORT ANGELES
A 1BD/1BA ...$625/M A 2BD/1BA ...$700/M H 2BD/1BA ...$825/M D 3BD/1BA ...$800/M H 3BD/1BA ...$850/M H 2BD/1.5BA $850/M H 2/1 LK DAWN $850/M H 3/1.5 VIEW $1100/M H 2/2 FURNISHED $1200/M H 4BD/2BA.... $1300/M H 3BD/2.5 BA CC&R’S $1800/M COMPLETE LIST @
ACREAGE: Black Diamond, 3.01 acres, quiet, pr ivate, dead end rd. Wooded with water view. $65,000. (360)460-1514
1111 Caroline St. Port Angeles 605 Apartments Clallam County Properties by
Inc.
RENTALS AVAILABLE COMMERCIAL HOMES APARTMENTS
452-1326
P.A. Fur nished studio apt. $650 with $300 deposit. No pets, utilities included. (360)457-0236
505 Rental Houses 671 Mobile Home Clallam County Spaces for Rent
SEQUIM BEAUTIFULLY REMODELED HOME w i t h N E W E V E R YTHING. 206 E Fir St. OPEN HOUSE SATURD AY, A U G U S T 1 s t , 11-4. 2BD/1.75B with large bright bonus room. Excellent central location. 1,447 sf with attached 190 sf storage, 520 sf detached two car carport, shop. $188,000. Laurene 360-393-2259
Properties by
Inc.
RENTALS AVAILABLE COMMERCIAL HOMES APARTMENTS
452-1326
(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: MONEY TRACT REMOVE MAYHEM Answer: When she thought her daughter might have a fever, she used her — “THERM-MOM-METER”
6042 Exercise Equipment
SHARE HOME: master- TETER HANG UP: Modsuite, garage, Sunland el GL9500, vergy good Amenities, $650 per condition. $150. month. (360)681-3331 (360)582-9141
RV Space: Private prope r t y, i n c l u d e s g a r age/shed, long term renters only. $450. (360)681-3225
683 Rooms to Rent Roomshares ROOMMATE WANTED To share expenses for very nice home west of P.A. on 10+ acres. $425 mo., includes utilities, DirectTV, wifi. Must see. Call Lonnie after 5 p.m. (360)477-9066
1163 Commercial Rentals
PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM
PRIVATE SETTING Cute 3 br, 2 ba home where you can hear Solmar creek while sitting on the back deck. G a r d e n e r ’s p a r a d i s e with fruit trees, greenhouse and potting shed. Well taken care of and some recent updates. RV Hook up and Dump. Fire pit. MLS#291685/833845 $189,900 Will-Tennette Possinger Windermere Real Estate Sequim East (360) 460-0790
Panoramic View Water views from living room and daylight basement. 4 br, 1.5 ba home plus an adjacent extra lot for privacy. Fenced back yard, covered patio. Enjoy apples from your own tree while taking in the Strait. MLS#291478/821148 $249,900 Rick Patti Brown Windermere Real Estate Sequim East (360) 775-5780
R O U N D R A A M A O T E N R
Arena, Basketball, Bowling, Boys, Cheer, Coach, Court, Cricket, Dance, Eastern, Elimination, Fans, Finals, Games, Girls, Goal, Golf, Group, Judges, Lacrosse, League, Match, Play, Puck, Quality, Referee, Ringette, Round, Schedule, Score, Shoot, Soccer, Spectators, Sports, Stats, Stick, Swim, Teams, Teen, Tennis, Tournament, Umpires, Western Yesterday’s Answer: King
LARYL
Location Creates Quality of Life 4 Seasons Ranch with all its amenities and this lovely 4 br., 3 ba., modern home with kitchen / bath upgrades. 0.8 acre lot, back deck, gas fireplace, dbl garage, cathedral ceilings, mtn view. Walk on the beach, play golf, fish in the creek, take a dip in the pool, walk on the Discovery Trail and never need to leave 4 Seasons Ranch. MLS#291696 $349,000 Ania Pendergrass 360-461-3973 Remax Evergreen
Once in a lifetime opportunity! Own a 98 acre private oasis that includes approx. 1,000 feet of beachfront with tideland rights, salmon rearing Nelson Creek frontage and a priva t e m a n a g e d fo r e s t . Utilities are in place and high speed internet has been brought in from HWY 112 to the shop with 2 br., 2 ba. apar tment above, and to the future building site. Zoned Commercial Forest / Mixed Use 20 allowing for a variety of possibilities. Relax and enjoy the privacy and abundant wildlife that visits this unique property! MLS#291700 $2,000,000 Kelly Johnson (360)477-5876 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES
I E J R O Y M O A R T E C A L
Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.
PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM
EXQUISITE & EXTRAORDINARY Spacious 5 bd, 3.5 ba; 4,938 sf Charming entry, stunning master suite large kitchen with ample counter space for mal dining, comfortable living room adjacent vacant lot to north sold with home. MLS#832997/291665 $376,000 Team Schmidt (360)918-3199 WINDERMERE SUNLAND 360-683-6880
T N I C C A E S N R R E R S K
by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM
Excellent Property Water views from living room and daylight basement. 4 br, 1.5 ba home plus an adjacent extra lot for privacy. Fenced back yard, covered patio. Enjoy apples from your own tree while taking in the Strait. MLS#291334/811719 $254,900 Rick Patti Brown Windermere Real Estate Sequim East (360) 775-5780
E A L S H S C P L T C U S T E
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
581351589
Custom Built on 2.5 Acres Beautiful 3 br, 2.5 ba home with Cherry hardwood flooring in entry, kitchen, dining area, and hall. Upgraded appliances in kitchen, large living room, master suite with double sinks, great d e ck w i t h a u t o m a t e d awning, detached 30 X 40 insulated pole building with 200 amp power, 1 0 ’ d o o r s, a n d 6 , 0 0 0 watt back up generator. MLS#290950 $449,500 Tom Blore 360-683-7814 PETER BLACK REAL ESTATE
T S I T U A O G D E E T E H F O ګ A E ګ N N ګ S B ګ O A L O C I B T
© 2015 Universal Uclick www.wonderword.com Download our app!
By Gail Grabowski and Bruce Venzke
105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 505 Rental Houses 683 Rooms to Rent Clallam County Roomshares Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County
BEAUTY IN SUNLAND 2 bd., 2 ba., 1,467 sf. on 9th Fairway, skylights and large windows, double fireplace living / dining rooms, mature landscaping acts as natural fencing, secluded large patio, 2 car garage with storage. MLS#808069/291280 $249,000 Deb Kahle (360)670-5978 WINDERMERE SUNLAND 360-683-6880
A O Q L U R E D G C H W Y K A
Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app
ACROSS 1 “Just as I suspected!” 4 Alabama protest city 9 Crude dwelling 14 Sun, in Mexico 15 Oak-to-be 16 Company newbie 17 *Historic Chicago landmark cofounded by Jane Addams 19 With time to spare 20 Angler’s basket 21 One thousandth: Pref. 23 Fishtank organism 24 *Anxiety caused by confinement 29 Bill, Louis and Carrie 30 Porthole view 31 Flight-related prefix 32 Either of the first two consonants in “coccyx,” but not the third 34 “We __ Overcome” 35 Lavish affairs 38 *Dress fancily 41 Summer shirt 42 Curving 44 Annual athletic awards 46 Actor Connery 47 “Midnight Cowboy” hustler Rizzo 49 Cantina snack 53 *Old phone feature for multiple calls 55 Stein fillers 56 Coeur d’__, Idaho 57 Braying beasts 58 Drainage conduit 60 In tidy condition, and a hint to the first words of the answers to starred clues 64 Remove pencil marks 65 Dutch bloom 66 Scratching post user 67 Inner turmoil 68 Oozes 69 Aliens, briefly
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Properties by
Inc.
RENTALS AVAILABLE COMMERCIAL HOMES APARTMENTS
452-1326
QUALITY OFFICE SPACE: 970 sf, great location, lots of parking. $1,170/mo. Avail. 9/1 (360)683-4184
6050 Firearms & Ammunition GUN SHOW Sequim Prairie Grange Sept. 5-6, Sat. 9-5, Sun. 9-3. Admission $5, Family $7. Tables both days $35. Don Roberts (360)457-1846 SENTINEL: MK1 pistol, 22 cal., excellent condition. $250. 683-2529 SPRINGFIELD XDS/45, 4” barrel. $450. (360)912-2071 WE BUY FIREARMS CASH ON THE SPOT ~~~ ANY & ALL ~~~ TO P $ $ $ PA I D I N CLUDING ESTATES AND OR ENTIRE COLLECTIONS Call 360-477-9659
6055 Firewood, S E QU I M : 5 t h Ave. , Fuel & Stoves Boardwalk Sq., space for rent, negotiable FIREWOOD: $179 deliv(360)683-3256. ered Sequim-P.A. True cord. 3 cord special TWO OFFICES IN $499. (360)582-7910 DOWNTOWN www.portangelesfire SEQUIM GAZETTE wood.com BUILDING FOR SUB-LEASE WOOD SLABS: For fire448-sq-ft for $500 mo., wood ,fencing, siding 12’ 240-sq-ft for $350 mo. full pickup load $50. Perfect for accountant (360)460-9226 or other professional. S h a r e d c o n fe r e n c e 6075 Heavy room, restroom, wired for high-speed InterEquipment net. Contact John Brewer, publisher, John Deere: ‘08 CT322, (360)417-3500 track skid steer, with c a b. We l l m a i n t a i n e d machine, added extra 6025 Building hydraulic attachment fitting, rebuilt hand control, Materials n ew wa t e r p u m p a n d FLOORING: Beautiful t r a c k s p r o c k e t s . C h e r r y, t o n g u e a n d $25,000/obo. (360)928-1022 g r o o v e , 6 0 0 s f. , . 5 0 cents a foot. (360)452-0837 6080 Home
6080 Home Furnishings
6140 Wanted & Trades
RECLINER: Cream color, comfy, micro fiber, man size, 4 years old, original $600, sell for $150. (360)477-4538
Deer Elk and Moose Antlers: wanted to buy, by the pound or by the piece. (360)461-5804
6100 Misc. Merchandise
6135 Yard & Garden
LAWNSWEEPER Craftsmen 42” hi speed CIDER PRESSES: New, m o d e l # 4 8 6 . 2 4 2 2 2 3 hardwood barrel, motor- Used once, Excellent ized. $595. 461-0719 C o n d i t i o n . $ 2 2 0 L i ke new, (360)681-7053. GARAGE / SHOP DOORS: New remodel R I D I N G M OW E R : ‘ 0 8 plans changed, sell at Craftsman, 21hp Briggs cost call for sizes and $ and Stratton, 46” deck, hydrostatic trans., 3 bin install also avail. grass catcher. $800 obo, (360)732-4626 (360)683-8220 MISC: Rototiller, TroyBuilt “Horse” new motor T I L L E R : R e a r T i n e . and belts. $250. Couch/ Rarely used yard and chair/ottoman, mission garden tiller. Yard Mastyle $125. Bedroom set chine by MTD. $215.00. solid maple head/foot (919)616-2567. w i t h ra i l s, 1 0 d rawe r dresser w/mirror, night- 8142 Garage Sales stand. $275. Free big Sequim barn cat, neutered male, friendly, great mouser. G A R AG E S a l e : M o n . (360)452-6339 Aug 24, 9-3pm, no early MOBILITY SCOOTER: b i r d s p l e a s e, 1 8 7 W. Electr ic. New batter y, Hammond St Sequim. barely used. $400 cash. Quality household items, (360)808-3160 or 452- tools, furniture, toys and much more, all in very 8322 good condition. WESTERN ART: “Cattle g a t h e r i n g b e fo r e t h e storm” by Fredrick Remington on marble base. Also framed beautifully framed horses cutting cattle. Contact: Bob Jacobson @ 360-379-6688
8182 Garage Sales PA - West
PIANO: Kimball Parlor Grand (5’) $1800. (360)460-1347
GARAGE SALE: Saturday only, 8-5 p.m., 1526 W. 13th St., PA. Craft supplies, candle making, craft books / magazines, nice China, household, tons of nice clothes and jackets. Boat / RV parts, marine diesel, 2 vintage diesels. Free stuff after 4. No earlies.
6115 Sporting Goods
7030 Horses
6105 Musical Instruments
FISHING GEAR: Private collection of fly, casting, spinning etc. Everything from rods and reels to Furnishings lures and flys. New and 6035 Cemetery Plots A R M O I R E : E x c e l l e n t used. Ranging from $.60 Golden Pine. 6 drawers to $100. Call for appt. between 9am-6pm. C E M E T E R Y P L O T : plus TV/Stereo space. (360)457-8628 E-208, Mt. Angeles Ce- 48” X 26” X 78”. $300. (360)797-1495 m e t e r y, Po r t A n g e l e s WA . $ 1 , 7 5 0 ( R e g . 6125 Tools MASSAGE CHAIR $1,995) (360)461-1339 Brookstone. Top of the CEMETERY PLOT: One l i n e r e d l e a t h e r r e double plot. Last one in clinable massage chair SAW: Husky power saw, Veterans area, complete with multiple settings. 460 Rancher, like new, p a ck a g e w i t h d o u bl e $2200 new. $1100. $400. (360)457-9037. d e p t h l i n e r, m a r k e r, (360)477-0710 opening and closing, final date and setting fee. Moving and Everything Small Turret Lathe: $10,000. (360)304-8647. M u s t G o ! . S t a n d u p P r e c i s i o n m e t a l freezer, double bed with cutting, Harding copy box spring and frame, 8 pos turret full set of collets, with all tool6040 Electronics r e c l i n e r, G M C l o c k , 5c h i d e a w ay c o u c h a n d ing, cutting tools, drills, love seat, Mirror, 6 per- taps, measuring tools, TV: 55’ Vizio, 1.5 years son table and chairs, phase converter, runs o l d . G r e a t c o n d i t i o n . bedside tables, 2 large on 240w. $1500 o.b.o. $ 3 0 0 , g r e a t b u y . dressers, cedar chest, 6 8 1 - 0 5 0 5 a f t e r 5:30p.m. (360)797-3904 couch table more!
QH Mare for lease, needs experienced rider. Also, horse trailer for sale. 2 horse, tandem axle, new tires. $1488. call for more info. 4177685 or 928-5027.
7035 General Pets
AKC German Shepherd Puppy. European blood lines, black and red. Both parents hip and elbows OFA cer tified, first shots, wormed. $900 ea. Ready now. (360)457-9515
F1B Goldendoodle puppies: available the end of September. They are excellent service/therapy dogs and family pets. F1B’s are considered hypoallergenic and non-shedding. Leave a message at (775)275-0112.
Classified
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
AIR CONDITIONER: Daewoo, window. $60. (360)809-0032
BLOUSE: Aqua, White Stag, button down, 5X, (30/32w). $5. (360)457-6343
AMMO: (2) boxes, .38 cal, special wadcutters. BOAT MOTOR: 1975 $25. each. 681-3339 Evenrude, good for parts. $50. ANDROID: Car charger, (360)531-0525 stereo earbuds, (3) s c r e e n s a v e r s , n e w. BOAT MOTOR: Mariner, $40. (360)797-4633 5 horse, long shaft, runsgood. $200. ARM CHAIR: Silver and (360)775-9631 cream, with 2 cushions, cat-paw legs. $20. B OAT T R A I L E R : 1 6 ’ , (360)797-1179 new tires, needs tlc. $50. (360)531-0525 ART: Framed oil painting, seascape, 34”X58”. B O O K C A S E S : ( 3 ) $100. (360)683-2400 Matching oak, adjustable shelves. $45 each. A RT: T i m Q u i n n ’s (360)775-0855 “Friends of the Field”, and “First Crab Fest. BOOKS: Complete Ivan $200. (360)461-7365 Doig collection, all of his published works. $200. BARBECUE: Travel (360)681-7579 size, new, barrel type, gas, great buy. $35. BOOKS: Harr y Potter, (360)681-4834 h a r d c o ve r, # 1 - 7 s e t . $65. (360)775-0855 BASS TACKLE BOX With 45 plugs and rub- BOW: Compound, Bear b e r wo r m s 9 5 % n ew. Polar II. $60. $150. (360)457-8628. (949)241-0371 BED: Antique brass B OW F L E X : E x t r e m e, sleigh bed. $200. with leg attachment, (360)461-3311 and extras, evenings. BED: Antique iron bed $200. (360)683-9882 complete. $200. BRACKETS: Shelving, (360)461-0940 (46) and posts (14), B E D : C o m p l e t e, k i n g steel. $200. (360)797-4633 size, mattress, box springs, headboard. BRAD NAILER: Stapler, $100. (360)796-3525 n ew i n o r i g i n a l c a s e. B E D F R A M E : Q u e e n $20. (360)681-3339 size, metal, on wheels. BRIEFCASE: for laptop, $30 o.b.o. 683-2589 used for school, execellent condition. $15. BENCH GRINDER: (360)808-6430 New, 6” electric, never been used. $75. CABINET: Cur io, oak (360)461-7322 with light, 68” high w/ 3 BOAT: 10’ Livingston. glass shelves. $125. (360)681-4996 $100. obo. 775-9631
MONDAY, AUGUST 24, 2015 B7
CAMERA: JVC, com- COKE BOTTLE: Full, pact, super vhs camcor- mint, Super Bowl 30, der, 1000x digital zoom. San Diego CA. $5. (360)797-1179 $35. (360)670-3310
FAN: Dayton exhaust LAMPS: Torchiere halofa n , 3 6 ” ve r t i c l e b e l t gen floor lamps, 2 black, d r i ve . u n u s e d . $ 1 5 0 . one white. $5 each. 681-4768 o.b.o. (360)385-1503
CAMERA: Minox 35GL COLLECTOR: Illinois w/ matching electronic first Pheasant stamp flash and cases. $100. print, framed. $200 firm. o.b.o. (360)379-4134 (360)461-7365
FIFTH-WHEEL COVER: LICENSE PLATE: for Adco Tyvek, new in box, car, personalized, says TIGERS. $5. 23ft - 25.5ft., $125. (360)457-6343 (360)452-4785
CAMERA: Retina II, uncommon. $100. o.b.o (360)379-4134 CAMP GRILL: Coleman, steel case, iron grate, includes propane. $35. (360)681-3811 CANOPY: White, 7’ long f i t s R a n g e r P i c k u p. $150/obo. (360)808-6792 CAPTAINS BEDS: Oak, with mattresses and bedding. $150. (360)683-6762 CAR PARTS: 1949-50, side chrome, hood ornaments, ford tail lights. $100. (360)808-6009 CEDAR CHEST: Homemade. 18x45. $40. (360)460-8333
COMPUTER: HP. moni- F I R E W O O D H O O P : tor, keyboard, mouse, Solid steel, 29” diameOS cd plus, like new. ter. $20. (360)452-6339 $75. (360)808-9130 FLOOR JACK: Heavy CRAFTMAN: Dove tail, duty, 3 1/2 ton, like new. template fixture. $50. $75. (360)683-0146 (360)457-5921 FREE: Bed, queen size, C R A F T S M A N : G r a s s with frame, 5 yrs old, no sweeper, high perfor- calls before 10am. m a n c e, 4 2 ” , # 4 6 8 1 8 . (360)681-2919 $80. (360)452-2468 FREE: Top soil. about 3 DINNERWARE: Phalz- yards. (360)683-1646 graf, 8 place sets, never used, neutral tones. $45. GAMES: Vintage foot(360)681-2482 ball, 4 different board games. $25. o.b.o. DISHES: 12 place set(360)452-6842 t i n g , s e r v i n g d i s h e s, Noritake China. $120. GRINDER BENCH: (360)457-7579 Por table, all metal, all D O G C AG E : B a r g a i n ball bearings work great. Hound, new condition, $75. (360)582-9987
medium - large. $25. (360)683-4492 CERAMIC: Lladro man with violin. #5472, PerD O G H O U S E : I g l o o, fect condition. $75. medium size, new condi(360)681-7579 tion. $30. (360)683-4492 CHANDELIER: Country style, 3 lamp, kitchen. DOUBLE BED: Mattress s e t , c l e a n , l i t t l e u s e. $25. (360)457-5921 $150. (360)385-1503 CHINA CABINET: Corner, curved glass doors, D RU M S E T: 5 p i e c e, 72” X 39”, 2 drawers. with seat. $75. (360)452-4072 $100. (360)681-2482. CLOTHES: New, camo, EDGE TRIMMER: Lawn militar y clothes, gear. Black & Decker edgehog. $25.obo. 582-6434 Call after 8am. $95 (360)202-0928 ENTERTAINMENT CenCRAB POTS: (2) com- ter: big corner unit, solid wood. $99. mercial. $20 each. (360)683-9394 (360)452-4072
HEALTH RIDER: with manuals, excellent condition. $50. (360)683-0033 HELMET: Old leather Ar my Air Cor ps flight helmet, very good cond. $175. (360)460-9570 IPHONE 5: Apple, Verizon, with accessories, excellent conditon. $165. (360)808-6430 JUICERATOR: Acme, new $290, sell. $30. (360)683-2400 KENNEL: Large dog. $175 o.b.o. (360)582-6181
E E F R E E A D S R F Monday and Tuesdays S
L OV E S E AT : V i n t a g e, r o ck i n g , g o o d s h a p e, neutral color. $75. (360)457-8114 MAILBOX: Locking, 8” high x 12” wide x 20” long. $75. (360)461-7322 MASSAGE TABLE: Excellent condition. $200. (360)461-3311 MASSAGE TABLE: Pro, all attachments. $100. (360)808-6009 M AT T R E S S : D o u bl e , Box spring, pristine condition. $175 o.b.o. (360)461-0860
M I S C : w e e d bu r n i n g RADIO PARTS: Tubes, t o r c h , n o t a n k . $ 2 0 . Magnavox. $25. Ther marest mattress. (360)457-7579 $20. (360)452-6339 RECLINERS: (2), microMIXER: Antique Hamil- fiber, excellent condition. ton Beach mixer, good $125 each. (360)452-4347 condition. $50. (360)457-3274 ROD and REEL: FenMODEL KITS: Vintage, wick. Daiwa 2500C 2 ( 8 ) u n b u i l t m o d e l s , ball bear ings, reel in planes, boats, plastic. box. $52.50 457-8628 $50. (360)452-6842 ROLLERS: 10ft. roller a s s e m bl y fo r fe e d i n g M O T O R C Y C L E wood into tools. $150ea. CHAPS: brown leather 985-290-5769 with fringe,multi-size to XXL.$200. 681-4834 SEWING CABINET: Fits 2 machines, sewing maM O V I N G B O X E S : chine and serger. $50. Wardrobe, dishpacks, (360)582-0753 loads of large and small. SHELVES: folding, solid $200. (801)361-5978 wood. $50. (360)683-9394 OAK TABLE: Round, occasional, pedestal, SINKS: (2) Pedestal, 24”x22”. $40. white $45, Bone (new), (360)457-6431 $75. (360)460-8333 PAPER CUTTER: BosSNOWBLOWER: Toro ton, new, 24” X 24” mat. 1800, electric. $25. $98. (360)582-1490 (985)290-5769
MATTRESS PAD: New, king size, magnetic. $100. (360)461-0940 P I C N I C TA B L E : K i d size, Little Tikes, with MISC: Color tv’s, 26” umbrella, like new. $40. $20. with VHS. $20. 13” (360)452-4785 w i t h r e m o t e o r V H S. $10. (360)452-9685 PILATES: Machine, Stamina Premier XP, exMISC: Computer, $30. cellent conditon. $150. monitor, $5. keyboard (360)457-1526 (2), mouse (2), all for $39. (360)457-3414 P OW E R WA S H E R : MISC: Craftsman scroll- K a r c h e r m o d e l 3 3 0 , i n g s a b r e s a w. $ 2 0 . 1400 PSI, electric. $75. (360)809-0032 Craftsman 3/8” drill. $10
TA B L E : S o l i d w o o d , very nice, with benches an storage. $100. (360)477-4832 TELEPHONE TABLE: with padded seat, unique, 30”h. $30. (360)457-6431 TENT: 7’x8’x5’, dome, rainfly, stakes, stuff sack. lightly used. $45. (360)670-9035 obo TILLER: Mantis, with aerator and edger attachments. $50. (360) 681-4768 TIRES: (4) Used 21555-R17 Michelin. $15 ea. (360)681-3228 TRANSMISSION: Chevy, turbo,400 4x4, needs rebuild. $100. (360)460-4360 TREE: Varigated Ficus. Beautiful 5’ tall ficus. $60. (360)681-8195. TV CABINET: Oak, mission style, with 2 drawers. $75. (360)461-0860
S O FA : a n d m a t c h i n g love seat, taupe, microfi- VACUUM: Bissell, upber, both recliners, nice. right, excellent condition. $25. (360)683-9278 $200. (360)460-4360 SPEAKERS: Fisher, (2) 32”x18”x15”, 15” woofer. $30. (360)670-3310
V I D E O S A N D DV D S : (14) Fly tying how to. $1 ea. (360)683-9295
WADDERS: Chest, size S T R O L L E R : G r a c o , 9, by Texspor t, excelgood condition, brown lent, insulated. $50. and pink, storage, $20. (360)683-0146 (360)452-5186 WALKER: With seat and o.b.o. (360)683-2589 PRESSURE WASHER: TABLE: Folding, cutting brakes. $45. table. $30. 582-0753 (360)683-6097 MISC: Tablesaw, works Karcher, 1800 psi, driveway cleaner tool. $100. great. $50. (3) tables. TABLES: (2) small fold- WA S H E R : W h i r l p o o l , (360)457-3274 $20. and $50 each. ing tables, 28” X 24” X available Sept. 1. $25. (360)452-9685 48”. $12 ea. or $20 both. (360)808-1466 PROPS: (2) brass (360)808-1920 MOTOR: Delco, electric, p r o p s . 1 1 / 4 s h a f t s . WELDER: 90 amp, flux 16x16. $ 1 0 0 e a . TYPEWRITER: Brother, wire, electric. $50. 1/4 hp. $25. (360)460-9570 (360)683-9295 electric. $10. 808-1920 (360)683-6180
M ail to: Peninsula Daily News PO Box 1330 Port Angeles, WA 98362
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• 2 Ads Per Week • 3 Lines • Private Party Only
• No Pets, Livestock, Garage Sales or Firewood
7035 General Pets 9820 Motorhomes 9820 Motorhomes DOG: Black lab/Rottweiler, 9 yrs., very nice family dog. Needs a good home with space. $50. (360)460-2542
MACAW: Blue and gold. Archibald. She is 2 years and we have had her since she was a chick. She is hand reared and came from a reputable breeder. She has been micro-chipped. She hasn’t been sexed but shes always been a girl t o u s, a n d t h i n k s h e must be as she is very big. Her cage is huge and so her tail feathers are beautiful and overall she is in excellent shape. Her cage is a corner cage and measures approx 45 inches by 45 inches. Her favorite things are walnuts and monkey nuts. She does a lot of talking. We are reluctantly selling as with a 1 year old and another on the way, we just don’t get the time we used to have with her. Would suit a loving home that can give her attention and her favorite treats! She comes with cage, toys, food and a big air tight container to store it. She will also come with his paperwor k, bir th cer tificate and tracer document. $500. Email: caresalot667 @gmail.com
37’ Diesel pusher 300 Cummins 6 Speed Allison Trans. 6500 Watt Gen, 2 Slides, levelers Awnings, day & night shades corin counters, 2 each AC TVs Heaters, tow Package,excellent cond. Call for more det a i l s $ 3 9 , 0 0 0 . O B O. (360)582-6434 or (928)210-6767
CHEVY: Motorhome, “89 Class C 23’ 41K. New tires, electrical convertor, high output alternator. Captain’s chairs and s o fa . L a r g e f r i g a n d freezer. Lots of storage. Outstanding condition. $9,750/OBO (360)797-1622
MOTORHOME: Bounder ‘03, 36’. 2 slides, HAS EVERYTHING, W/D, ice maker, barn stored, ex. cond. 22K ml. Price reduced to $39,900/obo. (813)633-8854
TENT TRAILER: ‘08 R o c k w o o d Fr e e d o m . Sleeps 8, tip out, stove, gas/elec. fridge, furnace, toilet with shower, king and queen beds with heated mattresses. Outside gas bbq and shower. Great cond. $6,495. WINNEBAGO (360)452-6304 ‘02, BRAVE, 33’,. Class A, Model 32V, Ford V10 gas engine with 2 slides, TRAILER: 22ft. Holiday Onan Generator, rear Rambler, sleeps 4, roof camera, tow package, AC, kitchen, needs work. l eve l e r s. S l e e p s t wo, $1,900. 461-3232 dinner for 4, party for six, TRAILER: ‘89, 25’ Hi-Lo 42.8K miles, $29,800. Voyager, completely re(407)435-8157 conditioned, new tires, NO TEXTING AC, customized hitch. $4,750. (360)683-3407.
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
9808 Campers & Canopies CAMPER: ‘88 Conastoga cab-over. Self contained, great shape. $2,000. 683-8781 CAMPER: Outdoorsman, bed, refrigerator, stove. $1,500. (360)912-2441 FLEETWOOD: ‘01 Tent Trailer. Great condition $3,500 Brenda 360-4613668 or Duane 360-4613433.
9050 Marine Miscellaneous
BAYLINER: ‘81, 21’ and TRAILER: ‘99 Sierra, trailer, hull is sound, en2 5 ’ , n e e d s T L C . g i n e a n d o u t d r i ve i n $6,000/obo. 417-0803. good shape. $1,800. (360)681-2747 UTILITY TRAILER: 16’, ramps, tandem axle, cur- BOAT: 10’ Spor t Cat, rent license. $2,250. ‘97, Fiberglass, electric (360)460-0515 trolling motor, oars, battery and charger, load UTILITY TRAILER: 4X8 ramp. $650. heavy duty, with side (360)681-4766 racks and tailgate. $700. (360)460-8138 BOAT: 12’ Aluminum, with 5hp motor, on trailer, $1,500. 9802 5th Wheels (360)683-9015
KOMFORT: ‘02 34’ triple slide. New appliances, CAR DOLLY: STEHL- good shape. $12,000. TOW. B l u e c a r d o l l y. Will deliver. 461-4374 Good condition, $600. ROCKWOOD, ‘10, 5th (919)-616-2567 wheel, 26’, many extras, b e l o w b o o k va l u e @ $23,000. (360)457-5696.
BOAT: 16’ Larson, 40 horse mercur y, Eagle depth finder, with trailer. $1988. 417-7685 or 9285027. BOAT: ‘65 Pacific Mariner, 14’, 50hp, fully res t o r e d , w i t h t r a i l e r. $1,950 obo. 417-8250
T E R RY: ‘ 9 6 , 2 6 ’ 5 t h B OAT: ‘ 7 4 L i g h t n i n g Wheel. $4,500/obo. sailboat, 19’. On trailer. (360)640-0111 $1000 obo. 460-6231 CARGO TRAILER: 2012 Wells Cargo VFr o n t 6 x 1 4 C a r g o Tra i l e r. L o a d e d a n d ex c e l l e n t c o n d i t i o n , must see. Less than 7000 miles. More Info at http://bit.ly/1hzVZj5 $4,999. Call Rik (360)460-2472. COACHMAN: ‘07 Chaparal, 27’5”, electric jackexcellent condition. (360)457-2780 $11,500. FLEETWOOD: ‘00, 26’, Slideout. $6.900. (360)452-6677 TRAILER: ‘97 Nash, 26’, sleeps 4, queen bed, gas/electric, AC, tub and shower, TV. Ex. Cond, new tires. $7,800. Rainbow RV Park. 261831 Hwy 101 #36. Sequim. Ask for Jerry. (360)5736378.
NO PHONE CALLS
9808 Campers & Canopies
BOAT: ‘88 Invader, 16’, 1 6 5 H P M e r c r u i s e r, open bow, low hours. L A N C E : ‘ 8 6 , 1 1 ’ w i t h $2,900. (360)452-5419. truck, Ford F250, ‘02. B O AT : S e a r a y, 1 8 ’ , $11,000. (360)683-9015 135hp Mercury. $8,000 obo. (360)457-3743 or (360)460-0862 BOAT: Tollycraft, ‘77, 26’ Sedan, well equipped and maintained classic, trailer, dingy and more. See at TENT TRAILER: Coach- 1 5 1 8 W. 1 1 t h a l l e y. m a n ‘ 1 1 C l i p p e r 1 2 6 $20,000/obo. (360)457-9162 Spor t. Pop up, Queen bed on each end. B OAT TRAILER: ‘99, Fr idge, stove, stereo, furnace, hot water heat- 20’ Heavy duty, custom. er, excellent condition. $1,500. (360)775-6075 Ve r y l i t t l e u s e. Ta bl e with bench seats, sofa PORTA-BOTE: 10’, exand table that folds into cellent condition, stable, bed. Must see to appre- 2010 Suzuki 2.5hp moc i a t e ! $ 6 , 5 0 0 . C a l l tor, 4 cycle, less than 20 ( 3 6 0 ) 6 4 0 - 2 5 7 4 o r hrs. $1,100 for both. (360)452-3729 (360)640-0403.
All you need to cash in on this opportunity are a garage sale kit from the Peninsula Daily News and a garage sale ad in classified.
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P U P P I E S : P u r e b r e d MOTORHOME: Damon Boxers. 5 weeks. $600. ‘95 Intruder. 34’, Cum(360)451-5034. mins Diesel, 2 air conditioners, satellite dish, rebuilt generator, all new 9820 Motorhomes f i l t e r s a n d n ew t i r e s $19,000/obo. (360)683-8142 GMC: 26’ Motorhome. 1976. $16,500. RV: ‘91 Toyota 21’.V-6, (360)683-8530 C r u i s e c o n t r o l , ove r MOTORHOME: ‘96 30ft. drive, 90K miles. $9,900. (360)477-4295 Southwind Stor m. 51k miles. Custom interior, Roadmaster towing sys- T H O R : ‘ 1 1 Fr e e d o m tem, Banks Power Pack Elite 31R. 10k miles, ex. and other extras. Very cond. Good Sam ext. nice cond. $18,500. warranty until 75k miles (360)681-7824 or 1/2019. RV Navigator, back up camera, tailgatMOTORHOME: Dodge er Dish Network TV, Su‘76 Class C. 26’, new p e r s l i d e a n d D V D tires, low miles, non- player, tow car trailer smoker, in PA. $2,500 inc. $56,000. firm. (360)460-7442. (360)808-7337
9832 Tents & Travel Trailers
or FAX to: (360)417-3507 Email: classified@peninsuladailynews.com
5A246724
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B8 MONDAY, AUGUST 24, 2015
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MONDAY, AUGUST 24, 2015 B9
9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County
by Mell Lazarus
CR RESOLUTION 07, 2015
NOTICE OF INVITATION FOR BIDS
CALL FOR HEARING ON THE PROPOSED VACATION OF PORTIONS OF SEQUIM DUNGENESS WAY (#95250) and THREE CRABS ROAD (#52800)
9050 Marine Miscellaneous
9180 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles Classics & Collect. Others Others
PEDDLE Boat: on trail- CHEVY: ‘49 Truck 3/4 ton, complete rebuilt, er, like new, $2,000/obo. piper red, great condi(360)452-8607 tion, 235 cu 6 cylinder, engine with low miles, 12 volt system, long bed with oak, $14,000. (360)461-6076
SAILBOAT: ‘04 WWP19 5hp mtr, trailer, new radio and stereo. Ready to sail, garaged. $6,200. hermhalbach@wavecable.com or (360)504-2226
SEARAY, ‘88 Sundancer, boathoused in PA, 800 engine hr., $33,000. (541)840-1122 S I LV E R S T R E A K : 1 7 ’ H a r d t o p, a l u m i n u m . Brand new, 4 hrs. on 115 hp, plus 9.9 Yamaha, fully equipped. $40,000. (360)683-8668
SKI BOAT: ‘73 Kona. 18’ classic jet ski boat. 500 c.i. olds. engine. B e r k l e y p u m p . To o much to mention, needs upholstry. $2500. (209)768-1878
9817 Motorcycles HARLEY DAVIDSON: ‘ 0 4 L o w R i d e r. 3 7 0 0 miles, loaded, $8,500. (360)460-6780 H A R L E Y DAV I D S O N : ‘06, XL1200 Spor tster. $5,900. (360)452-6677 H A R L E Y DAV I D S O N ‘93, Wide glide, black with chrome. $10,500 /obo. (360)477-3670. Harley Wide Glide: ‘93 well maintained Low miles, custom paint extras. $6,800 TEXT 360300-7587 HD: ‘81 XLS Sportster. 1,000 cc, 9K. $2,500. (360)683-5449 H O N DA : ‘ 8 4 S a b r e, 1100cc. runs excellent. $1,100. (360)775-6075 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 K AWA S A K I : ‘ 0 6 N o mad. Very clean. Lots of extras. $6,000 obo. Mike at (360)477-2562 SUZUKI: ‘00 600 Katana. 5k ml. $2,200. (707)241-5977 YAMAHA: ‘04, WR450F, well taken care of , has all the extras, street legal. $3,500. (360)683-8183
9805 ATVs ATV: Stolen Joyner ATV and Trailer. Arizona License plate. REWARD $500 for information and conviction of the person or person that unlawfully removed the ATV and Trailer from N Beach Dr (Br idgehaven Com.) Contact Jefferson Cty., Sheriff Dept. 385-3831 or owner 360-437-9577
9742 Tires & Wheels LOGGING/DUMP: Truck tires. 11R22.5, Goodye a r, G 3 5 7 , n ew u n m o u n t e d . $ 4 0 0 p a i r. (360)640-5180 TIRES: Goodyear Eagle F1, (2) P275/35Z/R18’s with 3/8” tread, (2) P 3 2 5 / 3 0 Z / R 1 9 ’s w i t h 1/4” tread. In Sequim $300. (360)683-4115. WHEELS: Focal, all black, 18”, set of four, 5 l u g , l u g p a t t e r n s i ze 114.3 width is 8.5. $350. (360)477-8505
9180 Automobiles Classics & Collect.
1930 Model A: In exceptional condition, newly rebuilt engine. $19,000. Call Jim. (360)301-4581 JAGUAR: ‘83, 350 Chevy engine and transmission, many new par ts. $2,500/obo. (360)4524156 or (360)681-7478.
DODGE: ‘91 Spirit. 3.0 TOYOTA: ‘00 Camry. 4 V 6 , AC. R u n s g r e a t . Cylinder, 5 speed, 125K $ 9 0 0 . ( 3 6 0 ) 4 5 2 - 1 6 9 4 miles. $3,500. (360)477-6573 evenings.
FORD: ‘01 Crown Vic- TOYOTA: ‘14 Prius C. toria, LX, 113K ml., origi- 1200 miles, like new, with warranty. $17,900. nal owner. $3,900. (360)683-2787 (360)461-5661 CHEVY: ‘56 Pickup, restored, 350 V8, AOD, V W: ‘ 1 3 J e t t a T D I , 4 FORD: ‘91 Thunderbird IFS. $18,000/obo. Sport. High output 5 liter door, diesel, sunroof, (360)683-7192 V- 8 , Au t o m a t i c, r u n s G P S , 7 5 K m i l e s . $24,000. (320)232-5436 C H E V Y : ‘ 5 7 B e l a i r, 2 good. $995. 460-0783 door, hardtop project. Fresh 327 / Muncie 4 FORD: ‘92 Thunderbird. 9434 Pickup Trucks sp., 12 bolt, 4:11 posi Low mileage. $2,000. Others rear - complete and sol- (360)461-2809 or 4610533 id. $9,500. CANOPY: Fits Dodge (360)452-9041 GMC: ‘01 Sonoma SLS 1995-2001, 8’ long, exCHEVY: ‘77 Corvette, t- Extended Cab 2WD - c e l . c o n d i t i o n . $ 2 7 5 . tops, 65K original ml., 4.3L Vor tec V6, Auto- OBO. (360)477-6098 6K on rebuilt engine, m a t i c, A l l oy W h e e l s, 350 cubic inch / 350 hp, Brand New Tires, Bed- CHEVY: ‘85, 4x4, many s e c o n d o w n e r , n e w liner, Third Door, Priva- new parts. $1,700. (360)452-4156 or brake system, new sus- cy Glass, Cruise Con(360)681-7478. pension, flowmasters, t r o l , T i l t , Air exc. condition, must see. Conditioning, Alpine CD $12,500/obo. Stereo, Dual Front Air- FORD: ‘01 Ranger, extended cab, XLT, new (360)437-4065 bags. 80K ml. front brakes, complete $6,995 tune up, hard Tonneau GRAY MOTORS cover with new paint. 457-4901 Au t o, A / C, P / W, P / B, graymotors.com P / M . Ju s t t u r n e d 5 0 k GMC: ‘03, Sonoma ex- m i l e s . E x c e l . c o n d . tended cab. Loaded 4x4 $8,500. (360)460-7527 3.8 v6 automatic, three door with canopy, facto- FORD: ‘86 F250, 4x4, 4 r y b e d l i n e r n ew L e s speed, with canopy, 6.9 Schwab tires, ice cold D i e s e l , 8 , 0 0 0 l b wa r n A/C, 6 disc factor y In winch, 16’ custom alumidash, auto headlights, num wheels, exel. tires. auto wipers, tilt, cruise, Clean interior. $6,500 high low range . Sweet obo (206)795-5943 after 4:30pm weekdays. FORD: 1929-30 Custom t r u c k n e e d s n o t h i n g Model A Roadster. Per- 127K ml. 20mpg $7,500. FORD: ‘95 F150. New fect interior, very clean, firm (360)477-6218 Tom. engine has 12K miles on r uns great on Nissan it. $5,500. p i ck u p r u n n i n g g e a r. GMC: ‘04 Yukon SLT (360)457-3503 Owner sunny day driver 4X4 Sport Utility - 5.3 only. Teal green, black Vor tec V8, Automatic, FORD: ‘97 Diesel 4WD f e n d e r s v i n y l t o p . A l l o y W h e e l s , N e w Power stroke with bed$25,700 Real eye catch- T i r e s, Tow Pa ck a g e, liner, canopy, new tires, e r. ( 3 6 0 ) 7 7 5 - 7 5 2 0 o r Running Boards, Roof transmission overhauled Rack, Sunroof, Keyless (360)457-3161. Entry, Tinted Windows, $7,900. (360)461-3232 FORD: 1929 Model A Po w e r D o o r L o c k s , Roadster, full fendered, Windows, and Mirrors, 9556 SUVs a l l m u s t a n g r u n n i n g Power Programmable Others Heated Leather Seats, gear. $16,500. 460-8610 A d j u s t a bl e Pe d a l s , T h i r d R o w S e a t i n g , CHEVY: ‘99 Suburban, Cruise Control, Tilt, Air 4 W D , V 8 , s e a t s 8 . Conditioning, Rear A/C, $3,200. (360)808-2061 Bose CD Stereo, Rear DVD Player, Infor mat i o n C e n t e r, O n S t a r, 9730 Vans & Minivans D u a l Fr o n t A i r b a g s . Others 107K ml. $12,995 CHRYSLER: ‘98 MiniFORD: 1950 Original GRAY MOTORS van, great shape, clean. Convertible. Beige interi457-4901 $3400. (360)477-2562 or and top on burgundy graymotors.com restoration featured in DODGE: ‘88 Caravan, B u l b H o r n m a g a z i n e. H O N DA : ‘ 0 6 A c c o r d . runs good, would make Appeared in ads ran by C l e a n , l o w m i l e a g e . a g o o d d e l i ve r y va n . Bon Marche. Mechani$1,000. (360)460-6381 cally sound and clean. $10,000 OBO cash. (360)374-5060 Owner restored. VW: ‘89 Vanagon Carat. $26,700. (360)775-7520 HONDA: ‘96 Accord EX Sleeps 2, with table, 7 or (360)457-3161. Coupe - 2.2L 4 Cylin- seats, extremely clean, F O R D : 1 9 5 2 P i c k u p, der, 5 Speed Manual, a u t o , a x l e r e b u i l d . Mustang front, 302, C4, Alloy Wheels, Sunroof, $7,900 obo. 461-3232 Power Windows, Door 9” Ford rearend. $7,500. Locks, and Mirrors, 460-8610 9935 General Cruise Control, Tilt, Air Conditioning, Cassette Legals Stereo, CD Changer, Dual Front Airbags. Eliza Rivas, pursuant to $3,995 Quileute Law and Order GRAY MOTORS Code, section 18.03(b), 457-4901 you are hereby notified graymotors.com that a confidential and mandatory court appearFORD: ‘62 Thunder- HONDA CIVIC: ‘04 Hy- ance in a civil matter in bird. Landau 116K mi. brid, one owner, excel., which you are named as powder blue, white vi- cond., $6500. 683-7593 a party has been schednyl, new int., clean enuled for September 8th, g i n e a n d t r u n k . KIA: ‘05 Sedona, 66K 2015 at 2:45pm at the m l . , S i l v e r / G r e e n , Quileute Tribal Court in $18,500. $3,800. (360)912-1847 La Push, Washington. (360)385-5694 or (575)763-3449. Pub: August 20, 21, 23, FORD: ‘70, 500, 4dr.,3 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 30, speed stick, 302, new 31, September 1, 2, 3, 4, 9935 General ex h a u s t , n ew t i r e s / 6, 7, 8, 2015 Legals wheels. $2,650. Legal No.652317 (360)452-4156 or (360)681-7478 SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON FOR KING COUNTY Estate of WILLAM I. MURPHY, Deceased. NO. 15-4-04559-5 SEA SEAT: ‘69, 600D. Made NONPROBATE NOTICE TO CREDITORS in Spain, Everything reRCW 11.42.030 done. $9,000/obo. (360)379-0593 The notice agent named below has elected to S T U D E B A K E R : G T give notice to creditors of the above-named deceH aw k , 1 9 6 2 , $ 6 , 2 0 0 . dent. As of the date of the filing of a copy of this Call for details. notice with the cour t, the notice agent has no (360)452-3488 knowledge of any other person acting as notice agent or of the appointment of a personal represenVW: Karmann Ghia, tative of the decedent’s estate in the state of Wash‘74. $4,500. ington. According to the records of the court as are (360)457-7184 available on the date of filing of this notice with the court, a cause number regarding the decedent has 9292 Automobiles not been issued to any other notice agent and a personal representative of the decedent’s estate Others has not been appointed. Any person having a claim against the decedent BUICK: Reatta ‘90, Conv, mint cond 106km, must, before the time the claim would be barred by $7000. Pics. (360)681- any otherwise applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in the manner as provided in 6388. jimfromsequim RCW 11.42.070 by serving on or mailing to the no@olympus.net tice agent or the notice agent’s attorney at the adCADILLAC: ‘89 Coupe dress stated below a copy of the claim and filing the Deville, 2 door, only 2 original of the claim with the court. The claim must owners, tan, very good be presented within the later of: (1) Thirty days after the notice agent served or mailed the notice to cond. New tires. $2,500. the creditor as provided under RCW (360)796-0588 or 11.42.020(2)(c); or (2) four months after the date of 912-3937. first publication of the notice. If the claim is not preChevrolet: ‘06 Silvera- sented within this time frame, the claim is forever do 2500HD Extended barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW Cab LS Shortbed 4X4 - 11.42.050 and 11.42.060. This bar is effective as 6 . 6 L D u ra m a x Tu r b o to claims against both the decedent’s probate and Diesel, 6 Speed Allison nonprobate assets. Automatic, Alloy Date of First Publication: August 10, 2015 Wheels, Brand New T i r e s, Tow Pa ck a g e, The notice agent declares, under penalty of perBedliner, Diamondplate Bedrails, Aluminum Cab jury under the laws of the State of Washington on July 30, 2015, at Eatonville, Washington, that the Guard, Rear Sliding W i n d o w, 4 O p e n i n g foregoing is true and correct. Doors, Keyless Entry, Power Windows, Door // s // L o c k s , M i r r o r s , a n d Joan M. Berry D r i ve r s S e a t , C r u i s e c/o Kurt H. Olson Control, Tilt, Air Condi- Fahlman Olson & Little, PLLC t i o n i n g , B o s e C D 1524 Alaskan Way, Suite 200 S t e r e o, I n f o r m a t i o n Seattle, WA 98101-1514 Center, Dual Front AirAttorney for Notice Agent: bags.49K Mi. $27,995 Kurt H. Olson GRAY MOTORS Fahlman Olson & Little, PLLC 457-4901 Harborscape Professional Building graymotors.com 1524 Alaskan Way, Suite 200 H O N D A : ‘ 0 6 C i v i c . Seattle, WA 98101-1514 Clean, low miles. $11,000. (360)460-1843 Pub: August 10, 17, 24, 2015 Legal No. 949993
SEALED BIDS will be received by the Board of Clallam County Commissioners at 223 East Fourth Street, Room 150, Port Angeles, Washington until 10:00 a.m., Tuesday, September 8, 2015, at which time they will be publicly opened and read aloud THE BOARD OF CLALLAM COUNTY COMMIS- for: SIONERS finds as follows: The improvement of 1.44 miles of LaPush Road, 1. A petition has been received seeking to vacate between Milepost 11.08(Olympic National Park and abandon a portion of county rights of way, al- Boundary) and Milepost 12.52(By Yak Way). Work leging that the rights-of-way are useless as a part of includes placement of a 2-inch thick HMA overlay, the general road system and that the public will be striping, shoulder work- including recessed pavebenefited by its vacation. ment markers, and other related work. Said right of way petitioned to be abandoned is de- Complete plans and specifications may be obtained scribed as follows: from the office of the Public Works Department, Courthouse, 223 E. 4th St., Ste. 6, Port Angeles, SEQUIM DUNGENESS WAY WA 98362-3015, (360) 417-2319. Questions reA STRIP OF LAND AS DESCRIBED UNDER garding this project may be directed to Ray BradCLALLAM COUNTY AUDITOR’S FILE NUMBERS ford at (360) 417-2530. 79452, 79453 AND LYING BETWEEN THE MADISON DONATION LAND CLAIM AND BALANCED The sealed bids must be clearly marked on the outGOVERNMENT MEANDER LINE, SITUATE IN A side of the envelope, “BID PROPOSAL – LAPUSH PORTION OF GOVERNMENT LOT 1 AND TIDE- R O A D H M A PAV E M E N T O V E R L AY, C R P LANDS ABUTTING OF SECTION 30, TOWNSHIP C1234”. Address bid proposal to: Board of Clallam 31 NORTH, RANGE 3 WEST, W.M., BEING OF County Commissioners, 223 E. 4th St., Ste. 4, Port VARYING WIDTH AN EQUAL DISTANCE ON EI- Angeles, WA 98362-3015 or hand-deliver to 223 E. THER SIDE OF THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED 4th St., Room 150, Port Angeles, Washington. Bid CENTERLINE: documents delivered to other offices and received late by the Commissioners’ Office will not be conCOMMENCING AT THE SOUTHWEST CORNER sidered nor will bids received by facsimile or e-mail. OF SAID SECTION 30; THENCE N2 DEGREES 45’37”E ALONG THE WEST LINE OF SAID SEC- Clallam County will determine the lowest responTION 30, A DISTANCE OF 1344.92 FEET TO A sible bidder in accordance with the terms of Clallam POINT ON THE NORTH LINE OF THE MADISON County Code Section 3.12.070 and reserves the DONATION LAND CLAIM PER SURVEY RE- right to reject any and all bids and to waive inforCORDED IN VOLUME 10 OF SURVEYS, PAGE malities in the process or to accept the bid which in 63, RECORDS OF CLALLAM COUNTY, WASH- its estimation best serves the interests of Clallam I N G TO N ; T H E N C E S 6 7 D E G R E E S 2 3 ’ 0 6 ” E County. ALONG SAID NORTH LINE, A DISTANCE OF 31.90 FEET TO THE TRUE POINT OF Clallam County in accordance with Title VI of the BEGINNING; Civil Rights Act of 1964, 78 Stat. 252, 42 U.S.C. THENCE ALONG THE CENTERLINE OF A 60 2000d to 2000d-4 and Title 49, Code of Federal FOOT RIGHT-OF-WAY N02 DEGREE 45’37”E, A Regulations, Department of Transportation, Subtitle DISTANCE OF 85.94 FEET; A, Office of the Secretary, Part 21, NondiscriminaTHENCE ALONG THE CENTERLINE OF A 56.40 tion in Federally Assisted Programs of the DepartFOOT RIGHT-OF-WAY N27 DEGREES 59’29”E, A ment of Transportation issued pursuant to such Act, DISTANCE OF 896.00 FEET TO A POINT HERE- hereby notifies all bidders that it will affirmatively INAFTER REFEREED TO AS POINT “A”; ensure that in any contract entered into pursuant to THENCE ALONG THE CENTERLINE OF A 56.40 this advertisement, disadvantaged business enterFOOT RIGHT-OF-WAY N27 DEGREES 59’29”E, A prises as defined at 49 CFR Part 26 will be afforded DISTANCE OF 549.72 FEET TO THE TERMINUS full opportunity to submit bids in response to this inOF SAID CENTERLINE. vitation and will not be discriminated against on the grounds of race, color, national origin, or sex in THE SOUTHERLY SIDELINES OF SAID RIGHT- consideration for an award. O F - WAY VA C AT I O N T E R M I N AT E AT T H E NORTH LINE OF SAID MADISON DONATION The attached contract plans, these contract proviLAND CLAIM. sions and the Standard Specifications for the above-described project are hereby THREE CRABS ROAD A STRIP OF LAND SITUATE IN A PORTION OF APPROVED THIS 18th DAY OF August, 2015 GOVERNMENT LOT 1 OF SECTION 30, TOWNSHIP 31 NORTH, RANGE 3 WEST, W.M., BEING BOARD OF CLALLAM COUNTY 60 FEET IN WIDTH, 30 FEET ON EITHER SIDE COMMISSIONERS OF THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED CENTERLINE: ______________________________ Mike Chapman, Vice Chair COMMENCING AT POINT “A”; ATTEST: THENCE S57 DEGREES 43’42”E, A DISTANCE _________________________ OF 158.52 FEET TO FEET TO THE TERMINUS Trish Holden, CMC, Clerk of the Board OF SAID CENTERLINE. Pub: August 24, 31, 2015 Legal No. 652808 ALL BEARINGS AND DISTANCES ARE RELATIVE TO THE WASHINGTON COORDINATE SYSTEM NORTH ZONE, NAD 83(91), PER SURVEY RECORDED IN VOLUME 40 OF SURVEYS, PAGE 43, RECORDS OF CLALLAM COUNTY, WASHINGTON. BEARINGS ARE RELATIVE TO SAID GRID. DISTANCES ARE REDUCED TO GRID BY A SCALE FACTOR OF 0.99994. 2. RCW 36.87 sets the requirements for the Board to consider vacation and abandonment of public rights of way. NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED by the Clallam County Board of Commissioners, in consideration of the above findings of fact: 1. Hereby declares its intent to vacate and abandon right of way described above. 2. Instructs the County Engineer to examine the above described right of way and to report his opinion as to whether the right of way should be vacated and abandoned, whether the right of way is in use or has been in use, the condition of the right of way, whether it will be advisable to preserve it for the county road system in the future, whether the public will be benefited by the vacation and abandonment, and all other facts, matters, and things which will be of importance to the board, prior to the public hearing date set below. 3. Instructs publication, posting, and notification procedures be followed as per RCW 36.87. 4. Sets a public hearing to consider the vacation request, to be held in the Commissioners’ Meeting Room, Room 160, Clallam County Courthouse, 223 E. 4th Street, Port Angeles, Washington, on Tuesday, September 8, 2015, at 10:30 a.m. PASSED AND ADOPTED this 11th day of 2015 BOARD OF CLALLAM COUNTY COMMISSIONERS _______________________________________ Jim McEntire, Chair _______________________________________ Mike Chapman _______________________________________ Bill Peach ATTEST: _______________________________________ Trish Holden, CMC, Clerk of the Board PUB: August 17, 24, 2015 Legal No: 651579
9932 Port Angeles 9932 Port Angeles Legals Legals REQUEST FOR QUALIFICATIONS Structural and Civil Engineering Support City of Port Angeles 321 E. Fifth Street, Port Angeles, WA 98362 RFQ Due September 8, 2015 The City of Port Angeles, Public Works and Utilities Department is requesting qualifications (RFQ) for Professional Engineering services necessary to complete Bridge Inspections and the Nippon Bridge Approach Design. Scope: The intent of the request for proposals is to select an engineering firm and enter into negotiations for an agreement to provide engineering and other services as necessary to complete the project. This agreement will be for approximately 15 months in duration with the option for the City of Port Angeles to extend it for additional time and money if necessary. Bridge inspections are to be performed on four City bridges with local funds. The Nippon Bridge Approach is funded through Federal Surface Transportation Program (STP) grant administered by Wa s h i n g t o n D e p a r t m e n t o f Tr a n s p o r t a t i o n (WSDOT) for Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) and is matched with local funds. Additional directed services may be authorized in writing to meet needs related to the City’s structural and civil engineering requirements in support of the Capital Facilities Program and City infrastructure. The full RFQ, and other documents, for this project are available on-line through Builders Exchange of Washington, Inc. at http://www.bxwa.com. Click on: “Posted Projects”, “Goods and Services”, “City of Port Angeles”. Those interested in submitting a Statement of Qualifications are encouraged to provide contact information to (BXWA) by e-mail to cheri@bxwa.com or telephone at 425-258-1303. The consultant must check online at BXWA for any addenda, new documents, or cancellation of the RFQ. The City of Port Angeles, in accordance with Title VI of the Civil Rights of 1964, 78 Stat.252, 42 U.S.C. 2000d to 2000-4 and Title 49, Code of Federal Regulations, Department of Transportation, Subtitle A, Office of the Secretary , Part 21, NonDiscrimination in Federally Assisted Programs of the Department of Transportation, issued pursuant to such Act, hereby notifies all Bidders that it will affirmatively ensure that in any contact entered into pursuant to this advertisement, minority business enterprises will be afforded full opportunity to submit bids in response to this invitation and will not be discriminated against on the grounds of race, color, or national origin in consideration for an award. Michael Puntenney, P.E. Deputy Director of Public Works & Utilities PUB: August 17, 24, 2015 Legal No. 651928
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File No.: 7037.106065 Grantors: Northwest Trustee Services, Inc. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. as trustee for Freddie Mac Securities REMIC Trust, Series 2005S001 Grantee: Jeremy S. Percival, as his separate estate Ref to DOT Auditor File No.: 2005 1158721 Tax Parcel ID No.: 053013 230000 Abbreviated Legal: PTN SE4 SW4 NW4 S13 T3 ORS WWM CLALLAM, CO. Washington Notice of Trustee’s Sale Pursuant to the Revised Code of Washington 61.24, et seq. THIS NOTICE IS THE FINAL STEP BEFORE THE FORECLOSURE SALE OF YOUR HOME You have only 20 DAYS from the recording date of this notice to pursue mediation. DO NOT DELAY. CONTACT A HOUSING COUNSELOR OR AN ATTORNEY LICENSED IN WASHINGTON NOW to assess your situation and refer you to mediation if you are eligible and it may help you save your home. See below for safe sources of help. SEEKING ASSISTANCE Housing counselors and legal assistance may be available at little or no cost to you. If you would like assistance in determining your rights and opportunities to keep your house, you may contact the following: The statewide foreclosure hotline for assistance and referral to housing counselors recommended by the Housing Finance Commission Telephone: Toll-free: 1-877-894-HOME (1-877-8944 6 6 3 ) . W e b s i t e : h t t p : / / w w w. d f i . w a . g o v / c o n s u m e r s / h o m e o w n e r ship/post_purchase_counselors_foreclosure.htm The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development Telephone: Toll-free: 1-800-5694287. Web site: http://www.hud.gov/offices/hsg/sfh/hcc/fc/index.cfm?webListAction=search&searchstate=WA&filterSvc=dfc The statewide civil legal aid hotline for assistance and referrals to other housing counselors and attorneys Telephone: Toll-free: 1-800-606-4819. Web site: http://nwjustice.org/whatclear. I. On September 4, 2015, at 10:00 AM. inside the main lobby of the Clallam County Courthouse, 223 East 4th Street in the City of Port Angeles, State of Washington, the undersigned Trustee (subject to any conditions imposed by the Trustee) will sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder, payable at time of sale, the following described real property “Property”, situated in the County(ies) of CLALLAM, State of Washington: That portion of the Southeast Quarter of the Southwest Quarter of the Northwest Quarter of Section 13, Township 30 North, Range 5 West, W.M., Clallam County, Washington, described as follows: Beginning at the Quarter corner on the West line of said Section 13, thence Easterly 1318 feet more or less to the Southeast corner of said Southeast Quarter of the Southwest Quarter of the Northwest Quarter; thence North along the East line thereof to a point 60 feet South of the Northeast corner of said Southeast Quarter of the Southwest Quarter of the Northwest Quarter, said point being the True Point of Beginning; thence South 200 feet; thence West parallel with the South line of said Southeast Quarter of the Southwest Quarter of the Northwest Quarter to the center line of the County Road; thence Northerly along the center line of said County Road to a point 200 feet from the last preceding course when measured at right angles thereto; thence East parallel with the South line of said Southeast Quarter of the Southwest Quarter of the Northwest Quarter to the True Point of Beginning; except right of way for existing roads. Situate in Clallam County, State of Washington. Commonly known as: 262 Lewis Road Port Angeles, WA 98362 which is subject to that certain Deed of Trust dated 06/10/05, recorded on 06/17/05, under Auditor’s File No. 2005 1158721, records of CLALLAM County, Washington, from Jeremy S. Percival, an unmarried individual as a separate estate, as Grantor, to Olympic Peninsula Title, a Washington corporation, as Trustee, to secure an obligation “Obligation” in favor of Washington Mutual Bank, a Washington corporation, as Beneficiary, the beneficial interest in which was assigned by Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, as receiver of Washington Mutual Bank to Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. as trustee for Freddie Mac Securities REMIC Trust, Series 2005-S001, under an Assignment/Successive Assignments recorded under Auditor’s File No. 2013-1293609. *The Tax Parcel ID number and Abbreviated Legal Description are provided solely to comply with the recording statutes and are not intended to supplement, amend or supersede the Property’s full legal description provided herein. II. No action commenced by the Beneficiary of the Deed of Trust is now pending to seek satisfaction of the Obligation in any Court by reason of the Grantor’s or Borrower’s default on the Obligation secured by the Deed of Trust. III. The Beneficiary alleges default of the Deed of Trust for failure to pay the following amounts now in arrears and/or other defaults: Amount due to reinstate as of 04/24/2015. If reinstating after this date, please contact NWTS for the exact reinstatement amount. Monthly Payments $20,955.05 Lender’s Fees & Costs ($564.64) Total Arrearage $20,390.41 Trustee’s Expenses (Itemization) Trustee’s Fee $700.00 Total Costs $700.00 Total Amount Due: $21,090.41 Other known defaults as follows: IV. The sum owing on the Obligation is: Principal Balance of $184,906.83, together with interest as provided in the note or other instrument evidencing the Obligation from 11/01/13, and such other costs and fees as are due under the Obligation, and as are provided by statute. V. The Property will be sold to satisfy the expense of sale and the Obligation as provided by statute. The sale will be made without representation or warranty, express or implied regarding title, possession, encumbrances or condition of the Property on September 4, 2015. The default(s) referred to in paragraph III, together with any subsequent payments, late charges, advances costs and fees thereafter due, must be cured by 08/24/15 (11 days before the sale date), to cause a discontinuance of the sale. The sale will be discontinued and terminated if at any time before 08/24/15 (11 days before the sale date), the default(s) as set forth in paragraph III, together with any subsequent payments, late charges, advances, costs and fees thereafter due, is/are cured and the Trustee’s fees and costs are paid. The sale may be terminated any time after 08/24/15 (11 days before the sale date), and before the sale by the Borrower, Grantor, any Guarantor or the holder of any recorded junior lien or encumbrance paying the entire balance of principal and interest secured by the Deed of Trust, plus costs, fees, and advances, if any made pursuant to the terms of the obligation and/or Deed of Trust, and curing all other defaults. VI. A written notice of default was transmitted by the Beneficiary or Trustee to the Borrower and Grantor at the following address(es): NAME AND ADDRESS Jeremy S. Percival 262 Lewis Road Port Angeles, WA 98362 Unknown Spouse and/or Domestic Partner of Jeremy S. Percival 262 Lewis Road Port Angeles, WA 98362 Jeremy S. Percival 404 North Park Drive Sultan, WA 98294-7607 Unknown Spouse and/or Domestic Partner of Jeremy S. Percival 404 North Park Drive Sultan, WA 98294-7607 by both first class and certified mail, return receipt requested on 10/16/14, proof of which is in the possession of the Trustee; and on 10/16/14 Grantor and Borrower were personally served with said written notice of default or the written notice of default was posted on a conspicuous place on the real property described in paragraph I above, and the Trustee has possession of proof of such service or posting. VII. The Trustee, whose name and address are set forth below, will provide in writing to anyone requesting it a statement of all costs and trustee’s fees due at any time prior to the sale. VIII. The effect of the sale will be to deprive the Grantor and all those who hold by, through or under the Grantor of all their interest in the Property. IX. Anyone having any objection to the sale on any grounds whatsoever will be afforded an opportunity to be heard as to those objections if they bring a lawsuit to restrain the sale pursuant to RCW 61.24.130. Failure to bring such a lawsuit may result in a waiver of any proper grounds for invalidating the Trustee’s sale. X. NOTICE TO OCCUPANTS OR TENANTS - The purchaser at the Trustee’s Sale is entitled to possession of the property on the 20th day following the sale, as against the Grantor under the Deed of Trust (the owner) and anyone having an interest junior to the Deed of Trust, including occupants who are not tenants. After the 20th day following the sale the purchaser has the right to evict occupants who are not tenants by summary proceedings under Chapter 59.12 RCW. For tenant-occupied property, the purchaser shall provide a tenant with written notice in accordance with RCW 61.24.060. The trustee’s rules of auction may be accessed at www.northwesttrustee.com and are incorporated by this reference. You may also access sale status at www.northwesttrustee.com and www.USA-Foreclosure.com. Date Executed: Northwest Trustee Services, Inc., Trustee Authorized Signature 13555 SE 36th St. Suite 100 Bellevue, WA 98006 Contact: Heather L. Smith (425) 586-1900. (TS# 7037.106065) 1002.274089-File No. PUB: August 3, 24, 2015 Legal No:
B10
WeatherWatch
MONDAY, AUGUST 24, 2015 Neah Bay 62/52
g Bellingham 69/56
Yesterday
➡
Statistics for the 24-hour period ending at noon yesterday. Hi Lo Rain YTD Port Angeles 77 45 0.00 13.79 Forks 75 47 0.00 40.16 Seattle 80 57 0.00 18.14 Sequim 79 52 0.00 7.99 Hoquiam 79 52 0.00 20.20 Victoria 77 50 0.00 14.05 Port Townsend 75 48 **0.00 8.73
Olympic Peninsula TODAY A.M. FOG
Port Angeles 66/52
PATCHY A.M. FOG
A.M. FOG
Port Townsend 65/53
A.M. FOG
Sequim Olympics 76/52 Freeze level: 11,500 feet Port Ludlow 69/51
Forks 70/49 G FO M. A.
PATCHY A.M. FOG
➡
Aberdeen 69/52
National forecast Nation TODAY
Forecast highs for Monday, Aug. 24
Last
New
First
Sunny
Billings 93° | 50°
San Francisco 69° | 59°
Minneapolis 69° | 53°
Denver 91° | 55°
Chicago 76° | 58°
Los Angeles 82° | 67°
Atlanta 90° | 70°
El Paso 92° | 69° Houston 97° | 76°
Full
Low 52 Clouds with patchy fog
WEDNESDAY
67/52 Mostly cloudy, patchy a.m. fog
Miami 91° | 79°
Marine Conditions
THURSDAY
71/53 Lots of sun after a.m. fog
Fronts
Tides
Seattle 76° | 54°
Spokane 88° | 58°
Tacoma 77° | 52°
Olympia 77° | 48°
Yakima 87° | 57° Astoria 71° | 53°
TODAY
Port Townsend Dungeness Bay*
Albany, N.Y. Albuquerque Amarillo Anchorage Asheville Atlanta Atlantic City Austin Baltimore Billings Birmingham Bismarck Boise Boston Brownsville Buffalo
CANADA
© 2015 Wunderground.com
TOMORROW
Hi 82 93 95 70 82 92 86 97 83 65 88 70 82 73 94 77
8:11 p.m. 6:22 a.m. 4:18 p.m. 1:43 a.m.
Lo Prc Otlk 60 PCldy 69 Clr 62 Cldy 51 PCldy 68 .06 Rain 72 Rain 59 PCldy 72 Cldy 57 Clr 42 Clr 71 1.36 Rain 49 1.02 Clr 60 Cldy 67 .01 Cldy 77 PCldy 57 PCldy
WEDNESDAY
High Tide Ht 8:53 a.m. 5.5’ 8:21 p.m. 7.4’
Low Tide Ht 2:27 a.m. 1.0’ 2:09 p.m. 3.3’
High Tide Ht 9:59 a.m. 5.8’ 9:25 p.m. 7.7’
Low Tide Ht 3:32 a.m. 0.5’ 3:22 p.m. 3.2’
High Tide Ht 10:34 a.m. 6.3’ 10:24 p.m. 8.2’
Low Tide 4:29 a.m. 4:26 p.m.
Ht -0.1’ 2.7’
1:11 p.m. 5.5’ 9:59 p.m. 5.9’
4:47 a.m. 5.9’ 5:11 p.m. 5.3’
1:50 p.m. 5.8’ 10:59 p.m. 6.0’
5:42 a.m. 0.1’ 6:14 p.m. 5.3’
2:22 p.m. 6.2’
6:33 a.m. 7:05 p.m.
-0.4’ 5.0’
2:48 p.m. 6.8’ 11:36 p.m. 7.3’
6:00 a.m. 0.6’ 6:24 p.m. 5.9’
3:27 p.m. 7.2’
6:55 a.m. 0.1’ 7:27 p.m. 5.9’
12:36 a.m. 7.4’ 3:59 p.m. 7.6’
7:46 a.m. 8:18 p.m.
-0.4’ 5.5’
1:54 p.m. 6.1’ 910:42 p.m. 6.6’
5:22 a.m. 0.5’ 5:46 p.m. 5.3’
2:33 p.m. 6.5’ 11:42 p.m. 6.7’
6:17 a.m. 0.1’ 6:49 p.m. 5.3’
3:05 p.m. 6.8’
7:08 a.m. 7:40 p.m.
-0.4’ 5.0’
*To correct for Sequim Bay, add 15 minutes for high tide, 21 minutes for low tide.
Briefly . . . Menus for senior meals announced PORT ANGELES — Port Angeles Senior Nutrition Site dinners will be served at 4 p.m. Tuesday through Friday at the Port Angeles Senior Center, 328 E. Seventh St. A suggested donation is $5 for those who are 60 or older. People younger than 60 can attend for $8. Reservations should be made 24 hours in advance to 360-457-8921. Menus are subject to change. ■ Tuesday: Pea salad,
slice of ham, macaroni and cheese, broccoli and cauliflower, and blueberries and cream. ■ Wednesday: Spinach salad, spaghetti with meat sauce, green beans, garlic bread and cantaloupe. ■ Thursday: Broccoli salad, roast pork, rice pilaf, butternut squash and apple crisp. ■ Friday: Vegetable soup, shrimp salad, grapes and strawberry shortcake.
Fossil talk slated PORT ANGELES — John Cornish of the Randolf Frederick Co. will speak about fossils and crystal-infused rocks in the second-floor meeting room at The Landing mall, 115
E. Railroad Ave., at 7 p.m. Friday. Cornish offers this introductory talk to educate and inspire amateur and professional treasure hunters on behalf of the Clallam County Gem and Mineral Association. Each donor or new member who signs up for the association will receive a ticket for door prize drawings. The $5 donation at the door will go toward future presentations for further education about gems, minerals and fossils. For more information, phone the Randolf Frederick Co. at 360-797-1718. Peninsula Daily News
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Low
High
-10s
-0s
Burlington, Vt. 81 Casper 67 Charleston, S.C. 90 Charleston, W.Va. 84 Charlotte, N.C. 88 Cheyenne 70 Chicago 81 Cincinnati 81 Cleveland 79 Columbia, S.C. 92 Columbus, Ohio 81 Concord, N.H. 83 Dallas-Ft Worth 97 Dayton 79 Denver 92 Des Moines 84 Detroit 80 Duluth 77 El Paso 97 Evansville 84 Fairbanks 58 Fargo 77 Flagstaff 81 Grand Rapids 81 Great Falls 65 Greensboro, N.C. 85 Hartford Spgfld 84 Helena 67 Honolulu 92 Houston 93 Indianapolis 80 Jackson, Miss. 96 Jacksonville 92 Juneau 59 Kansas City 86 Key West 91 Las Vegas 105 Little Rock 87
60 29 73 62 71 38 67 61 58 74 59 61 79 60 44 56 60 55 73 67 50 55 52 59 41 69 61 42 81 76 65 72 73 52 63 77 83 70
0s
10s
20s 30s 40s
50s 60s
70s
80s 90s 100s 110s
Cartography © Weather Underground / The Associated Press
.53 .15
.07
.51
.07 .46
.01 .04 .08 .83 .55 .21
Cldy Cldy Cldy PCldy Cldy Cldy Rain PCldy Rain Cldy PCldy Cldy PCldy PCldy Cldy Clr Rain Rain Cldy Cldy Cldy Clr PCldy Rain Cldy Cldy Cldy Cldy Rain Cldy Cldy PCldy Cldy Rain Clr Clr Clr Rain
Los Angeles Louisville Lubbock Memphis Miami Beach Midland-Odessa Milwaukee Mpls-St Paul Nashville New Orleans New York City Norfolk, Va. North Platte Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Pendleton Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, Maine Portland, Ore. Providence Raleigh-Durham Rapid City Reno Richmond Sacramento St Louis St Petersburg Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco San Juan, P.R. Santa Fe St Ste Marie Shreveport
83 85 96 85 93 101 79 82 89 91 86 83 79 91 88 94 80 86 105 80 78 86 81 87 66 95 86 90 78 94 85 98 77 73 88 89 81 95
Valley, Calif. Ä 25 in West Yellowstone, Mont.
GLOSSARY of abbreviations used on this page: Clr clear, sunny; PCldy partly cloudy; Cldy cloudy; Sh showers; Ts thunderstorms; Prc precipitation; Otlk outlook; M data missing; Ht tidal height; YTD year to date; kt knots; ft or ’ feet
66 Cldy Sioux Falls 81 53 Clr 77 56 PCldy 71 Cldy Syracuse 95 80 Cldy 71 Cldy Tampa 87 62 .66 Clr 74 .61 Cldy Topeka 98 73 .18 Cldy 78 .61 Rain Tucson 87 70 .58 Rain 77 PCldy Tulsa Clr 66 Rain Washington, D.C. 86 64 Wichita 89 63 2.51 PCldy 57 .59 Cldy 79 55 PCldy 71 .02 Cldy Wilkes-Barre PCldy 77 .59 Cldy Wilmington, Del. 84 58 70 Cldy _______ 74 Clr 41 Clr Hi Lo Otlk 73 Cldy 58 49 Wind/Rain 55 1.52 Clr Auckland 85 68 PCldy 77 .58 Cldy Beijing Berlin 81 61 PCldy 49 Clr Brussels 69 54 Ts 65 PCldy Cairo 94 75 Clr 87 Clr Calgary 78 49 PCldy 57 PCldy Guadalajara 81 59 Ts 64 Cldy Hong Kong 93 76 Clr 60 Clr Jerusalem 86 67 Clr 68 Cldy Johannesburg 78 47 Ts 61 Cldy Kabul 83 57 Clr 38 Clr London 62 52 Rain 62 PCldy Mexico City 77 57 Ts 62 PCldy Montreal 83 61 Ts 61 Clr Moscow 66 43 PCldy 68 .91 Cldy New Delhi 91 81 Ts 83 Cldy Paris 69 53 Sh 59 Cldy Rio de Janeiro 75 69 Rain 78 Cldy Rome 86 69 PCldy 70 Cldy San Jose, CRica 76 64 Ts 60 Cldy Sydney 68 55 Rain 77 PCldy Tokyo 77 69 Wind/Cldy 60 Clr Toronto 73 56 Clr 63 Rain 77 .08 PCldy Vancouver 69 52 PCldy
Tiny library opens up in Sequim PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
SEQUIM — The city of Sequim has partnered with the North Olympic Library System (NOLS) to install a Tiny Olympic Library at Seal Street Park in downtown Sequim. The self-serve greenand-blue library is stocked with books by NOLS that are available to the public to borrow or keep. The Sequim tiny library is one of four in Clallam County. Other tiny library locations are: ■ Port Angeles: City Pier. ■ Forks: Forks Transit Center ■ Clallam Bay: Sunsets West Co-op, 16795 state Highway 112. Readers can return books to any of the Clallam County tiny library locations. Requests for service to the Sequim Tiny Olympic Library should be directed to the Sequim Library at 603 N. Sequim Ave., 360-
A Tiny Olympic Library is now ready for readers in four locations across the Peninsula. 683-1161 or Sequim@nols. org. Contact Sequim Assistant to the City Manager/
Parks Manager Joe Irvin with questions at 360-5822457 or jirvin@seqimwa. gov.
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Port Angeles
67/53 Bit of sun, bit of cloud
Victoria 71° | 51°
Ocean: NW wind 5 to 15 kt. Wind waves 2 ft or less. NW swell 7 ft at 12 seconds subsiding to 5 ft at 11 seconds. Patchy morning fog. Tonight, NW wind 5 to 15 kt. Wind waves 2 ft or less. NW swell 6 ft at 10 seconds.
Sep 12
Sunset today Sunrise tomorrow Moonrise today Moonset tomorrow
Washington TODAY
Strait of Juan de Fuca: W wind 10 to 20 kt. Wind waves 1 to 3 ft. Patchy morning fog. Tonight, W wind 20 to 30 k. Wind waves 3 to 5 ft.
LaPush
Sep 3
FRIDAY
71/54 Mostly sunny
New York 85° | 70°
Detroit 75° | 57°
Washington D.C. 91° | 67°
Cartography C artogra artography t phy by y Keith Keith ith Thorpe Th horp / © Peninsula Daily News h
TUESDAY
Cloudy
The Lower 48 TEMPERATURE EXTREMES for the contiguous United States:
Cold
TONIGHT
Pt. Cloudy
Seattle 76° | 54°
Almanac
Brinnon 72/55
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