Tuesday
Grab the Money Tree
Showers resolute across Peninsula B10
Great discounts on local dining and services A6
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS Port Townsend-Jefferson County’s Daily Newspaper
September 1, 2015 | 75¢
Storm’s bluster dubbed ‘historic’
Above the fray Drone tracks fire’s hot spots
Park area closings, outages continue
Test flight in Olympic forest deemed success INSITU
BY DOMINIC GATES
InSitu operator Joseph Cooper prepares the ScanEagle drone for launch to surveil the Paradise Fire in Olympic National Park last week.
MCCLATCHY NEWS SERVICE
QUEETS — Officials fighting a forest fire in Olympic National Park say they successfully used a drone last week to get overhead infrared video to steer waterdropping helicopters to their target. “They were watching a live feed and ALSO . . . were able to direct ■ Fight helicopter bucket against fires drops to heat,” said may last into Brentwood Reid, fire winter/A4 information officer for the Paradise Fire. “Because the forest canopy is so dense, it’s very difficult to detect hot spots and even the fire’s edge.” The weeklong test was the first time the U.S. Department of the Interior has operated a drone in firefighting, but it’s likely not the last. The ScanEagle drone used at the Paradise Fire was designed and built by Boeing’s unmanned-aerial-vehicle subsidiary InSitu in the Klickitat County town of Bingen and provided by the company at no direct cost to the government as an operational test. The Department of the Interior is testing the use of drones for wildfire suppres-
S
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
The storm that hit the Pacific Northwest on Saturday is being called the region’s most powerful summer storm on record, and as of Monday evening, the North Olympic Peninsula was still cleaning up fallen trees while some power customers remained in the dark. Winds that approached 90 mph on the Peninsula’s Pacific Coast and more than 50 mph in East Jefferson County dropped trees on cars and power lines, closing Olympic National Park roads and cutting power to more than 14,400 customers in Clallam and Jefferson counties. By Monday, most park areas and attractions had reopened, and service had been restored to most power customers.
howing how
unmanned vehicles can help fight wildfires, a drone provided real-time overhead video to officials battling the Paradise Fire in Olympic National Park.
BY ARWYN RICE
Park closures NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
This is a screenshot of a video showing the drone’s infrared view of the Paradise Fire.
sion this year, though it’s likely to be several years before they are deployed in significant numbers. “We have to determine how we’ll safely integrate these things into our
existing tactical-aircraft fire-traffic area,” said Brad Koeckeritz, Interior’s national unmanned-aircraft specialist. TURN
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Olympic National Park workers Monday continued clearing trees and branches from roads and campgrounds and removed hazardous trees and snags to reopen more parts of the park, which had been completely closed immediately after the storm Saturday. “We do plan to have everything open in time for Labor Day weekend,” Rainey McKenna, park spokeswoman, said Monday. TURN
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Schools prep for first day of class Centennial party, registration set in Jefferson districts
tery school districts.
Chimacum
Cowboy Day will be held all day Thursday to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the creation of the Chimacum School District and the BY ARWYN RICE entry of the class of 2019 — the 100th graduating class. PENINSULA DAILY NEWS Cowboy Day begins with ChiJefferson County school dismacum High School registration tricts are gearing up for the new and ends with a centennial annischool year with back-to-school versary party at 6:30 p.m. events this week, including a 100Registration will be held from year anniversary celebration for 8 a.m. to noon Thursday for all the Chimacum School District. students, including Running Start, Sept. 8 is the first day of school the Pi Program and Focus Proin Port Townsend, Chimacum, Quil- gram. Registration activities include cene and Brinnon school districts. paying fees, getting a 2015-16 Port Townsend and Chimaschool identification card, taking cum districts will hold back-toschool pictures, turning in annual school events this week. paperwork, applying for free or Clallam County classes begin reduced lunches, arranging for this week. parking permits and purchasing Classes will resume today for an ASB membership and the yearSequim students, Wednesday in book. Forks and Thursday for the Port Angeles, Crescent and Cape FlatTURN TO SCHOOLS/A5
FALL
CHARLIE BERMANT/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Unique hometown flavor Main Street Executive Director Mari Mullen, left, chats with Printery Communications owner Mike Kenna, center, and David Kayley, who ran Main Street when the first Port Townsend Family Portrait was taken in 1985. The three were at the picnic that followed the picture-taking Sunday afternoon. For the 2015 family portrait, see Page A8.
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INSIDE TODAY’S PENINSULA DAILY NEWS BUSINESS CLASSIFIED COMICS COMMENTARY DEAR ABBY DEATHS HOROSCOPE NATION PENINSULA POLL
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TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2015
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Tundra
The Samurai of Puzzles
By Chad Carpenter
Copyright © 2015, Michael Mepham Editorial Services
www.peninsuladailynews.com This is a QR (Quick Response) code taking the user to the North Olympic Peninsula’s No. 1 website* — peninsuladailynews.com. The QR code can be scanned with a smartphone or tablet equipped with an app available for free from numerous sources. QR codes appearing in news articles or advertisements in the PDN can instantly direct the smartphone user to additional information on the web. *Source: Quantcast Inc.
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Newsroom, sports CONTACTS! To report news: 360-417-3531, or one of our local offices: Sequim, 360-681-2390, ext. 5052; Jefferson County/Port Townsend, 360-385-2335, ext. 5550; West End/Forks, 800-826-7714, ext. 5052 Sports desk/reporting a sports score: 360-417-3525 Letters to Editor: 360-417-3527 Club news, “Seen Around” items, subjects not listed above: 360-417-3527 To purchase PDN photos: www.peninsuladailynews.com, click on “Photo Gallery.” Permission to reprint or reuse articles: 360-417-3530 To locate a recent article: 360-417-3527
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The Associated Press
Newsmakers Celebrity scoop ■ By The Associated Press
‘SpongeBob Musical’ in the works THERE’S A “SPONGEBOB” musical in the works, but the music is no kiddie stuff. Nickelodeon said Monday it will produce the world premiere of “The SpongeBob Musical” in Legend Chicago next summer with original songs from John Legend, David Bowie, Cyndi Lauper, Dirty Projectors, The Flaming Lips, T.I., Plain White T’s, They Might Be Giants, Lady Antebellum, Panic! At the Disco and Aerosmith’s Steven Tyler and Joe Perry. It is co-conceived and
directed by Tina Landau with a book by Kyle Jarrow and music supervision by Tom Kitt. The show will play Chicago’s Oriental Theatre starting June 7 with an eye to Broadway. Producers call it “a rousing tale of a simple sea sponge who faces the unfathomable. It’s a celebration of unbridled hope, unexpected heroes and pure theatrical invention.” Kids’ material has made the leap to stage before, including “The Addams Family,” “Annie” and “You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown.” And writer, director and producer Adam McKay is currently working on an “Archie” musical.
Cyrus hosts awards Taylor Swift won video of the year, Miley Cyrus briefly flashed one of her breasts and Kanye West ranted at the MTV Video Music Awards. West, who said he got
high before going onstage Sunday, gave a rambling speech as he apologized to Swift for taking her microphone in 2009, admitting “I don’t understand awards shows,” bashing MTV and claiming he would run for president in 2020. Swift presented West with the Michael Jackson Video Vanguard Award. “This arena tomorrow is gonna be a completely different setup this stage will be gone. After that night, the stage was gone, but the effect that it had on people remained,” West said of running onstage during Swift’s speech at the 2009 VMAs. “The problem was the contradiction. The contradiction is I do fight for artists, but in that fight, I somehow was disrespectful to artists. I didn’t know how to say the right thing, the perfect thing.” It was just one of the dramatic moments at the awards show.
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS PENINSULA POLL SUNDAY’S QUESTION: Do you think the recent rainfall on the North Olympic Peninsula should prompt lifting the burn bans now in place?
Passings By The Associated Press
WES CRAVEN, 76, died Sunday. The prolific writer-director ushered in two distinct eras of suburban slashers, first in the 1980s with his iconic “Nightmare on Elm Street” and its indelible, razor-fingered villain Freddy Krueger. He did it again in the 1990s with the self-referential “Scream.” Both reintroduced the fringe genre to mainstream audiences and spawned Mr. Craven successful in 2010 franchises. Wesley Earl “Wes” Craven was born in Cleveland, Ohio, on Aug. 2, 1939, to a strictly Baptist family. Though he earned a master’s degree in philosophy and writing from John Hopkins University and briefly taught as a college professor in Pennsylvania and New York, his start in movies was in pornography, where he worked under pseudonyms. “Nightmare on Elm Street,” however, catapulted him to far greater renown in 1984. The Ohioset film about teenagers (including a then-unknown Johnny Depp) who are stalked in their dreams, which Mr. Craven wrote and directed, spawned a never-ending franchise that has carried on until, most recently, a 2010 remake. Along with John Carpenter’s “Halloween,” “Nightmare on Elm Street” defined a horror tradition where helpless teenagers are preyed upon by knifewielding, deformed killers in cruel morality tales; usually, promiscuous girls were the first to go. In a statement, Mr. Cra-
ven’s family said that he died surrounded by family in his Los Angeles home, after battling brain cancer. He is survived by his wife, producer Iya Labunka; a son; a daughter; and a stepdaughter.
________ MARVIN MANDEL, 95, a former Maryland governor whose 26-year career in state government ended with his 1977 conviction on political corruption charges, has died. According to a statement from his family, Mr. Mandel passed away Sunday afternoon after spending two days with family Mr. Mandel in St. Mary’s in 2009 County celebrating the 50th birthday of his stepson, Paul Dorsey. Once considered one of Maryland’s most powerful and effective governors, Mr. Mandel presided over a major reorganization of state government, built a subway in Baltimore and spent $1 billion on school construction. But his accomplishments were overshadowed by his personal tribulations. He was convicted in 1977 along with five co-defendants of mail fraud and racketeering. The charges stemmed from what prosecutors said was a complex scheme in which Mr. Mandel was given money and favors for vetoing one bill and signing another to help his friends make money on a horse-racing track deal. The conviction remained the dominant event of his career even after it was overturned on a technicality in 1987 because of a
Supreme Court ruling in another case. Before the charges were filed, Mr. Mandel was the undisputed top man in Maryland politics. He became governor Jan. 7, 1969, when Spiro Agnew left to become vice president under President Richard M. Nixon. In one of the biggest changes to state government under his tenure, Mr. Mandel created a cabinet system in the executive branch that streamlined 240 state agencies that reported to the governor.
Yes
13.0% 84.6%
No Undecided 2.4% Total votes cast: 745
Vote on today’s question at www.peninsuladailynews.com NOTE: The Peninsula Poll is unscientific and reflects the opinions of only those peninsuladailynews.com users who chose to participate. The results cannot be assumed to represent the opinions of all users or the public as a whole.
Setting it Straight Corrections and clarifications The Peninsula Daily News strives at all times for accuracy and fairness in articles, headlines and photographs. To correct an error or to clarify a news story, phone Executive Editor Leah Leach at 360-4173530 or email leah.leach@peninsuladailynews.com.
Peninsula Lookback From the pages of the PENINSULA DAILY NEWS and Port Angeles Evening News
1940 (75 years ago) Headlined by the Port Angeles Salmon Derby, organized labor’s big celebration Monday and a great flow of tourist traffic on the Olympic Loop highway, the Labor Day weekend proved an eventful period for Port Angeles and the Peninsula. No accurate check was available, but unofficial observers estimated the flood of tourist cars on the Olympic Loop and secondary highways at possibly the highest peak in history. Resorts, auto camps and hotels were crowded to overflowing in many cases. The concentration of tourists was particularly heavy in Port Angeles, and hundreds of “foreign” license plates were seen on the streets over Saturday and Sunday nights.
breaking year in amount of forest funds to be distributed. This is the first year for deducting forest funds earmarked for local schools from state aid. Under state legislation passed this year, 40 percent of the amount allotted to county schools will be subtracted from finances allowed the schools by the state in 1965.
1990 (25 years ago) All 110 permanent Olympic National Park employees have been told they may be laid off for up to 22 days if Congress fails
to reach a budget agreement by Oct. 1. Park Superintendent Maureen Finnerty said layoff periods might be staggered but it would still be very difficult if not impossible for all park facilities to be kept open. “This is a worst-case scenario we are looking at,” Finnerty said. “It’s got a lot of people concerned. We’re waiting and keeping our fingers crossed.”
Seen Around Peninsula snapshots
MAN IN SHORT sleeves washing his car in the rain in Port Angeles . . .
Laugh Lines
WANTED! “Seen Around” items recalling BACK IN SCHOOL, things seen on the North kids? Olympic Peninsula. Send Don’t worry, school will them to PDN News Desk, 1965 (50 years ago) end eventually, and then P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles you’ll get to go to a differFederal forest funds are WA 98362; fax 360-417ent kind of school called going to mean less to Clal3521; or email news@peninlam County schools this year, work, and it only ends suladailynews.com. Be sure when you get old and die. at least percentage-wise. you mention where you Jimmy Kimmel saw your “Seen Around.” Ironically, it’s a record-
Looking Back From the files of The Associated Press
TODAY IS TUESDAY, Sept. 1, the 244th day of 2015. There are 121 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: ■ On Sept. 1, 1715, following a reign of 72 years, King Louis XIV of France died four days before his 77th birthday. On this date: ■ In 1807, former Vice President Aaron Burr was found not guilty of treason. Burr was then tried on a misdemeanor charge but was again acquitted. ■ In 1905, Alberta and Saskatchewan entered the Confederation as the eighth and ninth provinces of Canada. ■ In 1923, the Japanese cities
of Tokyo and Yokohama were devastated by an earthquake that claimed some 140,000 lives. ■ In 1939, World War II began as Nazi Germany invaded Poland. ■ In 1945, Americans received word of Japan’s formal surrender that ended World War II. Because of the time difference, it was Sept. 2 in Tokyo Bay, where the ceremony took place. ■ In 1976, U.S. Rep. Wayne L. Hays, D-Ohio, resigned in the wake of a scandal in which he admitted having an affair with “secretary” Elizabeth Ray. ■ In 1983, 269 people were killed when a Korean Air Lines Boeing 747 was shot down by a Soviet jet fighter after the airliner
entered Soviet airspace. ■ In 1985, a U.S.-French expedition located the wreckage of the Titanic on the floor of the Atlantic Ocean roughly 400 miles off Newfoundland. ■ Ten years ago: New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin issued a “desperate SOS” as his city descended into anarchy amid the flooding left by Hurricane Katrina. Al-Qaida’s number two made the terror group’s first direct claim of responsibility for the July 7 bombings in London in a videotape. ■ Five years ago: President Barack Obama convened a new round of ambitious Mideast peace talks at the White House as he
hosted Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in the first face-to-face negotiations in nearly two years. ■ One year ago: President Barack Obama, addressing a union crowd in Milwaukee, renewed his push for Congress to raise the minimum wage in a buoyant accounting of the economy’s “revving” performance. The U.N.’s top human rights body overwhelmingly approved the Iraqi government’s request for an investigation into alleged crimes against civilians committed by the Islamic State group in its rampage across northeastern Syria and parts of Iraq.
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, September 1, 2015 P A G E
A3 Briefly: Nation ment released Monday. Mireya Alejandra Lopez, 22, was arrested Sunday at a home MOREHEAD, Ky. — The in the Phoenix Supreme Court on Monday ruled suburb of against the Kentucky county Avondale. Lopez clerk who has refused to issue A judge same-sex marriage licenses, and Monday ordered her jailed on two the clerk will arrive at work this counts of first-degree murder and morning to face her moment of one count of attempted murder, truth. with bail set at $2 million. Rowan County Clerk Kim In addition to being accused of Davis will have to choose whether killing her sons by holding them to issue marriage licenses, defying underwater in a bathtub, Lopez her Christian conviction, or conis accused of trying to drown a tinue to refuse them, defying a 3-year-old boy identified as her federal judge who could pummel stepbrother. her with fines or order that she be hauled off to jail. Suspect had evaluation “She’s going to have to think HOUSTON — The man and pray about her decision overnight. She certainly understands accused of shooting and killing a suburban Houston officer has a the consequences either way,” history of mental illness and Mat Staver, founder of the law once lived in a homeless shelter, firm representing Davis, said authorities said Monday. Monday, hours before a courtHarris County Sheriff’s Depordered delay in the case expired. uty Darren Goforth, 47, was “She’ll report to work tomorrow and face whatever she has to ambushed and shot 15 times, Harris County District Attorney face.” A line of couples, turned away Devon Anderson said in a court hearing for Shannon J. Miles, by her office again and again in who is charged with capital murthe two months since the U.S. der. Supreme Court legalized gay Miles, a 30-year-old Houston marriage across the nation, plan resident who said little in court, to meet her at the courthouse is being held without bond. His door. Davis stopped issuing all mar- criminal history dates back to 2005 and includes an arrest in riage licenses in the days after Austin in 2012 that led to Miles the landmark decision. Her lawbeing sent to a state mental hosyers with the Liberty Counsel pital for several months. had filed a last-ditch appeal to Anderson would not comment the Supreme Court on Friday, on a motive, saying investigators asking that they grant her “asywere still trying to figure that lum for her conscience.” out. When asked if it might be conTwins’ drowning nected to heightened tensions PHOENIX — A woman around the country between law accused of drowning her 2-yearenforcement and civilians, Anderold twin sons told police she did son said, “I have no idea whether it does or not.” it because nobody loved them or The Associated Press her, according to a court docu-
High court rules against clerk on gay marriage
No criminal trouble expected for Clinton BY KEN DILANIAN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON — Experts in government secrecy law see almost no possibility of criminal action against Hillary Clinton or her top aides in connection with now-classified information sent over unsecure email while she was secretary of state, based on the public evidence thus far. Some Republicans, including leading GOP presidential candidate Donald Trump, have called Clinton’s actions criminal and compared her situation to Clinton that of David Petraeus, the former CIA director who was prosecuted for giving top secret information to his paramour. Others have cited the case of another past CIA chief, John Deutch, who took highly classified material home. But in both of those cases, no one disputed that the information was highly classified and in many cases top secret. Petraeus pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor; Deutch was pardoned by President Bill Clinton.
By contrast, there is no evidence of emails stored in Hillary Clinton’s private server bearing classified markings. State Department officials say they don’t believe emails she sent or received included material classified at the time. And even if other government officials dispute that assertion, it is extremely difficult to prove anyone knowingly mishandled secrets. “How can you be on notice if there are no markings?” said Leslie McAdoo, a lawyer who frequently handles security-clearance cases. Clinton’s critics have focused on the unusual, home-brew email server Clinton used while in office and suggested she should have known secrets were improperly coursing through an unsecure system, leaving them easily hackable for foreign intelligence agencies. But to prove a crime, the government would have to demonstrate that Clinton or aides knew they were mishandling the information — not that she should have known. A case would be possible if material emerges that is so sensitive Clinton must have known it was highly classified, whether marked or not, McAdoo said. But no such email has surfaced.
More emails unveiled THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON — The State Department was expected to release on its website roughly 7,000 pages of former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton’s emails Monday evening, including about 150 that have been censored because they contain information that has now been deemed classified. Department officials say the redacted information was classified in preparation for the public release of the emails and was not identified as classified when Clinton sent or received them. All the censored information in the latest group of emails is classified at the “confidential” level, not at the higher “top secret” or compartmentalized, the officials said.
Briefly: World Thai police seek 2 new suspects in bomb probe BANGKOK — Thai police issued arrest warrants Monday for two more suspects, a Thai woman and a foreign man of unknown nationality, as part of a widening investigation that yielded its first arrest over the weekend in connection with a deadly bombing in Bangkok two weeks ago. National police spokesman Prawuth Thavornsiri said he was certain the two were part of a group responsible for the Aug. 17 blast at the Wanna Suansun Erawan Shrine in central Bangkok that killed 20 people, more than half of them foreigners. In a televised announcement Monday, Prawuth displayed a photograph of the woman’s Thai identification card and a sketch of the man. He later said police were asking for additional arrest warrants. Police said Monday evening that relatives of the woman, iden-
tified as 26-year-old Wanna Suansun, said they believe she is in Turkey. The developments came after police arrested a man in an apartment in Bangkok’s outskirts Saturday and seized bomb-making equipment that included detonators, ball bearings and a metal pipe that could serve as a bomb casing.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
PROTESTS
TURN DEADLY IN
UKRAINE
Ukrainian protesters clash with police after the Ukrainian parliament in Kiev, Ukraine, approved Monday a controversial constitutional amendment that would give greater powers to separate regions in the east. The Interior Ministry said one officer was killed in a grenade blast, with more than 100 wounded.
Damage unclear DAMASCUS, Syria — A Syrian official in charge of antiquities said Monday his government has not been able to determine how much damage an explosion near the ancient Temple of Bel caused the ancient structure in the militant-controlled city of Palmyra. Activists, including a Palmyra resident, said an Islamic State bombing extensively damaged the 2,000-year old temple Sunday. The resident described a massive explosion, adding that he saw pictures of the damage but could not get near the site. Maamoun Abdulkarim, the head of the Antiquities and Museums Department in Damascus, said that “undoubtedly” a large explosion took place near the temple, which lies in a sprawling Roman-era complex. But he said the extent of the damage remains unclear. The Associated Press
Obama opens his Alaska trip with climate at the forefront BY JOSH LEDERMAN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
ANCHORAGE, Alaska — President Barack Obama brought the power of the presidential pulpit to Alaska on Monday, aiming to thrust climate change to the forefront of the global agenda with a historic visit that will put the state’s liquefying glaciers and sinking villages on graphic display. During his three-day tour of Alaska, Obama planned to hike a glacier, converse with fishermen and tape a reality TV show with survivalist Bear Grylls — all part of a highly orchestrated White House campaign to illustrate how
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climate change has damaged the state’s stunning landscape. The goal at each stop is to create powerful visuals that show real-world effects of climate change and drive home Obama’s message that the crisis already has arrived. Later in the trip, Obama will become the first sitting president to travel north of the Arctic Circle when he visits Kotzebue — population 3,153 — to address the plight of Alaska Natives, who face dire economic conditions amid some of the worst effects of global warming. Aboard Air Force One, the White House unveiled a new National Park Service map bear-
ing the name Denali where Mount McKinley used to be. As a prelude to the trip, Obama announced his administration was renaming the tallest mountain in North America and restoring its traditional Athabascan name. The move drew applause from Gov. Bill Walker and other Alaska leaders but harsh condemnations from Ohio politicians angry that Ohio native and former President William McKinley’s name will be erased from the famed peak. The White House said it planned to work with Ohio officials to find another way to honor McKinley’s legacy.
. . . more news to start your day
West: Calif. doctor faces murder trial in 3 deaths
Nation: Last Titanic lunch menu going up for auction
Nation: Third World Trade parachutist is sentenced
World: Gold hunters blocked from site of train
A LOS ANGELES County prosecutor says even after several patients died of overdoses, the California doctor now charged in their deaths continued to pass out prescriptions for powerful painkillers in appointments that lasted as little as three minutes. Deputy District Attorney John Niederman told jurors in opening statements Monday that Dr. Hsiu-Ying “Lisa” Tseng deserves to be convicted of second-degree murder in the deaths of three of her patients. Tseng has pleaded not guilty. She is among only a handful of doctors nationwide to be charged with murder related to prescription drugs.
THE TITANIC’S LAST lunch menu — saved by Abraham Lincoln Salomon, a passenger who climbed aboard the so-called “Money Boat” before the ocean liner went down — is going to auction, where it’s estimated it will bring $50,000 to $70,000. The online New York auctioneer Lion Heart Autographs is offering the menu and two other previously unknown artifacts from Lifeboat 1 on Sept. 30. The lifeboat was dubbed the “Money Boat” by the press because of unfounded rumors one of them bribed seven crew members to quickly row the boat away from the sinking ship rather than rescue others.
THE LAST OF three sky divers convicted on misdemeanor charges for parachuting off 1 World Trade Center two years ago was sentenced Monday to 300 hours of community service and a $2,000 fine. The sky diver, Marko Markovich, 28, was found guilty in June of reckless endangerment and of violating a New York City ordinance against parachuting off buildings and bridges. His co-defendants, James Brady and Andrew Rossig, were given similar penalties when they were sentenced several weeks ago by the judge who presided over the case, Justice Juan M. Merchan of State Supreme Court in Manhattan.
POLISH AUTHORITIES HAVE blocked off a wooded area near a railroad track after scores of treasure hunters swarmed southwest Poland looking for an alleged Nazi gold train. The city of Walbrzych and its surrounding wooded hills are experiencing a gold rush after two men, a Pole and a German, informed authorities through their lawyers that they have found a Nazi train with armaments and valuables that reportedly went missing in the spring of 1945 while fleeing the Red Army. Inspired by a local legend since World War II, people with metal detectors and ground-penetrating equipment are combing the area and its still-used railway tracks.
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TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2015
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Reclaimed water assists Bell Creek irrigation BY CHRIS MCDANIEL PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
SEQUIM — A city pilot project to pump reclaimed water into Bell Creek will provide additional irrigation for a local farm in periods of drought, with other farms potentially benefitting in the future if the move is a success. In this pilot phase, the additional flow provides water to Maple View Dairy Farm for pasture irrigation. “If it works for everybody, I am really hopeful we can turn the pilot into a project and expand it to serve more farms,” said David Garlington, Sequim Public Works director. The city recently installed a pump and constructed approximately 800 feet of pipe and an energy dissipating waterfall to channel the water directly into the creek just to the west of Washington Harbor. The reclaimed water — purified sewage water — enters Bell Creek after being treated at the Sequim Water Reclamation Facility at 247 Schmuck Road. The new pipeline ejects water into the creek about 500 feet upstream from Maple View Dairy Farm’s agricultural intake pump.
Steady flow Last week, about 220 gallons of water was entering the creek through the pipeline every minute, Garlington said. “Coincidentally, that is almost exactly what [Maple View Dairy Farm] was pumping out to get the irrigation needed” for their operations, he said. The increased flows also will benefit the lower Bell Creek riparian area, Garlington said. It is expected that the increased flow to Bell Creek will continue at least
CITY
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The Maple View Dairy Farm irrigation pump draws augmented water from lower Bell Creek for agricultural pasture irrigation as Utilities Manager Peter Tjsemsland peers into the creek. through October. Eventually, “we want to have the capacity of putting as much as 450 gallons per minute in the creek, but we will have to modify the pump to get that kind of capacity,” Garlington said. The increased water flow “has guaranteed that there is enough flow in Bell Creek that we will be able to continue to irrigate a portion of the farm,” said Ben Smith, Maple View Dairy Farm coowner. Bell Creek is used to irrigate about 35 acres of land used to produce animal feed for livestock at the farm, Smith said. If there was not enough water in the creek to provide irrigation, the farm would have to purchase feed from other farms — an expensive endeavor, Smith said. “Anytime we have to
purchase outside of town, it at least doubles our feed expense on the dairy. Our long-term viability is dependent on us being able to grow enough feed here locally to be able to make ends meet,” he said.
Dungeness impact The increased flows may reduce the amount of water the farm pulls from the Dungeness River in future years, which would be beneficial to flows during drought seasons, Smith said. The pilot project was initiated by the drought emergency declared for the east Olympic watersheds by Gov. Jay Inslee in March and then the statewide emergency declaration in May. The move came after the city received recent
approval from the state departments of Ecology, Health and Fish and Wildlife to start a pilot project to increase Class “A” reclaimed water flows to Bell Creek. “The sewage is all collected and taken down to the Water Reclamation Facility and it is processed there,” Garlington said. “What we are doing down there is producing a product called Class ‘A’ reclaimed water that is not potable but can be used for crop irrigation.”
not to exceed 2.2 per 100 milliliters in seven consecutive daily samples, with no sample exceeding 23 per 100 milliliters, according to Washington Water Reclamation and Reuse Standards. Coliform organisms are a group of bacteria that inhabit the intestinal tract of animals and can cause disease. Their presence in water is an indicator of fecal pollution. The reclaimed water produced by the city “is just State designation a cut below what would be potable water,” Garlington Class “A” reclaimed said. “Currently, we use it in water has the highest level town for irrigation.” of treatment and quality designated by the state. Bell Creek use Treatment includes oxidation, coagulation, filtraThe city has previously tion and disinfection, result- pumped reclaimed water ing in a median number of from the facility into Bell total coliform organisms Creek at the Water Reuse
Demonstration Park, located at 563 N. Rhodefer Road west of the reclamation facility. “We use it every year to augment Bell Creek in the parks during the summer time; otherwise the creek would be entirely dry,” Garlington said. “But this is the first year when we have essentially taken it outside the park and are putting it in Bell Creek outside the park itself.” The creek will now have more water in it even while some is diverted by the farm, which is good “because it can get very low in late summer,” Garlington said. The pilot program has the potential to increase the use of Class “A” reclaimed water for agricultural irrigation in the future, Garlington said. The key will be “getting the reclaimed water to where it is being used,” Garlington said. “It is great in the summer time. We can utilize this water and essentially all of the reclaimed water that we produce.” But “when you are outside the growing season, that is when it gets tough, so looking at the project longterm, what we would like to do is develop some storage capacity so the water can be stored in the wintertime and then utilized for agriculture in the summertime,” Garlington said. “[Storage] is a detail that we haven’t gotten to that point in the process yet. And, storage is not cheap, so you have to look at the economics of it all.”
________ Sequim-Dungeness Valley Editor Chris McDaniel can be reached at 360-681-2390, ext. 5052, or cmcdaniel@peninsuladailynews. com.
E-Z Pawn to open second location east of Port Angeles BY PAUL GOTTLIEB PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
“I came a long way since then. “It took years and years and years to get my head above water.” The project should be completed by spring, store manager Brian Winters, 39, said last week. “We’ve got to keep growing as a company,” he said. Connely and Winters — who is Connely’s stepgrandson — said Capital Advance has avoided the pitfalls of most check-cashing and payday loan stores, many of which have been regulated out of business.
PORT ANGELES — Two businesses in one building are rising from the ashes of the landmark New Peking restaurant and lounge in a $1.2 million project. The 2416 E. U.S. Highway 101 night spot burned to the ground in a July 5, 2011, fire that also destroyed a Port Townsend muralist’s creation. Four years later, work is proceeding on a 7,700-square-foot structure that will house a second Help for entrepreneurs local branch of E-Z Pawn Inc., which “We make sure the loan is the will keep open its 26,000-squareappropriate amount and make foot downtown store, owner Ted sure they can pay back their Connely said Monday. loans,” Winters said. “That’s why we are about the Capital Advance only one left standing.” Also at the building site just Connely said Capital Advance east of the city limit will be Capi- gives borrowers longer to pay and tal Advance, a check-cashing and allows them to make payments on payday loan business owned by their loans. E-Z Pawn that will move from 901 Connely said he has helped E. First St. at the intersection many entrepreneurs start their with Race Street. own businesses or helped them Connely, 73, and his late wife, bridge revenue gaps during lean Emily, opened E-Z Pawn at its times. present 113 W. First St. location “In the community, I’m kind in 1982. of like a poor man’s bank,” he “I started with $250 to my said. name,” the Nebraska native and Jewelry and firearms are popular items at the pawn shop. Beaver resident said.
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Connely said he loses money on most transactions. “But I make so many deals, I still make a little, because I deal for volume,” he said.
2011 fire No one was injured at the New Peking during the fire that began at about 3:20 a.m. the morning after July Fourth in 2011. The blaze shut down all four lanes of Highway 101 until about 8:40 a.m. July 5. Post-holiday commuters were detoured through nearby Gales Addition while firefighters from Clallam County Fire Districts Nos. 2 and 3 and the Port Angeles Fire Department fought the flames. The building, known for a signature dragon mural painted by Port Townsend artist James Mayo in 2005, was purchased by the Kevin Fong family in 1985 and became a haven for pool players and home to two pool leagues. Ted Connely and his wife, Brenda, purchased the approximately 0.7-acre parcel from the Peking China Corp. in February 2014 for $130,000, according to the county Assessors’ Office. The Connelys transferred the property to EZP East LLC this year.
KEITH THORPE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
E-Z Pawn Inc. President Ted Connely, left, and Vice President Brian Winters stand in what will become E-Z Pawn East at 2416 E. U.S. Highway 101, the site of the former New Peking restaurant east of Port Angeles. The site is situated in the county’s urban growth area, established in 1995. “This is a commercial zone, and it’s good to put a new business on a vacant lot,” said Steve Gray, deputy director of the county Department of Commu-
nity Development. “It’s a good thing for our economic development. “It definitely helps to infill businesses.”
________ Senior Staff Writer Paul Gottlieb can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 5060, or at
Rain and increasing humidity help firefighters BY NICHOLAS K. GERANIOS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
SPOKANE — Rain and cooler temperatures Monday helped firefighters battling a series of big blazes in north-central Washington and other states in the West. In Washington, the North Star Complex of wildfires stood at 313 square miles and was about 22 percent contained. A small amount of rain that fell Sunday didn’t even reach the floor of the burning forests, but raised humidity levels, which helped firefighters, fire spokesman Donnie Davis said. Temperatures in the 50s and 60s on Monday morning inhibited growth of the fire, which was burning
east of Omak and north of fires were only about 5 miles Break for Oregon Nespelem, Davis said. apart and were expected to In Oregon, crews fightmerge, Davis said. ing a large blaze south of Okanogan Complex John Day caught a break as Idaho fires Meanwhile, the Okanocooler weather, lighter gan Complex of wildfires In Idaho, a wildfire winds and rain helped them stood at about 30 percent jumped the Salmon River, get ahead of the flames. containment Monday. prompting evacuation The fire has destroyed Spokesman Bernie notices and forcing more more than 40 homes and Pineda said rain and breezes than 100 rafters to cut their burned 158 square miles cleared the smoky air. trip short and be shuttled since Aug. 12. “You can see the sur- out of the backcountry. In Montana, the Flatrounding foothills,” Pineda Authorities said the fire head County sheriff’s office said. grew to 122 square miles lifted the mandatory evacuThe Okanogan Complex Monday and threatened the ation order for residents of became the largest wildfire in town of Riggins. Essex, on the southern edge state history last week, coverFire spokesman Jose of Glacier National Park. ing more than 470 square Acosta said crews tried to U.S. Highway 2 also miles. use the river as a fire break reopened. But fire managers split but gusty winds over the In Wyoming, firefightthe Tunk Block Fire out of weekend caused the fire- ers contained a wildfire the Okanogan Complex and fighters to abandon the that burned more than gave management of that area for safety reasons. 200 acres of grass and blaze to North Star fire offiIdaho on Monday had 18 sage brush near Gray Reef cials, Davis said. large fires burning, the Reservoir in Natrona That’s because the two most in the nation. County on Sunday.
PeninsulaNorthwest
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
A5
(J) — TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2015
Schools:
Registration starts this week CONTINUED FROM A1 Heron, 3939 San Juan Ave. Grant Street ElemenFreshmen register at 8 tary, which serves children a.m., sophomores at 9 a.m., in kindergarten through juniors at 10 a.m. and the fifth grade, has new seniors at 11 a.m. in the hours this year — 8 a.m. to high school commons. 2:30 p.m. A freshman orientation The grades 1-8 will begin will be held from 9 a.m. to Sept. 8. 10:30 a.m. Thursday after Kindergarten classes freshman registration. will begin with half-days The orientation will Sept. 10 and 11. include school tours, activities and information for Quilcene new students. The Quilcene School DisFreshman parent orientation begins at 9:30 a.m. trict does not hold a backto-school event before the Thursday in Room 200. The district is phasing in first day of school. Registration for new stua closed campus policy, eliminating off-campus dents is open during office hours at 294715 U.S. Highlunch breaks for students. In 2015-16, seniors will way 101. For more information be eligible to apply for offcampus permits, but in about new student registra2016-17, there will be no tion, phone 360-765-3363. off-campus permits issued. The centennial anniver- Brinnon sary party begins at 6:30 The Brinnon School Disp.m. at Chimacum High for trict, which has kindergarpast and present students, ten through eighth-grade families and the commu- students, does not hold a nity. back-to-school event before “Everyone is welcome to the first day of school. come,” said Superintendent The district has hired Rick Thompson. Patricia Beathard as the The party will be held in new superintendent-princithe newly renovated gym- pal for the 2015-16 school nasium. year. Beathard replaces Wally Port Townsend Lis, who served as partNew student registra- time superintendent for tion for all Port Townsend both the Brinnon and Quilschools is held by appoint- cene school districts as a cost-savings measure taken ment via 360-379-4523. Port Townsend High by the districts during the School registration was economic slump and state budgetary cutbacks. held Monday. Lis remains as superinFreshmen orientation tendent at the Quilcene will be held today from 8:30 a.m. to 11 a.m. at the high School District. ________ school. Blue Heron Middle Reporter Arwyn Rice can be School will hold a teacher reached at 360-452-2345, ext. meet-and-greet from 5 p.m. 5070, or at arice@peninsula to 6 p.m. today at Blue dailynews.com.
Storm: Some
in county still without power CONTINUED FROM A1 only one or two customers. The remaining outages Hoh Valley, Hoh Camp- are scattered across the ground, Beach 1, Beach 6, county, and all were Lower Queets Valley Road expected to have power and Quinault-area roads restored by this afternoon, and campgrounds reopened said Jim Parker, general Monday, and a small land- manager of the Jefferson slide on Camp David Junior PUD. Road was cleared, McKIn Clallam County, the enna said. PUD had restored service As of Monday, the to all customers by Sunday Kalaloch, Mora and Lake night, said PUD spokesman Ozette campgrounds Mike Howe. remained closed, and Mora and Hoko-Ozette roads ‘Historic’ storm were closed at the park Cliff Mass, professor of boundary, she said. McKenna said Kalaloch atmospheric sciences at the University of Washington, Campground is expected to called the storm “historic” reopen today, and campers and “a ‘perfect storm’ that are expected to be allowed would bring respect during to begin camping tonight. November” in his weather Hurricane Ridge, Stairblog, www.cliffmass.blogspot. case, Elwha Valley, Sol Duc com. and other popular park “As far as my research areas reopened Saturday has shown, there has never night or Sunday. been a summer storm even close to this one for western Lights still off Washington. The most powAt its height, more than erful summer storm ever to 14,000 North Olympic Pen- hit our region,” he said in insula power customers the blog. The storm resulted in were in the dark — 2,400 in Clallam County Public Util- severe damage across the ity District areas and about Pacific Northwest, includ12,000 in Jefferson County ing two deaths and at least five injuries. PUD areas. The Jefferson County ________ PUD reported that 600 cusReporter Arwyn Rice can be tomers remained without reached at 360-452-2345, ext. power Monday in remote 5070, or at arice@peninsula areas where lines service dailynews.com.
Kennewick police lack applicants
anything goes wrong at fires CONTINUED FROM A1 combat operations in Iraq and subsequently became a “By next year, we’ll see standard surveillance tool increased usage. It’ll be con- for the U.S. military. sistent growth of these [unmanned] aircraft as Rainforest burning time goes on.” The statewide drought has affected even the OlymSee through smoke pic Peninsula rain forest, Koeckeritz said the where Reid said the snowScanEagle test over the pack on the mountains is 14 Paradise Fire was “highly percent of normal and melted off four months earsuccessful.” Fire managers “were lier than usual. In the area of the wildable to see through the smoke very clearly. They fire, which was detected were able to determine the back in June, large dead intensity of the fire and trees are dried out and proclearly see the fire’s edge,” vide heavy fuel for the blaze. Koeckeritz said. It’s also burning as much In addition to using drones on surveillance mis- as 6 inches deep into the sions, Koeckeritz said Inte- forest duff — a thick mat on rior will test an “optionally the forest floor composed of manned” helicopter for years of accumulated dead delivering supplies and leaves and other organic water to firefighters in material. Unlike live trees, which Boise, Idaho, in October. Such a vehicle could be may burn only superficially piloted on clear days but as a fire passes through, sent up unmanned at times such deep fuel, said Reid, when manned helicopters “will burn and burn and cannot fly, either at night or burn.” Because of the high fuel when smoke reduces visibilload and steep canyons in ity. With fires burning the area, it’s too dangerous throughout the state and to try to attack the interior across the Western U.S., of the fire. The strategy then is to manned aircraft, both helilet it burn clean in the intecopters and fixed-wing rior and confine it on the planes, are spread thin. The ScanEagle drone, edges. which first flew in 2002, weighs approximately 50 Drone’s advantages pounds and is about 5 feet The firefighting airlong, with a wingspan of planes in use now in Eastjust over 10 feet. ern Washington cost milIt flew over the Paradise lions of dollars and are Fire in the remote wilder- mostly provided to the govness of the Queets Valley at ernment by private contracan altitude of 9,500 feet. tors at a cost of $27,000 per It’s launched by a mobile day, plus $10,000 per hour catapult. When it returns, of flying. it’s caught via a rope susBuying a ScanEagle syspended from a boom that tem costs much less than a snags the drone’s upturned manned aircraft. Koeckwingtips. eritz said the government The ScanEagle system will likely set up a similar, was originally developed to private contracting system track shoals of fish from for firefighting drones. Pacific Ocean fishing boats. Unmanned and relaLater, it was successfully tively cheap, drones present deployed by the Marines in a much lower risk if any-
7 inches of rain falls on Paradise Fire PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
OLYMPIC NATIONAL PARK — The Paradise Fire was doused by nearly 7 inches of rain by Monday morning, but the weather prevented officials from getting a close look at the moisture’s affect on the blaze. Fire managers have not been able to assess the status of the 2,796-acre fire since the storm arrived Friday due to continued rain in the area. Firefighters assigned to the fire are staged in the local area until the weather clears and have been made available to help in the recovery from Saturday’s windstorm. Weather stations near the Paradise Fire, located in the Queets River valley 30 miles southeast of Forks in West Jefferson County, have recorded 6.82 inches of precipitation since Friday. Fire officials have said they do not believe the rain is enough to fully extinguish the fire, due to the thick rainforest canopy that shelters deep duff, or accumulated forest debris, where the fire can continue to burn. “The Paradise Fire is unprecedented in size for the fuel type and area, so there is no way to know for certain how long fire activity will continue even with the changes in weather,” fire managers said in their Monday fire update. thing goes wrong. As a result, said Reid, the National Park Service is considering drones for other missions, including search-and-rescue operations. He said fire managers using the InSitu video feed “watched a helicopter land and saw people get out of the helicopter and get back on again.” “With the heat signature, they are able to see an individual person, so they’re thinking this could also be used in search and rescue, particularly at night or in smoky conditions,”
said Reid. Last month, InSitu launched a ScanEagle from Oliktok Point on Alaska’s North Slope in a demonstration for the Coast Guard of its capabilities in remote search-and-rescue operations. This was not the first drone to be flown in Olympic National Park. The park in 2012 used a different drone — the Raven, designed by California-based AeroVironment — to monitor the flow of sediment in the Elwha River as part of the Elwha restoration project.
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KENNEWICK — The Kennewick Police Department is having trouble finding qualified applicants for jobs. Chief Ken Hohenberg says the department’s high standards are responsible for its low number of complaints.
But The Tri-City Herald reported that those high standards also lead to an arduous hiring and training process that weeds out many applicants. The chief says he is looking to hire seven new officers but so far has found only four.
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, September 1, 2015 PAGE
A7
This is my land, and your land THE OTHER DAY, my teenage daughter and I were idly browsing real estate porn, a monument to American inequality: a private island in the Bahamas selling for $17.9 million; a 900-acre retreat in Washington state for $11 million; and an 83-acre estate in Colorado for a cool $100 million. Then we snapped out of Nicholas the covetousness, for we had Kristoff just been enjoying a vacation on even more exclusive property, so valuable that no hedge fund manager could ever afford to buy or rent it. We had been hiking day after day past pristine mountain lakes, serenaded by the babble of snow-fed streams, greeted by vivid wildflowers in alpine meadows. And it’s all my land! Of course, it’s also your land. It’s our extraordinary national inheritance, one of the greatest gifts of our ancestors: our public lands. My daughter and I were backpacking a 210-mile stretch of the Pacific Crest Trail in central California, from Donner Pass to Yosemite. The cost? It was all free. Most of the time in America, we’re surrounded by oppressive inequality, such that the wealthiest 1 percent collectively own substantially more than the bottom 90 percent. One escape from that is America’s wild places. At a time when so much else in America is rationed by price, egalitarianism thrives in the wilderness. On the trail, no one can pull rank on you — except a grizzly bear. (In that case, be very deferential!) Wilderness trails constitute a rare space in America marked by economic diversity. Lawyers and construction workers get bitten by the same mosquitoes and sip from the same streams; there are none of the usual signals about socioeconomic status, for most hikers are in
on wealth or breeding. Their vision reflected a deep belief at the time, among Republicans as well as Democrats, in public services that transcended class. The result was the world’s best public school system at the time, networks of public libraries, public parks and beaches, and later a broad system of public universities and community colleges. Sadly, that belief in public goods today seems old-fashioned. My daughter and I are hiking the full Pacific Crest Trail, 2,650 miles from Mexico to Canada, in the narrow window in which she’s strong enough and I’m not yet decrepit. We’ve hiked half and hope to finish in another five or six years. My favorite area this time was the area south of Sonora Pass, a stunning landscape of jagged peaks, snow patches and alpine lakes. We found it more intoxicating than any microbrew. Then it started hailing on us. Yes, in midsummer, balls of ice the size of marbles pelted us, stinging through hats and clothing. Soon the ice turned to rain, the trail to mud — and we were reminded that one of the great things about the wilderness is its capacity to discomfort and humble us. Most of the time in the 21st century, we dominate our surroundings: We tweak the thermostat and the temperature falls one degree. We push a button and Taylor Swift sings for us. It’s the opposite in the wilderDIANE URBANI DE LA PAZ/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS ness, which teaches us constantly The first snow of the season coats the Olympic Mountains as Hurricane Ridge rises into that we are not lords of the uniautumn-tinged trees just south of Port Angeles in 2012. verse but rather building blocks of it. shorts and a T-shirt, and envelCar campers often pay fees. Yosemite might be nothing but In the best sense, nature puts oped by an aroma that would But there are almost never fees weekend homes for Internet us in our place. make a skunk queasy. for backpackers in the real wilder- tycoons. Sometimes with icy toes. The wild offers the simplest ness. Fortunately, America’s visionarWilderness offers therapy for and cheapest of vacations. Instead, you pay in sweat and ies back then didn’t think that the soul as just about the last fully My daughter and I unroll our blisters. way. egalitarian place in America. sleeping bags on a $5 plastic sheet In that respect, the wilderness People like Theodore Roosevelt Here we all stand equal — and watch shooting stars until we reflects a vision for America that and Gifford Pinchot who helped before the bears and the mosquifall asleep. (If it rains, we set up a is more democratic than just preserve our wild places were per- toes. And there’s a lesson here tarp.) about any other space in our coun- sonally wealthy and could afford worth emulating for the rest of We carry all our food. And at try. country estates. America. the end, we sometimes try to I can’t help thinking that if the But they understood the impor________ hitchhike back to civilization American West were discovered tance of common ownership of Nicholas Kristof is a colum(although drivers mostly speed up today, the most glorious bits would some of America’s natural herinist for The New York Times. when they see me). be sold off to the highest bidder. tage, so that access didn’t depend
A Katrina moment for politicians THERE ARE MANY things we should remember about the events of late August and early September 2005, and the political fallout shouldn’t be near the top of the list. Still, the disaster in Paul New Orleans Krugman did the Bush administration a great deal of damage — and conservatives have never stopped trying to take their revenge. Every time something has gone wrong on President Barack Obama’s watch, critics have been quick to declare the event “Obama’s Katrina.” How many Katrinas has Obama had so far? By one count, 23. Somehow, however, these putative Katrinas never end up having the political impact of the lethal debacle that unfolded a decade ago. Partly that’s because many of the alleged disasters weren’t disasters after all. For example, the teething
problems of www.healthcare.gov were embarrassing, but they were eventually resolved — without anyone dying in the process — and at this point, Obamacare looks like a huge success. Beyond that, Katrina was special in political terms because it revealed such a huge gap between image and reality. Ever since 9/11, former President George W. Bush had been posing as a strong, effective leader keeping America safe. He wasn’t. But as long as he was talking tough about terrorists, it was hard for the public to see what a lousy job he was doing. It took a domestic disaster, which made his administration’s cronyism and incompetence obvious to anyone with a TV set, to burst his bubble. What we should have learned from Katrina, in other words, was that political poseurs with nothing much to offer besides bluster can nonetheless fool many people into believing that they’re strong leaders. And that’s a lesson we’re learning all over again as the 2016 presidential race unfolds. You probably think I’m talking about Donald Trump, and I am. But he’s not the only one.
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Consider, if you will, the case of Chris Christie. Not that long ago, he was regarded as a strong contender for the presidency, in part because for a while, his toughguy act played so well with the people of New Jersey. But he has, in fact, been a terrible governor, who has presided over repeated credit downgrades and who compromised New Jersey’s economic future by killing a much-needed rail tunnel project. Now Christie looks pathetic — did you hear the one about his plan to track immigrants as if they were FedEx packages? But he hasn’t changed; he’s just come into focus. Or consider Jeb Bush, once hailed on the right as “the best governor in America,” when in fact all he did was have the good luck to hold office during a huge housing bubble. Many people now seem baffled by his inability to come up with coherent policy proposals or any good rationale for his campaign. What happened to Jeb the smart, effective leader? He never existed. And there’s more. Remember when Scott Walker was the man to watch? Remember when
Bobby Jindal was brilliant? I know, now I’m supposed to be evenhanded and point out equivalent figures on the Democratic side. But there really aren’t any; in modern America, cults of personality built around undeserving politicians seem to be a Republican thing. True, some liberals were starry-eyed about Obama way back when, but the glitter faded fast, and what was left was a competent leader with some big achievements under his belt — most notably, an unprecedented drop in the number of Americans without health insurance. And Hillary Clinton is the subject of a sort of anti-cult of personality, whose most ordinary actions are portrayed as nefarious. (No, the email thing doesn’t rise to the level of a “scandal.”) Which brings us back to Trump. Both the Republican establishment and the punditocracy have been shocked by Trump’s continuing appeal to the party’s base. He’s a ludicrous figure, they complain. His policy proposals, such as they are, are unworkable, and
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
anyway, don’t people realize the difference between actual leadership and being a star on reality TV? But Trump isn’t alone in talking policy nonsense. Trying to deport all 11 million illegal immigrants would be a logistical and human rights nightmare but might conceivably be possible; doubling America’s rate of economic growth, as Jeb Bush has promised he would, is a complete fantasy. And while Trump doesn’t exude presidential dignity, he’s seeking the nomination of a party that once considered it a great idea to put George W. Bush in a flight suit and have him land on an aircraft carrier. The point is that those predicting Trump’s imminent political demise are ignoring the lessons of recent history, which tell us that poseurs with a knack for public relations can con the public for a very long time. Someday The Donald will have his Katrina moment, when voters see him for who he really is. But don’t count on it happening anytime soon.
________ Paul Krugman is a columnist for The New York Times.
HAVE YOUR SAY We encourage (1) letters to the editor of 250 words or fewer from readers on subjects of local interest, and (2) “Point of View” guest opinion columns of no more than 550 words that focus on local community lifestyle issues. Please — send us only one letter or column per month. Letters and guest columns published become the property of Peninsula Daily News, and it reserves the right to reject, condense or edit for clarity or when information stated as fact cannot be substantiated. Letters published in other newspapers or websites, anonymous letters, letters advocating boycotts, letters to other people, mass mailings and commercial appeals are not published. We will not publish letters that impugn the personal character of people or of groups of people. Include your name, street address and — for verification purposes — day and evening telephone numbers. Email to letters@peninsuladailynews.com, fax to 360-417-3521, or mail to Letters, Peninsula Daily News, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. Sunday RANTS & RAVES 24-hour hotline: 360-417-3506
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TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2015
PeninsulaNorthwest
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Family portrait celebrates PT Annual tradition helped start trend BY CHARLIE BERMANT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT TOWNSEND— Some attendees at the 12th Port Townsend Family Portrait on Sunday remember the first event in 1985, celebrating the national trend that began one block away from the current locale. “I know we were the first, there is no doubt,” said David Kayley, under whose watch as the first director of the Port Townsend Main Street Program that event took place at Taylor and Washington streets in front of the Silverwater Cafe. “Once we did it, we alerted the National Trust for Historic Places and the idea caught on. Now they pop up all over the place.” Neither Kayley nor current Main Street Executive Director Mari Mullen can estimate how many towns sponsor community portraits, while maintaining that such an event is part of small-town life throughout the country. “It’s a great way to celebrate the small-town concept,” Mullen said. “Everyone can wrap their mind around it because it celebrates your heritage, which in Port Townsend is our downtown buildings.” Kayley said the first picture was meant to bring the town together. “At the time, a lot of residents were feeling overwhelmed by all the new people moving to town, so we saw the family portrait as a way to get people involved with the downtown,” he said. Residents are still overwhelmed by new arrivals, Kayley said, “but now they’re used to it.” “It’s hard enough to take a family portrait with just four people, let alone 750,” said Printery Communications owner Mike Kenna, who has worked on every shot. “But everyone is showing up. It’s a rewarding thing to do and it shows the wonderful fabric of Port
Townsend.” Despite a weekend of wind, rain and power outages, Sunday’s portrait drew a number equivalent to 8 percent of the town’s population. Printery Communications employee Jayde Lawson counted 752 people, seven dogs and a sea gull in this year’s picture, which was not the largest crowd but more than what Mullen expected. The city of Port Townsend reports 9,355 residents, although there was no guarantee that everyone in the picture lives in town, as anyone who happened to be in the neighborhood could drop in. Participating out-oftowners included a resident of Switzerland as well as Kayley, who traveled to Port Townsend from Pennsylvania specifically to appear in the picture. Participants were instructed to arrive at 4:45 p.m. with the picture scheduled for 5 p.m., but it was taken a few minutes early. This shut out Port Townsend resident Ray Grier, who said he was in almost every past portrait. “Somebody messed up the time. The posters said 5 p.m. and they did it early,” he said, adding that he wasn’t that disappointed. “That’s just life in Port Townsend.” Also shut out was City Manager David Timmons, who has held his job since 1999 but has yet to appear in the portrait. “We do this very quickly,” Kenna said. “You do not want to use Port Townsend time because we shoot it right on the button.” The shot was expected to take place at 5 p.m. The first family portrait was taken in 1985, with others in 1986, 1992, 1994, 1997, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2007, 2010 and 2013. They usually correspond with a project or event. This year was to commemorate
DAVID CONKLIN
The weather cooperated for the Port Townsend Family Portrait on Sunday. This was the 12th year a town portrait has been taken. Main Street’s 30th anniversary while in past years, the new ferry, the Adventuress’ centennial and the construction of the new city hall were celebrated. All but two have taken place downtown aside from the Jefferson County Courthouse in 2000 and the
Uptown Historic District in 2003. After a test shot last month, photographer David Conklin took four exposures from atop a fire crane and immediately shipped the best one to Kenna, who printed the posters that were on sale at 2 p.m. Monday.
Improving technology has streamlined the process, Conklin said, as digital photography quality today matches that of film when that wasn’t always the case. Digital also allows color balancing and compensating for lighting, which was necessary on Sunday due to
the unpredictable weather. About 300 posters were printed and are now available for $10 at the Printery, 631 Tyler St. Jefferson County Editor Charlie Bermant can be reached at 360385-2335 or cbermant@ peninsuladailynews.com.
Two Jefferson County department heads to retire this fall BY CHARLIE BERMANT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT TOWNSEND — The retirement of two Jefferson County department heads this fall is being characterized as “both a loss and an opportunity” by the county administrator. Carl Smith, Department of Community Development director, will retire Sept. 25 after three years on the job while Central Services Director Frank Gifford, 64, will retire Oct. 30 after two years in the position. Gifford’s current annual salary is $102,330. The range for the new position is between $76,272 and $102,324. Smith, 65, currently earns $90,353, with his successor to earn between $70,831 and $95,151.
Application deadline
Comprehensive plan The next DCD director will focus on the upcoming comprehensive plan revision due next year, Morley said, as well as promoting economic development. “The new director will be looking at how to marry agriculture with critical areas protection and also further develop DCD’s partnership with Public Works,” Morley said. The new director also will supervise the development of areas such as Port Hadlock and Glen Cove, he said.
Property management Morley said the Central Services position, which manages facilities, equipment and technology, will not change appreciably, although he hopes the new director will become involved in management of properties that the county has not used to its full potential. “We have a portfolio of
properties that we haven’t been able to do much with since the recession,” Morley said. Gifford “We are not sure whether we want to surplus them or put them to another use.” Morley provided two examples: some property adjacent to Fire District No. 5 in Discovery Bay and the Bayshore Motel in Brinnon. The selection process for the respective jobs will differ in terms of public involvement.
because [Morley] has been conservative, but we don’t have the reserves we had when we received more revenue from the real estate excise tax.” After his retirement, Gifford plans to explore meditation and yoga as a path to relaxation and will take a few months off before tackling new projects. Smith, who lives in Quilcene, said he plans to seek new opportunities as a planning consultant and will stay involved with the local community through
volunteer work. In an email, he said he is proud of the improvements made at DCD during his tenure as director “through the dedicated efforts of the staff from the lean training and the culture of continuous improvement now at DCD. “The effort is paying off with improved processes that are showing results in faster permitting times and improved customer service,” he said. Existing staff will have input into the hiring for
Selecting DCD director Selecting a DCD director will be open to community input, while the central services position will be decided internally, Morley said. “With the DCD position, we will shape the process around the kinds of applicants we get,” he said. Gifford began with the county as capital projects manager in 1989 and served as public works director from 1999 to 2013, at which time he assumed his current position. He also acted as temporary interim county administrator prior to Morley’s appointment in 2008. “We have a better process now,” Gifford said, in a comparison to when he joined the county. “We have become more structured and systematic. Although we’ve been up and down financially, we are in good shape now
both positions, Morley said. While Morley will consider input from staff, the public and the county commissioners during the selection process, the final choice is his own. Aside from DCD and Central Services, Morley supervises department heads in Public Works, Emergency Management and Public Health.
________ Jefferson County Editor Charlie Bermant can be reached at 360385-2335 or cbermant@ peninsuladailynews.com.
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The application deadline for the central services job is Sept. 21. The deadline for the DCD, director application closes Sept. 28. Smith was first hired by Jefferson County to head DCD while Gifford has worked for the county in several jobs since 1989. “Frank has been with the county for many years and has done all sorts of things,” County Administrator Philip Morley said. “We will miss his historical knowledge, but when people retire, others can come in and bring a fresh approach.” Morley credits Smith with introducing lean training into the department and streamlining its permit process, something he hopes
the next director will continue. The characteristics of a lean organization were described in Lean Thinking, by Jim Wo m a ck , founder of the Lean Enterprise I n s t i t u t e , Smith and Dan Jones, founder of the Lean Enterprise Academy. It is an organizational strategy intended to improve customer service while decreasing waste.
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, September 1, 2015 SECTION
CLASSIFIEDS, COMICS, BUSINESS, WEATHER In this section
B Cougars
PC opens in fine form Peninsula women dominate Friendlies PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Luke Falk is expected to start at quarterback for Washington State in its opener against Portland State this Saturday.
Falk set for stat binge BY JACOB THORPE MCCLATCHY NEWS SERVICE
PULLMAN — For the quarterbacks who propel Washington State’s Air Raid offense, record passing numbers are simply an occupational byproduct. Connor Halliday constantly updated Washington State’s game notes and media guides, routinely taking down Pac-12 and national records First Game on his way to Saturday school records in vs. Portland St. passing yards, at Pullman touchdowns, Time: 11 a.m. completions, On TV: Pac-12 attempts and percentage of passes completed. He broke a 24-year record for most passing yards in a game, and might well own the NCAA’s record for most passing yards in a career had his season not ended in the ninth game because of a broken ankle against USC. While Halliday’s injury ended the records chase for Mike Leach’s first multiyear starting quarterback at Washington State, it gave his second one a head start on his own stats binge. Luke Falk filled in with Halliday out for the final three games last year, and the redshirt sophomore has already passed for 1,859 yards and 13 touchdowns in his embryonic career. Though Leach will not officially name a starter yet, he hinted to KRJ radio hosts Jason Puckett and Ian Furness that Falk, “for Week 1, probably puts our best foot forward.”
SPRINGFIELD, Ore. — The Peninsula College women’s soccer team opened the regular season with three shutouts in less than 30 hours at the Northwest Athletic Conference Friendlies at Willamalane Center for Sports and Recreation over the weekend. The Peninsula men, meanwhile, played Walla Walla to a 0-0 draw and then lost 3-2 to defending NWAC champion Highline. The Peninsula women’s trick was taking early leads with quick scores. A pair of freshmen scored goals and Manaia SianiaUnutoa recorded her first shutout of the season in the Pirates’ 2-0 over Treasure Valley on Saturday. Myu Ban scored Peninsula’s first goal of the season in the fifth minute and then set up Ellie Small for another goal in the 33rd minute. Siania-Unutoa, the Pirates’ only goalkeeper with prior col-
RICK ROSS/PENINSULA COLLEGE ATHLETICS
Peninsula’s Ellie Small dribbles against Columbia Basin’s Brittany Vickerman during the Pirates’ 3-0 win. Small scored two goals at the NWAC Friendlies. lege experience, had two saves. Peninsula then played two games Sunday, defeating Columbia Basin 3-0 before wearing out the back of the net in an 11-0 rout of Grays Harbor. The Pirates again scored
early against Columbia Basin when Bianca Andrade set up Kendall Howell in the 12th minute. Six minutes later, Lexi Krieger tallied the first of her three goals on the day to put
Peninsula ahead 2-0. Paige Mahuka scored the Pirates’ first second-half goal of the season in the 88th minute off an assist by Cierra Hamilton. TURN
TO
PIRATES/B3
Lockett is ‘The Kansas Rocket’ Hawks rookie off to running start
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Seahawks rookie Tyler Lockett (16) returns a punt for a touchdown against San Diego last week.
SPRINT
FOR A SPLIT second Saturday night, I saw Gale Sayers again. The uniJohn form didn’t look the same McGrath — he was wearing a white Seattle Seahawks jersey and dark blue pants with neongreen trim — and the number had changed. Sayers was No. 40; now he was wearing No. 16. But when Tyler Lockett changed directions en route to a 67-yard touchdown return of a punt, implicitly eluding pursuit
as if he were a magnet repelling the force of 11 opposing magnets, that was Gale Sayers during his rookie season with the Chicago Bears. It had been 50 years almost to the day — Aug. 28, 1965 — since Sayers made his de facto NFL debut during an exhibition game against the Rams. He ran back a punt for a 77-yard score, ran back a kickoff for a 93-yard score, and produced a third score by throwing a 25-yard touchdown pass. Left handed. His coach, George Halas, couldn’t recall seeing anybody like him, an observation that carried some weight: Halas was present at the creation of the NFL. TURN
TO
MCGRATH/B3
BOAT CHAMPIONS
Comes prepared Falk is most often praised by coaches for his willingness to put in long hours studying film of his own offense and opposing defenses, which yield a very prepared quarterback on game day. Any questions about his ability to compete at a high level were surely answered after his first start, in which he threw for 471 yards and five touchdowns in a win at Oregon State and was then named the Pac12 Player of the Week. The next two games, losses to Arizona State and Washington, showed the areas in which Falk still needed polishing — he combined to throw six interceptions. The good news is that turnovers were rarely an issue for Falk during his first offseason preparing to be a starting quarterback, albeit while in competition with Peyton Bender. “I’m settled in a little more and seeing the field a little better,” Falk said. “I’m having a little more freedom, I guess.” If Falk wins the job it will mean his command of the Air Raid and decision-making outweighed the superior natural throwing ability of Bender. TURN
TO
COUGS/B3
JEFF HALSTEAD/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Driver Doug Hendrickson, right, and Navigator Nichole Heaton-Muller clasp hands and wave a checkered flag after guiding the Wicked Racing No. 01 sprint boat to national and world championships in the 400 class by taking first in the final race of the season at Webb’s Slough in St. John on Saturday. Wicked Racing also claimed national and world championships in the Unlimited class when the No. 10, driven Dan Morrison and navigated by Cassie Beaudry, won at Webb’s Slough.
B2
SportsRecreation
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2015
Today’s
SPORTS ON TV
Latest sports headlines can be found at www. peninsuladailynews.com.
Scoreboard Calendar
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Today
Go to “Nation/World” and click on “AP Sports”
10 a.m. (26) ESPN Tennis ITF, U.S. Open, First Round (Live) 4 p.m. (26) ESPN Tennis ITF, U.S. Open, First Round (Live) 5 p.m. (25) ROOT Baseball MLB, Seattle Mariners at Houston Astros (Live)
SPORTS PIC OF THE DAY
Today Baseball: Olympic Crosscutters Gold vs. Kitsap BlueJackets, at Kitsap County Fairgrounds, 4:30 p.m.; Olympic Crosscutters Black vs. Shelton, at Kitsap County Fairgrounds, 7 p.m.
Football NFL Preseason Friday’s Games New England 17, Carolina 16 Kansas City 34, Tennessee 10 Detroit 22, Jacksonville 17 Saturday’s Games Buffalo 43, Pittsburgh 19 Minnesota 28, Dallas 14 Cleveland 31, Tampa Bay 7 Miami 13, Atlanta 9 N.Y. Jets 28, N.Y. Giants 18 Cincinnati 21, Chicago 10 Washington 31, Baltimore 13 Seattle 16, San Diego 15 Philadelphia 39, Green Bay 26 Indianapolis 24, St. Louis 14 Denver 19, San Francisco 12 Sunday’s Games Houston 27, New Orleans 13 Arizona 30, Oakland 23 Thursday, Sep. 3 New Orleans at Green Bay, 4 p.m. Baltimore at Atlanta, 4 p.m. Cincinnati at Indianapolis, 4 p.m. Philadelphia at N.Y. Jets, 4 p.m. Tampa Bay at Miami, 4 p.m. Jacksonville at Washington, 4:30 p.m. Carolina at Pittsburgh, 4:30 p.m. Buffalo at Detroit, 4:30 p.m. N.Y. Giants at New England, 4:30 p.m. Minnesota at Tennessee, 5 p.m. Cleveland at Chicago, 5 p.m. Houston at Dallas, 5 p.m. Kansas City at St. Louis, 5 p.m. Arizona at Denver, 6 p.m. Oakland at Seattle, 7 p.m. San Diego at San Francisco, 7 p.m. End of Preseason
Baseball American League East Division W L Toronto 74 56 New York 72 57 Tampa Bay 64 66 Baltimore 63 67 Boston 60 70 Central Division W L Kansas City 80 50 Minnesota 67 63 Cleveland 63 66 Chicago 61 68 Detroit 60 70 West Division W L Houston 72 59 Texas 68 61 Los Angeles 65 65 Seattle 61 70 Oakland 57 74 Sunday’s Games Toronto 9, Detroit 2
Pct GB .569 — .558 1½ .492 10 .485 11 .462 14 Pct GB .615 — .515 13 .488 16½ .473 18½ .462 20 Pct GB .550 — .527 3 .500 6½ .466 11 .435 15
DAVE LOGAN/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
TEAMING
UP
Kaitlyn Meek, 15, of Port Townsend, left, readies to rope the hind feet of a calf as her partner Amelia Hermann, 11, of Port Angeles first ropes the head during team roping at the Peninsula Junior Rodeo Association’s Clallam County event on Sunday. Cowboys and cowgirls from throughout Western Washington participated in 25 different events Saturday and Sunday. In team roping, when the head and foot of the calf have been secured by ropes, the clock stops and the time is recorded. N.Y. Mets 5, Boston 4 Tampa Bay 3, Kansas City 2 Cleveland 9, L.A. Angels 2 N.Y. Yankees 20, Atlanta 6 Minnesota 7, Houston 5 Chicago White Sox 6, Seattle 5, 11 innings Texas 6, Baltimore 0 Oakland 7, Arizona 4, 11 innings Monday’s Games Tampa Bay at Baltimore, late. Cleveland at Toronto, late. N.Y. Yankees at Boston, late. Seattle at Houston, late. L.A. Angels at Oakland, late. Texas at San Diego, late. Tuesday’s Games Tampa Bay (Smyly 1-2) at Baltimore (Tillman 9-9), 4:05 p.m. Cleveland (Co.Anderson 2-3) at Toronto (Estrada 11-8), 4:07 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Pineda 9-8) at Boston (Porcello 6-11), 4:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Sale 12-7) at Minnesota (Duffey 2-1), 5:10 p.m. Detroit (Verlander 2-6) at Kansas City (Cueto 2-3), 5:10 p.m. Seattle (Elias 4-7) at Houston (Feldman
Nishikori, last year’s runner-up, upset by Paire at U.S. Open
5-5), 5:10 p.m. L.A. Angels (Shoemaker 6-9) at Oakland (Bassitt 1-6), 7:05 p.m. Texas (Gallardo 11-9) at San Diego (Cashner 5-13), 7:10 p.m. Wednesday’s Games L.A. Angels at Oakland, 12:35 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Boston, 1:05 p.m. Tampa Bay at Baltimore, 4:05 p.m. Cleveland at Toronto, 4:07 p.m. Chicago White Sox at Minnesota, 5:10 p.m. Detroit at Kansas City, 5:10 p.m. Seattle at Houston, 5:10 p.m. Texas at San Diego, 7:10 p.m.
National League East Division W L New York 72 58 Washington 66 63 Atlanta 54 76 Miami 52 79 Philadelphia 52 79 Central Division W L St. Louis 84 46 Pittsburgh 79 50
Pct .554 .512 .415 .397 .397
GB — 5½ 18 20½ 20½
Pct GB .646 — .612 4½
Chicago Milwaukee Cincinnati
74 55 .574 55 75 .423 53 76 .411 West Division W L Pct Los Angeles 72 57 .558 San Francisco 69 61 .531 Arizona 63 67 .485 San Diego 63 67 .485 Colorado 52 76 .406 Sunday’s Games N.Y. Mets 5, Boston 4 Colorado 5, Pittsburgh 0 Washington 7, Miami 4 N.Y. Yankees 20, Atlanta 6 San Diego 9, Philadelphia 4 Milwaukee 4, Cincinnati 1 St. Louis 7, San Francisco 5 Oakland 7, Arizona 4, 11 innings Chicago Cubs 2, L.A. Dodgers 0 Monday’s Games Miami at Atlanta, late. Philadelphia at N.Y. Mets, late. Cincinnati at Chicago Cubs, late. Washington at St. Louis, late. Arizona at Colorado, late. San Francisco at L.A. Dodgers, late.
9½ 29 30½ GB — 3½ 9½ 9½ 19½
Texas at San Diego, late. Tuesday’s Games Arizona (Corbin 3-3) at Colorado (Flande 3-1), 12:10 p.m., 1st game Miami (Nicolino 2-2) at Atlanta (S.Miller 5-11), 4:10 p.m. Philadelphia (Harang 5-14) at N.Y. Mets (Niese 8-9), 4:10 p.m. Cincinnati (DeSclafani 7-10) at Chicago Cubs (Haren 8-9), 5:05 p.m. Pittsburgh (G.Cole 15-7) at Milwaukee (Nelson 10-10), 5:10 p.m. Washington (J.Ross 5-5) at St. Louis (C.Martinez 13-6), 5:15 p.m. Arizona (R.De La Rosa 11-6) at Colorado (K.Kendrick 4-12), 5:40 p.m., 2nd game San Francisco (Bumgarner 16-6) at L.A. Dodgers (Greinke 14-3), 7:10 p.m. Texas (Gallardo 11-9) at San Diego (Cashner 5-13), 7:10 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Miami at Atlanta, 9:10 a.m. Cincinnati at Chicago Cubs, 11:20 a.m. Philadelphia at N.Y. Mets, 4:10 p.m. Pittsburgh at Milwaukee, 5:10 p.m. Washington at St. Louis, 5:15 p.m. Arizona at Colorado, 5:40 p.m. San Francisco at L.A. Dodgers, 7:10 p.m. Texas at San Diego, 7:10 p.m.
Transactions FOOTBALL National Football League ARIZONA CARDINALS — Released LB Lorenzo Alexander, LB Glenn Carson, G Nate Isles, LB Edwin Jackson, LB Andrae Kirk, CB Shaquille Richardson, TE Gannon Sinclair, WR Ryan Spadola, CB Darren Woodard and P Dave Zastudil. Waived-injured WR Travis Harvey. ATLANTA FALCONS — Waived DB Jonathon Mincy. SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS — Waived PK Corey Acosta, LB Steve Beauharnais, CB Mylan Hicks, T Sean Hooey, WR Mario Hull, WR Chuck Jacobs, WR Nigel King, LB Shawn Lemon, FB Trey Millard and DL Lawrence Okoye. Placed G-C Daniel Kilgore on the PUP list and WR DeAndre Smelter on the reserve/ non-football injury list. Placed WR Dres Anderson and LB Desmond Bishop on injured reserve. SEATTLE SEAHAWKS — Terminated the contracts of C Lemuel Jeanpierre and DT D’Anthony Smith. Waived OT Jesse Davis, CB George Farmer, WR Deshon Foxx, WR Deontay Greenberry, CB Keelan Johnson, LB Quayshawn Nealy, DE Greg Scruggs and S Ty Zimmerman. Waived-injured FB Brandon Cottom and CB Triston Wade. Placed CB Jeremy Lane and WR Paul Richardson on the PUP list. ST. LOUIS RAMS — Placed CB E.J. Gaines on injured reserve. Terminated the contract of WR Damian Williams. Waived OT Steven Baker, OT Travis Bond, CB Imoan Claiborne, S Jay Hughes, LS Tyler Ott, K-P Michael Palardy, WR Tyler Slavin, TE Brad Smelley, LB Korey Toomer and C David Wang.
Goodell, Brady await ‘Deflategate’ ruling THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
NEW YORK — NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell and New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady attended last-minute settlement talks between the NFL and its players union Monman from Asia to reach a major day before a judge announced he BY RACHEL COHEN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS final, where he lost to Marin Cilic. would decide the dispute over The 25-year-old followed that deflated footballs with a ruling in NEW YORK — A year after his up with more success in 2015 and a day or two. run all the way to his first Grand came into the U.S. Open with his Everyone involved “tried quite Slam final, Kei Nishikori’s stay at first top-four seed at a Grand hard” to reach a deal in the conthe U.S. Open lasted only a few troversy that has hung over proSlam tournament. hours. He made it to the quarterfinals fessional football since New EngThe fourth-seeded Nishikori at both the Australian and French land easily won the AFC title had two match points in the Opens this year, but withdrew game in January, U.S. District fourth-set tiebreaker against from the second round at Wimble- Judge Richard Berman said in 41st-ranked Benoit Paire, but the federal court in Manhattan. Frenchman saved both of them don because of a calf problem, the However, Berman said: “We latest injury in a career plagued then took control in the fifth for a did not reach a settlement. In by them. 6-4, 3-6, 4-6, 7-6 (6), 6-4 victory He had been playing well on some cases, it doesn’t happen, and Monday. the hard courts this summer this is one of those cases.” It was the first win of his Absent a compromise, Berman career against an opponent before pulling out of Cincinnati, will have to either affirm or throw though, winning the title at Washranked in the top five. out Goodell’s decision in July to “When I saw the draw against ington and beating Rafael Nadal uphold a four-game suspension of in Montreal, where he lost to Kei, I said, ‘Bad luck,’” Paire eventual champ Andy Murray in Brady. recalled. The NFL concluded the quarBut then he reminded himself the semifinals. It’s the first time since 1999 terback colluded with two Patrihe had been competitive in two ots ball handlers to deflate footprevious losses to the Japanese that a U.S. Open men’s finalist balls to gain an edge in a 45-7 lost in the first round the followstar. “It’s not like if I play against ing year. Cilic had no such problems Roger Federer,” Paire said, explaining he knew he could get Monday, starting his title defense something going against Nishiko- with a straight-set victory over 94th-ranked qualifier Guido ri’s serve. “Against Kei, I know I can Pella. The 26-year-old Paire has play.” Nishikori had withdrawn from never been past the third round the hard-court warmup at Cincin- at a major tournament. He had 21 nati, citing a hip injury, but he aces Monday, the last to close out said Monday he was fine physi- the match. Top-seeded Novak Djokovic cally. PORT ANGELES — This Still, he looked sluggish late in needed just 71 minutes to beat weekend’s Jammin’ in the Park the match, which lasted 3 hours, 91st-ranked Joao Souza of Brazil festival at the new Waterfront 6-1, 6-1, 6-1. 14 minutes on a steamy day. Park between Oak Street and On the women’s side, four of Valley Creek will include a beach “He was very aggressive, so there was many rallies and it was the top 10 players are already out, volleyball tournament. tough to get rhythm,” Nishikori with seventh-seeded Ana IvaSaturday’s tournament has a novic, eighth-seeded Karolina reverse coed format with four said. “He hits a lot of drop shots and Pliskova and 10th-seeded Carla players per team, including up to Suarez Navarro losing Monday, a two males. Teams may also have good serves.” Last year at Flushing Mead- day after third-seeded Maria up to two substitutes. ows, Nishikori became the first Sharapova withdrew. The tournament will open
victory over the Indianapolis Colts. The NFL Players Association has accused the league of handling the discipline unfairly for Brady, who has denied any role in the scandal nicknamed “Deflategate.” Speaking at a hearing that lasted less than five minutes, Berman noted that senior executives from the league and the players union who had not attended several previous settlement talks joined more than an hour of negotiations Monday morning. Giants president and co-owner John Mara took part, as did free agent kicker Jay Feely, Berman said. Feely is a member of the union’s executive committee and Mara is chairman of the NFL’s executive committee that oversees labor matters. “For us it reinforces the desire and the need for an independent arbitrator in these matters of personal conduct,” Feely said outside court. “But we understand Tom’s position and I think the process will work itself out.”
Berman said he’s putting the final touches on his decision. “It won’t be today, but hopefully tomorrow or the day after,” he said Monday of a written ruling. Berman said previously that he hoped to rule by Friday, giving the Patriots enough time to prepare for their Sept. 10 season opener against the Pittsburgh Steelers. Berman had ordered Goodell and Brady to attend Monday’s hearing. Both arrived 90 minutes early to participate in talks in the judge’s robing room. Neither spoke inside or outside court. Berman has said a settlement would be “rational and logical” but also cited weaknesses in the way the NFL handling of the controversy. The judge has also suggested that the league’s finding was too vague, that Brady was generally aware that game balls were being deflated. At a court hearing this month, Berman told the NFL there was precedent for judges to toss out penalties issued by arbitrators.
with round-robin play in recreational and competitive divisions, followed by a seeded, single-elimination tournament for each division. Three courts will be available for the games starting at 9 a.m. The tournament is limited to 12 teams. Registration is $25 per person or $100 per team. To register, or for more information, email Norm Schaaf at nschaaf@merrillring.com, or phone 360-460-1365.
Hyppa basketball skills camp Saturday and Sunday, Sept. 12-13, at Peninsula College. The camp is open to boys and girls in grades five through 12. The camp runs from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. that Saturday and 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday. Campers should bring a basketball and a small lunch. For more information or to register, phone Olympic Avalanche coach Joe Marvelle at 360-460-4746 or email him at warehousepa@gmail.com. Peninsula College is located at 1502 E. Lauridsen Blvd. Peninsula Daily News
Briefly . . .
Beach volleyball tourney in PA
Hyppa hoops camp PORT ANGELES — A few openings remain for the Chis
SportsRecreation
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2015
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Pirates: T-birds edge PC men Crabbing season resumes along northern coast CONTINUED FROM B1
Siania-Unutoa again made two saves to earn the shutout. In the final game, Peninsula and Grays Harbor played 13 minutes of scoreless soccer before the floodgates opened with a fourgoals-in-five-minutes barrage by the Pirates. Krieger scored in the 14th minute and again in the 16th minute, both goals being set up by Smalls. In the 17th minute, Coby Yoshimura’s pass led to a goal for Tasha Inong, and one minute later, Krieger returned an earlier favor by setting up Small for her second goal of the season. Krieger finished with three goals and an assist, and Small added three assists to her two scores. The Pirates paced themselves, relatively speaking, the remainder of the half, scoring goals in the 27th minute (Inong), 30th minute (Brenda Torres-Hernandez) and 45th minute (Bri Jackson-Vallente) to lead 7-0 at half. In the second half, Mahuka scored goals in the 57th and 70th minutes to give her three in the young season. Michelle Whan scored in the 59th minute and Bianca Andrade found the net in the 68th minute. Peninsula freshman goalkeeper Cicely Warnick made one save to earn her first career shutout.
RICK ROSS/PENINSULA COLLEGE ATHLETICS
Peninsula sophomore Eddie Benito jumps over a Highline defender to gain control of the ball. Benito scored for the Pirates in their 3-2 loss. The final damage for the NWAC Friendlies. weekend is 16 goals scored The Pirates played Walla for the Pirates and zero Walla, the 2014 East Region goals allowed. champion, to a scoreless draw Saturday and then Rough slate for men went toe-to-toe with the The Peninsula men were defending champions before given a brutal draw but falling on a late goal Sunperformed admirably in day. Highline got on the their two games at the
board early when Tino Lopez-Slish scored in the sixth minute. Both defenses tightened up for the remainder of the first half, and the Thunderbirds held a 1-0 lead at intermission. Peninsula sophomore Eddie Benito evened the score in the 51st minute off an assist by Demar Stewart. Highline retook the lead on a goal by Christian SotoGonzalez in the 66th minute. The Pirates again tied the game, this time with a goal by Santi Sierra in the 76th minute. The tie held for 11 minutes. It was broken when Soto-Gonzalez tallied his second goal, the game-winner, with three minutes left in regulation. Freshman goalkeeper Nick Johnson made four saves for Peninsula. In Saturday’s opener, Johnson earned his first career shutout and made five saves.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
OLYMPIA — The state Department of Fish and Wildlife has reopened the north coast of Washington to crab fishing. Both commercial and recreational crab fishing had been closed from Point Chehalis to the Queets River because marine toxins posed a threat to public health. That area, including Grays Harbor, was reopened over the weekend after health officials determined crabs on the northern coast were safe to eat. The crab harvest remains open farther north on the coast in Marine Areas 3 (LaPush) and 4 (Neah Bay).
Outdoors LaPush and the portion of Area 4 west of the BonillaTatoosh line will close to crabbing Tuesday, Sept. 15. See crab season information online at tinyurl.com/ pdnCrabSeasons. The southern Washington coast — from Point Chehalis south to the Columbia River — remains closed to crab fishing because of too high level of domoic acid. The natural toxin produced by certain types of marine algae can be harmful or even fatal if consumed in sufficient quantities. Cooking or freezing does not destroy domoic acid in shellfish.
Cardinals up next The Pirate men’s tough schedule continues this Saturday when they host North Idaho (2-0), the team that eliminated them from the NWAC championships in the quarterfinal round last year. The game kicks off at 2 p.m. at Wally Sigmar Field. It follows the Peninsula women’s matchup with North Idaho (1-1) at noon. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
McGrath: Lockett like Sayers CONTINUED FROM B1 “He doesn’t look any different coming at you,” 49ers defensive back George Donnelly once said of Sayers. “But when he gets there, he’s gone.” Same with Lockett.
‘Just reacting’ When it appears he’s within reach of a tackler, he’s gone. Anticipating him to explain precisely why he zigs left instead of right, or right instead of left, is fruitless. It’s like asking Sonny Rollins to explain one of his improvised riffs on the sax. “It’s just reacting,” Lockett said after his touchdown salvaged the Seahawks’ otherwise lackluster performance against the San Diego Chargers. We’re three dates into the preseason — all that remains is a final dress rehearsal Thursday night when the starters will make a short cameo appearance — and the only intriguing development of the summer has been Lockett’s emergence as a 2015 version of Gale Sayers. Comparisons between a third-round draft choice and the Hall of Famer regarded to be the most exciting open-field runner in NFL history are probably premature. OK, they’re definitely premature. Nobody should expect Lockett to score a rookie-record 22 touchdowns, as Sayers did
Hawks trade Norwood THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
fourth-round draft choice by the Seahawks in CHARLOTTE, N.C. — 2014. He played nine The Carolina Panthers games with two starts as have acquired wide a rookie, catching nine receiver Kevin Norwood in a trade with the Seat- passes for 102 yards. Panthers general tle Seahawks in manager Dave Gettleexchange for an undisclosed 2017 draft choice. man said in a press release Monday that Carolina has been searching for answers at Norwood “has the size you look for along with wide receiver ever since toughness and smarts.” Kelvin Benjamin went Gettleman said the down with a season-endPanthers had studied ing injury. Norwood leading up to The 6-foot-2, 200pound Norwood was a last year’s draft.
in 1965. And yet, comparisons are inevitable. Sayers dazzled collegiately at Kansas, in the conference then known as the Big 8. Lockett starred at Kansas State, in the conference now known as the Big 12. Sayers was famous for his uncanny sense on when and where to change direction in concert with his blockers. Lockett’s sense is equally uncanny. Football fans admire the bruisers — thinking here of Marshawn Lynch — who’d rather plow into an opponent for an extra halfyard along the sideline than seek refuge out of bounds. Thanks to his appetite for contact, Lynch embodies the heart and soul of a team seeking an unprecedented third consecutive
ASHBURN, Va. — The Washington Redskins have made a quarterback change: Kirk Cousins will be the starter this season, not Robert Griffin III. “We feel like at this time, Kirk Cousins gives us the best chance to win,” coach Jay Gruden said, unseating Griffin, the 2012 Offensive Rookie of the Year. “It’s Kirk’s team.” Although Gruden said that it’s Cousins’ job for the season, not just the Sept. 13 opener against Miami,
the quarterback is not overconfident. “It’s a step in the process,” Cousins said. “It doesn’t feel like a finish line by any means. Time will tell. It’s going to be an interesting ride.” Griffin, who has struggled since tearing his right ACL and MCL in a January 2013 playoff loss to Seattle, was scheduled to start last Saturday’s preseason game at Baltimore before being scratched the previous day in the wake of a concussion suffered Aug. 20 against Detroit. Griffin participated in non-contact drills Monday but remains in the NFL’s concussion protocol and
won’t play in Thursday’s preseason finale against Jacksonville. Cousins, taken in the fourth round in the same draft that Griffin was chosen No. 2 overall, took over and led Washington’s starting offense to its first two touchdowns of the preseason. Those two drives seem to have clinched the starting job for Cousins.
Bills tab Taylor ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. — Quarterback Tyrod Taylor, who goes by the nickname “T-Mobile,” got the call to be the Buffalo Bills’ season-opening starter. Though he’s never started an NFL game in
Mariners send Jackson to playoff-hopeful Cubs THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
HOUSTON — The Chicago Cubs acquired outfielder Austin Jackson from the Seattle Mariners on Monday, boosting their depth for their run at a possible playoff spot. The Mariners receive a player to be named and money for an international draft slot. Because the deal was made before Sept. 1, Jackson will be eligible for the postseason if the Cubs get that far. Chicago began the day with a 5½-game lead Been there before over San Francisco for the second NL wild-card berth. Sayers didn’t spike the Jackson had been set to ball when he reached the goal line, as this was 1965, bat leadoff and play center field Monday night at Housa few years before the Chiefs’ Elmo Wright pioton. He was scratched from neered the celebratory the lineup more than hour touchdown dance. Sayers before gametime. merely tossed the ball over The 28-year-old Jackson his head, as if to say: was traded from Detroit to “That’s all, folks!” the Mariners in July 2014. Lockett’s reaction Satur- He was hitting .272 with day was similarly low key. eight homers and 38 RBIs He scored, let go of the ball, in 107 games this season. and comported himself as The Cubs have been somebody who’s familiar using Dexter Fowler in cenwith the end zone. ter field. He’s been banged Another comet from the up some, and Jackson could state of Kansas, almost 50 help improve the Cubs’ years to the day after the defense, maybe as a latefirst one arrived. For those inning replacement in left of us who marveled at Gale field for Kyle Schwarber. Sayers, the dots just so conMariners interim gennect. eral manager Jeff Kingston
NFC championship. But acrobats more prone to avoid tackles than break them are just as compelling. Sayers played football as if a two-hand touch counted as a stop. So does Lockett. The Seahawks’ specialteams return units last season were ineffective, and that’s putting it charitably. The longest kick return was Paul Richardson’s 47-yard scamper; the longest punt return was a 38-yard effort from Doug Baldwin. On the 36 occasions the Seahawks accepted a punt, the typical return found Bryan Walters calling for a fair catch. Give Walters this much: ________ His job called for him to John McGrath is a sports colresist any notion of umnist for The News Tribune. He expanding a repertoire that can be contacted at john. began, and ended, with mcgrath@thenewstribune.com.
NFL Briefing Cousins to start at QB over Griffin
him assuring there wouldn’t be a turnover. Lockett will be given the freedom to take the ball and run with it. Stay tuned for highlights at 11 p.m. Which reminds me of Sayers, whose six-touchdown afternoon against San Francisco on Dec. 12, 1965, concluded with an 85-yard punt return that was in the books before he reached midfield. One tackler whiffed, another was juked out, and “The Kansas Comet” was off to the races. Sort of. He peeked behind him, saw nobody giving chase, and jogged the last 30 yards.
Austin Jackson celebrates with teammates after scoring a run Sunday.
announced the trade Monday night. “Obviously we would prefer to be buyers than sellers at this point, but I think for us and the Seattle Mariners at this point in time, it’s more about the future, looking ahead and trying to balance the shortterm with the long-term,” he said. Kingston took over last week after GM Jack Zduriencik was fired. The Mariners have had a disappointing season and were 61-70 when they made the trade. After the trade was announced, Ketel Marte was inserted into the Seattle lineup at shortstop and Brad Miller moved from shortstop to center field. Kingston said one of the benefits of the trade is that Miller will get more time in center field. “I think we’d like to see quite a bit of it,” Kingston said. “I just spoke to [manager] Lloyd [McClendon] about it and I think that at this point in time that’s probably his best fit for this organization going forward. “We think he has the components and skillset to play out there. If he can play out there, it’s a huge asset to this organization.”
Cougs: Falk
CONTINUED FROM B1 Falk has that much space, he can frequently get 7 or 8 For Falk to keep the job and get out of bounds. For this year at least, long enough to break Halliwhoever wins the job is day’s career records, howfour seasons, Taylor’s likely to have a full year to dynamic dual-threat poten- ever, he’ll have to hold off pile up gaudy statistics, Bender, who is improving tial trumped the experibarring injury or disasence of his two competitors in the areas where Falk trous play. currently holds an advanwhen coach Rex Ryan In addition to the desire tage. made his long-awaited to have continuity in the “[The coaches] just tell decision Monday. offense’s natural leadership me don’t try to do too “It came down to basirole, the backup won’t get much,” Bender said. “Make cally that explosiveness the same opportunities and things simple. that Tyrod brings to us,” first-unit reps in practice “I think on the first few as the starter. Ryan said. “All three guys made it difficult, but at the days I just tried to do a litWith a deep receiver tle bit too much. I’ve tried end of the day, that’s kind corps full of playmakers, to cut back a little bit, of what we went with.” the quarterback won’t have Taylor won the job over make the easy throw, and to be a hero who completes when the big plays are former Bills starter and lots of difficult throws to 2013 first-round draft pick there, take shots.” amass receiving yards and Falk also adds a dimen- touchdowns. EJ Manuel, and Matt Cassion to the offense with his sel, a 10-year journeyman “My biggest deal is just who was acquired in an off- ability to run for yards — to not try to do too much,” Leach prefers he doesn’t season trade with MinneFalk said. “Just run the unless he can pick up 15, sota. offense, get the ball in the end zone.” The Associated Press and while it’s rare that
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, September 1, 2015 PAGE
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Seattle company pulls in $33M to create new metal Modumetal: Made to last 8 times longer BY RACHEL LERMAN MCCLATCHY NEWS SERVICE
A Snohomish County warehouse, full of machines making metal sandwiches out of tiny, microscopic layers of material, is not the typical place you’d expect major oil companies to be investing millions of dollars. But industry giants are throwing millions behind Seattle-based Modumetal, which is creating a new class of metal, and testing stronger, less corrosive nuts and bolts with oil customers. The company has raised a financing round of about $33.5 million, according to an SEC filing.
Oil giants listen in The round was led by Peter Thiel’s venture-capital firm Founders Fund, with participation from oil giants, including BP Ventures, Chevron Technology Ventures and ConocoPhillips. Modumetal has deep connections to the oil and gas industry because of its core product — a process that creates a metal designed to be more corrosion-resistant, stronger and longer lasting than traditional metals, such as steel and aluminum. Modumetal nuts and
WILL FOSTER/MCCLATCHY NEWS SERVICE
Modumetal’s nanolaminated metals are less prone to corrosion, making them stronger and longer-lasting than traditional metals, the company said. bolts are priced similarly to those made of other metals, CEO Christina Lomasney said, but are made to last eight times as long. “That means bridges that can last longer, cars that are lighter and engines that can run hotter,” she said. Modumetal has the backing of Steve Singh, the co-founder of Bellevue business-software developer Concur; he also is on Modumetal’s board. That may be a far cry from Singh’s software roots, but he sees big potential in Modumetal’s products. He pointed to safer oil drilling from less corrosion and lighter, stronger vehicles. “The real attraction is if you can deliver technology that fundamentally changes the manufacturing process. . . . It helps not just Modumetal’s business; it helps more broadly across the
global economy,” Singh said. For the oil industry, Modumetal’s products means oil rigs that could withstand big challenges with corrosion, an issue that has cost companies globally $2.2 trillion, Lomasney said. The company uses “nano-layering” to create metal products built from extremely thin layers of material.
Stronger than original Lomasney compares it to making plywood; the resulting sheet of layered materials is stronger than the original wood. “We’re able to take the same raw materials [used in traditional metals] and configure them in such a way that we get dramatically different performance,” Lomasney said. “When you reduce the scale of the layers down to a nanometer scale, the laws
of physics change.” For instance, the metal nanosandwich ends up with different characteristics when it reacts with heat and other elements. The technology often results in a product that has much better properties than conventional metals, said Carolyn Seto, a director at industry analyst company IHS. “If you have these nanolaminated materials that are less prone to corrosion, then potentially, companies wouldn’t have to replace [equipment] as frequently,” she said. A June filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission indicated Modumetal raised $26.6 million. Tuesday’s filing replaces the June filing. Modumetal has raised three smaller seed rounds since 2009, according to Crunchbase and SEC filings. The company plans to use the latest round to expand so it can produce parts faster and add space to make new products. Its headquarters and research office are near Gas Works Park in Seattle, while its production facility is in Snohomish County. It has a field office in Houston where many of its customers, including Chevron, BP and ConocoPhillips, have operations. Modumetal was founded in 2007 by Lomasney, a physicist who previously founded composites company Isotron, and John Whitaker, a chemical engineer.
November 7, 1915 August 24, 2015 Elizabeth “Betty” McLennan was born in Zulkenhagen, Germany, on November 7, 1915. She passed away on August 24, 2015, in Port Angeles just short of her 100th birthday with her daughter by her side. She came to the United States with her mother on October 31, 1922. They lived in St. Paul, Minnesota, with her mother’s sister. She attended schools in St. Paul, Duluth and Brainerd, Minnesota. In 1940, she graduated from the Rochester State Hospital School of Nursing. She was a registered nurse. She found work in a Catholic hospital in Seattle, Washington.
Death Notices Lambert Louis Schriner Feb. 24, 1920 — Aug. 28, 2015
Lambert Louis Schriner died of natural causes in Sequim. He was 95. Services: None. Sequim Valley Funeral Chapel is in charge of arrangements. www.sequimvalleychapel. com
North Olympic Peninsula Death Notices and Death and Memorial Notice obituaries appear online at
peninsula dailynews.com
Mrs. McLennan It was there that she met Gene C. McLennan at a dance hall. He was smitten with her. They were married for 48 years until his passing May 1, 1990. They were married November 15, 1942. They moved to Port Angeles to be closer to relatives. On January 14, 1952, Betty gave birth to their only daughter, Kathleen.
She worked as a registered nurse at the Davidson Hay Hospital for a number of years before going to work for Dr. J.J. Fairshter. He said that she was the best nurse who had ever worked for him. Later on, she worked for Dr. Thomas Madsen. In 1964, they moved from their house on Sunrise Heights to Eighth Street, where Gene started his business, McLennan’s Electric. She gave up nursing and worked as his bookkeeper for many years. Betty loved the Pacific Northwest. She loved clam digging at Kalaloch, bird hunting with Gene and fishing. She loved Port Angeles and thought that there was no better place on Earth. She could crochet, knit and sew anything. She was a very warm-hearted soul — kind, thoughtful and caring.
She was preceded in death by her husband, Gene C. McLennan; her mother, Ida Garske Price; father Otto Price; and stepson Kenneth G. McLennan. Elizabeth is survived by her loving daughter, Kathleen “Kay” (Alan) Martin of Billerica, Massachusetts; and her only granddaughter, Bonnie. She also leaves her stepgrandchildren, Gay (Bill) Meyers of Port Angeles and Scott and Pat McLennan of Valdez, Alaska. Other people who cared for her in the past three years are Vincent Cipriano, Gay Meyers, Debra Graham and Lori McPherson. Mom, now you and Dad can have that dance. I love you. Kay. Memorial services will be held at Drennan-Ford Funeral Home, 260 Monroe Road, Port Angeles, on Thursday, September 3, 2015, at 4 p.m. with Pastor David Moffitt officiating.
Death and Memorial Notice KAREN OLNEYHUFF February 16, 1938 August 25, 2015 Karen Olney-Huff, a 77-year-old resident of Port Angeles, passed away August 25, 2015, due to lung cancer. She was born to Clarence Theodore Heintz and Frances Pearl Schuster on February 16, 1938, in Elyria, Ohio. Karen graduated from high school and attended three years of college. She served in the U.S. Air Force as an AC-3 in personnel from 19561957. She was employed in banking in Elyria and Grants Pass, Oregon. She
Karen Olney-Huff also worked as a grocery checker in Grants Pass. She married Douglas Andrews in Grants Pass, but it ended in divorce in 1997. Later, she married
Doubts about China sap confidence WASHINGTON — The fear that gripped financial markets this month is a stark one: That China’s economy might be slipping into a decline that could persist for years. But the world’s secondlargest economy isn’t collapsing — certainly not yet, anyway. What’s really in freefall is confidence in its leaders, once seen as wielding nearmythic power to keep their economy growing at a propulsive pace. Global stock markets have sunk — and gyrated — as investors have wrestled with their doubts. The Dow Jones industrial average has lost nearly 1,000 points since China’s surprise move to devalue its currency Aug. 11. That step, in part an effort to align the yuan with market forces, was also seen by investors as a desperate bid to fuel exports in a faltering economy. Yet for all its woes, China still outruns every other major economy.
Google watch SAN FRANCISCO — Google is introducing an application that will connect Android smartwatches with Apple’s iPhone, escalating the rivals’ battle to strap their technology on people’s wrists. The move thrusts Google on to Apple’s turf in an attempt to boost the lackluster sales of watches running on its Android
Real-time stock quotations at peninsuladailynews.com
Wear software. The program uniting the devices running on different operating systems was released Monday in Apple’s app store. Google’s new app will enable the latest Android watches to link with the iPhone so people can quickly glance at their wrists for directions, fitness information and notifications about events, emails and Facebook updates.
Gold and silver Gold for December lost $1.50, or 0.1 percent, to settle at $1,132.50 an ounce Monday. September silver added 3.7 cents, or 0.3 percent, to $14.586 an ounce. Peninsula Daily News, McClatchy News Service and The Associated Press
Death and Memorial Notice
Death and Memorial Notice ELIZABETH ELFREIDA PAULA GARSKE MCLENNAN
$ Briefly . . .
Warren Olney, also of Grants Pass, but they divorced in 1990. She married Denver Eiler Huff in November 2014, and they remained together until her passing. Mrs. Huff was a member of the Player’s Club, Thespians, Gypsy Square Dance Club and the Sinclair Swingers. She was also a member of the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union. She is survived by her husband, Denver Eiler Huff; daughter Fawn Michelle (Gene) Cordova; son Robert Scott Andrews; sister Carole Lute; and brother Ted Heintz. Mrs. Huff was preceded in death by her parents.
MARY SHAWVER August 7, 1922 August 24, 2015 Mary Shawver, a 93-year-old resident of Port Angeles, passed away August 24, 2015, at Discovery Memory Care in Sequim due to agerelated causes. She was born August 7,1922, in Csorna, Hungary, to Alexander Nagy and Agnes Kosner Nagy, and attended school until the ninth grade. Mrs. Shawver was employed by Jansen Company, sewing swimsuits in Vancouver, B.C. She married Jasper Shawver in Canada in 1973, and he brought her back to his home in Port Angeles. She was a member of the Apostolic Faith. She is survived by her
stepchildren, Lois Todd of Seattle, Washington, Richard (Eva) Shawver of Port Angeles and Malcolm (Agatha) Shawver of Port Angeles; stepdaughter-in-law Joy Shawver of Forks; sisters Helen (Wally) Gibson of Langley, B.C., and Julie Garrett of Alder Grove, B.C.; brother Alec (Joanne) Nagy of Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada; and niece Grace (Don) Cook of Gresham, Oregon. She was preceded in death by her husband, Jasper Shawver; both parents; sister Elizabith Plesko; and brother-inlaw Reg Garrett. Memorial contributions can be made to Volunteer Hospice of Clallam County, 540 East Eighth Street, Port Angeles, WA 98362.
Death and Memorial Notice JAMES TOMLINSON July 5, 1939 August 25, 2015 James Tomlinson, a 76-year-old resident of Walla Walla, Washington, passed away August 25, 2015, due to sepsis. Mr. Tomlinson was born in Walla Walla to parents Howard Marion Tomlinson and Ethel Belle Lockman on July 5, 1939. He married Virginia Tomlinson in Port Angeles in 1968. The union ended in divorce in February of 1999. He received his GED and served his country in the Army Air Corps. He then worked as a millwright at Peninsula Plywood (KPly) in Port Angeles until he retired. Mr. Tomlinson was an
avid angler and hunter in his spare time. He is survived by his sons, Jeremy (Crystal) Tomlinson and Doug (Cheryl) King; daughters Gina Brown, Lori (Christopher) Baungardner and Ethel “Bell” King; brother Richard (Kathleen) Tomlinson; sisters Sandra (Dale) Hopson, Marion Zeman and Judy (John) Kusler; and grandchildren Gunnar and Bergen Amundson, Aaron and Cody Tomlinson, Kyler and Alexander Baungardner, and Erick, Kendra, Kayla and Doug King Jr. He was preceded in death by Florance Dahl and Phyllis KickerMcCarthy. Memorial contributions may be made to Pioneer Park Aviary, Whitman Street, Walla Walla, WA 99362, 509527-4403.
Fun ’n’ Advice
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Dilbert
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Classic Doonesbury (1985)
Frank & Ernest
Garfield
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DEAR ABBY: I was best friends with “Joanne” after we met in middle school. She comes from a conservative Christian family and has three successful siblings. This has made her quirky, mediadriven pursuits and city life a disappointment to her family. When we were teens and she learned that I was a straight ally for gay rights, she came out to me as a lesbian, but for years only I and a few close friends knew. Once she was an adult and her family found out, they practically disowned her and made their disapproval and “shame” very clear. Unfortunately, due to some family problems of my own, I moved away, and we communicated only periodically for the last couple of years until recently. I was shocked when she informed me that she is going to become a nun. Abby, I have no problem with her faith (I attend an LGBTfriendly church), but I’m afraid Joanne is doing it for all the wrong reasons. For the 15 years I have known her, she has been an open-minded, culture-loving social butterfly, and she doesn’t seem to have changed much personality-wise. Naturally, her family is thrilled with her decision because it means she will never date another woman or be a part of “that lifestyle.” I know Joanne is an adult and these choices are hers to make, but I’m afraid she is being guilted into a life she will ultimately regret. How do I express my concerns to her without being offensive? Kathy in New York
by Lynn Johnston
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by G.B. Trudeau
by Bob and Tom Thaves
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by Brian Basset
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TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Avoid being enticed into a secret affair or hiding information that puts you in an awkward position. Concentrate more on broadening your outlook and sharing skills and information with others. New beginnings will be positive and enlightening. 3 stars
by Pat Brady and Don Wimmer
ZITS ❘ by Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman
Dennis the Menace
Will she be taking a vow of Van Buren silence and shutting herself off from the world for a life of prayer and contemplation, or will she be working to help underprivileged communities? Does she plan to remain in the United States or join an order like Mother Teresa’s in some other country? If you show an interest rather than “concern,” I’m sure she will be glad to answer any questions you may have without becoming offended.
Abigail
Dear Abby: I have recently been invited to my sister’s baby shower. The problem is I am a man. My mother and sister think I am sexist for not wanting to go. I always thought this kind of thing was a women’s event. Are my mother and sister right? Am I being sexist? Nathan in Indiana
The Last Word in Astrology ❘ ARIES (March 21-April 19): Plan out your day and you will achieve what you set out to do. Take care of unfinished business and set aside time for conversing and relaxing with someone you love to be around. Strive to be your best. 3 stars
Rose is Rose
DEAR ABBY
Dear Nathan: You’re not necessarily sexist, but you are behind the times. Baby showers are no longer solely women’s events. In fact, because men are so much more actively involved in their little ones’ care than they used to be, it is becoming common for the showers to be co-ed affairs. (They’re called “Jack and Jill” showers.) Dear Kathy: Before you I hope you won’t skip the cele“express your concerns,” I think bration because I think you’d enjoy you should have enough respect for it. your friend’s intelligence to ask ________ her what has prompted this lifeDear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, changing decision and what it will also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was entail. founded by her mother, the late Pauline PhilWill she be joining an order that lips. Letters can be mailed to Dear Abby, P.O. wears a habit? (Not all nuns do any- Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069 or via more.) email by logging onto www.dearabby.com.
by Jim Davis
Red and Rover
B5
Woman needs friend’s interest, not her concern
by Scott Adams
For Better or For Worse
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2015
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by Hank Ketcham
Pickles
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by Brian Crane
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Don’t wait around when you should be making alterations that will improve your life, your position and your reputation. Offer your ideas to influential people and you will get the backing you need. Money will come from an unusual source. 5 stars VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Let your intuition take over and you will make the right choices. Negotiate smartly by looking over any fine print that can affect your earning potential down the road. Don’t limit what you can accomplish by settling for less now. 3 stars
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Step up to the podium and voice your opinion. Greater involvement in a group that supports a cause you believe in will enable you to make a difference. Romantic opportunities will surface if you are open about your expectations. 4 stars
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Do something physical. Participate in an event that will allow you to get to know your peers better. A positive change is apparent if you update your image and strive to maintain a happy attitude. 3 stars
CANCER (June 21-July 22): Don’t be bothered by what others do. Explore creative hobbies or check out something unfamiliar to you. Gaining knowledge will make you better equipped to take on any challenges or competitors you face. Plan an exciting day trip or vacation. 2 stars
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Work hard, but be mindful of someone who is feeling neglected. Including the people around you in whatever you do will inspire and motivate them to pitch in and help. Opportunities are apparent. Send out your resume or negotiate a deal. 3 stars
The Family Circus
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by Eugenia Last
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): You are in the zone. Put your plans in motion and make whatever decisions are necessary to take you to the next level. This is a perfect day to start a new exercise or selfimprovement program that will snap you back into shape. 5 stars CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Expand an interest you have and consider how you can turn your expertise into a moneymaking venture. Uncertainty will prevail if you let someone play with your emotions. Listen carefully and don’t give in to a manipulative situation. 2 stars AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Consider ways to make your money grow. Invest in something that will help you make positive changes to the way you earn your living. Don’t settle for a handshake — get what you want in writing. 4 stars PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Be willing to share responsibilities, and only ask for the things that you absolutely need. Stick to the facts and keep your life from getting too complicated. A change in your image or appearance will help boost your confidence. 3 stars
by Bil and Jeff Keane
Classified
B6 TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2015
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
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A/R COORDINATOR Motivated individual to perform all functions of A/R. Degree preferred but not required. Can do attitude a MUST! Drug Free Workplace. Email hr@sunsetdoitbest.com for complete job description B L AG D O N ’ S C O N STRUCTION LLC: Residential and commercial remodeling licensed bonded and insured lic e n s e # BLAGDCL855L4 (360)460-4566 or email hmblagdon@yahoo.com
CLASSIFIEDS!
FLEETWOOD: ‘06 Pioneer, 180CK, 22’ Travel Trailer. Very clean with sofa bed, dinette, queen, and top bunk. Rear bath, tub, shower, range, oven, and microwave. Stereo, patio awning, A/C, aluminum diamond plate rock guard, mini blinds, and more. Well maintained. $8,295. Please call (360)808DINING SET: 60”x40” 6945. plus one leaf at 18” with 4 upholstered oak chairs R E C U M B E N T B I K E : on swivel base with cast- Burley, 2 wheels, 24 sp. ers. Table seats 8 peo- comfortable. $325/obo. (360)683-7144 ple. Great buy at $475. (360)670-6421 RIDING MOWER: 1950 VW: ‘85 Cabriolet, con- Wheelhorse. Excel. convertable., Red, new tires dition. $500 firm. / b a t t e r y, 5 s p. (360)670-6421 $1,900/obo (360)683-7144 WANTED: Single/Twin KAYAKS: 2 Eddy Line, bed in good condition 17.5’ and 14’. $1,200 ea. with mattress and box spring. (360)683-2958 (360)504-2783 CRAFTY PERSON WANTED: Help wanted immediately - full or part time position for assembly and production in award ribbon manufacture. Currently located in Sequim and m ov i n g t o Po r t A n g e l e s i n O c t o b e r. (360)681-5101 Office (775)997-5595 Cell.
Employment 4026 Employment 3010 Announcements 4026 General General 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
Heavenly Home. One o n o n e A d u l t C a r e. Seeking live-in client. Lic. & loving caregiver. call:360-977-6434
3020 Found FOUND: Rabbit, large, grey, Old Black Diamond Rd. (360)452-2471
3023 Lost LOST: Canadian Goose, Black head with white spot above eyes. Super fr iendly. Mt. Pleasant Rd. 8/22. (360)775-1552 LOST: Cat, male, 8/13. Orange and white bobtailed *REWARD*. (360)681-8172 L O S T: M a i l b ox key. 16th St. near PUD/Juvenile Detention. Black top with short key. 775-9507 LOST: Male cat, orange long haired. From Mt. Pleasant/Monroe Rd bus barn area. 477-7872
4026 Employment General
7 CEDARS RESORT IS NOW HIRING FOR THE FOLLOWING
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Bingo Sales Clerk Customer Service Officer, FT Swing Shift • Deli/Espresso Cashier/Attendant • Grocer y Cashier FT (Graveyard Shift) • IT System Administrator III • Line Cook PT Napolis • Napolis Cashier/Attenant • Porter PT • Prep Cook (Main Kitchen) Part Time • P T To t e m R e wards Representative • Snack Bar Attendant For more information and to apply online, please visit our website at www.7cedars resort.com. Native American preference for qualified candidates. A/R COORDINATOR Motivated individual to perform all functions of A/R. Degree preferred but not required. Can do attitude a MUST! Drug Free Workplace. Email hr@sunsetdoitbest.com for complete job description
ACCEPTING APPLICACRAFTY PERSON T I O N S fo r C A R R I E R WANTED: Help wantRO U T E Po r t A n g e l e s ed immediately - full or Area. Peninsula Daily part time position for News Circulation Dept. assembly and producInterested parties must tion in award ribbon be 18 yrs of age, have manufacture. Currently valid Washington State located in Sequim and Driver’s License, proof of m ov i n g t o Po r t A n insurance, and reliable g e l e s i n O c t o b e r. vehicle. Early morning (360)681-5101 Office delivery Monday-Friday (775)997-5595 Cell. and Sunday. Apply in person 305 W 1st St, or Delivery Technician send resume to tsipe@peninsuladaily- P/T 20-30 hrs/week evenews.com. NO PHONE ning shift, M-F, rotating weekends. Clean driving CALLS PLEASE. record req. Apply at Advertising coordina- Jim’s Pharmacy & Home tor: needed for media Health, 424 E. 2nd St., ads, news releases, pro- P.A. EOE. motions materials and EARLY CHILDHOOD event planning. See SERVICES hartnagels.com for deOlympic Community Actails. tion Programs Early Childhood Ser vices is CARRIER hiring for the following for Peninsula Daily News positions in Clallam and Jefferson County for the and Sequim Gazette 2015- 2016 Program Combined Route Sequim area. Interest- Year: Teacher Assistant; ed par ties must be 18 Itinerant Teacher Assistyrs. of age, have a valid a n t a n d S u b s t i t u t e Washington State Driv- Te a c h e r A s s i s t a n t . ers License, proof of in- Hours and Weeks vary surance and reliable ve- by site for all listed posih i c l e . E a r l y m o r n i n g tions. Applications at delivery Monday through OlyCAP, 823 Commerce Loop, Por t Townsend, Friday and Sunday. WA (360) 385-2571; or jbirkland@sequim 228 W. First St., Por t gazette.com Angeles, WA (360) 4524 7 2 6 , o r w w w. o l y CAR SALES/customer cap.org. Closes when service, part time, valid filled. EOE. drivers license. Apply at 2840 E. Hwy 101, Port LINE COOKS: ExperiAngeles. WA enced, competitive wages. Full time or part time. CASE MANAGER Apply in person at Black 40 hrs/wk, located in the Bear Diner in Sequim. Sequim Infor mation & Assistance office. ProLUBE TECH vides case mgt to sen- Par t-time, valid WSDL i o r s & a d u l t s w i t h required. Apply at 110 disabilities. Good com- Golf Course, P.A. munication & computer skills a must. Bachelor’s d e gr e e b e h av i o ra l o r NW DRIVING SCHOOL health science and 2 yrs Of Por t Angeles, Por t paid social service exp. Townsend and Forks are or BA and 4 yrs exp., accepting apps for a 4 WDL, auto ins. required. mo. training program/in$17.18/hr, full benefit car instructor. Part time pkg, Contact Information position with bonus/wag& Assistance, 800-801- es upon completion of 0050 for job descrip. & training. Training is Tapplic. packet. Open un- Th-Fri. 8 a.m. to 4 p.m til filled, preference given Starting Sept. 8, 2015 to appl. rec’d by 4:00 pm Apply at: northwestdriving 09/14/15. I&A is an schoolinc.com/ EOE. employment.htm Community Services Director The CSD runs these programs: Weatherization, Energy Assistance, JARC, Community Centers, Nutrition, RSVP/Vet Connect, Encore/Arts & Minds, Home Fund. Responsible for all funding sources supporting Community Ser vices Programs. Qualifications: Bachelors degree; minimum of two years work experience in social services, human service, case management or related field. Experience in managing programs, budgets and personnel. Applications and more details at www.olycap.org. Closes when filled. EOE. COOK: Experience desired. Full-time, benefits, pay doe, to join our team at the Fifth Avenue Retirement Center. Pleasant work environment , must be flexible to work all shifts, including weekend shifts. Must be able to interact comfortable with our residents and guests. Apply at Sherwood Assisted Living, 5 5 0 W. H e n d r i c k s o n Road, Sequim.
Office Manager: Private RV Par k seeks Office Manager to provide administration of office duties for a Private RV Park of 115 U n i t s i n G a r d i n e r, Washington. Duties include: provide leaders h i p / o ve r s i g h t t o a team of personnel and/or contractors as assigned, to perform various functions that contribute to the maintenance, upkeep, and improvements of the park, work collaboratively with the accountant, Facilities Manager and park residents, prepare, review, and submit accounts payable/receivable records, manage incoming and outgoing park communications (U.S. mail, E-mail, etc., prepare yearly operating budgets, work with t h e Pa r k ’s B y - L aw s and CC Rs, and Lease Transfer Procedures, interpret and adhere to Local, State and Federal regulations as they relate to the RV Par k duties and responsibilities, other park office management duties as assigned. Qualifications include: work experience commensurate with the duties, successful completion of High School diploma or GED, proficient in software such as QuickBooks and Microsoft Office Products, strong interpersonal communications skills. Salar y:20k to 30k per year based on an average 30 hour work week, subject to seasonal fluctuation Salary commensurate with experience. Send resume to dbrvresumes@embarqmail.com QUILEUTE TRIBAL SCHOOL Quileute Culture Coordinator: Will coordinate Quileute culture activities throughout the school year and recommend the temporary employment of Elders, Trib a l M e m b e r s, a n d / o r appropriate individuals to teach and or lead cultural activities for the students and staff. Pay: DOQ/E. Quileute Language Teacher: Is responsible for teaching Quileute Language to K-12 students, and monitoring / reporting student progress. Pay: DOQ/E. Jobs Open Until Filled Fo r m o r e i n fo r m a t i o n please contact Mark Jacobson @ 360-374-5609 or MARK.JACOBSON@QUILEUTENATION.ORG PERSONAL REQUIREMENTS: Applicants must be able to adhere to pre-employment and random UA’s and personal Washington State and Tribal background checks. Substitute / On Call Carrier for Peninsula Daily News route in Forks and LaPush Looking for individuals interested in a Substitute Motor Route in For ks and LaPush. Interested parties must be 18 yrs. o f a g e , h ave a va l i d Washington State Drivers License and proof of insurance. Early morning delivery Monday through F r i d a y a n d S u n d a y. Please call D’Ann at (360)374-2099
OFFICE/CLERICAL Available full-time front office position at Peninsula Bottling. Job Duties include: daily/weekly/monthly reconciliation of delivery route sales and payments, daily vending coin counting, answering phones and providing quality customer service, data entry in various computer applications, and miscellaneous administrative support tasks as needed. Looking for someone with experience with computers, working in an office environment, and cash handling with a positive attitude and professional appearance. Please submit resumes in person at 311 S. Valley Street Monday-Fr iday from 8-5.
The Hoh Tribe has the following positions open · Housing Director · Family Service Manager Please submit a cover letter, resume and job application. You can visit our website www.hohtribe-nsn.org for complete job description and job application. If you have any questions please feel free to contact Kristina Currie; Administrative Assistant, phone 360-374-6502 or email: kristinac@hohtribensn.org. Closes September 3, 2015 @ 4:00 PM
Support Staff To wor k with adults w i t h d eve l o p m e n t a l disabilities, no experie n c e n e c e s s a r y, $ 1 0 . 5 0 h r. A p p l y i n person at 1020 Caroline St. M-F 8-4 p.m.
LONG DISTANCE No Problem!
VET TECH: Licensed or experienced (Full-time). M u s t b e ava i l . we e k ends. Get application at Angeles Clinic For Animals, 160 Del Guzzi Dr., P.A.
Peninsula Classified 1-800-826-7714
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.
BEST OF SUNLAND Premier 3 bd, 2.5 ba, 2578 sf, Complete living space over garage, b u t l e r ’s p a n t r y, c a fé patio, high quality workm a n s h i p, m a n i c u r e d landscaping, hot tub. MLS#837402/291735 $499,500 Tyler Conkle (360)670-5978 WINDERMERE SUNLAND
B L AG D O N ’ S C O N STRUCTION LLC: Residential and commercial remodeling licensed bonded and insured liBIG HOUSE LOTTA c e n s e # ROOM BLAGDCL855L4 (360)460-4566 or email 5 br to accommodate family and/or fr iends. hmblagdon@yahoo.com Two family rooms with fireplaces and few small Handyman with Truck. “nooks” for private conProperty maintenance, versations. Large kitchgutter cleaning, moss en and dining area. Conremoval, dump runs, venient location. And an furniture moving, de- extra lot for large gatherb r i s h a u l i n g , m i n o r ings or future developh o m e r e p a i r s , ment. h o u s e / RV p r e s s u r e MLS#291426 $329,000 washing. Call for estiDick Pilling mate. UPTOWN REALTY (360)461-9755 (360)417-2811 HOUSEKEEPER: Reliable professional licensed, insured, references. $25/hr. (360)808-6330
Landscape maintenance, trimming and pruning, Pressure washing and debr is hauling. Light tractor work and lawn or field mowing. FREE QUOTES. Tom - 360460-7766. License: bizybbl868ma Credit Cards Accepted L A W N A N D YA R D MAINTENENCE: Trimming, weeding, hauling, pruning, mowing. Reasonable rates. (360)6837702 Perfection Housekeeping: Has client openings. 681-5349 After 6 p.m. Private Caregiver: Available, 8 years experience, flexible hours. Call Marc (360)477-9416 leave message. PRIVATE HOME: Priva t e h o m e , p r i va t e room, 35 yrs experience, 24 hour loving care for senior lady. (360)461-9804. WILL SHOP OR RUN ERRANDS in Sequim area. All inquiries most welcome! Hourly rate. Leave a message with contact number. 360775-7603 Young Couple Early 60’s available for seasonal cleanup, weeding, trimming, mulching & moss removal. We specialize in complete garden restorations. Excellent references. 457-1213 Chip & Sunny’s Garden Tr a n s f o r m a t i o n s . L i c e n s e # C C CHIPSSG850LB.
105 Homes for Sale Clallam County Beautiful Landscaping with mature trees and plants. Could have a nice water view if some of the trees were trimmed. Extra garage in back with lots of parking and a basketball cour t. This home is perfect for entertaining. Formal dining area looks into the large rec. room. Picture perfect living room with fireplace. Upstairs has a library that overlooks the rec. room. So many things to mention that it is best to make an appointment and see for yourself what a unique home this is. ADU also! MLS#280762 $450,000 Thelma Durham (360)460-8222 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES
BRAND NEW ROOF! New car pet and fresh paint. Carefree living in West Alder Estates, a 55+ park. Water, sewer, and trash included in m o n t h l y fe e o f $ 3 7 0 . Wa l k i n g d i s t a n c e t o shopping/services. Nice, clean and move in ready. 1,568 SF, 2br / 2BA. Pets allowed w/approval. MLS#291317/810772 $63,500 Cathy Reed Windermere Real Estate Sequim East (360) 460-1800
BRAND NEW Enjoy the perks of living in a NEW home with a designer select interior. Gourmet kitchen includes stainless steel appliances, granite c o u n t e r t o p s . H u r r y, these homes are going fast! MLS#290532/764020 $299,500 Alan Burwell Windermere Real Estate Sequim East (360) 460-0790 Bright & Sunny Low maintenance, quiet neighborhood and move in ready make this gem a good choice for just about everyone. MLS#291740 $139,000 Team Powell UPTOWN REALTY (360)417-2797 Cedars at Dungeness Golf course home with quality finishes, 1,670 sf of open concept living, gra n i t e c o u n t e r s a n d s t a i n l e s s a p p l i a n c e s, large master with jetted tub, enjoy golf course views throughout. MLS#833832/291671 $284,900 Team Schmidt (360)680-6880 WINDERMERE SUNLAND 360-460-0331 Custom and Elegance This beautifully finished 3 bed/2.5 bath home sits on just over 3 pr ivate acres with secure automatic gated entry. Elegant formal dining room with tray ceiling & wine closet, kitchen w/ granite counter tops, & island w/ breakfast bar & sliding glass doors to the back patio. Family room features built ins & a prop a n e f i r e p l a c e. L a r g e master suite w/ jetted soaking tub & walk in closet. Barn w/ 2 stalls, pasture for horses or other animals, greenhouse, deer fenced raised herb and vegetable gardens! MLS#291753 $425,000 kelly Johnson (360)477-5876 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES
Fine Home, Barn and Shop One level: 3 br., 2 ba., dining room, den, living room, bonus room off the triple garage. This is a good layout and quality construction. Lots of sunlight and there are light colors throughout. Triple bay RV/shop and an excellent quality barn and arena. Entire 4.9 a c r e s i s fe n c e d a n d cross fenced and the entire driveway and turn around is concrete. MLS#290681/774053 $599,000 Diann Dickey John L. Scott Real Estate 360.808.0113 HUGE BACKYARD Two bedroom/ one bathroom home located on a quiet dead end street minutes from downtown Port Angeles. Open floor plan with a large living room with sliding glass doors to the expansive patio - great for dining al fresco! Bright and cheery kitchen with eating space. Master bedroom o ve r l o o k i n g t h e b a c k yard. One car attached g a ra g e w i t h p l e n t y o f room for storage. Large and private fully fenced in level back yard with fire pit, landscaping and horseshoe pits! Ready for summer fun and games! MLS#291737 $145,000 Kelly Johnson (360)477-5876 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES
TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD: CALL: 452-8435 TOLL FREE: 1-800-826-7714 FAX: 417-3507 VISIT: WWW.PENINSULADAILYNEWS.COM OR
E-MAIL:
CLASSIFIED@PENINSULADAILYNEWS.COM DEADLINES: Noon the weekday before publication. ADDRESS/HOURS: 305 West First Street/P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. Open 8 a.m.-5 p.m. weekdays CORRECTIONS AND CANCELLATIONS: Corrections--the newspaper accepts responsibility for errors only on the first day of publication. Please read your ad carefully and report any errors promptly. Cancellations--Please keep your cancellation number. Billing adjustments cannot be made without it.
5000900
Support Staff To wor k with adults w i t h d eve l o p m e n t a l disabilities, no experie n c e n e c e s s a r y, $ 1 0 . 5 0 h r. A p p l y i n person at 1020 Caroline St. M-F 8-4 p.m.
NEW
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4026 Employment 4080 Employment 105 Homes for Sale General Wanted Clallam County
105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County FORECLOSURE 2,420 sf/ with 4 bedroom 2 bath home located in Por t Ludlow. Sitting on 3.89 acres with outbuildings. Call Thelma to get more info on this or other foreclosures in the area. MLS#291454 $214,900 Thelma Durham (360)460-8222 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES GREAT HORSE PROPERTY 3 stall horse barn plus shop with two bay garage. Cute guest house. Lots of room for everyone here! Fruit trees and you can walk to the beach! Warm and efficient wood stove inser t. The bathrooms have been remodeled. MLS#290392 $299,999 Thelma Durham (360)460-8222 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES
GREAT LOCATION BETWEEN SEQUIM AND P.A.! 3 br., 3 full ba., 5.05 Acres - Spring fed pond, 2 story / 2 car attached garage, partial mountain view, land for your horses and livestock, large bonus room over garage-780 SF. MLS#290975 $365,000 Team Thomsen UPTOWN REALTY (360)808-0979 JUST REDUCED 100K! Beautiful Lake Crescent NW contemporary style home with 100 ft of lake frontage. Complete privacy and views, cathedral ceilings, wood beams, amazing large windows, wrap around deck, toasty wood burning stove- all great for living, entertaining and thoroughly enjoying this property year round. MLS#282243 $675,000 Ania Pendergrass 360-461-3973 Remax Evergreen MONTERRA HOME This home is in good condition and ready to m o ve r i g h t i n . L a r g e deck out back and fenced yard. Metal roof and shed for storage. Attached garage with work shop. Living room and family room with fireplace. Eat-in kitchen is ve r y e f f i c i e n t . L a r g e master suite MLS#291423/816905 $139,900 Walter Clark (360)797-3653 TOWN & COUNTRY Move-in Ready! Wonderful 2 bed, 2 bath, 1,753 sq ft home! Master bedroom has fabulous walk-in California style closets. Master bath has s o a k t u b, s e p a ra t e shower and double sinks. Craft room with cupboards galore could be converted to 3rd bedroom. Most of the home is ADA. MLS#291736 $182,500 Jean Irvine UPTOWN REALTY (360)417-2797 Picture Perfect Circular drive leads you to carefully landscaped yard. The house flows nicely highlighting its spaciousness. 3 bedrooms accommodate families or guests. Bonus room for hobbies/projects. Check out the mountain view from the deck. MLS#291692 $175,000 Dick Pilling UPTOWN REALTY (360)417-2811
OPEN HOUSE Sunday, Aug 30 Noon to 3pm The tree lined streets of the Solana Community include Solana Estate Lots, Solana Cour tyard Lots and amenities that would exceed any buyer’s expectations coupled with the awe- inspiring views of Sequim Bay, the shipping lanes in the Strait of Juan de Fuca, Mount Baker & the Cascades, San Juan Islands & Protection Island. C o m e ex p e r i e n c e t h e friendly neighborhood, inviting clubhouse with kitchen, gathering room, exercise room, patio with fireplace, pool & spa. Katy will be at the clubhouse to greet you with a map of the community and available lots - most of which are recently cleared and ready to build! Meet Kelly at the in progress showcase home with world class views and high end finishes including stunning white oak floors with a light wa l nu t s t a i n , p r o p a n e fireplace with stone surround and figured maple mantle and a luxurious kitchen with stainless steel appliances and granite counter tops. Located minutes from John Wayne Marina and Olympic National Park. Public utilities available.View lots starting at $142,500 MLS#291312 $550,000 Kelly Johnson (360)477-5876 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES
PERFECT HORSE PROPERTY Peaceful country living on 5+ acres of horse property at the end of a private road with year round Lotzgesell creek in the southeast corner. This 3 br, 2 ba Sequim home features tile floors and custom pecan cabinets. The proper ty is fenced and cross-fenced i n t o s eve ra l p a s t u r e s ready for your horses. There is a 400 square foot shop and pole barn which is great for RV storage. This home is perfect for those with a green thumb or anyone looking to start their own mini-farm! MLS#291612 $374,000 Team Tenhoff Blue Sky Real Estate Sequim 206-853-5033
PRICE REDUCED! Sweeping Views of the Elwha River, Riverfront access on property!, 4 br., 3 full ba., 2,794 finished sf/total sf 3,410, 1 ½ story - 5.03 acres aux-dwelling unit, 2 car attached garage/det a c h e d RV g a r a g e, l a r g e c o ve r e d p i c n i c area with fire pit, MLS#291193 $450,000 Team Thomsen UPTOWN REALTY (360)808-0979
SPACIOUS RAMBLER Located on two city lots just steps from Lincoln Park! 3 br., 2.5 ba., with family room, heat-a-later fireplace, and ductless heat pump. Oversized double car garage plus RV parking! MLS#291764 $189,000 Chuck Turner 452-3333 PORT ANGELES REALTY
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
Updated Farmhouse Beautiful 1.5 story farmhouse on 1.16 acres w/ detached 3 car garage plus a 236 sqft hobby / storage building. The home features a country kitchen, master bedroom, living room, d e n / o f f i c e, & l a u n d r y room on the main level plus 2 bedrooms and a bonus room on the u p p e r l e v e l MLS#291635 $249,000 Tom Blore 360-683-7814 PETER BLACK REAL ESTATE
WATER VIEW 3 bd., 3.5 ba, 2,436 sf., Multi-level, master suite with 2 baths and office space, lower level rec room, bonus room and bath, kitchen with stainl e s s a p p l i a n c e s, p u l l outs, pantr y, 3 decks, pet friendly low maintenance yard. MLS#759157/290458 $349,900 Deb Kahle (360)680-6880 WINDERMERE SUNLAND 360-683-6880
505 Rental Houses Clallam County
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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 CENTRAL P.A.: 3 Br., 2 carport, shop. $188,000. story, 2 car gar $1,100. Laurene 360-393-2259 plus dep. (360)461-6608
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DEMAND!
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ACROSS 1 Pop singer Anthony 5 Drive-__ window 9 Annoying email 13 “Then again,” in texts 14 Real howler 15 In and of itself 16 Arnaz of early sitcoms 17 Save-the-date card follow-up 19 Judgments made on the fly 21 Joe of “NCIS” 22 “Dang!” 23 “The Crying Game” actor Stephen 24 Hole in one 25 Connecticut Ivy Leaguer 27 Taunting laugh 29 Call it quits 36 Champ’s cry 37 Airport compliance org. 38 Cuban currency 39 Take a nap 44 Patriotic women’s gp. 45 Clever laugh 46 Ef counterpart, in temperatures 47 NW state with a panhandle 50 Simpson who’s a member of 12Down 53 Tryst participant 55 Football play comprised of the starts of 19-, 29and 39-Across 58 First sequel’s sequel 59 Pandora’s boxful 62 Cut again, as lumber 63 Apollo 11 destination 64 Earth goddess 65 Part of GPS: Abbr. 66 Like some telegrams 67 Tiny part of a min.
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. GREYHOUND DOGS Solution: 8 letters
D O M E S T I C H S I L G N E
(360)
417-2810
HOUSES/APT IN PORT ANGELES
Monday’s Puzzle Solved
are in
DEMAND!
452-1326
P K A G G E C W E R A I F G M
S C L R P A S H C P A L N U I
K T E O C P S I A A H V L G L
U N R T R P E T S S N A E O S
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E V N P D E Z I R P N D N I H
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40 Consecrate 41 Like much pub grub 42 Kennel cacophony 43 “Now, just hold on” 47 “Happy birthday” writers, perhaps 48 Dwarf who swept up Doc’s discarded diamonds
TWO OFFICES IN DOWNTOWN SEQUIM GAZETTE BUILDING FOR SUB-LEASE 448-sq-ft for $500 mo., 240-sq-ft for $350 mo. Perfect for accountant or other professional. S h a r e d c o n fe r e n c e room, restroom, wired for high-speed Internet. Contact John Brewer, publisher, (360)417-3500
FLOORING: Beautiful C h e r r y, t o n g u e a n d g r o o v e , 6 0 0 s f. , . 5 0 cents a foot. (360)452-0837
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QUALITY OFFICE SPACE: 970 sf, great location, lots of parking. $1,170/mo. Avail. 9/1 (360)683-4184
E T H S A E L O V I N G G E C 9/1
6035 Cemetery Plots CEMETERY PLOT: One
Armani, “The Falconer” (2435/3000), hand signed Armani, Armani “Skywatch” (732/3000) hand signed by Frabisio Tani, Armani “Nocturne” (554/1500) hand signed by Fabrisio Tani. All sold out middle to late 90’s. All have certificates of authenticity and org., boxes. All in pristine cond. Mill Creek collection “Brotherhood”, “Eyes of the Tiger”, “ C i r c l e o f L i fe ” . A l l have org., boxes excel., cond. Circa mid to late 90’s. Swarovski collection all retired with several annual pieces from mid to late 90’s, orig., boxes excel., cond. Kitty Critters, interesting collection. Shown by a p p o i n t m e n t o n l y. Dealer inquiries okay. Sequim (916)768-1233 cell
6010 Appliances
9/1/15
49 Off the mark 51 Plant parts 52 Vowel fivesome 54 Champ’s gesture 56 Natl. Merit Scholarship qualifying exam 57 Frontman for the Belmonts 60 Perjure oneself 61 __ fly: RBI producer 6075 Heavy Equipment
Momma
TISDEG
KENVIO Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
Answer here: Yesterday’s
❘
by Mell Lazarus
John Deere: ‘08 CT322, track skid steer, with c a b. We l l m a i n t a i n e d machine, added extra hydraulic attachment fitting, rebuilt hand control, n ew wa t e r p u m p a n d track sprockets. $25,000/obo. (360)928-1022
6080 Home Furnishings AIR CONDITIONER Por table 12500 BTU 3 mo. old, $200. (651)-233-4271.
6100 Misc. Merchandise
MISC: 1985 Honda TRX 1 2 5 - l i k e n e w. $ 7 0 0 . Commercial wood shaper, $300. Commercial doweling machine, $350. Double dust collector, never used, $750. Delta Cutt-Off saw, $125. (360)681-6293 DINING SET: 60”x40” plus one leaf at 18” with 4 upholstered oak chairs MISC: Ridged 8000 watt on swivel base with cast- generator, electric start. ers. Table seats 8 peo- $1,000/obo. 45 gal. pork rind or crab pot propane ple. Great buy at $475. cooker. $3,000 /obo. 20 (360)670-6421 gal. kettle corn or crab J a s p e r S e c r e t a r y : pot cooker, with stand. 1970’s excellent condi- $500/obo. 2 theater type tion,. $800. Bookcase: p o p c o r n m a c h i n e s . GUN SHOW knotty pine, 5 shelves, $200/ea. or obo., new Sequim Prairie Grange Sept. 5-6, Sat. 9-5, Sun. beautiful, 7’H x 4’W x cases of beer bottles. 12 22 oz. case, 24 12 oz. 9 - 3 . A d m i s s i o n $ 5 , 15”D. $350. (360)808-0388. case. $10 per Family $7. Tables both case.(360)477-6188 days $35. Don Roberts Moving and Everything (360)457-1846 M u s t G o ! . S t a n d u p MISC: Rototiller, Troyfreezer, double bed with Built “Horse” new motor box spring and frame, and belts. $250. Couch/ SPRINGFIELD X D S / 4 5 , 4 ” b a r r e l . r e c l i n e r, G M C l o c k , chair/ottoman, mission h i d e a w ay c o u c h a n d style $125. Bedroom set $425. (360)912-2071 love seat, Mirror, 6 per- solid maple head/foot son table and chairs, w i t h ra i l s, 1 0 d rawe r bedside tables, 2 large WE BUY FIREARMS dressers, cedar chest, dresser w/mirror, nightstand. $275. Free big CASH ON THE SPOT couch table more! barn cat, neutered male, ~~~ ANY & ALL ~~~ (425)918-2093 friendly, great mouser. TO P $ $ $ PA I D I N (360)452-6339 CLUDING ESTATES S O FA : L e a t h e r, d a r k A N D O R E N T I R E b u r g u n d y c o l o r, 6 . 5 ’ MOBILITY SCOOTER: COLLECTIONS Call long, very good condi- Electr ic. New batter y, 360-477-9659 t i o n . $ 3 7 5 . 3 6 0 - 4 1 7 - barely used. $400 cash. 7526 late afternoon or (360)808-3160 or 452evenings. 8322
6055 Firewood, Fuel & Stoves
FIREWOOD: $179 delivered Sequim-P.A. True cord. 3 cord special $499. (360)582-7910 www.portangelesfire wood.com
MISC: Refrigerator: Maytag, side by side, WOOD STOVE: Jotul, white. $350. W/D: White, certified clean burn, 26” Kenmore, $600/set. All wood. $1,400/obo. in excel. cond. (360)928-3483 (360)302-1817
(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: OZONE DIRTY CHOSEN DECEIT Answer: He asked his wife if he could play craps, but she said — NO DICE
Armoire style chest. Henredon chest in excellent condition. Dark walnut with brass hardware. $575/obo. (360)460-8883
6100 Misc. Merchandise GARAGE / SHOP DOORS: New remodel plans changed, sell at cost call for sizes and $ install also avail. (360)732-4626
RUN A FREE AD FOR ITEMS PRICED $200 AND UNDER • 2 ads per household per week • Run as space permits Mondays &Tuesdays • Private parties only • No firewood or lumber • 4 lines, 2 days • No Garage Sales • No pets or livestock
Deadline: Friday at 4 p.m. Ad 1
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6125 Tools SHOPSMITH: MARK IV Includes table saw, band saw, lathe, drill, shaper, s a n d e r, t o o l s , i n s t r. books. Good condition. $695 (360) 681-3811
GRINDER: New, Morton portable glass shop with S H O P S M I T H : M o d e l all par ts, tiles, glass, 510 with extras. Ver y good condition. $1200. cutting tools, etc. (360)457-3554 (360)774-6944
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E C M R A Y A C T G T Y A N H
Accelerate, Active, Black, Bonds, Breed, Brindle, Canine, Chase, Dolichocephalic, Domestic, Energy, English, European, Fawn, Female, Fur, Gallop, Game, Gentle, Grace, Gray, Healthy, Hind, Hunt, Leash, Loving, Muzzle, Obedient, Pets, Playful, Prey, Prized, Pups, Racing, Rotary, Running, Slim, Speed, Sporting, Sprint, Stride, Track, Travel, White Yesterday’s Answer: Trucks
GALDE
APT: Large 2 br, near library, water. sewer garbage included. no smoking no pets, good references. $750. (360)461-3415
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E A E A T M O N E R A B W I E
Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.
6025 Building Materials
Sunland Amenities, $580. (360)681-3331
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by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
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605 Apartments Clallam County
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605 Apartments Clallam County
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Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app
4 Great Wall locale 5 Libyan port 6 Rear 7 63-Across exploration vehicle 8 Erie Canal city 9 Alien-seeking gp. 10 Aforementioned 11 Together 12 Group with an annual Mind Games competition 15 Volkswagen family car 18 Ten percent donation 20 From the beginning 21 The “u” sound in “census” 24 Suffix with problem 26 Help desk offering, briefly 28 Arizona tribe 30 How some pics are stored 31 La Brea stuff 32 Owns, biblically 33 Holiday carol’s “Good King” 34 Glacial ridge 35 Get rid of
9/1/15
double plot. Last one in A 1BD/1BA ...$625/M ea gr tey,/ s hi endc,l uldo en gs tgear rmVeterans area, complete only. $450. p a ck a g e w i t h d o u bl e A 2BD/1BA ...$700/M renters(360)681-3225 d e p t h l i n e r, m a r k e r, opening and closing, fiH 2BD/1BA ...$825/M 1170 Getaways nal date and setting fee. 683 Rooms to Rent Vaction Rentals $10,000. (360)304-8647. D 3BD/1BA ...$800/M Roomshares Two weeks in Paradise H 3BD/1BA ...$850/M ROOMMATE in Maui at the Kuleana 6042 Exercise WANTED H 2BD/1.5BA $850/M Resor t. November Equipment To share expenses for 6th-13th and 13th-20th. H 2/1 LK DAWN $850/M very nice home west of Take one or both weeks. P.A. on 10+ acres. $425 100.00 per night. Call R E C U M B E N T B I K E : H 3/1.5 VIEW $1100/M mo., includes utilities, Di- 360-775-8119 for more Burley, 2 wheels, 24 sp. rectTV, wifi. Must see. details. comfortable. $325/obo. H 2/2 FURNISHED $1200/M Call Lonnie after 5 p.m. (360)683-7144 (360)477-9066 6005 Antiques & H 4BD/2BA.... $1300/M SHARE HOME: Large Collectibles 6050 Firearms & H 3BD/2.5 BA CC&R’S $1800/M m a s t e r s u i t e , g a r a g e , Ammunition
1111 Caroline St. Port Angeles
E O B R I N D L E C A R G T Y
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By Mark Bickham
DOWN 1 “The __ Squad” 2 Dined 3 1995 Reform Party founder 505 Rental Houses Clallam County
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2015 B7
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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
B8 TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2015
9832 Tents & Travel Trailers
9050 Marine Miscellaneous
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS 9180 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles 9434 Pickup Trucks Classics & Collect. Others Others
UTILITY TRAILER: 16’, ramps, tandem axle, current license. $2,250. (360)460-0515
GMC: ‘03, Sonoma extended cab. Loaded 4x4 3.8 v6 automatic, three door with canopy, factor y b e d l i n e r n ew L e s Schwab tires, ice cold A/C, 6 disc factor y In dash, auto headlights, auto wipers, tilt, cruise, high low range . Sweet tr uck needs nothing 127K ml. 20mpg $7,500. firm (360)477-6218 Tom.
9802 5th Wheels A I R C O M R E S S O R : C E DA R C H E S T: 4 f t HUBCAPS: 66 Corvette Large capacity, (20 gal.) w i d e, 2 2 ” h i g h , 2 0 . 5 ” h u b c a p s , v e r y n i c e . deep, roomy. $150. Iron Force. $120. $200. (360)452-9041 (360)417-8083 (360)457-1861 IPHONE 5: Apple, VeriAIR SHOCKS: for 1999 CHAIN SAW: Homelite. zon, with accessories, $35. (360)683-2400. - 2007, Ford F250. $50. excellent conditon. $165. (360)452-4785 (360)808-6430 C H A I N S AW : Po u l a n ART: Buzz Aldrin auto- 18”, gas, 42cc. $60. LADDER: Aluminum ex(949)232-3392 graph, on 1960’s Centut e n s i o n l a d d e r, 2 5 f t ry of Progress. $200. 225lb capacity, like new. CHARGER: Makita Li(360)461-7365 $110. (360)460-4300 i o n D C 1 8 R C, b r a n d ART: Framed “Friends new, and battery. $140. LADDERS: 20 & 24 foot (360)683-7841 of the Field”, s/n and 1st extension ladders. “Crabfest” car toon. $70./$90. (949)241-0371 C H E S T : 3 D r a w e r s , $200. for both. 461.7365 white, pine, 36” wide, LAWNMOWER: CraftsBAG: Golf/travel, hardly 19” deep, 31” ht. $50. man, key start, 22” cut. (360)457-6431 u s e d , c a nva s s / ny l o n . $200. (509)366-4353 $30. (360)681-4916 COFFEE TABLE: 36 x LAZY BOY: Double reBASKETBALL HOOP: 22, light brown, wood. c l i n i n g l ove s e a t , t a n . H u f f y p r o, b a ck b o a r d $35. (360)797-1179 $200. (912)308-6910 and mounting bracket. COLLECTOR CARDS: $55. (360)683-7841 Joe Montana book and LEAF BLOWER: Craftsman, gas powered, 205 cards, career set. $45. B E D : C o m p l e t e, k i n g HP. $30 (360)457-2804 (360)452-6842 size, mattress, box s p r i n g s , h e a d b o a r d . C O M P O U N D B O W : LIGHT BULBS: 4 ft, flo$100. (360)796-3525 Graphite, like new, 8 rescent. $1 each. (360)670-3310 hunting arrows. $80. BED FRAME: Queen (360)681-4505 LOUNGE CHAIR: Patio, size, metal, on wheels. $20. (360) 683-2589 DESK: Secretary desk, folding, white and navy, 6 ft tall, 2 shelves, 2 a d j u s t a bl e, r e c l i n i n g . BIKE RACK: Bell. For drawers. $75. $20. (360)681-4916 car, like new, used one (360)681-2451 LOVESEAT: Good contime. $15. 457-2804. ELECTRIC FIREPLACE dition, cream with floral BOBBLEHEAD: Ken blue, green, wine colors. $95. (360)437-0914 Griffey Jr., ‘13 Mariners $50. (360)504-2160 Hall of Fame, new. $50. ENGINE: 1956-235 L OV E S E AT: S l e e p e r, (360)457-5790 runs, $200. 452-9041 twin bed size, with ottoB O O K C A S E S : ( 3 ) FILE CABINET: 4 Draw- man, blue. $125. Matching oak, adjustable er, metal, letter size. (912)308-6910 $65. (360)808-6430 shelves. $45 each. M A T T R E S S : Tw i n , (360)775-0855 FIRE PIT: Kettle style, North American bedding, with cover. $25. BOOKS: Harry Potter, excellent condition. $75. (360)683-2400 h a r d c o ve r, # 1 - 7 s e t . (360)683-0146 $65. (360)775-0855 FLOOR JACK: Heavy MEAT Tenderizer. $30. BOOKS: Outlander se- duty, like new. $70. (360)417-2056 (360)681-4505. ries, complete, 7 in all. MIRRORS: Pair of $35. (360)417-2056 FREE: 50 Gallon water 30x42 wooden framed BOOKS: Star Trek, 20. heater, good wor king mirrors. $45.ea or $75. $1 each. (360)797-1179 cond. (360)681-2747 for the pair. 681-8190
R E C L I N E R : L e a t h e r, very comfortable. $100. (360)461-6076 R OA S T E R : H a m i l t o n Beach, 22 quar t, like new. $30. (949)232-3392 ROTOTILLER: Honda, 2 rear tines, used twice. $200. (509)366-4353 SAW: Radial arm saw, 10”. $98, (360)457-4241 SHADES: (3) Pleated, sage green, 28.5x46 5/8”. $10 ea. 452-9146 S H E E P S K I N : L a r g e. $20. (360)683-7380 SHOP LIGHT: Fixtures, 4 foot. $5 each. (360)670-3310 SPEAKERS: Set of 4. $25. (360)683-7380 S P I R O G R A P H : Ke n ner’s #401, complete, with multi colored pens. $30. (360)797-1106 STERO: AM/FM, turntable, cassette, 8 track, speakers, vintage.$135. (360)477-1716 SWIVEL ROCKER: with matching ottoman, light blue, good shape. $40. (360)582-0723 TABLE: Eastlake, with porcelain casters, foyer style. $160. (360)683-9295 TA B L E : G l a s s t o p , wrought iron, 2 x 2 ft. $10. (360)582-0723 TABLE: Large round table with (4) chairs. $150. (425)508-7575 TABLE: Mahogany, classic round, 1 drawer, 29” rd, 27” ht. $25. (360)457-6431
BOOM CHAIN: 10’ ft. FREE: Moving boxes, wardrobes, and packing $15. (360)452-3550 supplies. (360)504-3137 BOOTS: White brand, packers, brown, excel- F R E E Z E R : J u s t l i k e new, small, 27” X 33”. lent condition. $50. $100. (360)683-4063 (360)452-4785 FUEL PUMP: working, BOOTS: Women’s, Browning, leather, worn 12 volt, universal style, model #12v 2401. $25. once, size 7C, $50. (360)797-1106 (360)582-1280 BOOTS: Women’s Kamik, fancy, waterproof, size 9, new in box. $40. (360)582-1280 BOW: Compound, Bear Polar II. $60. (949)241-0371 BOXES: with lids, good for packing or storage. $.50 ea. (360)681-2451 BUMPER: “85” 3/4 rear bu m p e r, g o o d s h a p e. $75. (360)531-0525
MISC: Craftsman, elec- TOOLS: SUN Inductivetric 3/8” drill. $10. Elec- Timing Light. CP-7501 tric knife, never used. very nice. $35 683-2639 $8. (360)683-2589. TRIPODS: Professional. MISC: Par ts, Scout II Bogen, Linhoff, Gitzo. lens, gauges and more, $200.each. whole box. $15. (360)379-4134 (360)457-2909 T R U M P E T : Ya m a h a MOCCASINS: New. 2 brass with music stand. colors, brown. Size 10. $50 (360)457-1861 GALVANIZED PIPE: 1” $10. (360)797-1179 VA C U U M : S a m s u n g and 1 1/4”. $10. MOTORCYCLE CARRI- Quiet Jet. Purple. $25. (360)452-3550 E R : F i t s 2 ” r e c e i ve r. (360)797-1179 GARAGE: Portable can- $100. (425)508-7575 VA N I T Y: A n t i q u e , 7 vas, new in box.$275 at P L A N T S T A N D S : drawer, tall mirror atCostco. $195. Wood, (2). $5 and $12. tached. $100. (360)460-0067 (360)683-9295 (360)461-6076 GARDEN CART: Large w o o d b e d w i t h 2 6 ” PLAQUE: Hood or na- VEST: Blue, large, hurrim e n t , L i n c o l n , S p i ke ance sams plus Port Anwheels. $50. Lawrence Inc., Detroit. gels patch. $20. (360)683-0146 $45. (360)452-6842 (360)452-8760 GARMIN: GPSMAP 60, w i t h m a n u a l , n e v e r P O N D : 5 x 7 , bl a ck , WA L L P L AT E S : ( 2 ) three coves. $30. Franklin Mint, Cinderella, used, $250 new, $100. (360)457-2909 new. $20. 683-7994 (360)379-0836
BUMPER POOL: Table, 5 0 ” x 3 5 ” , b a l l s, c u e s, G A R M I N : G P S M A P light. $89. 76x, marine GPS, case, (360)457-4241 m a n u a l , n eve r u s e d . $140. (360)379-0836 CAMERAS: Minox 35GL , Retina II, speed graph- GLASS CANISTERS: ic mini $100. obo. With wood lids. $15. (360)379-4134 (360)452-8760
E E F R E Eand Tuesdays A D SS R F Monday AD
POT PULLER: Gas crab WASHER: Front loader, pot puller, runs great. works great! $100. $75. (360)452-6178 L/M (360)775-1126 P R O J E C TO R : S l i d e , W I N E D E C A N T E R S : Kodak, with 3 carousels, Blue with silver overlay, and stack loader. $65. valued at $250. for $150. (360)477-1716 (360)775-2940
6140 Wanted & Trades
or FAX to: (360)417-3507 Email: classified@peninsuladailynews.com
NO PHONE CALLS
9820 Motorhomes 9820 Motorhomes
CONE PICKERS NEEDE D : Fo r D o u g l a s F i r, Grand Fir, Silver Fir and Cedar cones. Open noon to 6. Call for info. (360)-461-0951 or (360)461-5414.
SOUTHWIND: ‘00, 36’, V10, 2 slides, 6K Onan, W/D, tow pkg., levelers, kingdome, with dishes, utensils, cookware, linens, towels, and more. $29,500. (360)683-4522
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, 6135 Yard & tow Package,excellent Garden cond. Call for more det a i l s $ 3 9 , 0 0 0 . O B O. LAWNSWEEPER (360)582-6434 or Craftsmen 42” hi speed (928)210-6767 model #486.242223 Used once, Excellent C o n d i t i o n . $ 2 2 0 L i ke new, (360)681-7053.
T H O R : ‘ 1 1 Fr e e d o m Elite 31R. 10k miles, ex. cond. Good Sam ext. warranty until 75k miles or 1/2019. RV Navigator, back up camera, tailgater Dish Network TV, Sup e r s l i d e a n d DV D player, tow car trailer inc. $56,000. (360)808-7337
WANTED: Single/Twin bed in good condition with mattress and box spring. (360)683-2958
RIDING MOWER: 1950 Wheelhorse. Excel. condition. $500 firm. (360)670-6421
7030 Horses Q H M a r e : fo r l e a s e , needs experienced rider. Within riding distance of trails. Call for more details. 417-7685 weekdays.
7035 General Pets 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.
7045 Tack, Feed & Supplies Horse Trailer: 2 horse straight load, Thoroughbred height. Tandem axle, new tires. $1,300.00. 417-7685 weekdays.
9832 Tents & Travel Trailers
KOMFORT: ‘02 34’ triple 9817 Motorcycles slide. New appliances, good shape. $12,000. HARLEY DAVIDSON: Will deliver. 461-4374 ‘ 0 4 L o w R i d e r. 3 7 0 0 ROCKWOOD, ‘10, 5th miles, loaded, $8,500. (360)460-6780 wheel, 26’, many extras, b e l o w b o o k va l u e @ H A R L E Y DAV I D S O N : $23,000. (360)457-5696. ‘06, XL1200 Spor tster. T E R RY: ‘ 9 6 , 2 6 ’ 5 t h $5,900. (360)452-6677 Wheel. $4,500/obo. H A R L E Y DAV I D S O N (360)640-0111 ‘93, Wide glide, black with chrome. $10,500 9808 Campers & /obo. (360)477-3670.
Canopies
Harley Wide Glide: ‘93 well maintained Low CAMPER: ‘88 Conasto- miles, custom paint exga cab-over. Self con- tras. $6,800 TEXT 360t a i n e d , g r e a t s h a p e . 300-7587 $2,000. 683-8781 HD: ‘81 XLS Sportster. CAMPER: Outdoors1,000 cc, 9K. $2,500. man, bed, refrigerator, (360)683-5449 stove. $1,500. (360)912-2441 HILLCLIMB Sept. 5 & 6. Gates open FLEETWOOD: ‘01 Tent 7 a.m. Entrance 1 mi. up Trailer. Great condition Deer Park Rd., P.A. Fol$3,500 Brenda 360-461- low signs. 1st bike up at 3668 or Duane 360-461- 10 a.m. (360)417-7509. 3433. H O N DA : ‘ 8 4 S a b r e, L A N C E : ‘ 8 6 , 1 1 ’ w i t h 1100cc. runs excellent. truck, Ford F250, ‘02. $1,100. (360)775-6075 $11,000. (360)683-9015 TRUCK CAMPER: ‘08 Northstar TC650 pop-up slide in truck camper. This camper is in EXCELLENT/like new condition. Asking $13,500 O B O, s e r i o u s bu ye r s only please. I can be reached @ (253)861-6862
9050 Marine Miscellaneous BAYLINER: ‘81, 21’ and trailer, hull is sound, eng i n e a n d o u t d r i ve i n good shape. $1,800. (360)681-2747 BOAT: 10’ Spor t Cat, ‘97, Fiberglass, electric trolling motor, oars, battery and charger, load ramp. $650. (360)681-4766 BOAT: 12’ Aluminum, with 5hp motor, on trailer, $1,500. (360)683-9015 BOAT: 16’ Fiberglass ‘78 Larson, 40 horse Mercur y motor, Eagle Depth finder, with Trailer. $1600.00. 417-7685 weekdays
BOAT: ‘88 Invader, 16’, 1 6 5 H P M e r c r u i s e r, open bow, low hours. $2,900. (360)452-5419. B O AT : S e a r a y, 1 8 ’ , 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 1 5 1 8 W. 1 1 t h a l l e y. $20,000/obo. (360)457-9162
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.
B OAT T R A I L E R : ‘ 9 9 , 20’ Heavy duty, custom. $1,500. (360)775-6075 FIBERFORM: ‘78, 24’ Cuddy Cabin, 228 Mercruiser I/O, ‘07 Mercury 9.9hp, electronics, d o w n r i g g e r s . $11,000/obo 797-0013
KAYAKS: 2 Eddy Line, FLEETWOOD: ‘00, 26’, 17.5’ and 14’. $1,200 ea. Slideout. $6.900. (360)504-2783 (360)452-6677 FLEETWOOD: ‘06 Pioneer, 180CK, 22’ Travel Trailer. Very clean with sofa bed, dinette, queen, and top bunk. Rear bath, tub, shower, range, oven, and microwave. Stereo, patio awning, A/C, aluminum diamond plate rock guard, mini blinds, and more. Well maintained. $8,295. Please call (360)8086945.
WINNEBAGO ‘02, BRAVE, 33’,. Class A, Model 32V, Ford V10 gas engine with 2 slides, Onan Generator, rear camera, tow package, l eve l e r s. S l e e p s t wo, dinner for 4, party for six, 42.8K miles, $29,800. (407)435-8157 NO TEXTING PARK MODEL: Custom GMC: 26’ Motorhome. built ‘05 Nor’wester, 12’ 1976. $16,500. wide park model. Porch, (360)683-8530 deck, metal awning, heat pump/ac, many extras. MOTORHOME: ‘96 30ft. $42,500. (360)732-4120 Southwind Stor m. 51k miles. Custom interior, TENT TRAILER: ‘08 Roadmaster towing sys- W I N N E B A G O : ‘ 8 7 R o c k w o o d Fr e e d o m . tem, Banks Power Pack Chieftain, 27’, 37,250 Sleeps 8, tip out, stove, and other extras. Very orig. miles, low hours on gas/elec. fridge, furnace, g e n e r a t o r , n i c e l y toilet with shower, king nice cond. $18,500. equipped kitchen, in- and queen beds with (360)681-7824 cludes TV and micro- heated mattresses. OutMOTORHOME: Damon wave. New ver y comside gas bbq and show‘95 Intruder. 34’, Cum- fortable queen mattress, er. Great cond. $6,495. mins Diesel, 2 air condi- lots of extras. $10,500. (360)452-6304 tioners, satellite dish, re(360)461-3088 built generator, all new TRAILER: ‘89, 25’ Hi-Lo f i l t e r s a n d n ew t i r e s Voyager, completely re9832 Tents & $19,000/obo. conditioned, new tires, (360)683-8142 Travel Trailers AC, customized hitch. $4,750. (360)683-3407. MOTORHOME: Dodge ‘76 Class C. 26’, new CAR DOLLY: STEHLTOW. B l u e c a r d o l l y. tires, low miles, nonTRAILER: ‘99 Sierra, smoker, in PA. $2,500 Good condition, $600. 25’, needs TLC. (919)-616-2567 firm. (360)460-7442. $6,000/obo. 417-0803. 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
FORD: 1929-30 Custom Model A Roadster. Perfect interior, very clean, r uns great on Nissan p i ck u p r u n n i n g g e a r. Owner sunny day driver only. Teal green, black fenders vinyl top. SKI BOAT: ‘73 Kona. $25,700 Real eye catch18’ classic jet ski boat. e r. ( 3 6 0 ) 7 7 5 - 7 5 2 0 o r 500 c.i. olds. engine. (360)457-3161. B e r k l e y p u m p . To o Forest River: Lite, ‘00, much to mention, needs FORD: 1929 Model A 21’ clean, 8’ slide, sleeps upholstry. $2500. Roadster, full fendered, 6, everything in excellent (209)768-1878 all mustang running condition. $7,000. gear. $16,500. 460-8610 (360)452-2148
B OAT: ‘ 7 4 L i g h t n i n g sailboat, 19’. On trailer. $1000 obo. 460-6231
5A246724
• 2 Ads Per Week • No Pets, Livestock, • 3 Lines Garage Sales • Private Party Only or Firewood
ALPENLITE: ‘93 5th wheel, 24’. New hot water heater, fridge, stove, toilet, twin mattresses (2), shocks. Roof resealed, includes 5th wheel tailgate and 5th wheel hitch. $7,000. (360)452-2705
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
Mail to: Bring your ads to: Peninsula Daily News Peninsula Daily News PO Box 1330 305 West 1st St., PA Port Angeles, WA 98362
S E E D R A E F E E R E F FR For items $200 and under
5TH WHEEL: 2000, For- SEARAY, ‘88 Sundancest Ranger, 24’, 6 berth, er, boathoused in PA, 800 engine hr., $21,000. slide out, A/C. $6500. (541)840-1122 (360)797-1458
NEW: Briggs and Stratton shr imp and c ra b p u l l e r, 3 . 5 h p. $600. (360)452-2705
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
TOYOTA: ‘14 Prius C. 1200 miles, like new, with warranty. $17,900. (360)683-2787 V W: ‘ 1 3 J e t t a T D I , 4 door, diesel, sunroof, GPS, 75K miles. $24,000. (320)232-5436
9556 SUVs Others
CHEVY: ‘99 Suburban, 4 W D, V 8 , s e a t s 8 . $3,200. (360)808-2061 J E E P : ‘ 0 5 , W ra n g l e r, hard top, 6 sp. manual, 43K ml. $16,000. (360)457-9402
9730 Vans & Minivans Others
CHRYSLER: ‘98 Minivan, great shape, clean. $3400. (360)477-2562
DODGE: ‘88 Caravan, runs good, would make a g o o d d e l i ve r y va n . $1,000. (360)460-6381
9935 General Legals
Eliza Rivas, pursuant to Quileute Law and Order Code, section 18.03(b), you are hereby notified that a confidential and mandatory court appearance in a civil matter in which you are named as a party has been scheduled for September 8th, 2015 at 2:45pm at the Quileute Tribal Court in La Push, Washington. Pub: August 20, 21, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 30, 31, September 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, 2015 Legal No.652317
FORD: ‘70, 500, 4dr.,3 9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices speed stick, 302, new Clallam County Clallam County K AWA S A K I : ‘ 0 6 N o - ex h a u s t , n ew t i r e s / mad. Very clean. Lots of wheels. $2,650. Case No.: 15-4-00265-1 PROBATE NOTICE TO extras. $6,000 obo. (360)452-4156 or CREDITORS (RCW 11.40.030) In the Superior Mike at (360)477-2562 (360)681-7478 Court of the State of Washington in and for the County of Clallam in Re the Estate of Penny CarSUZUKI: ‘00 600 Katalene Huether, Deceased. na. 5k ml. $2,200. The personal representative named below has (707)241-5977 been appointed as personal representative of this estate. Any person having a claim against the deYAMAHA: ‘04, WR450F, cedent must, before the time the claim would be well taken care of , has barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limall the extras, street legal. $3,500. itations, present the claim in the manner as provid(360)683-8183 ed in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to SEAT: ‘69, 600D. Made the personal representative or the personal reprein Spain, Everything re- sentative’s lawyer at the address stated below a done. $9,000/obo. copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim 9805 ATVs (360)379-0593 with the court in which the probate proceedings were commenced. The claim must be presented S T U D E B A K E R : G T within the later of: (1) thirty days after the personal ATV: Stolen Joyner ATV H aw k , 1 9 6 2 , $ 6 , 2 0 0 . representative served or mailed the notice to the and Trailer. Arizona Licreditor as provided under RCW 11.40.020(i)(c); or cense plate. REWARD Call for details. (360)452-3488 (2) four months after the date of first publication of $500 for information and conviction of the person the notice. If the claim is not presented within this or person that unlawfully VW: ‘85 Cabriolet, con- time frame, the claim is forever barred, except as vertable., Red, new tires removed the ATV and o t h e r w i s e p r ov i d e d i n R C W 1 1 . 4 0 . 0 5 1 a n d Trailer from N Beach Dr / b a t t e r y , 5 s p . 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against ( B r i d g e h a v e n C o m . ) $1,900/obo both the decedent’s probate and nonprobate as(360)683-7144 Contact Jefferson Cty., sets. Sheriff Dept. 385-3831 Date of first publication: September 1, 2015 or owner 360-437-9577 VW: Karmann Ghia, Eric S. Huether, Personal Representative ‘74. $4,500. Lawyer for Est: Robert N. Tulloch, #9436 (360)457-7184 GREENAWAY, GAY & TULLOCH 9742 Tires & 829 East Eighth St., Suite A Wheels Port Angeles, WA 98362 9292 Automobiles (360) 452-3323 TIRES: Goodyear Eagle PUB: September 1, 8, 15, 2015 Legal No: 654129 Others F1, (2) P275/35Z/R18’s PUBLIC NOTICE TO WAVE TV CUSTOMERS with 3/8” tread, (2) P 3 2 5 / 3 0 Z / R 1 9 ’s w i t h B U I C K : R e a t t a ‘ 9 0 , Conv, mint cond 106km, Due to programming cost increases from TV net1/4” tread. In Sequim $7000. Pics. (360)681- works owned by A&E Networks, Discovery Commu$300. (360)683-4115. 6388. jimfromsequim nications, Disney/ESPN, FOX Broadcasting Com@olympus.net pany, HBO, NBCUniversal, Scripps Networks 9180 Automobiles Interactive, Turner Broadcasting System, Viacom, CADILLAC: ‘89 Coupe Classics & Collect. regional sports programmers, and independent Deville, 2 door, only 2 channel providers, Wave’s Cable TV rates will be owners, tan, very good adjusted in October. cond. New tires. $2,500. (360)796-0588 or At Wave, we offer our Expanded Content TV pro912-3937. gramming tier to customers at a subscription price that is directly equal to the cost we pay for the conC H E V Y: ‘ 0 6 I m p a l a , tent included. When network owners increase their 3.5L-V6 engine, 53K ml. monthly fees to us, we pass through the new rate to 4 - d o o r , v e r y n i c e . those customers that subscribe to that tier of ser$5,900. (360)457-3230. vice. To make it easy to understand the passedthrough programming costs paid to cable networks, D O D G E : ‘ 0 6 G r a n d this information is detailed on each customer’s bill. Caravan SE Minivan 3.3L V6, automatic, new At Wave, our number one goal is creating happy, tires, privacy glass, key- long-term customers. We work diligently on our less entry, power win1930 Model A: In ex- dows, door locks, and customers’ behalf to manage TV programming ceptional condition, new- mirrors, stow-n-go seat- costs, while seeking more choices. Unfortunately, l y r e b u i l t e n g i n e . ing, cruise control, tilt, cable television networks continue to increase their fees and require us to bundle their channels togeth$19,000. Call Jim. a i r c o n d i t i o n i n g , c d er which limits your choice in selecting the program(360)301-4581 stereo, dual front airming you want to watch. For more information on bags. 88k ml. the costs associated with TV programming, please $7,995 visit www.wavebroadband.com/content. GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 Further details, including alternate entertainment graymotors.com options, will be included in your October bill statement. DODGE: ‘73, Dart, good condition, runs well, b e n c h s e a t , 8 8 K m l . Thank you for choosing Wave. BMW: ‘07 Z4 3.0 SI R o a d s t e r. 4 7 K m i l e s, w e l l m a i n t a i n e d , l i ke new. $19,999. (360)477-4573
O F F S H O R E S a i l b o a t CHEVY: ‘49 Truck 3/4 wanted. 27’-37’ ft. Up to ton, complete rebuilt, $30K (360)775-7146 piper red, great condition, 235 cu 6 cylinder, PEDDLE Boat: on trail- engine with low miles, er, like new, $2,000/obo. 12 volt system, long bed (360)452-8607 with oak, $14,000. (360)461-6076 PORTA-BOTE: 10’, excellent condition, stable, CHEVY: ‘56 Pickup, re2010 Suzuki 2.5hp mo- stored, 350 V8, AOD, tor, 4 cycle, less than 20 IFS. $18,000/obo. hrs. $1,100 for both. (360)683-7192 (360)452-3729 C H E V Y : ‘ 5 7 B e l a i r, 2 door, hardtop project. Fresh 327 / Muncie 4 sp., 12 bolt, 4:11 posi rear - complete and solid. $9,500. (360)452-9041 CHEVY: ‘77 Corvette, ttops, 65K original ml., 6K on rebuilt engine, 350 cubic inch / 350 hp, s e c o n d o w n e r, n ew brake system, new suspension, flowmasters, exc. condition, must see. $12,500/obo. S I LV E R S T R E A K : 1 7 ’ (360)437-4065 H a r d t o p, a l u m i n u m . Brand new, 4 hrs. on JAGUAR: ‘83, 350 Che115 hp, plus 9.9 Yama- vy engine and transmish a , f u l l y e q u i p p e d . sion, many new par ts. $2,500/obo. (360)452$40,000. 4156 or (360)681-7478. (360)683-8668
SAILBOAT: ‘04 WWP19 5hp mtr, trailer, new radio and stereo. Ready to sail, garaged. $6,200. hermhalbach@wavecable.com or (360)504-2226
FORD: ‘86 F250, 4x4, 4 speed, with canopy, 6.9 D i e s e l , 8 , 0 0 0 l b wa r n winch, 16’ custom aluminum wheels, exel. tires. Clean interior. $6,500 obo (206)795-5943 after 4:30pm weekdays.
FORD: ‘95 F150. New H O N DA : ‘ 0 6 A c c o r d . engine has 12K miles on C l e a n , l o w m i l e a g e . it. $5,500. $10,000 OBO cash. (360)457-3503 (360)374-5060 FORD: ‘97 Diesel 4WD HYUNDAI: ‘92 Sonata, Power stroke with bedl o w m i l e s , 5 s p. d e - liner, canopy, new tires, transmission overhauled pendable. $1,250. $6,800. (360)461-3232 (360)775-8251
JEEP: ‘99 Grand Cherokee Limited 4X4 4.0L inline 6, automatic, alloy wheels, good tires, tow package, keyless entry, tinted windows, roof rack, power windows, door locks, and mirrors, power programmable heated leather seats, cruise control, tilt, air conditioning, pioneer cd stereo, dual front airbags. $4,995 GRAY MOTORS FORD: 1950 Original 457-4901 Convertible. Beige interigraymotors.com or and top on burgundy restoration featured in B u l b H o r n m a g a z i n e. KIA: ‘05 Sedona, 66K Appeared in ads ran by ml., Silver/Green, Bon Marche. Mechani- $3,800. (360)912-1847 cally sound and clean. or (575)763-3449. Owner restored. $26,700. (360)775-7520 TOYOTA: ‘02 Tacoma or (360)457-3161. Standard Cab Shortbox 2WD - 2.4L 4 cylinder, 5 F O R D : 1 9 5 2 P i c k u p, speed manual, matchMustang front, 302, C4, ing fiberglass canopy, 9” Ford rearend. $7,500. bed mat, air condition460-8610 ing, cassette stereo, dual front airbags. $6,995 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com
FORD: ‘62 Thunderbird. Landau 116K mi. powder blue, white vinyl, new int., clean engine and trunk. $18,500. (360)385-5694
CHEVY: ‘85, 4x4, many new parts. $1,700. (360)452-4156 or (360)681-7478.
$5,000. (360)797-1179.
1-866-WAVE-123 Pub: September 1, 2015 Legal No.652827 FORD: ‘01 Crown Victoria, LX, 113K ml., origi- SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON FOR nal owner. $3,900. CLALLAM COUNTY (360)461-5661 In re the Estate of Greta Ann Doutre Cook, Deceased. FORD: ‘91 Thunderbird NO. 14-4-00114-2 PROBATE NOTICE TO Sport. High output 5 liter CREDITORS RCW 11.40.030 V- 8 , Au t o m a t i c, r u n s The Administrator named below has been appointgood. $995. 460-0783 ed as Administrator of this estate. Any person having a claim against the decedent must, before the FORD: ‘92 Thunderbird. time the claim would be barred by any otherwise Low mileage. $2,000. applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in (360)461-2809 or 461- the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serv0533 ing on or mailing to the Administrator or the Administrator’s attorney at the address stated below a G M C : ‘ 0 1 S i e r r a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim 2500HD extended cab with the court in which the probate proceedings slt longbed 4x4 - 6.0l were commenced. The claim must be presented vor tec v8, automatic, within the later of: (1) Thirty days after the Adminisk & n i n t a k e , a l l o y trator served or mailed the notice to the creditor as wheels, new tires, run- provided under RCW 11.40.020(1)(c); or (2) four ning boards, tow pack- months after the date of first publication of the noage, canopy, bed mat, tice. If the claim is not presented within this time privacy glass, keyless frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherentry, 4 opening doors, wise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. power windows, door This bar is effective as to claims against both the locks, and mirrors, pow- decedent’s probate and nonprobate assets. er programmable heat- Date of First Publication: September 1, 2015 ed leather seats, cruise Administrator: control, tilt, air condi- David Doutre t i o n i n g , c d / c a s s e t t e Attorney for Administrator: s t e r e o, o n s t a r, d u a l Stephen C. Moriarty, WSBA #18810 front airbags. Address for mailing or service: $10,995 PLATT IRWIN LAW FIRM GRAY MOTORS 403 S. Peabody, 457-4901 Port Angeles, WA 98362 graymotors.com (360) 457-3327 Court of Probate Proceedings: Clallam County HONDA CIVIC: ‘04 Hy- Superior Court brid, one owner, excel., Probate Cause Number: 14-4-00114-2 cond., $6500. 683-7593 Pub. September 1, 8, 15, 2015. Legal No. 654013
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FALL/WINTER EDITION 2014 - 2015
NORTH OLYMPIC PENINSULA GUIDE PORT TOWNSEND/JEFFERSON COUNTY | SEQUIM/DUNGENESS VALLEY PORT ANGELES | FORKS/WEST END | NORTH/WEST COAST | VICTORIA
13th annual
Dungeness Crab & Seafood Festival Friday 12:30 p.m. - 10 p.m. Saturday 10 a.m. - 10 p.m. Sunday 10 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Held rain or shine on the Port Angeles waterfront. Food, crafts, music, cooking demonstrations, chowder cook-off and more!
SUPPORT
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Awareness month
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FALL/WINTER 2015/2016
PRESENTING SPONSORS: M.V. COHO
Produced by Olympic Peninsula Celebrations and the Port Angeles Regional Chamber of Commerce An advertising supplement produced by Peninsula Daily News
Talk to your advertising representative about which special sections are best for you In Port Angeles/ Western Clallam, call
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NEXT ISSUE Peninsula Daily News: Friday, October 02 Kitsap Newspapers: Friday, October 02 Sequim Gazette: Wednesday, October 07 Advertising Deadline: Tuesday, Sept 8, 2015
Show your support and help spread the word that early detection is the key NEXT ISSUE Sequim Gazette: Wednesday, Oct. 7 Peninsula Daily News Friday, Oct. 9 Advertising Deadline: Thursday, Sept 10, 2015
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B10
WeatherWatch
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2015 Neah Bay 63/50
g Bellingham 65/52
Yesterday
➡
Olympic Peninsula TODAY Port Townsend 64/51
Port Angeles 65/50
Sequim Olympics 64/49 Snow level: 7,500 feet Port Ludlow 65/52
Forks 64/49
➡
Aberdeen 64/51
National forecast Nation TODAY
Forecast highs for Tuesday, Sept. 1
Last
New
First
Sunny
Billings 91° | 56°
San Francisco 68° | 59°
Minneapolis 88° | 69°
Denver 85° | 57°
Chicago 90° | 71°
Los Angeles 78° | 68°
Miami 89° | 79°
Fronts
Low 50 Showers likely
64/48 Puddles might start to form
65/49 More rain falls
Marine Conditions
SATURDAY
63/48 Sun peeks out to say hello
65/48 Break out the shades
CANADA
Seattle 68° | 58° Olympia 67° | 57°
Spokane 74° | 50°
Tacoma 65° | 58° Yakima 74° | 49°
Astoria 64° | 56°
ORE.
TODAY High Tide Ht 2:43 a.m. 8.6’ 3:09 p.m. 8.9’
© 2015 Wunderground.com
TOMORROW
Albany, N.Y. Albuquerque Amarillo Anchorage Asheville Atlanta Atlantic City Austin Baltimore Billings Birmingham Bismarck Boise Boston Brownsville
83 92 87 57 77 74 88 92 86 83 74 98 80 88 90
64 65 61 43 61 67 74 67 73 54 69 66 54 71 73
7:55 p.m. 6:33 a.m. 9:37 p.m. 11:31 a.m.
Lo
Prc Otlk PCldy Cldy Clr Clr .08 Cldy .64 Cldy Cldy Cldy Cldy Cldy Cldy PCldy Clr Clr .22 Cldy
THURSDAY
Low Tide Ht 8:58 a.m. 0.7’ 9:33 p.m. -0.6’
High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht 3:36 a.m. 8.1’ 9:44 a.m. 0.1’ 3:53 p.m. 8.9’ 10:26 p.m. -0.5’
High Tide Ht Low Tide 4:33 a.m. 7.4’ 10:30 a.m. 4:41 p.m. 8.7’ 11:24 p.m.
Ht 1.0’ -0.2’
Port Angeles
5:06 a.m. 6.2’ 11:08 a.m. 1.2’ 5:32 p.m. 7.0’ 11:49 p.m. 0.9’
6:11 a.m. 6.0’ 11:56 a.m. 2.2’ 6:10 p.m. 7.0’
7:22 a.m. 5.8’ 12:44 a.m. 6:50 p.m. 6.8’ 12:49 p.m.
0.5’ 3.1’
Port Townsend
6:43 a.m. 7.7’ 12:10 a.m. 1.6’ 7:09 p.m. 8.7’ 12:21 p.m. 1.3’
7:48 a.m. 7.4’ 7:47 p.m. 8.6’
1:02 a.m. 1.0’ 1:09 p.m. 2.4’
8:59 a.m. 7.2’ 8:27 p.m. 8.4’
1:57 a.m. 2:02 p.m.
0.5’ 3.5’
Dungeness Bay*
5:49 a.m. 6.9’ 11:43 a.m. 1.2’ 6:15 p.m. 7.8’
6:54 a.m. 6.7’ 12:24 a.m. 0.9’ 6:53 p.m. 7.7’ 12:31 p.m. 2.2’
8:05 a.m. 6.5’ 7:33 p.m. 7.6’
1:19 a.m 1:24 p.m.
0.5’ 3.1’
LaPush
*To correct for Sequim Bay, add 15 minutes for high tide, 21 minutes for low tide.
Warm Stationary
Pressure Low
High
Sep 21 Sep 27
Sunset today Sunrise tomorrow Moonrise today Moonset tomorrow Hi
Victoria 66° | 54°
Ocean: W wind to 10 kt becoming SW. Wind waves 1 to 2 ft. W swell 7 ft at 11 seconds. Rain. At night, SW wind 15 to 20 kt easing to 5 to 15 kt. Wind waves 1 to 3 ft. W swell 7 ft at 11 seconds.
Sep 12
Nation/World
Washington TODAY
Strait of Juan de Fuca: Light wind becoming W 5 to 15 kt. Wind waves less than 1 ft becoming 2 ft or less. A chance of rain. At night, W wind 20 to 25 kt easing to 10 to 20 kt after midnight. Wind waves 2 to 4 ft.
Tides
FRIDAY
Sep 3
-10s
-0s
Buffalo 79 Burlington, Vt. 83 Casper 92 Charleston, S.C. 79 Charleston, W.Va. 83 Charlotte, N.C. 83 Cheyenne 92 Chicago 77 Cincinnati 86 Cleveland 85 Columbia, S.C. 80 Columbus, Ohio 85 Concord, N.H. 85 Dallas-Ft Worth 97 Dayton 86 Denver 96 Des Moines 79 Detroit 85 Duluth 81 El Paso 93 Evansville 86 Fairbanks 48 Fargo 88 Flagstaff 78 Grand Rapids 78 Great Falls 81 Greensboro, N.C. 83 Hartford Spgfld 88 Helena 80 Honolulu 91 Houston 91 Indianapolis 87 Jackson, Miss. 96 Jacksonville 84 Juneau 50 Kansas City 85 Key West 85 Las Vegas 101
65 61 61 74 66 67 63 60 64 67 70 66 58 74 65 66 68 66 64 71 66 37 66 51 62 51 67 64 50 81 71 67 70 73 46 69 81 81
0s
10s
20s 30s 40s
50s 60s
70s
80s 90s 100s 110s
Cartography © Weather Underground / The Associated Press
7.06 .11
.07 2.22 .01
.17
.17 .18 .13
1.19 1.07 .66
Clr PCldy PCldy Rain Cldy Cldy Cldy Clr PCldy PCldy Cldy PCldy Clr PCldy PCldy Cldy PCldy PCldy PCldy PCldy PCldy Cldy Cldy Rain Clr Cldy Cldy PCldy Cldy Cldy Cldy Cldy PCldy Rain Rain PCldy Cldy Clr
à 115 in Death Valley, Calif. Ä 30 in Stanley, Idaho
Atlanta 89° | 66°
El Paso 97° | 69° Houston 85° | 74°
Full
New York 91° | 74°
Detroit 87° | 66°
Washington D.C. 93° | 69°
Cartography C artogra artography t phy by y Keith Keith ith Thorpe Th horp / © Peninsula Daily News h
WEDNESDAY THURSDAY
Cloudy
The Lower 48 TEMPERATURE EXTREMES for the contiguous United States:
Cold
TUESDAY
Pt. Cloudy
Seattle 68° | 58°
Almanac
Brinnon 66/50
OUTDOOR BURN BAN IN EFFECT PENINSULA-WIDE
Statistics for the 24-hour period ending at noon yesterday. Hi Lo Rain YTD Port Angeles 69 53 0.00 14.50 Forks 69 52 0.60 43.42 Seattle 68 55 0.35 20.18 Sequim 65 56 0.01 8.32 Hoquiam 68 56 0.09 21.95 Victoria 66 55 0.00 14.62 Port Townsend 70 59 **0.00 9.01
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Little Rock 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
96 90 85 91 91 84 91 72 81 79 91 90 86 93 90 77 88 73 91 108 84 81 73 89 86 99 85 90 90 89 91 88 94 81 74 89 86 77
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
94 72 PCldy 71 PCldy Shreveport 76 64 Clr 70 Cldy Sioux Falls 80 60 PCldy 68 PCldy Syracuse 89 75 .80 Rain 63 Clr Tampa 85 64 PCldy 70 PCldy Topeka Tucson 99 76 Cldy 78 .10 PCldy 89 69 Clr 67 Clr Tulsa Cldy 60 Clr Washington, D.C. 87 75 84 69 Clr 63 Cldy Wichita 88 66 PCldy 65 Cldy Wilkes-Barre Wilmington, Del. 89 74 Cldy 75 PCldy 74 .13 Cldy _______ 75 Cldy 55 PCldy Hi Lo Otlk 66 Clr Auckland 59 50 Sh 65 Clr Beijing 84 64 Cldy 75 .01 Rain Berlin 85 55 Ts 52 PCldy Brussels 65 50 Sh 76 Cldy Cairo 96 74 Clr 86 Clr Calgary 70 48 Sh 66 Cldy Guadalajara 78 60 Ts 61 Clr Hong Kong 86 81 Ts 61 .04 Cldy Jerusalem 86 68 Clr 70 PCldy Johannesburg 79 44 Clr 67 1.44 Rain Kabul 87 52 Clr 67 PCldy London 65 49 Sh 55 Clr Mexico City 76 59 Ts 73 Cldy Montreal 83 66 Clr 60 Clr Moscow 65 49 Cldy 75 PCldy New Delhi 98 83 Clr 76 2.06 Rain Paris 71 48 Clr 64 Clr Rio de Janeiro 87 66 Clr 75 Cldy Rome 93 64 Clr 70 Cldy San Jose, CRica 83 67 Ts 60 Clr Sydney 66 53 Clr 79 PCldy Tokyo 86 73 PCldy 59 .02 Cldy Toronto 80 65 Clr 62 Cldy Vancouver 64 53 Rain
Briefly . . . Olympic UFO meeting set for Saturday PORT TOWNSEND — There will be an Olympic UFO Meet-Up at the Quaker Meeting House, 1841 Sheridan Ave., from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday. Maurene Morgan will present a program on “A Day in the Life of a Mutual UFO Network (MUFON) Field Investigator.” Morgan shows an excerpt from a TV show Hanger 1 episode and then compares it with the procedures that field investigators use from. She also will talk about the mysterious “silent explosion” that occurred near Port Townsend on Aug. 2, according to a news release. For more information about the Olympic UFO Meet-Up or the location of the after-meeting group, phone 360-344-2991 or email olympic.ufo@gmail. com.
NEWCOMERS
HELP PETS
Port Angeles Newcomers’ Club President Maggie Philbin, left, and board member Lynn Bender, far right, present a $100 check to Welfare for Animals Guild treasurer MaryAnn Langan, second from left, and WAG director/trainer Barb Brabant. The donation will be used to help pets in need at the nonprofit.
Aerie, 2843 E. Myrtle St., starting at 9:30 a.m. Sunday. The public is invited PORT ANGELES — The Port Angeles Eagles will host and there is no entry fee. A barbecue is available a car show at the Eagles
Car show Sunday
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Scholarship award PORT ANGELES — Brianna Miller has been awarded the Sons of Italy Elena Buonpane Memorial Scholarship of $700 for the 2015-16 academic year. Miller is the daughter of
BANQUET ROOM AVAILABLE
360.452.3928
Shane and Coral Miller and is a recent graduate of Port Angeles High School. She has been involved in a variety of community activities, including the Girl Scouts, 4-H and various events with the high school band. Miller will be attending Western Washington University with an interest in
at noon for $5. For more information, phone 360-460-5359.
HARDWOODS • CARPETS • LAMINATES
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elementary education. The Elena Buonpane Memorial Scholarship honors a charter member of the Sons of Italy organization from Forks and is awarded to a local student with Italian heritage who is attending college. The local chapter of the Sons of Italy meets monthly on the third Sunday of the month at the United Methodist Church Hall. For more information about future scholarships or meetings, phone Don Zanon at 360-452-8677.
Her first book of poetry, Commotion of Wings, was published in 2010 by Main Street Rag as an Editor’s Choice. In 2014, her poem “Smaller” was nominated for a Pushcart Prize. There is a suggested donation of $3 to $5 for the readings. All proceeds will support the arts center. For more information, phone Bill Mawhinney at 360-302-1159 or visit www. northwindarts.org.
Rock, gem show
PORT ANGELES — The Clallam County Gem & PORT TOWNSEND — Mineral Association will The Northwest Reading present the Rock, Gem and Series on Thursday, Sept. Jewelry Show at the Vern 10, will feature Dan Butter- Burton Community Center, worth and Colette Tennant. 308 E. Fourth St., on SaturThe reading starts at day and Sunday, Sept. 7 p.m. at the Northwind 12-13. Arts Center, 701 Water St. The show is from 9 a.m. Butterworth teaches lit- to 6 p.m. Sept. 12 and from erature and creative writ10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sept. 13. ing at Gonzaga University Admission is free. in Spokane. The show, featuring the Algonquin Books and Puget Sound Flint KnapLost Horse Press have pub- pers, will offer demonstralished his creative nonfictions on wire wrapping, tion and books of poems. flint knapping and more. Tennant is an English Children get free rocks professor at Corban Uniwhile supplies last. versity in Salem, Ore., Lunch is available, and where she teaches literathere will be raffle drawture as well as creative ings. writing. She also teaches For more information, art history and literature phone Jennie Bourassa at through their overseas pro- 360-681-0372 or Kathy gram Ambex in Germany, Schreiner at 360-681-3811. Austria and Italy. Peninsula Daily News
Double reading