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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS July 11, 2016 | 75¢

Port Angeles-Sequim-West End

Kilmer backs bill on timber

Performing with fire

Clallam Bay baton-twirler Rainee Signor works with flaming batons in the Clallam Bay-Sekiu Fun Days Grand parade Saturday in Clallam Bay. Signor earned her way to a national competition taking place in Alabama this week by placing in a regional championship for batontwirlers.

Measure could help rural towns BY ROB OLLIKAINEN PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

LONNIE ARCHIBALD/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Man convicted of charges in Clallam charged in killing Palmer was being held Sunday on $500,000 bond in the Missoula County jail after an initial appearance in MisMISSOULA, Mont. –– A man who soula County Justice Court on Wedneswas convicted as a juvenile of raping a day. child in Clallam County is charged with killing a 5-month-old baby boy in Mis- March 30 call soula, Mont. When Missoula officers responded to Marc Allen Palmer, 25, has been charged with one count of deliberate homi- a call March 30 that an infant wasn’t cide in the death of 5-month-old Brayden breathing, they noted suspicious bruisBeal, according to an affidavit of probable ing around the baby’s mouth, the affidacause filed by Jason Marks, chief deputy vit says. county attorney in Missoula County. The child was transported to a hospital BY JESSE MAJOR

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

where the 5-monthold baby was pronounced dead. An autopsy performed at the Montana State Crime Lab confirmed the bruising and the medical examiner determined the cause of death was asphyxia by Palmer smothering. TURN

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PORT ANGELES — U.S. Rep. Derek Kilmer is among members of Congress who have introduced a bill to accelerate wood building construction and help rural communities affected by mill closures. Kilmer, D-Gig Harbor, and three congressional colleagues introduced Wednesday bipartisan legislation that would create federal grants to encourage the use of less expensive and less carbon-intensive construction materials in tall buildings. The Timber Innovation Act (H.R. 5628) would spur Kilmer the use of highly flexible, sturdy and flame-resistant modern wood products such as cross-laminated timber in buildings over 85 feet, according to a joint news release. “Folks in my region don’t want the top export of our rural communities to be young people,” said Kilmer, whose 6th Congressional District covers the North Olympic Peninsula. “Now we have an opportunity to grow the timber industry in a way that doesn’t put conservation at odds with job creation.” Kilmer authored a provision in the bill that would provide grants for retrofitting shuttered mills in rural areas affected by reduced timber harvests.

Local help? The provision could help cities such as Forks and Port Angeles, which have lost mills in recent years, according to Kilmer’s office. Introducing the bill with Kilmer were Suzan DelBene, D-Medina, Cathy McMorris Rodgers, R-Colville, and Glenn “G.T.” Thompson, R-Pa.

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Permanent repair for Clallam clock on way Courthouse timepiece falters again

May 27 ended last Friday when the old bushing was reinstalled.

BY ROB OLLIKAINEN

Rare parts

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — A permanent fix is in store for the onagain-off-again Clallam County Courthouse clock. After keeping time for five days, the hands of the iconic tower clock in Port Angeles stopped moving again Wednesday. Damaged bushing, a cylindershaped metal lining inside the timekeeper, caused extended clock stoppages in April and June. Newly manufactured bushing will be shipped from Missouri and installed in the century-old court-

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house clock this week, said Clallam County Parks, Fair and Facilities Director Joel Winborn. “Hopefully, that will solve our problem for good,” Winborn said in an email. “It has been frustrating, but I’m confident we’ll be back on line soon.” Winborn said he hoped the clock would be working again by the end of this week. The new bushing was tested for about two weeks in a similar clock in Missouri. “So far, that clock has performed without flaw,” Winborn said Wednesday. A 35-day stoppage that began

The E. Howard Co. Boston Model No. 2 clock is rare, and replacement parts are hard to find, county officials have said. The repairs are being handled by Missouri-based Americlock under a warranty at no cost to the county. Last June, Americlock disassembled, cleaned, polished and reassembled the clock. Winborn told commissioners Tuesday that he has heard “many concerns” from the public about KEITH THORPE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS the clock. “Believe me, we are trying to The clock in the tower of the Clallam County Courthouse in Port Angeles is seen stuck at 8:45 last week. fix the problem,” he said.

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Newsmakers Celebrity scoop ■ By The Associated Press

Chaka Khan and sister enter rehab CHAKA KHAN AND her sister have entered a drug rehabilitation program to battle their addictions to prescription drugs, and Khan said the death of her good friend Prince helped hasten her decision to get help. In a statement released to The Associated Press on Sunday, the 63-yearold GrammyKhan winning singer said she has been battling an addiction to the same medication that led to Prince’s death. Prince was found dead at his Minnesota home April 21.

An autopsy found he died of an overdose of fentanyl, a powerful opioid painkiller. “Unfortunately, I will miss concert appearances over the summer,” Khan said. “However, it’s vital that I put my health and wellbeing first. I know that I am disappointing some of my fans, but I also know they would want me to recover and be well and healthy.” Khan has entered an intensive rehabilitation and aftercare program with sister, Yvonne Stevens, also known as Taka Boom. Khan said the pair “agreed we would take this journey together and support each other through the recovery.” “The tragic death of Prince has had us both rethinking and re-evaluating our lives and priorities. We knew it was time to take action to save our lives. My sister and I would like to thank everyone for

their support, love and prayers.”

Honorary citizen Sophia Loren has been made an honorary citizen of Naples, the city that formed her and became the backdrop of many of her films. Naples Mayor Luigi de Magistris honored 81-year-old Loren at a ceremony attended by Loren 500 residents Saturday as the Neapolitan song “O sole mio” played. Loren was wearing a black dress with a fuschia floral print and told the news agency ANSA that “I feel so much love.” De Magistris said on Twitter that Loren and Naples have “intertwined hearts.”

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS PENINSULA POLL SATURDAY’S QUESTION: Do you plan to vote in the Aug. 2 primary election?

Passings By The Associated Press

SYDNEY H. SCHANBERG, 82, a New York Times foreign correspondent whose courageous reports about Cambodia’s takeover by the brutal Khmer Rouge regime in 1975 earned him the Pulitzer Prize and formed the basis of the Academy Award-winning film “The Killing Fields,” died Saturday at a hospital in Poughkeepsie, N.Y. He had a heart attack last Tuesday, said his wife, Jane Freiman Schanberg. In the early 1970s, while based in Singapore for the Times, Mr. Schanberg began to report from Cambodia, a onetime French protectorate across the border from Vietnam. He provided the first major coverage of U.S. bombing missions that ravaged the Cambodian countryside, including a 1973 attack when a B-52 dropped 20 tons of bombs on a remote village, leaving about 150 residents dead. Mr. Schanberg’s partner in reporting was Dith Pran, a resourceful and multilingual Cambodian who served as his interpreter and guide. They became inseparable reporting partners, even as a communistbacked insurgency known as the Khmer Rouge began to close in on the capital city of Phnom Penh in early 1975. As civil war enveloped

Laugh Lines DONALD TRUMP MET with 200 House Republicans who were described as “nervous.” And following the meeting, many of them were described as “Democrats.” Conan O’Brien

the country, the U.S. Embassy closed its doors April 12. Mr. Schanberg refused Mr. orders from Schanberg the Times to evacuate, choosing instead to take refuge with Dith at the French Embassy. As the only U.S. reporter remaining in Cambodia, Mr. Schanberg visited hospitals, where the blood of Khmer Rouge victims flowed down the halls. On April 17, 1975, as Mr. Schanberg and Dith were about to leave the embassy on a reporting assignment, “some heavily armed Khmer Rouge soldiers charged in through the main gate,” Mr. Schanberg later wrote. “Shouting and angry, they wave us out of the car, put guns to our heads and stomachs and order us to put our hands over our heads. I instinctively look at Pran for guidance,” he wrote, referring to Dith by his

Seen Around Peninsula snapshots

ROTARIAN MEMBER WORKING in the Port Angeles Lions food booth at the Olympic Peninsula Humane Society open house. A fine example of working together for the good of the community . . . WANTED! “Seen Around” items recalling things seen on the North Olympic Peninsula. Send them to PDN News Desk, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles WA 98362; fax 360417-3521; or email news@ peninsuladailynews.com. Be sure you mention where you saw your “Seen Around.”

given name, which comes last in Cambodian usage. “We have been in difficult situations before, but this is the first time I have ever seen raw fear on his face. He tells me, stammering, to do everything they say. I am shaking. I think we’re going to be killed right there. But Pran, having somehow composed himself, starts pleading with them. His hands still over his head, he tries to convince them we are not their enemy, merely foreign newsmen covering their victory.” Dith’s quick thinking led the gunmen to release him and Mr. Schanberg. Days later, the Khmer Rouge ordered all Cambodians to leave the French Embassy.

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Setting it Straight Corrections and clarifications

■ The Port Angeles Regional Chamber of Commerce’s monthly luncheon meeting will be held Wednesday at 11:15 a.m. in the second-floor meeting room of the Red Lion Hotel, 221 N. Lincoln St. An item on Page A9 Sunday listed an incorrect day for the meeting.

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

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

1941 (75 years ago) Out of the frying pan into the firing line for old aluminum from Port Angeles kitchens. This city will take part in the National Defense Aluminum Collection from July 21 through 29 which will be conducted on a nationwide basis by the office of civilian defense, directed by Mayor F.H. LaGuardia. J.H. Kyle is chairman of the Aluminum Drive in Clallam County, cooperating with members of the state defense council who are in charge of the statewide drive. A widespread statewide program is being arranged and broadcast station officials are expected here next week to outline the program.

water tank literally ripped through the Port Townsend home of Mrs. Letha Waters at 509 Calhoun St., on Saturday morning, causing possible total damage to the structure. Mrs. Waters was not at home at the time of the explosion, between 10:30 a.m. and 11 a.m. Had she been, she undoubtedly would have received serious if not fatal injuries, according to fire department officials. The tank, which exploded apparently because of unrelieved pressure, blew straight through the roof and to an estimated height of 100 feet before landing 100 feet away in a neighbor’s yard.

1991 (25 years ago) 1966 (50 years ago) An exploding table-top

Jefferson County officials say building and

development could come to a halt until a legal case involving the county’s land use law runs the gamut of the court system, which could take up to two years. If a judge does not delay an order to nullify the county’s land use code, the county will have to suspend most building permits because “unregulated development is not going to be in anybody’s best interest,” county Supervisor David Goldsmith said today. That stance follows a judge’s opinion on a lawsuit over the county’s land use law. Clallam County Superior Court Judge Gary Velle issued the opinion July 3, saying the Jefferson County Board of Commissioners failed to follow state law when enacting its land use code in 1989.

Looking Back From the files of The Associated Press

TODAY IS MONDAY, July 11, the 193rd day of 2016. There are 173 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: ■ On July 11, 1804, Vice President Aaron Burr mortally wounded former Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton during a pistol duel in Weehawken, N.J. Hamilton died the next day. On this date: ■ In 1798, the U.S. Marine Corps was formally re-established by a congressional act that also created the U.S. Marine Band. ■ In 1922, the Hollywood Bowl officially opened with a program called “Symphonies Under the Stars” with Alfred Hertz conducting the Los Angeles Philharmonic.

■ In 1936, New York City’s Triborough Bridge (now officially the Robert F. Kennedy Bridge) linking Manhattan, Queens and The Bronx was opened to traffic. ■ In 1952, the Republican National Convention, meeting in Chicago, nominated Dwight D. Eisenhower for president and Richard M. Nixon for vice president. ■ In 1955, the U.S. Air Force Academy swore in its first class of cadets at its temporary quarters at Lowry Air Force Base in Colorado. ■ In 1960, the novel To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee was first published by J.B. Lippincott and Co. ■ In 1966, the game show “The Newlywed Game,” hosted by

Bob Eubanks, premiered on ABCTV. ■ In 1979, the abandoned U.S. space station Skylab made a spectacular return to Earth, burning up in the atmosphere and showering debris over the Indian Ocean and Australia. ■ In 1991, a Nigeria Airways DC-8 carrying Muslim pilgrims crashed at the Jiddah, Saudi Arabia, international airport, killing all 261 people on board. ■ In 1995, the U.N.-designated “safe haven” of Srebrenica in Bosnia-Herzegovina fell to Bosnian Serb forces, who then carried out the killings of more than 8,000 Muslim men and boys. The United States normalized

relations with Vietnam. ■ Ten years ago: Eight bombs hit a commuter rail network during evening rush hour in Mumbai, India, killing more than 200 people. ■ Five years ago: Rupert Murdoch’s media empire was besieged by accusations that two more of his British newspapers engaged in hacking, deception and privacy violations. ■ One year ago: Top Mexican drug lord Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, head of the powerful Sinaloa Cartel, escaped from a maximum security prison for the second time by exiting through a secretly dug mile-long tunnel. He was recaptured in January 2016.


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Monday, July 11, 2016 P A G E

A3 Briefly: Nation Activist released from jail after La. protest BATON ROUGE, La. — A prominent Black Lives Matter activist, three journalists and more than 120 other people were taken into custody in Louisiana over the weekend, authorities said Sunday, in connection with protests over the fatal shooting of an African-American man by two white police officers in Baton Rouge. Spokeswoman Casey Rayborn Hicks of the East Baton Rouge Sheriff’s Office told The Associated Press that nearly 100 people were McKesson taken to the parish jail over protests that began late Saturday. Most of those arrested were from Louisiana and faced a single charge of obstructing a highway. A first wave of arrests took place Friday and early Saturday, with 30 people taken into custody. Police began releasing those who were arrested on Sunday afternoon. Tensions between black citizens and police have risen palpably over the past week or so amid police shootings of African-American men in Minnesota and Louisiana and the gunning down of five white police officers by a black suspect in Dallas in apparent retaliation. Among those arrested was DeRay McKesson, a leading figure in the Black Lives Matter movement that blossomed in recent years in the wake of numerous deaths of unarmed black men at the hands of police. McKesson smiled and

embraced supporters upon his release from jail Sunday afternoon. “I remain disappointed in the Baton Rouge police, who continue to provoke protesters for peacefully protesting. There’s a lot of work to be done, with this police department specifically,” he said.

Highway shut down ST. PAUL, Minn. — Police arrested about 100 people in the Minnesota capital of St. Paul during protests over the recent police killings of black men, including one in a nearby suburb. Authorities said 21 St. Paul officers and six state troopers were hurt during the fracas late Saturday and early Sunday. Police used smoke bombs to clear more than 200 people blocking Interstate 94, the main highway in and out of the Twin Cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul. Protesters pelted police in riot gear with rocks, bottles, firecrackers and other objects, and they refused to get off the highway, prompting officers in riot gear to move in just after midnight.

Calif. woman missing VALLEJO, Calif. — Police in Northern California are investigating the kidnapping for ransom of a woman who remains missing even though four suspects have been arrested in the case. Elvira Babb, 57, was last seen June 29 by a co-worker who dropped her off at a market in Vallejo, Lt. Jeff Bassett said. Her son, John Babb of San Francisco, received a text message the next day demanding money, described under six figures, and threatening his mother’s life if he did not comply or contacted to police. Babb replied, but he didn’t get a response, Bassett said. The Associated Press

Suspect taunted police in Dallas negotiations The chief defended the decision to kill Johnson with a bomb delivered by remote-controlled robot, saying negotiations went nowhere and that officers could not approach him without putting themselves in danger. Brown said he became increasingly concerned that “at a split second, he would charge us and take out many more before we would kill him.”

BY REESE DUNKLIN AND JULIET LINDERMAN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

DALLAS — The suspect in the deadly attack on Dallas police taunted authorities during two hours of negotiations, laughing at them, singing and at one point asking how many officers he had shot, the police chief said Sunday. Micah Johnson, a black Army veteran, insisted on speaking with a black negotiator and wrote in blood on the wall of a parking Military-style drills garage where police cornered and Johnson had practiced militarylater killed him, David Brown told style drills in his yard and trained CNN’s “State of the Union.” at a private self-defense school that teaches special tactics, including Meaning unclear “shooting on the move,” a maneuver Johnson, who was apparently in which an attacker fires and wounded in a shootout with police, changes position before firing again. He received instruction at the wrote the letters “RB” and other markings, but the meaning was Academy of Combative Warrior Arts in the Dallas suburb of Richunclear. Investigators are trying to ardson about two years ago, said decipher the writing by looking the school’s founder and chief through evidence from Johnson’s instructor, Justin J. Everman. Everman’s statement was corsuburban Dallas home, Brown said. roborated by a police report from

May 8, 2015, when someone at a business a short distance away called in a report of several suspicious people in a parked SUV. The investigating officer closed the case just minutes after arriving at a strip mall. While there, the officer spoke to Johnson, who said he “had just gotten out of a class at a nearby self-defense school.” Johnson told the officer he was “waiting for his dad to arrive” and pick up his brother. No one else was apparently questioned. On Friday, Dallas Mayor Mike Rawlings described Johnson as “a mobile shooter” who had written manifestos on how to “shoot and move.” Authorities have said the gunman kept a journal of combat tactics and had amassed a personal arsenal at his home, including bomb-making materials, rifles and ammunition. The academy website refers to one of its courses as a “tactical applications program,” or TAP.

Briefly: World Australian leader claims election victory SYDNEY — Eight days after Australia’s general election ended in uncertainty, the prime minister finally claimed victory Sunday for his conservative coalition, bringing an end to the country’s political paralysis — at least for the moment. Though the question of who won the July 2 election was answered, the question of exactly how the conservatives will rule Turnbull the fractured Parliament was not. With official results still days or even weeks away, it was unclear whether Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull’s Liberal Party-led coalition had won enough votes to govern in its own right, or whether it would need the support of independent and minor party lawmakers to form a minority government.

Riots hurt 120 officers BERLIN — Police say more

than 120 officers were injured and 86 demonstrators were detained during leftist riots in the German capital which police call “the most aggressive and violent protests in the last five years.” Berlin police said in a statement Sunday that protesters threw bottles, cobblestones and fireworks, destroyed cars and attacked officers.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

COMMEMORATING

A MASSACRE

Poland’s chief rabbi Michael Schudrich prays during commemorations Sunday marking the 75th anniversary of a massacre of Jews in Jedwabne, Poland. In 1941, Jews in Jedwabne were locked in a barn and burned to death by their Polish neighbors, an atrocity committed as Germans occupied the country and were carrying out the Holocaust.

U.S. travel cautioned DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Two Mideast countries are warning citizens traveling in the United States to be careful around protests over police shootings. A “special alert” issued by the United Arab Emirates Embassy to Washington on Saturday urged citizens to stay away from demonstrations in U.S. cities. State news agency WAM said the warning followed a protest by supporters of the “Black Lives Matter” movement in Washington on Friday. The island kingdom of Bahrain issued its own advisory on Twitter, telling nationals to be “cautious of protests or crowded areas.” The U.S. State Department routinely issues travel advisories for Americans abroad. The Associated Press

On trip, Obama issues call for more respect, understanding BY DARLENE SUPERVILLE AND KATHLEEN HENNESSEY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

MADRID — President Barack Obama called Sunday for greater tolerance, respect and understanding from police officers toward the people they are sworn to protect, as well as from individuals who think the police are too heavy-handed and intolerant, particularly toward people of color. “I’d like all sides to listen to each other,” Obama said as he answered a reporter’s question after meeting with Spain’s acting prime minister, Mariano Rajoy, during his shortened first visit to Spain as president.

Quick Read

It was the fourth straight day that Obama has commented on a series of distressing events back home: the fatal shootings by police of black men in Louisiana and Minnesota, and a sniper attack that killed five police officers and wounded seven in Dallas. Obama said violence against police by anyone concerned about fairness in the criminal justice system does “a disservice to the cause.” He repeated that the vast majority of U.S. police officers are doing a good job, and said rhetoric portraying them as otherwise does little to rally support for the effort to over-

haul a criminal justice system broadly recognized as biased against minorities. “Maintaining a truthful and serious and respectful tone is going to help mobilize American society to bring about real change,” Obama said. The president also called for balance from law enforcement. “I would hope that police organizations are also respectful of the frustrations that people in these communities feel and not just dismiss these protests and these complaints as political correctness,” he said.

. . . more news to start your day

Nation: Off-duty officer kills man entering home

Nation: ‘Pets’ hijinks deliver box-office victory

World: Spanish matador fatally gored; 1st since ’85

World: Israel announces $12.9M for settlements

AN OFF-DUTY ST. Louis County police officer fatally shot a man as he was trying to enter the officer’s home Saturday evening, police said. Police said the off-duty officer, who was not identified, shot and killed 20-year-old Tyler Gebhard after he threw a 50-pound concrete planter through a window to enter the Lakeshire home, the St. Louis PostDispatch reported. According to police, Gebhard was known to the family and had recently made online threats toward it and “uninvolved members of the community.”

“THE SECRET LIFE of Pets,” a family feature from Universal Pictures, led the North American box office in its opening weekend, marking five straight weeks that animated films have dominated theaters. The picture from Comcast Corp.’s film division collected an estimated $103.2 million in U.S. and Canadian theaters, ComScore Inc. said Sunday an emailed statement. That ended the monthlong No. 1 run for Walt Disney Co.’s “Finding Dory.” The only other new release, the 20th Century Fox comedy “Mike and Dave Need Wedding Dates,” garnered $16.6 million and placed fourth.

A BULLFIGHTER WAS fatally gored in Spain in an eastern town — the first professional matador to be killed in the ring in more than three decades. Victor Barrio, 29, was pronounced dead late Saturday by a surgeon at the Teruel bullring. Barrio was first gored in the thigh by the 1,166-pound bull’s left horn and his body was flipped over. He was gored a second time in the chest and the blow penetrated a lung and his aorta as the matador was on the ground. Medics were at his side almost immediately, but attempts to save his life were unsuccessful.

ISRAELI PRIME MINISTER Benjamin Netanyahu announced a $12.9 million plan to strengthen two Israeli settlements in the southern West Bank on Sunday. The plan came days after Netanyahu approved the construction of hundreds of new homes in settlements in the West Bank and east Jerusalem, drawing a harsh rebuke from the U.S. State Department. Netanyahu said Sunday that the funding will go to Kiryat Arba, a settlement of 7,000 Israelis, and to the Jewish residents of the adjacent Palestinian city of Hebron. He said the government will “assist the residents who stand heroically in the face of vicious terrorism.”


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PeninsulaNorthwest

MONDAY, JULY 11, 2016

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

House, Senate to debate budget bills PENINSULA DAILY NEWS NEWS SERVICES

Eye on Congress

WASHINGTON — Both chambers will debate 2017 by industry, ZIP code and budget bills in the last week more of legislative activity before ■ Vote-Smart.org — Congress starts a recess How special interest groups lasting until Sept. 6. rate legislators on the issues. Contact legislators

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

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

Learn more Websites following our state and national legislators: ■ Followthemoney. org — Campaign donors

■ OVERHAUL OF MENTAL-HEALTH PROGRAMS: The House last Wednesday passed, 422 for and two against, a bill (HR 2646) that would expand Medicare and Medicaid coverage, including prescription-drug coverage, of mental-health treatments and services. Overall, the bill would make major changes in federal programs and agencies that help Americans cope with mental illness and substance abuse. By expanding entitlement spending, the bill is projected to add at least $3 billion and possibly tens of billions of dollars to federal debt through fiscal 2025. In part, the bill would address the nation’s shortage of hospital beds and professional staff for psychiatric care; remove criminal incarceration from mentalhealth hospitals; ease privacy rules to spur information sharing for diagnoses and treatments; elevate the standing of mental-health programs in the Department of Health and Human Services and develop improved preventive measures and early interventions against diseases including schizophrenia. Tim Murphy, R-Pa., said the bill “allows parents and caregivers to help with care. It increases the number of crisis mental-health beds. It drives evidence-based care. It builds on existing mental-health and substanceabuse parity laws. It brings accountability to federal grant programs.” No member spoke against the bill. A yes vote was to send the bill to the Senate. Kilmer voted yes. ■ H E A L T H ACCOUNTS, OVERCOUNTER MEDICINES: Voting 243 for and 164 against, the House last Wednesday passed a GOPsponsored bill (HR 1270) that would allow individuals to purchase over-thecounter medicines with funds from their Health Savings Accounts (HSAs). The bill would add $6.6 billion to federal debt over 10 years. Existing law permits individuals to couple HSAs with high-deductible health plans. HSA contributions are tax-free, withdrawals can be used only to pay qualified medical expenses and account balances are invested and carried forward year to year. HSAs are key to House Republicans’ newly released

plan to replace the Affordable Care Act. Michael Burgess, R-Texas, said today’s law needs fixing because it “decreases access to reasonable over-the-counter medications and discourages people from taking control of saving for their health care needs.” Jim McGovern, D-Mass., said the bill would “disproportionately benefit highincome people, increase taxes for low- and middleincome people and do nothing to improve the quality of or address the underlying cost of health care.” A yes vote was to send the bill to the Senate, where it appears likely to fail. Kilmer voted no. ■ SANCTUARY CITIES, IMMIGRATION: The Senate last Wednesday failed, 53-44, to reach 60 votes for advancing a bill (S 3001) that would deny economic-development and community-block grants to “sanctuary” cities or states that refuse to act as an arm of federal immigration enforcement. Officials in sanctuary cities say that to assist the Department of Homeland Security in this fashion would undercut community-policing efforts that depend on rapport with immigrant populations. Richard Durbin, D-Ill., said the bill “would criminalize, with mandatory minimum sentencing, conduct that would affect thousands of people who have crossed over the border into the United States undocumented.” Ted Cruz, R-Texas, said: “A real president, faithful to the Constitution, would end sanctuary cities by cutting off money to any jurisdiction openly defying federal immigration law.” A yes vote was to pass the bill. Cantwell and Murray voted no. ■ STIFFER PENALTIES FOR ILLEGAL ALIENS: Voting 55 for and 42 against, the Senate last Wednesday failed to reach 60 votes needed to advance a bill (S 2193) that would increase from two years to five years the maximum sentence for persons convicted of illegally entering the U.S. The bill also would require mandatory minimum sentences of five years for undocumented aliens with aggravated felony records who illegally re-enter the U.S. after deportation. The bill failed, in part, because it runs counter to bipartisan congressional efforts to reduce prison overcrowding resulting from the imposition of long minimum sentences for less-serious crimes. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, said it is time “to confront the sobering issue of illegal aliens, many of whom have serious criminal backgrounds and yet are allowed

Sen. Maria Cantwell D-Mountlake Terrace

Sen. Patty Murray D-Seattle

Rep. Derek Kilmer D-Gig Harbor

to illegally re-enter this country with impunity.” Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., said the bill appears to be “inspired by Donald Trump and the anti-immigrant rhetoric that is fueling his campaign . . . pushing hardworking immigrants back into the shadows.” A yes vote was to advance the bill. Cantwell and Murray voted no.

a Democratic bid to advance a Consumer Financial Protection Bureau rule, now in draft stage, that would begin federal regulation of companies that provide high-interest “payday” loans and similar credit secured by the borrower’s future paychecks. The amendment was offered to HR 5485 (above), which would prohibit the bureau from spending its funds to put the rule into effect. Terri Sewell, D-Ala., said it was important “to rein in predatory practices utilized by payday lenders across this country.” Patrick McHenry, R-N.C., said the amendment risks “cutting off access to credit for millions of Americans. . . . Where will consumers that need these loans go next?” A yes vote was to advance a proposed paydaylending rule. Kilmer voted yes.

spending to the SEC and thus to shareholders. The underlying bill (HR 5485) would kill the rule by starving it of funds. Daniel Kildee, D-Mich., said “American citizens have the right to know how corporations are spending money to affect the outcome of elections.” Anders Crenshaw, R-Fla., said: “Let’s call the amendment what it is. It is an end run around the Supreme Court’s Citizens United decision.” A yes vote backed the SEC’s planned rule on political disclosures. Kilmer voted yes.

■ 2017 IRS, JUDICIARY, WHITE HOUSE BUDGETS: Voting 239 for and 185 against, the House on Thursday passed a fiscal 2017 appropriations bill (HR 5485) that would provide $10.9 billion for the Internal Revenue Service, $9.2 billion for the General Services Administration, $7 billion for the federal judiciary, $1.5 billion for the Securities and Exchange Commission, $883 million for the Small Business Administration, $725 million for the District of Columbia, $692 million for the executive office of the president and $315 million for the Federal Communications Commission, among other outlays. The bill would end a requirement that corporations disclose certain campaign-finance activity to the SEC; prohibit the IRS from issuing a rule on the political activities of tax-exempt 501(c)(4) organizations; suspend the FCC’s “net neutrality” rule until court challenges are resolved; bar the FCC from regulating broadband rates and put the Consumer Financial Protection Agency budget under congressional control. Michael Burgess, R-Texas, said it is wrong that the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau “draws its funds on autopilot directly from the Federal Reserve,” therefore bypassing congressional oversight. Jim McGovern, D-Mass., said the bill “undermines key elements of the DoddFrank financial reform; it diminishes women’s access to legal health services [and] meddles in the District of Columbia’s internal affairs.” A yes vote was to pass the bill. Kilmer voted no.

■ IRS GUIDANCE ON TAX-EXEMPT ACTIVITY: Voting 183 for and 239 against, the House on Thursday defeated a Democratic amendment to bolster IRS scrutiny of 501(c)(4) social-welfare groups. Under the Supreme Court’s Citizens United ruling, these non-profit groups can receive contributions and engage in political activity. But to qualify for taxexempt status, they cannot devote a majority of their activities to politics. The underlying bill (HR 5485) would prohibit the IRS from issuing guidance to help groups comply with this requirement. It reflects a belief by many Republicans that the IRS gives undue scrutiny to organizations on the right including Tea Party groups. Xavier Becerra, D-Calif., said the IRS needs to “give us clarity on who can and who cannot use tax-exempt laws to try to be a socialwelfare organization.” Anders Crenshaw, R-Fla., said the IRS uses its oversight “to single out individuals and groups of individuals based on their political philosophy.” A yes vote backed IRS scrutiny of certain tax■ RULES FOR PAY- exempt organizations. Kilmer voted yes. DAY LENDERS: Voting 182 for and 240 against, the ■ DISCLOSURE OF House on Thursday defeated CORPORATE DONATIONS: Voting 186 for and 236 against, the House on Thursday defeated a Democratic amendment in support of the Securities and Exchange Commission requiring corporations to disclose their political contributions to 501(c)(4) social-welfare organizations (preceding issue). The SEC is planning a rule that would require publicly traded companies to disclose their political

■ M A N D A T O R YARBITRATION AGREEMENTS: Voting 181 for and 236 against, the House on Thursday defeated a Democratic amendment on behalf of draft Consumer Financial Protection Bureau rules to govern mandatory-arbitration language in consumer contracts including credit-card agreements. When they agree to such language, customers usually forego their right to seek redress in court and, instead, commit to having disputes settled by arbitration panels. Keith Ellison, D-Minn., said: “Forced arbitration clauses are a perfect example of an unfair system. Powerful corporations rig the rules to make it more difficult for people to hold companies accountable for wrongdoing.” Steve Womack, R-Ark., said: “Arbitration empowers individuals. Injured parties can obtain fair resolution of disputes without the need of an attorney. But many oppose this approach, particularly plaintiffs’ attorneys.” A yes vote was to back a draft rule to limit mandatory-arbitration agreements. Kilmer voted yes. ■ LABELING GMO FOODS: Voting 63 for and 30 against, the Senate on Thursday passed a bill (S 764) that would require food labels on consumer shelves to list genetically-modified organisms (GMOs) under standards set by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The bill would override GMO label laws enacted by states. Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich., said the bill gives consumers first-time access “to information about their food through a mandatory, nationwide label for food products with GMOs.” Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., said: “When parents go to the store and purchase food, they have the right to know what is in the food their kids are going to be eating.” A yes vote was to send the bill to the House. Cantwell and Murray voted no.


PeninsulaNorthwest

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

(C) — MONDAY, JULY 11, 2016

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Kilmer: Senate

has measure CONTINUED FROM A1 and education. Reduced timber harvests “With cross-laminated contributed to the 2014 clotimber we can utilize sure of the Interfor sawmill an abundant and sustain- in Beaver, Interfor planer able product native to mill in Forks, Green Creek Washington state that con- mill in west Port Angeles nects rural economies to and the 2015 closure of the greener urban growth,” Allen Logging Co. mill Kilmer said. south of Forks in west Jef“Our bipartisan bill ferson County, according to would make it easier for the mill owners. Nearly 100 organizaconstruction sites across the country to use sturdy, tions have endorsed the bill, innovative, renewable wood including American Forest American products grown and manu- Foundation, factured on the Olympic Wood Council, The Conservation Fund, National WildPeninsula,” Kilmer said. The legislation would life Federation and Weyerestablish a research and haeuser, Kilmer’s office development program and said. A companion measure create grants advancing tall wood building construction, (S. 2892) has been introauthorize a tall wood build- duced in the Senate. ing competition, incentivize ________ the retrofitting of existing Reporter Rob Ollikainen can be buildings in high unem- reached at 360-452-2345, ext. ployment areas and autho- 56450, or at rollikainen@peninsula rize technical assistance dailynews.com.

CHARLIE BERMANT/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Concerts on the Dock music manager Dominic Svornich, left, and sponsor Ryan Smith unfurl the stage banner that will be used at this year’s concert series, which begins Thursday.

All Stars to kick off PT free concert outdoor series Homicide: A preliminary hearing July 20

BY CHARLIE BERMANT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT TOWNSEND — A highlight of Port Townsend’s social season will begin Thursday when Concerts on the Dock enters its 18th year. The free series will kick off with a performance by Kevin Mason and the PT All Stars, which is one of the summer’s largest draws according to music coordinator Dominic Svornich. “Both Kevin and Locust Street Taxi [appearing July 28] bring people out to dance and drink beer,” he said. “The best bands appeal to a wide variety of people, since we get everyone from three-year-olds to people with walkers and in wheelchairs.”

Bay in background Concerts on the Dock are scheduled on consecutive Thursdays through Sept. 1 at Pope Marine Plaza in a setting with Port Townsend Bay as a backdrop. Seating will open at 4:30 p.m. Shows will begin at 5 p.m. and wrap up by 7:30 p.m. Svornich said there is an “amazing variety” of local bands from which to choose but not every one works in this environment. “I’ve had to give disappointing news to bands, that they don’t fit in,” Svornich said. “I love jazz and folk and bluegrass myself, but they aren’t the kind of bands that brings people out.” Crowds can get as large as 500 people, for a popular group and draw an average of 300 on a sunny day, he said. The concerts go on rain or shine and are moved into the Pope Marine Building in inclement weather. This has only happened twice, Svionich said. Main Street Executive Director Mari Mullen characterizes the summer weather as “fickle and tricky.” This year’s lead sponsor is Homer Smith Insurance which Mullen said “came to us just in the nick of time.” Ryan Smith, who represents the third generation of his family to work for the agency, said both his

father and grandfather have been big community supporters. “This is a good event,” Smith said. “It brings in tourists and benefits the local economy.”

Began in 2004

Concerts on the Dock began in July 2004 in the old Quincy Street dock area adjacent to what was then Water Street Brewing and Ale House. It moved to a paved area near the Northwest Maritime Center and moved to its current location in 2011. This is the sixth year in that location, although previous years have needed to accommodate various stages of construction. Seven concerts are scheduled this season. ■ July 21 — Uncle Funk and The Dope Six; dance band. ■ July 28 — Toolshed Trio with Abakis; dance band. ■ Aug. 4 — Locust Street Taxi; variety band. ■ Aug. 11 — Olympic Express Big Band; dance tunes from 1920s-2000s. ■ Aug. 18 — Cold Comfort with Kilcid; alternative, rock. ■ Aug. 25 — Joy in Mudville; bluegrass, folk, rock, blues and funk. ■ Sept. 1 — Lucky Brown and The Funk Revolution; jam-rock, reggae and funk. For more information, or to volunteer, call 360-385-7911 or go to ptmainstreet.org. Free outdoor concerts also are scheduled in Sequim and Port Angeles.

Music in the Park In Sequim, Lobo del Mar will perform Celtic, bluegrass and flamenco fusion from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday during Music in the Park at Carrie Blake Community Park, 563 N. Rhodefer Road. Bands will perform each Tuesday through Aug. 30. Parking is available at Carrie Blake Community Park or at 500 N. Blake Ave. Sequim city organizers encourage attendees to bring chairs or blankets and picnic baskets to the concerts.

Here is the lineup for the rest of the summer. ■ July 19 — Locos Only; rock and blues. ■ July 26 — Andre Feriante; Spanish guitar and ukulele, vocals. ■ Aug. 2 — Navy Band Northwest; variety. ■ Aug. 9 — Joy in Mudville; bluegrass, folk, rock, blues and funk. ■ Aug. 16 — Stardust Big Band; Big Band sound. ■ Aug. 23 — Fifth annual Sequim Karaoke Night; contest. ■ Aug. 30 — Farmstrong; bluegrass, country, folk and rock.

CONTINUED FROM A1 bloody nose, then went back to sleep. Officers said they found Justice of the Peace baby wipes with blood on Karen Orzech told Palmer them in the trash when not to discuss the case with they searched the residence. the child’s mother. They also said they found A preliminary hearing is what appeared to be blood set for July 20. on a pair of pants that had been used for padding in Child rape the baby’s car seat. Palmer, 16 at the time, A DNA analysis found pleaded guilty Feb. 1, 2007, the blood that was on the wipes belonged to the baby, to raping and molesting an which Palmer told detec- 8-year-old girl outside Port tives came from a bloody Angeles, according to Clallam County Superior Court nose, the affidavit says. Detectives learned that records. He had been charged in Palmer, who was not the baby’s father, and the boy’s December 2006 with sexumother had been staying ally assaulting the girl six with Palmer’s mother in her times over the course of a year. trailer. Palmer was ordered into The home had one bedroom, so Palmer and the 24 months of community mother had been sleeping supervision and required to on a futon in the front room register as a sex offender. and the baby had been He was transferred to Missleeping in his car seat on soula County for the superthe floor near the futon, vision. He could no longer have according to the affidavit. The baby’s mother told any contact with children detectives she awoke at three years or more younger about 2 a.m. and heard than him without adult Palmer saying “knock it off supervision. He was also ordered to Brayden,” the affidavit says. She asked Palmer if she attend mental health procould take over her son, grams and to take medicawho was fussing, but tions as prescribed. Palmer violated the Palmer told her “I got this,” terms of his supervision by the affidavit says. After she awoke again at being physically aggressive about 7:30 a.m., Palmer told with staff, being verbally her the baby wasn’t breath- abusive and being expelled from therapy, according to a ing, the affidavit says. Palmer initially told violation report filed in detectives he had slept the November 2008 by Danetta whole night and awoke at Rutton, senior probation 7:30 a.m. to find the baby officer with Clallam County Juvenile & Family Services. unresponsive. ________ When detectives asked about the bloodied baby Reporter Jesse Major can be wipes, Palmer said he used reached at 360-452-2345, ext. the wipes to clean blood 56250, or at jmajor@peninsula from Beal’s face after a dailynews.com.

Port Angeles In Port Angeles, Black Diamond Junction will perform ’60s to ’80s classics from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. on City Pier during the Concerts on the Pier series. The series, organized by the Port Angeles Regional Chamber of Commerce, runs every Wednesday through Sept. 7. Food vendors will be available. If heavy wind or bad weather is expected, the performances might be moved to The Gateway pavilion at the corner of Lincoln and Front streets. Audience members are encouraged to bring blankets or chairs to the informal, family-friendly performances. No smoking is allowed on City Pier during the concerts. Here is the series lineup for the rest of the summer. ■ July 20 — Twisted Roots; blues, Western swing and old rock. ■ July 27 — Three Too Many; popular rock. ■ Aug. 3 — The Weavils; bluegrass and swing. ■ Aug. 10 — The Strait Shots; classic rock ’n’ roll. ■ Aug. 17 — Ian McFeron Band; folksy rock ’n’ roll. ■ Aug. 24 — Sweet T & Justice; Americana blues. ■ Aug. 31 — Joy in Mudville; Americana funk rock. ■ Sept. 7 — The Buck Ellard Band; country.

________ Jefferson County Editor Charlie Bermant can be reached at 360-385-2335 or cbermant@peninsuladailynews.com.

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PeninsulaNorthwest

MONDAY, JULY 11, 2016

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PT woman to serve on DNC rules panel PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

WASHINGTON STATE DEPARTMENT

OF

TRANSPORTATION

PORT TOWNSEND — Cape George resident Linda Sutton was elected to the Rules Standing Committee of the Democratic National Convention following the state Democratic Convention. Sutton will join the Washington delegation in

Philadelphia from July 25-28, which includes fellow Jefferson County residents Jeff Engels and Ryan McAllister and Clallam County residents Jessica Hernandez of Port Angeles and Julie Johnson of Neah Bay. Sutton, a lifelong Democrat, was a member of the California State Democratic

Party’s Rules Committee prior to her move to the North Olympic Peninsula more than five years ago. She was also co-chair of Progressive Democrats of Los Angeles, an elected member of the Los Angeles County Central Committee and recipient of their Roosevelt Award.

A mechanical failure of the Hood Canal Bridge left the span’s deck unevenly positioned Sunday.

Brinnon woman recovering after wreck on Highway 101

Hood Canal Bridge shut by malfunction Structure reopened Sunday evening after several hours BY JESSE MAJOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

SHINE — The Hood Canal Bridge was closed for nearly seven hours Sunday after a mechanical malfunction that morning knocked the lift span out of alignment, a spokesperson for the state Department of Transportation said. The lift span came out of alignment during a marine traffic opening at 8 a.m. Sunday. The bridge reopened just before 3 p.m. The lift span usually opens 600 feet, but only opened 300 feet because of the mechanical problem. The boat crossing under the bridge was still able to get to the other side. “They stopped moving [the lift span] altogether when they realized it wasn’t opening up level like it was supposed to,” said Cara Mitchell, Department of Transportation spokesperson. “To reduce any further damage to the bridge, they stopped it right then and there.” Engineers are now work-

ing to determine if there was any damage and its possible extent.

Cause unknown

While Transportation wasn’t sure exactly what caused the problem, Mitchell said staff are trained in responding to similar situations. “We’ve [trained] within the last year,” she said. “The crews are trained on how to respond to a situation like this, but this is the first time any of us can remember actually having to implement it.” Transportation crews were working Sunday afternoon to remove electronic sign boards that said the bridge was out. She said the signs couldn’t be turned off remotely, so it would take about an hour before they were all off. “We appreciate everyone’s patience while we wrap things up,” she said. Mitchell said the bridge will continue to open to marine traffic, but only up to 300 feet until engineers get a closer look at the bridge, she said. If a vessel needs for the bridge to open higher, Transportation will take it on a case-by-case basis, she said.

They are also working to determine the exact source of the problem. At about 2:40 p.m., bridge engineers had lowered the lift span back into its lower position by disassembling a guide on the bridge. They then reinstalled the guide and inspected the bridge before reopening it to traffic. “We’ve never had something like this happen in recent years,” Mitchell said. Because the problem had yet to be identified, Mitchell said she didn’t know if this problem could occur again. Because of the urgency of the malfunction, the State Patrol offered to escort two additional engineers from Olympia to the bridge if they were facing ________ traffic. It takes two staff memReporter Jesse Major can be bers to open the bridge dur- reached at 360-452-2345, ext. ing a normal opening, she 56250, or at jmajor@peninsula dailynews.com. said.

Briefly . . . Supply drive begins today for Sequim SEQUIM — Sleep Train, 1041 W. Washington St., will hold its annual school supply drive for foster kids Monday through Sunday, Sept. 4. Requested items include backpacks, three-ring binders, notebooks, flash drives and packs of pens and pencils. All donations will be accepted.

Donations that are not used for the school supply drive will be passed on to other charities. For more information, visit www.sleeptrainfoster kids.org.

Special master TACOMA — A Pierce County court commissioner has ordered the state to appoint a “special master” to oversee changes in admissions policies at Western State Hospital. Commissioner Craig Adams’ ruling also calls for the state to adopt a goal of

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ending “psychiatric boarding” within six months. The News-Tribune said Friday’s ruling also tells the state to adopt new policies for admitting longterm patients to the psychiatric hospital in Lakewood. Officials with the Department of Social and Health Services said they will review the order before responding. The opinion is the latest salvo in a long-running dispute over admissions policies at Western State Hospital. Peninsula Daily News and The Associated Press

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Oldsmobile Bravada northbound on the highBRINNON –– A way near McDonald Cove 41-year-old Brinnon woman was in stable con- when her vehicle left the dition Sunday after being road and struck a dirt embankment and a tree at airlifted to Harborview Medical Center in Seattle about 3:16 p.m. Saturday. Seton was in stable following a wreck on U.S. condition Sunday, accordHighway 101. ing to a spokesperson for According to State Patrol, Michelle Seton was the Seattle hospital. State Patrol said she driving a gold 1999

Campaign finance measure garners 326,000 signatures BY RACHEL LA CORTE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

OLYMPIA — More than 326,000 signatures were turned in to the secretary of state’s office Friday in support of a proposed ballot measure that would make a series of campaign finance changes, including the creation of a publicly-funded voucher system for contributions. Supporters of Initiative 1464 called it a “comprehensive initiative.” “It reforms ethics and campaign finance laws in Washington to help demand more accountability,” said campaign spokesman Peter McCollum. I-1464 seeks to do several things, including creating a voucher system that would give voters three $50 “democracy credits” that they can use in state races every two years. To pay for the statewide system, I-1464 would repeal the non-resident sales tax exemption for residents of sales-tax-free states such as Oregon who shop in Washington. To be eligible to redeem the vouchers, participating candidates would have to pledge to limit the size of donations they accept, and agree to spending limits and private contribution limits.

Seattle measure Seattle voters passed a similar citywide measure, Initiative 122, last year. Voters there agreed to raise taxes by $3 million a year in order to get four $25

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was the only person involved in the wreck near Brinnon. Seton’s vehicle was totaled and impounded, and State Patrol said it is investigating a charge of driving under the influence. It is not known if she was wearing a seat belt at the time of the wreck.

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Supporters of a proposed campaign finance reform ballot measure carry boxes of signed petitions to turn in Friday in Olympia. vouchers they can sign over to candidates for mayor, city council or city attorney, starting with the council and city attorney elections next year. I-1464 would also impose tougher donor disclosure requirements on political advertisements and limit the amount of money contractors and lobbyists can contribute to candidates. It also would impose a three-year waiting period before former elected officials and senior staff can go lobby their previous employers and colleagues. Integrity Washington, the campaign in support of the measure, has raised more than $1.5 million, including $375,000 from Washington, D.C.-based Every Voice, which supported I-122 in Seattle last year. McCollum said that the campaign spent about $1 million on signature gathering. The campaign committee includes a Spokane City Council president, a vice president of the League of Women Voters of Washington and a co-chair of the Seattle Tea Party Patriots. “People from all different political spectrums see the influence of money in politics as a problem,” said Kathy Sakahara, of the League of Women Voters of Washington. “One thing that just about everyone agrees on is that our democracy should be run by the people, not just by the rich people, not just by the corporations.”

The Association of Washington Business has come out against the measure. Bob Battles, general counsel and director of government affairs for employment law at the business association, said that they have several concerns with the measure, including the repeal of the non-resident sales tax exemption. “That will hurt our border businesses,” he said. “There’s real business to be lost.” Battles also said that the campaign finance vouchers will have a limited benefit because rich candidates can choose to not participate and still privately fund their campaigns. “It doesn’t really level the playing field, because someone who wants to self-fund, will still self-fund,” he said.

I-1501 Also Friday, more than 320,000 signatures for Initiative 1501 were turned in to the secretary of state’s office. That measure increases penalties for criminal identity theft and consumer fraud targeting seniors and vulnerable individuals. An initiative requires at least 246,372 valid signatures of registered state voters to be certified, though the secretary of state’s office suggests at least 325,000 in case of any duplicate or invalid signatures. The signature validation process could take a few weeks, according to the secretary of state’s office.

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Monday, July 11, 2016 PAGE

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Divided by race, united by pain THERE AREN’T ANY ready answers for how to end this cycle of bloodshed, these heart-rending images from Louisiana and Minnesota and Texas of a country in desperate trouble, with so much pain to soothe, rage to exorcise and injustice to confront. But we have choices about Frank how we absorb Bruni what’s happened, about the rashness with which we point fingers. Making the right ones is crucial, and leaves us with real hope for figuring this out. Making the wrong ones puts that possibility ever further from reach. So does a public debate that assigns us different tribes and warring interests, when almost all of us want the same thing: for the killing to cease and for every American to feel respected and safe. We have disagreements about how to get there, but they don’t warrant the inflammatory headlines that appeared on the front of The New York Post (“Civil War”) or at the top of The Drudge Report (“Black Lives Kill”). They needn’t become hardened battle lines. “We have devolved into some separatism and we’ve taken our corners,” Malik Aziz, the deputy chief of police in Dallas, said in an interview with CNN on Friday. “Days like yesterday or the day before — they shouldn’t happen. But when they do, let’s be human beings. Let’s be honorable men and women and sit down at a table and say, ‘How can we not let this happen again?’ and be sincere in our hearts.” “We’re failing at that on all sides,” he concluded, expressing a sentiment uttered by public officials black and white, Democrat and Republican, in laments that drew on the same vocabulary. Separate, divided: I kept hearing those words and their variants, a report card for America as damning as it was inarguable. Separate, divided: I kept seeing that in pundits who talked past and over one another, in a din that’s becoming harder and harder to bear. Separate, divided: I kept thinking of Donald Trump and how he in particular preys on our estrangement and deepens it.

On Friday he didn’t, putting out sorrowful, thoughtful messages on Twitter and Facebook and announcing his postponement of a speech on economic opportunity that he had been scheduled to deliver. He was otherwise silent, and while that was entirely out of character, it was wholly in line with the shock and confusion that Americans were feeling. Hillary Clinton wrestled with that confusion in an interview with CNN’s Wolf Blitzer, stressing, “We can’t be engaging in hateful rhetoric.” Asked if and why she’d be better at dealing with race relations than Donald Trump would, she declined to disparage him. This wasn’t the moment for that. We can’t keep falling into the same old traps. We can’t keep making hasty conclusions, faulty connections. Predictably, there was a recurrence of talk after the killings of five police officers in Dallas late Thursday night that this was the fruit and fault of the Black Lives Matter movement and that cries of police misconduct equal a bounty on police lives. That was a willfully selective interpretation of events. It ignored an emerging profile of the suspected gunman as someone who acted alone, not as the emissary of any aggrieved group. It ignored how peacefully the protest in Dallas began and how calmly it proceeded up until shots rang out. Black and white stood together. Civilians and cops stood together. Those cops were there precisely because they’d been briefed on the demonstration and brought into its planning. They were a collaborative presence, not an enemy one. “We had police officers taking pictures with protesters, protecting them, guarding them, making sure they was getting from one point to another,” Aziz recalled. And their instincts amid the gunfire weren’t to flee for cover but to run toward its source and to hurry demonstrators out of the way. If we don’t pay full tribute to that, we’ll never get the full accountability from police officers that we also need, and we’ll never be able to address the urgent, legitimate demands at the heart of the Dallas demonstration and others like it.

“We’re hurting,” Dallas’s police chief, David Brown, said during a news conference Friday morning. “Our profession is hurting.” He’s black. So are many other officers on the Dallas force, a diverse one with a good record. And he implored everyone to remember that these men and women, in Dallas and elsewhere, “literally risk their lives to protect our democracy.” “We don’t feel much support most days,” he continued. “Let’s not make today most days.” That appeal was all the more poignant for how it united police and protesters in a desire that no sweeping, damning judgments be made about a whole class of people; that such prejudice be resisted; that such cynicism be renounced. We must be openhearted and coolheaded that way. But we have to be honest, too, and not shrink from the ugliness laid bare by technology and social media — by the footage of the police pumping bullets into Alton Sterling in Baton Rouge, La., on Tuesday and of Philando Castile bleeding and dying beside his girlfriend, Diamond Reynolds, on Wednesday in Falcon Heights, Minn. Over and over, Reynolds says “sir” to the police officer who shot Castile and whose gun is still visibly pointed toward the interior of the car where both she and her 4-year-old daughter, Dae’Anna, sit. It’s a shockingly intimate portrait of disbelief and helplessness. On Friday morning, Reynolds

appeared on CNN and insisted that her story not be seen in isolation. “It’s about all of the families that have lost people,” she said. “This thing that has happened in Dallas, it was not because of something that transpired in Minnesota,” she continued. “This is bigger than Philando. This is bigger than Trayvon Martin. This is bigger than Sandra Bland. This is bigger than all of us.” She added that Friday was Dae’Anna’s graduation from preschool, that Castile was supposed to be there, and that his absence would be hard on the little girl. Reflecting on Castile’s death, Gov. Mark Dayton of Minnesota asked: “Would this have happened if those passengers would have been white? I don’t think it would have.” It’s an important question, a defensible guess, and we need to be able to hear and express both without the instant commencement of political warfare, without superimposing particular causes and constituencies over the narrative, as if every new development and every next death were a bludgeon to be wielded. There’s only one cause here: taking the appropriate steps — in criminal justice, in police training, in schools, in public discourse — so that each of us goes about our days in as much peace as possible. And the constituency for that is all of America. Among the important choices we’re making is whom to listen to. There are voices out there — too many of them — that seek

to inflame. There are others that don’t. Three from Dallas stood out. One was that of Mayor Mike Rawlings, who lamented how racial issues “continue to divide us.” “This is on my generation of leaders,” said the mayor, who is white. “It is on our watch that we have allowed this to continue to fester, that we have led the next generation down a vicious path of rhetoric and actions that pit one against the other.” Another voice was that of Erik Wilson, the deputy mayor pro tem of the city, who is black. “No conflict has ever been solved with violence,” he told CNN. “It’s always been solved with conversation. And that is something that we need to focus on.” And then there was Deputy Police Chief Aziz, who is also black. Referring to nationwide instances of excessive police force, he said, “We should be held accountable, and that is what we have a criminal justice system for.” But of equal importance, he said, was “a real dialogue with the community that we can no longer be separate. We can’t divide ourselves.” Separate, divided: those words again. They’re our curse right now. Must they be our fate?

________ Frank Bruni is columnist for The New York Times. Thomas Friedman, who regularly publishes in the PDN on Mondays, is off this week.

In manufacturing, U.S. back in action REPORTS OF NASA’S Juno spacecraft’s entering the orbit around Jupiter lit a sparkler in this American heart — on the Fourth of July, no less. It showed that Americans Froma still have what it takes. Harrop To keep spirits orbiting, let’s note another recent American feat that few could have imagined a couple of years ago. The United States is now gaining, not losing, factory jobs. This glad trend has some sobering asterisks attached, but there’s no denying this: There are now nearly a million more factory jobs in this country than there were in 2010. Many of them are coming —

surprise, surprise — from China. China, meanwhile, has lost about 6 percent of its factory positions from four years ago. Why do Americans seem to know more about Jupiter’s 67 moons than about the turnaround in factory employment? Reason No. 1 is politics. From Donald Trump on the populist right to Bernie Sanders on the left, trade agreements have become the obsession, the all-purpose villain behind U.S. factory closings and “movings” to low-wage countries. In documenting the brutal departure of U.S. factory jobs, the candidates’ rearview mirrors have been quite accurate. We’re still down over 7 million manufacturing jobs from a peak of about 19.5 million in 1979. But any serious plan to address the future of blue-collar America must focus on what’s actually happening now. What’s happening is automation. Robots enable manufacturers to

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make lots of stuff with relatively few workers. The ability to do the job with far fewer humans goes far in canceling the advantage of lowwage countries. (Lower U.S. energy costs have helped, too.) This is how General Electric could move 4,000 jobs from China and Mexico to a new appliance plant in Louisville, Ky. “We have [only] two hours of labor in a refrigerator,” GE CEO Jeff Immelt explained, “so it really doesn’t matter if you make it in Mexico, the U.S. or China.” Another reason many don’t know about the improved outlook for factory work is that most of the new manufacturing jobs are in the South — especially North Carolina, South Carolina and Tennessee. The rattling job losses occurred in the industrial Midwest. Conditions are better there, too, but many of the region’s laid-off workers still suffer. The asterisks:

■ The technology that lets U.S. companies slash the labor content of their products is something anyone can use. Foxconn, a supplier for Apple and Samsung, recently replaced 60,000 Chinese workers with robots. ■ The new factory jobs require more training. The workers must be able to program and oversee fancy machinery. They need to be flexible, to move to another task as orders change. Happily, the pay is much higher. ■ Advances in automation seem destined to reduce human workforces even more, here and everywhere. ■ Brexit chaos has made the dollar stronger. That makes U.S. products more expensive on the global market. We should probably abandon hope that a Trump stump talk on U.S. manufacturing will delve in reality. That U.S. factory output and employment have been trending upward is something Trump

NEWS DEPARTMENT Main office: 305 W. First St., P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362 ■ MICHAEL FOSTER, managing editor; 360-417-3531 mfoster@peninsuladailynews.com ■ Sports; 360-417-3525; sports@peninsuladailynews.com ■ General news information: 360-417-3527 From Jefferson County and West End, 800-826-7714, ext. 5250 Email: news@peninsuladailynews.com News fax: 360-417-3521 ■ Sequim office: 147 W. Washington St., 98382; 360-681-2390 ■ Port Townsend office: 1939 E. Sims Way, 98368; 360-385-2335 CHARLIE BERMANT, 360-385-2335, ext. 5550, cbermant@peninsuladailynews.com

may not even know. In any case, it’s not useful information for his purposes. But Trump’s thundering vows to bring factory work back to this country by the container shipload do everyone a disservice. Robotics are upon us. Peddling a dated vision of U.S. factories humming along with thousands and thousands of workers is just another con. China won’t be able to have that soon. To restore prosperity to bluecollar America, we will need a moonshot program to retrain and rebuild. A country that can send spacecraft spinning around Jupiter should be able to pull that off.

_________ Froma Harrop is a columnist for the Providence (R.I.) Journal. Her column appears in the PDN every Monday. Email fharrop@gmail.com.

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


A8

PeninsulaNorthwest

MONDAY, JULY 11, 2016

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Clallam United Way chooses its 2016 campaign co-chairs BY CHRIS MCDANIEL PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Marilyn Balcerak, whose son fatally shot himself and his stepsister last year, speaks to the media last Thursday in Olympia about the submission of more than 330,000 signatures in support of a ballot measure on gun access.

330K signatures turned in for gun safety initiative BY RACHEL LA CORTE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CHRISTY J. SMITH

Sara Dutrow, left, and Courtney Buchanan of Olympic Veterinary Clinic are the 2016 campaign co-chairs for the United Way of Clallam County. The exact date of Super Saturday has yet to be scheduled, Smith said. “What will happen next is we will be meeting to set our [campaign] goal and make a theme,� Smith said. Both Dutrow and Buchanan are longtime residents of Clallam County. “The number of nonprofits that the United Way is able to support in their campaign is greater than any other agency in the county,� said Dutrow, who has served as CEO of Olympic Veterinary Clinic since 2012. “I am privileged to help lead this effort.� The residents of Clallam County have “helped me in so many ways, and I believe it is important to give back whenever possible,� Buchanan added. In addition to their roles at Olympic

Veterinary Clinic, Dutrow and Buchanan are active volunteers for Revitalize Port Angeles, the Humane Society and the Boys & Girls Clubs of the Olympic Peninsula. In addition to supporting its partner agencies, United Way of Clallam County also funds other charities as directed by some donors. “If you decide to donate to one of those agencies,� Smith said, the money is specifically earmarked for them, “and they get it directly.� United Way of Clallam County also manages the Clallam Community Foundation, which accepts bequests of all kinds, including remainder trusts and donor driven funds. For more information about Day of Caring events, call 360-457-3011 or visit www.unitedwayclallam.org.

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OLYMPIA — Supporters of a proposed state ballot measure that would create protection orders to take guns from people deemed a serious threat to themselves or others have turned in more than 330,000 signatures to the secretary of state. Signatures were turned in Thursday. Initiative 1491, backed by the Alliance for Gun Responsibility, comes after legislative efforts to create “extreme risk� protection orders failed earlier this year. Stephanie Ervin, I-1491’s campaign manager, said that the initiative creates “an import tool for families and law enforcement to prevent crisis from turning into tragedy.� Under the measure, concerned family or household members or police can petition the court by filing an affidavit stating specific concerns, such as mental illness or domestic violence, and the number and types of firearms owned. Following a court hearing, if the court finds evidence that a person poses a danger to themselves or others by having a firearm, they can have their guns taken away and be prevented from buying a firearm for up to one year. Only three states — California, Indiana and Connecticut — have enacted similar laws. California passed its bill after the mass shooting in 2014 near the University of California, Santa Barbara. Marilyn Balcerak, whose son fatally shot his stepsister and then himself in Auburn last year, said that she knew her son was suicidal, but she was powerless to prevent their deaths. “I did everything I could to keep him from getting a gun, and even went to the police, but was twice turned down,� she said. “If extreme risk protection orders had been law just two years ago, those police officers I talked to would have been able to help me.� Messages left with the National Rifle Association and the Bellevue-based Second Amendment Foundation were not immediately returned Thursday. An initiative requires at least 246,372 valid signatures of registered state voters to be certified, though the secretary of state’s office suggests at least 325,000 in case of any duplicate or invalid signatures. The signature validation process is expected to take a few weeks. The Alliance for Gun Responsibility was also behind a 2014 ballot measure, approved by voters that year, that requires background checks on all sales and transfers of guns, including private transactions and many loans and gifts. Maine and Nevada both have universal background check measures on the ballot this November. “For too long, there has been a disconnect between what the American people demand on gun safety and how American politicians

vote,� John Feinblatt, president of Everytown for Gun Safety, wrote in an emailed statement. “In 2014, we took this issue to the people of Washington state for an up or down vote — and they spoke loud and clear to prevent gun violence by requiring background checks for all gun sales. This year the people of Maine and Nevada and again in Washington state will have their say at the ballot box as well when it comes to gun safety.�

PORT ANGELES — Sara Dutrow and Courtney Buchanan of Olympic Veterinary Clinic are the 2016 campaign co-chairs for the United Way of Clallam County. The annual campaign kicks off each fall with Day of Caring projects set up all across the county. The 2015 campaign raised $726,353 from 2,000 donors for its 24 partner organizations and other nonprofits designated by donors. The goal was $950,000. In 2014, the campaign raised $780,000. During the campaign, hundreds of volunteers work in businesses and in communities across the county, encouraging people to “give where they live,� according to unitedwayclallam.org. Dutrow and Buchanan were chosen by the United Way of Clallam County board, said Christy J. Smith, United Way of Clallam County resource development manager. This year’s Day of Caring will fall on the weekend of Sept. 11, Smith said. “This year we are hosting eight events across the county,� she said. “Volunteers from the west end, Port Angeles and Sequim will be cleaning, painting and doing landscaping to show how much we love our community.� The campaign will end in December, Smith said, with the funds distributed during Super Saturday in February. “That is when we get the agencies together and share with them what they are getting,� she said.


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Monday, July 11, 2016 SECTION

CLASSIFIEDS, COMICS, WEATHER In this section

B Baseball

Shea rallies, wins Amateur Erases 3-shot deficit with birdie binge BY MICHAEL CARMAN PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Seattle’s Dae-Ho Lee has hit 12 home runs this season while becoming a fan favorite.

Derby missing out on Big Boy MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL’s Home Run Derby will be held today (5 p.m. ESPN) and it will not include Mariners fan favorite Dae-Ho Lee. To borrow what Henry John Higgins said before revealing McGrath that he’d become accustomed to the face of Eliza Doolittle: Damn! Damn! Damn! Damn! I realize getting worked up about a sports event that’s not really a sports event is silly. There’s only so much angry energy inside any man, and it’s better devoted toward telephone scammers, neglectful pet owners, corrupt dictators, and those occasions when you’re chewing food and miss the food and instead bite the inside of your cheek. Besides, I can’t remember the last time I watched a Home Run Derby in its entirety. Lob and swing, followed by another lob, another swing, over and over and over. Sometimes the ball goes over the fence, sometimes the ball doesn’t go over the fence. This is not my idea of entertainment, and I am easily entertained. Compounding the Derby drudgery is Chris Berman. Advocates of using waterboarding as an interrogation device should know that forcing terrorists to listen to Chris Berman for four hours would be a much more effective method of torture.

Missed opportunity And yet, if Dae-Ho Lee had been selected the Home Run Derby would’ve loomed as can’t-miss TV. Lee was a candidate to steal the show. Win, lose, whatever, the results don’t matter. What matters is the morning-after observations millions of viewers figured to share around the office water cooler. In one enchanted evening, “Big Boy” could’ve graduated from Seattle-area cult figure to national celebrity. Nothing against Kyle Seager’s younger brother Corey, the Dodgers shortstop whose 17 homers earned him a slot in the derby field, but Corey Seager is not the most intriguing rookie of the 2016 season. That distinction belongs to Lee, whose story — orphaned as a toddler in South Korea and raised by an impoverished grandparent who struggled to put food on the table, he sensed that baseball provided a life line to a better world, and he clutched it — should be transformed into a Disney movie. But Lee is out, and the Cincinnati Reds’ Adam Duvall is in, and that ought to amp up the intensity of the contest. An outfielder/first baseman hitting .235 this season, Duvall has slugged 30 homers during his threeyear career. Robinson Cano is in as well, but who would you rather see step up to the plate tonight? TURN

TO

MCGRATH/B2

SEQUIM — The North Olympic Peninsula’s best high school golfer can now lay claim as the top amateur player in Clallam County. Sequim’s Jack Shea posted a final-round 5-under-par 67 and rallied from three strokes back with six holes to play to edge Sid Krumpe by one stroke for the Clallam County Amateur Championhship on Sunday. The championship came down to one final putt, as Krumpe had a long putt for birdie and a tie on the 18th green. “He almost made that 40 or 50 footer,” Shea said. “It was on a great line and it ended up sneaking past by about a millimeter. “My heart was pumping on that one.” Shea, the back-to-back AllPeninsula boys golf MVP, finished the 54-hole stroke play tournament at 9-under-par 207. “It was a lot of fun,” Shea said of winning the tournament on his home course, the Cedars at Dungeness. “I played some pretty decent golf for me and I’m glad I was able to win here. “I get a pretty solid trophy.” Shea said he would celebrate the win his with family. He’s the son of Cedars GM and Director of Golf Bill Shea. “We’ve got a barbecue going, so nothing too crazy,” Shea said. He shot rounds of 72 at Peninsula Golf Course in Port Angeles on Friday, and posted a score of 4-under par 68 at SunLand Golf & Country Club in Sequim on Saturday. Shea entered Sunday’s final round trailing Krumpe, a member of Cedars’ maintenance crew, by one stroke, and was two back at the turn after a bogey on the ninth hole. Krumpe’s lead grew to three shots after he birdied the 12th hole. “After that I knew that I had

DAVE LOGAN/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Sequim’s Jack Shea holds the Clallam County Amateur Championship trophy after rallying to win the golf tournament by one stroke with a round of 5-under-par 67 at Cedars at Dungeness Golf Course in Sequim on Sunday. to make a move if I wanted to win,” Shea said. Shea did just that, birdying three of the next four holes to take the lead. “The 13th hole is a short par4, so I knew chances of him making a birdie were good. “I went into attack mode a little bit and hit my driver to

settled for par. Shea’s length off the tee helped him birdie the par-5 14th and pull within a stroke of the about 30 yards from the pin.” lead. Shea chipped to about seven “I hit a pretty good drive feet and drained his birdie putt. down the right and Sid had to “I was fortunate to make that lay up, he was a little further one,” Shea said. back with his drive. Krumpe, meanwhile, had a TURN TO SHEA/B2 good look at a birdie putt but

Golf

Montgomery shines in spot start Former Royals pitching prospect allows one run as M’s win 8-5 BY BOB DUTTON MCCLATCHY NEWS SERVICE

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Lefthander Mike Montgomery responded Sunday to a show-me start in the Show-Me State by showing the Kansas City Royals what they drafted and traded away. Montgomery seized the opportunity of a spot start by carrying a shutout into the seventh inning and helping the Mariners close out their prebreak schedule with an 8-5 victory at Kauffman Stadium. “It’s definitely satisfying,” he said. “But at the same time, it’s THE ASSOCIATED PRESS really a win for the team. It was Seattle starting pitcher Mike Montgomery delivers to a great facing the Royals here, and the first time pitching here. Kansas City batter during the Mariners’ 8-5 win over the Royals in Kansas City on Sunday. It was a lot fun, and I just

wanted to have fun with it.” It wasn’t all Montgomery, obviously. The Mariners pounded out 14 hits on this typically sweltering Heartland afternoon, including game-breaker homers by Robinson Cano and Adam Lind in a five-run seventh inning. The Mariners jumped to an 8-0 lead before Kansas City made a late run. “At 8-1, I thought we were in great shape,” manager Scott Servais said. “Then, I’m glad we had eight. You can’t put them away here. There’s a reason they won the World Series. They take a lot of pride in that.You see it in the ballpark with their fans, who kind of get them going. TURN

TO

M’S/B4

Kuma’s consistency provides needed boost BY BOB DUTTON MCCLATCHY NEWS SERVICE

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Six weeks into the season, Hisashi Iwakuma had one victory through eight starts and it was easy to wonder whether the Dodgers knew something last winter when they backed away from a tentative free-agent deal. Fast forward to last Friday: Iwakuma won for the eighth time in 10 starts when the Mariners held on for a 3-2 victory

over the Kansas City Royals. He has nine victories at the All-Star break for the first time in his career. “Staying consistent with my routine helped me a lot,” he said. “You can’t control the win or loss. All you can control is giving your team a chance to win. That’s all I’ve been trying to do.” In some ways, his performance has been similar. Iwakuma has a 4.15 ERA through his 10-game run after posting a 4.38 mark prior to his

surge. But he provided a major boost by pitching at least six innings in nine of his last 10 starts. That sort of consistency offers a sharp contrast to other member of the Mariners’ rotation since a strained right calf muscle forced Felix Hernandez to the disabled list after a May 27 start against Minnesota. In 40 games since Hernandez’s last start, the Mariners’ rotation produced only 19 starts

of at least six innings: seven by Iwakuma; 12 by everyone else. “He’s been huge for us,” manager Scott Servais said. “You look at it, you see it and you’re watching it and you think, `How is he doing it?’ But he pitches. He really pitches. “If you look at any one of his four pitches in a vacuum, they’re probably average. But when you put them all together, with his deception and his ability to make pitches, it plays up.” TURN

TO

KUMA/B4


B2

SportsRecreation

MONDAY, JULY 11, 2016

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”

1:30 p.m. NBA TV Basketball NBA, Brooklyn Nets vs. Atlanta Hawks, Summer League (Live) 3:30 p.m. NBA TV Basketball NBA, Toronto Raptors vs. Dallas Mavericks, Summer League (Live) 4 p.m. (313) CBSSD Fast Pitch NPF, Scrap Yard Dawgs vs. USSSA Florida Pride (Live) 5 p.m. (26) ESPN Baseball MLB, Home Run Derby Site: Petco Park - San Diego, Calif. (Live) 5 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Basketball NBA, Miami Heat vs. Denver Nuggets, Summer League (Live) 5:30 p.m. NBA TV Basketball NBA, Cleveland Cavaliers vs. Minnesota Timberwolves, Summer League (Live) 6 p.m. (313) CBSSD Fast Pitch, World Championship 7 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Basketball NBA, Sacramento Kings vs. New Orleans Pelicans, Summer League (Live) 7:30 p.m. NBA TV Basketball NBA, Golden State Warriors vs. Los Angeles Lakers, Summer League (Live)

SPORTS PIC OF THE DAY

Monday No events scheduled.

Tuesday Baseball: Wilder at Senior Babe Ruth State Tournament, at Issaquah, TBD

Baseball Mariners 8, Royals 5 Sunday’s Game Kansas City ab r hbi ab r hbi K.Marte ss 4 1 2 1 Mrrfeld 2b 4110 S.Smith lf 5 1 2 0 S.Perez dh 5 1 2 0 Cano dh 5 2 2 2 Morales 1b 3 0 0 1 N.Cruz rf 3 1 1 0 Eibner rf 4132 Dan.Rbr ph-rf1 0 1 0 Cthbert 3b 3011 K.Sager 3b 5 1 2 2 Orlando cf 4000 Lind 1b 5 1 1 3 Gordon lf 4121 Innetta c 4 0 0 0 A.Escbr ss 2000 L.Mrtin cf 5 1 2 0 C.Colon ss 1 0 0 0 O’Mlley 2b 3 0 1 0 Butera c 4110 Totals 40 814 8 Totals 34 510 5 Seattle

Seattle 200 100 500—8 Kansas City 000 000 131—5 E—Gee (3). DP—Seattle 2, Kansas City 2. LOB—Seattle 9, Kansas City 6. 2B—Merrifield (15), Cuthbert (9), Gordon (7). HR—Cano (21), Lind (13), Eibner (3), Gordon (7). SF—Cuthbert (1). IP H R ER BB SO Seattle Montgomery W,3-3 6 1⁄3 5 1 1 0 3 2⁄3 1 0 0 0 2 Diaz 1⁄3 2 3 3 2 0 Rollins 2⁄3 1 0 0 0 0 Benoit Cishek 1 1 1 1 1 2 Kansas City Gee L,3-3 32⁄3 5 3 2 1 3 Flynn 21⁄3 2 0 0 1 3 Pounders 1 5 5 5 1 3 Wang 1 2 0 0 0 0 Young 1 0 0 0 0 2 HBP—by Gee (Cruz). Umpires—Home, Fieldin Cubreth; First, Jim Reynolds; Second, Manny Gonzalez; Third, CB Bucknor. T—3:03. A—27,544 (37,903).

American League East Division W L Pct Baltimore 51 36 .586 Boston 49 38 .563 Toronto 51 40 .560 New York 44 44 .500 Tampa Bay 34 54 .386 Central Division W L Pct Cleveland 52 36 .591 Detroit 46 43 .517 Kansas City 45 43 .511 Chicago 45 43 .511 Minnesota 31 56 .356 West Division W L Pct Texas 54 35 .607 Houston 48 41 .539 Seattle 45 44 .506 Oakland 38 51 .427 Los Angeles 37 52 .416 Saturday’s Games Detroit 3, Toronto 2

GB — 2 2 7½ 17½ GB — 6½ 7 7 20½ GB — 6 9 16 17

Tuesday THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

QUITE

THE RACQUET

Andy Murray of Britain celebrates after beating Milos Raonic of Canada 6-4, 7-6 (3), 7-6 (2) in the men’s singles final at the Wimbledon Tennis Championships in London on Sunday. After Britain famously endured a 77-year wait between Wimbledon men’s champions, Murray has given the host country a pair of titles in quick succession. The win earned Murray his second trophy at the All England Club since 2013 and third Grand Slam championship overall.

Chicago White Sox 5, Atlanta 4 Baltimore 3, L.A. Angels 2 Boston 4, Tampa Bay 1 N.Y. Yankees 7, Cleveland 6, 11 innings Oakland 3, Houston 2 Kansas City 5, Seattle 3 Minnesota 8, Texas 6 Sunday’s Games Toronto 6, Detroit 1 N.Y. Yankees 11, Cleveland 7 Baltimore 4, L.A. Angels 2 Boston 4, Tampa Bay 0 Atlanta 2, Chicago White Sox 0 Houston 2, Oakland 1, 10 innings Seattle 8, Kansas City 5 Minnesota at Texas, late. Monday MLB All-Star Home Run Derby, 5 p.m. (ESPN)

Tuesday MLB All-Star Game at San Diego, 5 p.m. (FOX) Friday’s Games Texas at Chicago Cubs, 11:20 a.m. Boston at N.Y. Yankees, 4:05 p.m. Baltimore at Tampa Bay, 4:10 p.m. Kansas City at Detroit, 4:10 p.m. Cleveland at Minnesota, 5:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox at L.A. Angels, 7:05 p.m. Toronto at Oakland, 7:05 p.m. Houston at Seattle, 7:10 p.m.

National League Washington New York

East Division W L Pct GB 54 36 .600 — 47 41 .534 6

Miami Philadelphia Atlanta

47 41 41 48 31 58 Central Division W L Chicago 53 35 St. Louis 46 42 Pittsburgh 46 43 Milwaukee 38 49 Cincinnati 32 57 West Division W L San Francisco 56 33 Los Angeles 50 40 Colorado 40 47 San Diego 38 50 Arizona 38 51

.534 6 .461 12½ .348 22½ Pct .602 .523 .517 .437 .360

GB — 7 7½ 14½ 21½

Pct GB .629 — .556 6½ .460 15 .432 17½ .427 18

2:30 a.m. (319) PAC12 (320) PAC12WA Basketball, Exhibition Game, Pac-12 AllStars vs. Australia Boomers (Live) 5 a.m. (304) NBCSN Cycling UCI, Tour de France, Stage 10 EscaldesEngordany - Revel (Live)

Saturday’s Games Chicago White Sox 5, Atlanta 4 St. Louis 8, Milwaukee 1 San Francisco 4, Arizona 2 Miami 4, Cincinnati 2 Pittsburgh 12, Chicago Cubs 6 L.A. Dodgers 4, San Diego 3 Washington 6, N.Y. Mets 1 Colorado 8, Philadelphia 3 Sunday’s Games Miami 7, Cincinnati 3 Washington 3, N.Y. Mets 2 Chicago Cubs 6, Pittsburgh 5 Atlanta 2, Chicago White Sox 0 St. Louis 5, Milwaukee 1 All other games, late. Friday’s Games N.Y. Mets at Philadelphia, 4:05 p.m. Pittsburgh at Washington, 4:05 p.m. Milwaukee at Cincinnati, 4:10 p.m. Colorado at Atlanta, 4:35 p.m. Miami at St. Louis, 5:15 p.m. L.A. Dodgers at Arizona, 6:40 p.m. San Francisco at San Diego, 7:40 p.m.

Shea: Sinks putts late McGrath: Let Ichiro hit CONTINUED FROM B1 pretty tough pin location,” Shea said. “There was nowhere you “So I went for it and got about pin high off to the left could have a straight putt.” Shea hit his tee shot stiff and chipped on for a tap-in to within 7 feet and manbirdie.” Shea continued the aged to send home another birdie spree on the par-4 tough putt. “I think if I were to hit 15th, a hole he called “one of the toughest on the course.” 10 putts from that spot I’d “I hit a really good drive probably make two of them about 90 yards from the pin and be really happy about then got to 10 feet on my that,” Shea said. Krumpe was just off line approach shot. “That left me with a with his own birdie attempt downhill slider, a difficult on 17. “I head to the 18th tee putt, but I was able to knock and I pull out my 3-wood it in. “ Krumpe bogeyed that thinking that was the safest play,” Shea said. hole after three-putting. “But I pulled my drive to Both players made par the left, pretty close to the on the 16th hole. Shea added to his lead hazard and he pipes one with another birdie on the down the middle.” par-3 17th hole. With the two-stroke lead “The distance was about in hand, Shea decided to 160 yards downhill with a aim at the right side of the

green and play for bogey. “I got it up next to the green, chipped on to about 6 feet away, and my par putt lipped out on the low side,” Shea said. But a tap-in bogey did the trick for the recent Sequim High School graduate who will play at Montana State University-Billings this fall. “It was so much fun to watch those guys play,” Cedars head pro Garrett Smithson said. “We were in a gallery and following them around the course. “Jack’s a stud and I think he’ll do big things at the next level.”

________ Sports reporter Michael Carman can be contacted at 360-4173525 or at mcarman@peninsuladailynews.com.

Fowler confirms he will play for team USA in Rio Summer Olympics THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

TROON, Scotland — Rickie Fowler took to Twitter to say he’s going to the Olympics. Patrick Reed confirmed at the Scottish Open that he will join him in Rio. Now it’s up to Jordan Spieth. With one day before the deadline to submit the American team for Rio, Spieth still has not made up his mind whether the threat of Zika and other security concerns are enough to keep him out of the Olym-

pics. Two-time Masters champion Bubba Watson already has said he was going. Fowler played at St. Andrews upon his arrival in Scotland. Golfweek magazine reported that Peter Dawson, the former R&A chief executive who is president of the IGF, walked a few holes with Fowler on Saturday at the Old Course. “Looking forward to wearing some red white and blue in Rio,” Fowler tweeted Sunday evening.

Reed, No. 13 in the world, was first alternate for the Americans when Dustin Johnson withdrew on Friday because of the Zika virus. Reed had said earlier in the week he wanted to play, then said he would need to talk to his family after hearing that Johnson had pulled out. “I got the email and phone call from Team USA last night and I went through a lot of things with them, and we’re all in,” Reed said Sunday.

CONTINUED FROM B1 iro Suzuki, who is closing in on 3,000 career hits durLee, who just turned 34 ing the last of his 16 seasons in the big leagues. and may or may not be Ichiro’s reputation prepart of the Mariners’ future after 2016, or Cano, whose ceded his MLB debut with the 2001 Mariners: A contract with the team is guaranteed through 2023? meticulous craftsman who You might recall what I could spray the ball anydidn’t until a moment ago, where, and go yard — anytime — if so inclined. when I looked it up, that The Home Run Derby Cano won the 2011 contest. would be an opportunity Although heartstrings not often are pulled during for Ichiro to show his latent power potential isn’t a the Home Run Derby, myth. Cano’s performance Another definition of induced tears unrelated to imagination: Allowing San late-night yawning. His father, Jose, threw the bat- Francisco starting pitcher Madison Bumgarner to ting-practice tosses. Cano is a good guy, and take some swings. Bumgarner is legit with father-son scenarios built a bat in his hands — so around baseball are the legit Giants manager best. Bruce Bochy appointed But Cano’s attempt to him a spot in a convenfinish first for the second tional lineup recently for time, with his dad on the an interleague road game, mound again, will not where a DH is an alwaysinterest me. Using some imagination used option — but the Players Association had in putting together the issues with a pitcher pareight-man derby field ticipating in the Home Run would interest me. Definition of imagination: Replac- Derby. So Bumgarner won’t be ing defending champion Todd Frazier with, say, Ich- there, and Ichiro won’t be

there, and several candidates more likely to move the interest meter more than Mark Trumbo and Wil Myers won’t be there. Would it be a travesty to invite some retired legends into this thing? Dae-Ho Lee isn’t retired, and he isn’t a legend. All he had done before the derby lineup got posted Thursday was hit 12 homers in 172 at-bats, sustaining the power that produced 323 homers in South Korea and Japan. There’s a desperate dearth of personalities in baseball these days. No matter that he speaks next to no English, Lee is a personality who transcends language barriers. He could’ve have made four hours of Chris Berman almost tolerable. I doubt I’ll tune in. Life is too short for wasted nights.

________ John McGrath is a sports columnist at The News Tribune. He can be contacted at jmcgrath@ thenewstribune.com.

Lang wins Women’s Open in playoff THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SAN MARTIN, Calif. — Brittany Lang won her first career major at the U.S. Women’s Open when Anna Nordqvist touched the sand with her club in a bunker for a two-stroke penalty in the three-hole aggregate playoff on Sunday.

The penalty occurred on the second hole of the playoff and was not delivered to the players until they were on the final hole after officials reviewed replays in the latest controversy at a USGA event. Lang sealed the win with a short par putt on the final playoff hole, while

Nordqvist made bogey to lose by three shots. At last month’s U.S. Open, eventual winner Dustin Johnson played much of the final round not knowing if he would be penalized one stroke because his ball moved as he addressed it on the fifth green.


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MONDAY, JULY 11, 2016

No Ronaldo, no problem for Portugal in Euro final “It was tough because we lost our main man and we had all our hopes pinned on him because he’s a player who can score a goal at any minute,” Portugal defender Pepe said. “When he said he couldn’t go on, I tried to tell my teammates that we have to win it for him. That we were going to fight for him.” And they did. Red and green confetti descended from the roof onto Ronaldo and his victorious teammates as supporters of the hosts flooded out of the stadium, denied a third victory on French soil to add to Euro ‘84 and the 1998 World Cup. “Football can be very cruel,” said Lloris, France’s captain. “The overriding emotion is a lot of sadness.” It was a mostly dull and stodgy final but the record books will only show that Portugal went from third-place in its group to champion, and with little help from Ronaldo in its

BY ROB HARRIS THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SAINT-DENIS, France — Portugal overcame the loss of injured captain Cristiano Ronaldo to beat France 1-0 in the European Championship final on Sunday, with a goal in extra time from substitute Eder securing their country’s first football title. Just as the final looked destined for a penalty shootout, Eder cut through the French defense and struck a low shot from 25 meters (yards) past goalkeeper Hugo Lloris in the 109th minute at the Stade de France. Twelve years after losing to Greece on home soil in their last appearance in the final, it was Portugal’s turn to spoil the host nation’s party. And they achieved it after winning only one of their seven games at Euro 2016 inside 90 minutes, and after losing the inspirational Ronaldo midway through the first half.

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Portugal players celebrate at the end of the Euro 2016 final. Portugal won 1-0. last match. European football’s biggest game lost its biggest name after 25 minutes of a cagey final on the outskirts of the French capital. “Today I had bad luck because I had a small injury in the beginning of the teams, but my colleagues did their part — they run, they fight . . . nobody believed in Portugal but we won,” Ronaldo said.

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clattered into Ronaldo’s standing left leg. Ronaldo went down in agony— writhing, grimacing and screaming. He was able to return, but this was one injury he could not run off. The stretcher came on and in the 25th minute Ronaldo became a spectator. But thanks to Patricio’s array of saves and dogged defending, Ronaldo left a champion. Ronaldo was the last to climb the steps up to the VIP area to collect the trophy from Angel Maria Villar, who has assumed UEFA’s presidential duties since Michel Platini was banned from football. Unlike his great rival Lionel Messi, the Argentina and Barcelona forward, the 31-year-old Ronaldo has now filled the medal void on the major international stage. “It’s something unbelievable in my career, something I deserve,” Ronaldo said.

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After years of planning, the championship’s first 24-team tournament became a reality over the last month, but the quality of football deteriorated. Such a sterile showpiece — the first European Championship final to be scoreless after 90 minutes — seemed a fitting climax. Even France forward Antoine Griezmann, the tournament’s leading

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Kuma: ‘Making guys chase’ pitches a big help CONTINUED FROM B1 teed year, for $12 million, but includes two vesting Iwakuma, 35, was a free options, based on innings agent after last season and, pitched, that can boost the when the Mariners failed to three-year value to $44 milguarantee a third year in a lion. At this point, he needs to new deal, he looked elsewhere and eventually pitch another 47 2/3 innings reached agreement with over the rest of the season the Dodgers for $45 million to guarantee a $14 million deal for 2017. over three years. Barring an injury or That deal fell apart after the Dodgers examined the some other reversal, he results of Iwakuma’s medi- should reach the threshold before the calendar hits cal examination. The decision baffled Iwa- September. “Overall, my command kuma, who then reopened discussions with the Mari- has been better,” he said. “My stuff has been workners — but with diminished ing a lot better as well. I’m negotiating leverage. Iwakuma ultimately able to make pitches, and agreed to a deal that I’m able to go with my style includes only one guaran- — making guys chase and

making guys put the ball in setbacks, could return to play.” active duty shortly after the break. On the mend ■ Right-hander Ryan Cook, who hasn’t pitched ■ Right-hander Taijuan this season, is scheduled to Walker was examined Sunstart his rehab assignment day by Dr. Bob Anderson, a foot-and-ankle specialist, in Sunday at Peoria in the Arizona Rookie League. Charlotte, N.C. He was diagnosed in Anderson confirmed the original diagnosis of tendi- spring training with a nitis in Walker’s right foot, strained right latissimus and the hope is he can dorsi muscle in his back. ■ Right-handed reliever return in two weeks. ■ Right-hander reliever Tony Zych is making slow Nick Vincent is tentatively progress in his recovery scheduled to start a rehab from tendinitis in his rotaassignment over the All- tor cuff. Club officials now say Star break in his recovery from a strained muscle in Zych isn’t likely to return prior to September. his middle back. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS He last pitched on May Vincent hasn’t pitched Seattle’s Hisashi Iwakuma has a 9-6 record. since June 26 but, barring 1.

M’s: Host Astros on Friday after All-Star break CONTINUED FROM B1 ter made it 8-3, and Benoit surrendered a sacrifice fly to Cheslor Cuthbert before “And they feed off it.” But the Mariners held ending the inning. Steve Cishek gave up a on and gained a split in the leadoff homer in the ninth four-game series. The victory sent them to Alex Gordon before closinto the All-Star break on ing out the victory in a nonthe plus side of .500 at save situation. The Mariners grabbed a 45-44. The season resumes Friday against Houston at 2-0 lead in the first inning by capitalizing on a throwSafeco Field. “I think we’ve got a good ing error by Royals starter club,” third baseman Kyle Dillon Gee (3-3). Ketel Marte’s two-out bunt single Seager said. “I really do. We’ve had added another run in the some ups and downs. We fourth before the five-run definitely haven’t been as seventh. Montgomery lost his consistent as we’d like to be. shutout on his 74th and But I like our team.” Montgomery (3-3) gave final pitch when Eibner up one run and five hits in 6 drove a homer over the left1/3 innings while striking field wall. Montgomery had not out three and issuing no allowed a run in 16 2/3 prewalks. Edwin Diaz closed out vious innings against the the seventh inning, but the Royals in three career outRoyals roughed up an inef- ings. Kansas City selected fective David Rollins in the Montgomery, now 27, in the eighth. Joaquin Benoit replaced first round of the 2008 draft Rollins with one out, one but sent him to Tampa Bay run in and the bases loaded. in a franchise-changing Brett Eibner’s single to cen- deal in December 2012. Another trade brought

Montgomery to the Mariners prior to the 2014 season. A starter throughout his first eight pro seasons, he shifted this season to the bullpen and compiled a 2.15 ERA in 30 appearances. When an injury forced Taijuan Walker to the disabled list, Montgomery got the opportunity for a spot start. No surprise but, yes, he’ll get at least one more start. “Coming out of the break,” Servais said, “we will need all six starters to get to Felix [Hernandez, who is slotted to return July 20 from the disabled list]. So, yeah, he’ll start again. Don’t know which game it will be.”

Play of the Game Shortstop Ketel Marte went deep into the hole to backhand a grounder by Alcides Escobar in the third inning, planted his foot and got enough on the throw to get the out at first base. “I practice that every

day,” Marte said. Stat pack “I just tried to slow the Kyle Seager’s two-run game down, and you saw single in the first inning what happened.” extended his hitting streak to 13, which matches a May Positives 1-14 run by Robinson Cano Kyle Seager has multi- for the longest of the season ple hits in nine of his last 16 by a Mariner. games . . . Mike Montgomery ran his scoreless streak Quotable to 16 2/3 innings before Steve Cishek closed the Brett Eibner’s homer in the game by striking out Salvy seventh inning. That is the Perez with a runner on first longest streak of the season by a Mariners pitcher . . . . base. It amounted to a bit of Leonys Martin went 2-for-5 after getting just five hits in revenge: Perez hit a tworun, walk-off double against his previous 44 at-bats. Cishek in Thursday’s series opener; he also hit a homer Negatives Friday against Cishek Lefty reliever David Rol- when the Mariners held on lins nearly let the Royals for a 3-2 victory. back into the game when he So, Cishek’s thoughts retired just one of five bat- when Perez came to the ters in the eighth inning. plate again? Rollins had not allowed “Let’s party,” he said. a run in four innings over “That’s all I was thinkfour previous appearances . ing. I’ve got to attack him . Chris Iannetta was hitless here. I don’t want to make in four at-bats (he did have the job harder by putting a walk) and closed the first runners on first and second half in a 6-for-50 slump. with their three hitter

[Kendrys Morales] coming up. “I was trying to make [Perez] put the ball in play. Thankfully, he swung through it.” After Friday’s game, Cishek had joked he might throw a knuckleball when he next faced Perez. Was this a knuckler? “No,” he joked, “a knuckle slider.”

Short hops Five of Adam Lind’s 13 homers have been threerun shots . . .Robinson Cano’s homer in the seventh inning was his 21st of the season, which matches a career high prior to the All-Star break. He also had 21 in 2013 while playing for the New York Yankees . . . the Mariners finished with a 4-3 edge in the season series against Kansas City . . . . Daniel Robertson’s pinch single in the eighth inning was the Mariners’ 22nd pinch base-hit of the season, which leads AL clubs.

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CARE COORDINATOR CASE AIDE 40 hrs/wk, located in the Sequim Information and Assistance office. Provides support to seniors and adults with disabilities. Good communication and computer skills a must. Bachelor’s degree behavioral or health science and 2 yrs paid social service exp, WDL, auto ins. required. $17.38/hr, full benefit pkg, Contact Information and Assistance, 800801-0050 for job descrip. & applic. packet. Open until filled, preference given to appl. rec’d by 4:00 pm 7/12/16. I&A is an EOE. CNA: Part Time, ideally available for all shifts, including weekends. Apply in person at: Park View Villas, 8th & G Streets, P.A.

Contracts Management and Planning Director (CM&PD): Olympic Area Agency on Aging (O3A) seeks CM&PD based in Port Hadlock. Join mission-driven team advocating for independency and quality community s e r v i c e s fo r o l d e r o r disabled adults. 40 hrs./wk, $60,095$78,850 annual range, benefits, pension plan. Oversees contracts and service procurement in 4 counties. Develop and help implement 4 year agency plan. Required: WDL, auto-ins, BA in social science or related field and 6 yrs. planning and administrative exp. in community services OR Masters and 3 yrs. exp. Must have knowledge of public procurement, contract monitoring and compliance evaluation. For job description and application: 360-379-5061 or www.o3a.org. Open until filled; applications rec e i v e d b y 5 : 0 0 p. m . Tuesday July 19, 2016 in first review. O3A is an EOE.

All positions hiring at FOUND: Keys on small cafe in Discovery Bay. HR BENEFIT r i n g , m e t a l , fo u n d a t Call Dan after 11:30, SPECIALIST Laurel and 13th. (360)379-9131 $16-$19/hr DOE/DOQ (360)417-7580 PT with partial benefits. FOUND: On Old School- Alterations and Sew- Must have exp. in benefit Administration and ing. Alterations, mendhouse Rd. neutered male cat, red and white, i n g , h e m m i n g a n d knowledge of basic ins o m e h e av y we i g h t vestment pr inciples. 6/15. (360)797-7655 s ew i n g ava i l a bl e t o Req: BA in HR or Bus. y o u f r o m m e . C a l l Admin. 3 yrs of exp.in (360)531-2353 ask for HR or related field. Re3023 Lost Guest Service Agent sume/cvr ltr to: PBH 118 B.B. $11 - $14, DOE E. 8th St., Port Angeles, LOST: Cat., Long grey WA 98362 Housekeepers LOCAL SURVEYING hair, bright green eyes, peninsulabehavioral.org Starting $10.50 COMPANY Pierce Rd. Area, 7/4. EOE Accepting applications (360)775-0767 Apply in person at 140 fo r Pa r t y C h i e f, a n d Del Guzzi Dr. P.A. LOST: Dog, small black C h a i n m a n . W i l l i n g t o PA I N T E R S WA N T E D Long-term work in Port train chainman. female Pekingese. AgTownsend, please call Send resume to: Peninsula Classified new area, 7/4. (360)379-4176 info@clarkland.com 360-452-8435 (360)460-1129

Dungeness Courte Memory Care-Sequim, W E W A N T YO U T O JOIN OUR EXCEPT I O N A L G E R I ATRICS/DEMENTIA TEAM! SIGN ON BONUS $6000 for RN, $4000 for LPN. Starting wage: RN $27/LPN $25 per hour, plus weekend shift differential. Day and eve shifts available. Paid while you train, medical/vision plan Regence Innova, Aflac supplemental insurance available, accrue up to 80 hours paid time off the first year, 7 paid holidays, 401K with match w i t h F T e m p l oy m e n t . Email resume to Linda Potter at linda@dungenesscourte.com or call Linda at 360-582-9309 for more information.

LINE COOK and Dishwasher: Experienced. Apply in person between the hours of 2-5 p.m. Downriggers 115 E. Railroad Ave. Suite 207

The Quileute Tribe has a job opening in the Natural Resource we are seeking a Fisheries Biologist III. This person is responsible for the operation of the Fisher y Services Division which would include: estimating spawning escapeGROOMERS HELPER: ments for summer chiFo r s m a l l d o g s. Pa r t nook, fall chinook, fall coho, and winter steeltime. (360)417-3762 head, preparing pre-season run-size estimates SABAI THAI and post-season reports, Looking to hire clean, developing Tribal fishing energetic and hard- models, recommending working individual to IGN fishing schedules to j o i n o u r t e a m a s a tribal fisheries commitdishwasher and also a tee, and recording and line chef. Must be effi- reporting sampling inforcient and able to multi- mation from catch. In adtask. Please drop off dition, this person supervises a 5-6 full time fish resume between 4-9 tech employees. Must p.m. 903 W. 8th St. have a M.S. degree in fisheries biology or related field or a B.S. degree Support Staff To wor k with adults and a minimum of two w i t h d eve l o p m e n t a l years’ experience as a disabilities, no experi- Bio I, salary $56-62 Visit e n c e n e c e s s a r y , our website at www.quileutenation.org $ 1 0 . 5 0 h r. A p p l y i n person at 1020 Caro- for a job application/description. Or call 360line St. M-F 8-4 p.m. 374- 4366

Immediate Opening: Director of Finance and Administration (DFA) with Discovery Behavioral Healthcare. General Description: The DFA position will play a critical role in par tnering with the senior leadership team in strategic decision making and operations as the company continues to enhance its quality programming a n d bu i l d c a p a c i t y. This is a tremendous oppor tunity for a finance and operations l e a d e r t o m a x i m i ze and strengthen the internal capacity in building a well-respected, high-impact organization. Position Requirements: Graduate of a Bachelor’s deg r e e i n a bu s i n e s s management discipline such as Finance, Accounting or a related area, ideally with a MBA/CPA. At least 1-5 years of overall professional exper ience; i d e a l l y 6 + ye a r s o f broad financial and operations management experience. To apply go to http://www.discoverybh.org/jobs/ under the DFA job post. If you have any questions, please call Adam Marquis at 360385-0321 x123.


Classified

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

DOWN 1 Shake a leg, quaintly 2 Put two and two together

By DAVID OUELLET HOW TO PLAY: All the words listed below appear in the puzzle — horizontally, vertically, diagonally and even backward. Find them, circle each letter of the word and strike it off the list. The leftover letters spell the WONDERWORD. OXFORD ENGLISH DICTONARY Solution: 9 letters

A L P H A B E T I C A L R R V By Timothy L. Meaker

3 Air Force One, for one 4 Indonesian site of a WWII naval battle 5 Some “Night Court” characters: Abbr. 6 “Silent Night,” e.g. 7 Novelist Zola 8 Counter, as an argument 9 Author Harte 10 Dangerous place for an embedded journalist 11 Dream up 12 Man cave system 13 “The Great” Judean king 21 Ding-dong maker 22 Sched. postings 23 Like kitten videos 24 Any minute, to Shakespeare 25 Court sports org. 29 Sinister spirit 30 Teapot feature 32 Western neighbor of Nev. 33 Size up from med. 34 Charged particle 37 Dead ends?

7/11/16 Saturday’s PuzzleSolved Solved Friday’s Puzzle

P B A R S I M P S O N A A O N

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

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS Has newspaper routes available in the Port Angeles and Por t Towns e n d a r e a s. D e l i ve r y star t time is approximately 2 am. Six days per week. These are contracted positions-not e m p l oye e. M u s t h ave dependable, economical vehicle and car insurance. You must be dependable and at least 18 years of age. If you are interested please call: 360-452-4507.

Receptionist/ Admin Assistant The Receptionist is the first and primary contact for incoming visitors and calls to Sherwood Assisted Living. The position will perform a wide variety of office support functions for customers and Management personnel. Must be proficient in Microsoft Office Suite, Excel, with excellent communication, time management, and organizational skills. Professional manner and appearance is required. Must be a team player, detailed orientated and maintain confidentiality of company and custome r i n fo r m a t i o n . F T / w benefits, pay DOE, submit cover letter with resume to Admin Support, Sherwood Assisted Living, 550 W Hendrickson Rd, Sequim, WA 98382 or email: donna@sherwoodal.com

S E G A P A P O R T L I E C I R E R E C E A P E N U V L S S T A I D R I N G A R G R L E T A U B Y N B O O K R ‫ ګ ګ ګ ګ‬ N I G E L T C A P M L R A L O S S E R P

H W T O I Y W D S I T I O H X

R O E R L E A R N K O R C C E

A O N D N I G I R O E N I S G

S D O C O M P O U N D Y S E A

E T H O U S A N D S E R I E S

S E P Y T Y T I S R E V I N U

7/11

Abbreviations, Alphabetical, Book, British, Compact, Compound, Dialect, Entries, Expression, Grammar, Keyin, Language, Learn, Lyrics, Nigel, Noun, Online, Origin, Pages, Phonetic, Phrases, Plural, Portwood, Print, Record, Scholarly, Serial, Series, Simpson, Singular, Spell, Thousand, Tool, Type, University, Usage, Vocabulary Yesterday’s Answer: The Godfather THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

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

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

NLATS ©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

38 Coffee servers 39 __ perpetua: Idaho’s motto 40 Two-person logcutting tool 41 29-Down’s milieu 42 Schoolteacher of old 43 Toronto baseballer 44 Hooded ski jacket 45 Supermarket freebie

7/11/16

47 Speed-reads 48 Big name in arcades 49 Madrid mister 50 “Uncle!” 53 Actor Omar 54 Got a hole-in-one on 58 Wedding vow 59 Memorial Day month 60 “I think,” in texts

RELGIB

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

Yesterday's

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

4080 Employment Wanted Dons Handy Services Weeding, pruning, weed eating, landscape improvement. many other jobs ask. (484)886-8834 LAWN CARE Mowing, edging, pruning, hedging, weeding, hauling and more. (360)461-5034 or 461-0794

Juarez & Son’s: cc:Juares*843ls. Formerly doing business as Juarez Son’s Handyman Service. We simplified our name. We are license, bonded, and insured. We have been serving the Clallam county area mainly helping our clients with their home and yard maintenance needs for the last five years. We are now expanding and including small construction projects, fences, decks, and etc. Take peek at our photo’s and visit us on Facebook: Juarez Son’s or call us @360-452-4939 (business,message phone) or @360-460-8248 (business cell, voicemail) WANTED: Full Time Employment. Moving t o Po r t To w n s e n d . Over 25 years in the electrical distribution and wholesale. Presently work as Electrical Construction Purchasing Agent. Good references and no criminal or dr ug record. Call Brett at (530) 558-8250. 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 3 Br., 2 Ba., Rambler on 1/3 acre. Beautiful upgrades! MLS#300874 $262,500 Valerie Lape (360)461-7019 John L. Scott BEAUTIFUL CUSTOM HOME! Gourmet kitchen complete w/ Viking propane cook-top and double ove n s. M a s t e r s u i t e o n main floor has double va n i t i e s, l a r g e j e t t e d soaking tub and separate shower. Vaulted ceiling in living and dining, wood fireplace in den. New flooring in stairway and upstairs bedroom and Jack and Jill bath. Instant hot water heater, w ra p a r o u n d c ove r e d porch and southern exposed deck. Fullyfenced (chain-link) yard w / c o n c r e t e d r i veway that leads to an outdoor fire pit. Lawn is equipped w/ irrigation system. MLS#301116 $519,000 Remax Prime Marcus Oden 360-683-1500

BEAUTIFUL WATER VIEW Tu r n key, w e l l m a i n tained, 4 br, 2 ba, with beautiful water view on quite dead end street. Great home with all the necessities on the main floor. Open concept to dinning room for visiting with your guest as you prepare the meal. Enjoy the southern exposure back yard with raised garden for growing your tomatoes. Double car attached garage with workbench for your projects. MLS#301150 $254,900 Lisa Divelbiss, Broker (360)670-1445 JACE The Real Estate Company

CALLING ALL GOLFERS Investors beware! Not many lots left to build your dream home on. Both lots 7 and 10 are available. If you’re looking at the scenic Peninsula Golf Course. Centrally located close to town, medical, restaurants and shopping. Bus line availability near by. Drive by and take a look, or walk the golf cart path to capture the stunning views of what could be yo u r “ we l l m a n i c u r e d b a ck ya r d ” . G o r g e o u s Northerly views between the trees of the Straits and Victoria and to the west, lush green landscape between the 8th BRAND NEW TOWN- and 9th holes. MLS#292127 $120,000 HOUSE Remax Prime You won’t find any steps Shawna Rigg inside this brand new 3 360-808-5448 br/2 ba townhouse in the Fair Weather subdivision! This home is curCAMP EVERYDAY rently under contract, but Camp Runamuck has 5 similar townhouses are acres of peace and solibeing built in this neigh- tude. All the berries you borhood! Heated and can eat, all the wildlife cooled by an energy effi- you can see, without the cient ductless heat pump noise, just relax in the and a propane fireplace hot tub and look at the in the spacious living stars. 4 BR, 2.5 Ba, over room w/ durable lami- 2400 square feet, 2 car n a t e f l o o r i n g . F u l l y garage and extra space fenced back yard w/ a for your workshop. Floor covered deck that looks to ceiling granite fireout to partial mountain place and a large genv i ew s. P r o fe s s i o n a l l y erator. manicured front yards Becky Jackson a n d ex t e r i o r m a i n t e - MLS#301196 $349,900 nance included in your COLDWELL BANKER HOA fee. UPTOWN REALTY MLS#301277 $245,000 (360)808-0147 Windermere Kelly Johnson COUNTRY LIVING 360-477-5876 Near Discovery Trail, 2 Br, 2 Ba, 1404 SF, stainBUILDING SITE WITH less steel appl. and isVIEWS! land in lg. kitchen, warm Gorgeous building site in colors, vaulted ceilings, Dungeness, only min- large windows, attached u t e s a w ay f r o m o u t - 2 c a r g a ra g e, l o t s o f standing crabbing, clam- storage, low yard mainm i n g , a n d f i s h i n g , t e n a n c e, f u l l y fe n c e d s o u t h e r n e x p o s u r e , back yard mountain views and MLS#938565/300877 even some water view, $185,000 $350 water hook up fee, Deb Kahle septic design and perlic# 47224 mits paid ($2000), bring (360)683-6880 your plans or manufac(360)918-3199 tured home! WINDERMERE MLS#971596/301340 SUNLAND $60,000 TEAM SCHMIDT NEW LISTING! Mike lic# 15329 3 Br, 3.5 Ba, 3228 SF Irene lic#15328 beautiful deck, panoram(360)683-6880 ic views of valley, Strait 1-800-359-8823 and islands, open conWINDERMERE cept with vaulted ceiling, SUNLAND propane fireplaces, generous kitchen and dinNEW KITCHEN AND ing, with breakfast bar, MORE! Completely remodeled entertain in this 1386 sf and updated, this 3 br finshed walk out basea n d 2 b a . , h o m e i s ment, oversized garage move-in ready. Granite with 784 sf with separate counters. Stainless steel golf cart door MLS#970500/301321 appliances. New bath$369,900 rooms. A deck with saltTerry Peterson water view. lic# 107780 MLS#301316 $255,000 (360)683-6880 Jeanine Cardiff (360)797-4802 (360)460-9221 WINDERMERE JACE The Real Estate SUNLAND Company

(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: PLAID CYCLE MISFIT AMBUSH Answer: When the wind stopped, he told everyone on the sailboat to — STAY CALM

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

Independant Carrier in search of Substitute Carrier for Combined Motor Route for Sequim Area Substitue(s) needed fo r w e l l m a i n t a i n e d motor route. Training required starting in July. Interested parties must be 18 yrs. of age, have a valid Washington State Drivers License and proof of insurance. Early morning delivery Mond ay t h r o u g h Fr i d ay and Sunday. Please call Gary (360)912-2678

L L U R G N T O D U M A U Y I

© 2016 Universal Uclick www.wonderword.com Download the Wonderword Game App!

4080 Employment 4080 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale Wanted Wanted General General Clallam County Clallam County HR & Payroll/Benefits Administrator. Jefferson Transit is hiring for the position of H R Pay r o l l / B e n e f i t s Administrator. The position is responsible for administering, under supervision, the agency’s HR functions including but not limited to payroll processing, employee benefit management and employee records management. Minimum requirements include sufficient education and experience in HR and accounting to be competent at the position duties. Individual must be highly organized, detail oriented, have strong communication skills and be proficient at MS Excel. Good benefits and salary starting at $44,023 to 59,574 DOQ. Send resume, cover letter, and list of r e fe r e n c e s t o 6 3 4 Cor ners Road, Por t Townsend, WA 98368, attention Sara Crouch or email to scrouch@jeffersontransit.com.

H L B N I I A T O O L M C O O

Check out the new, free JUST JUMBLE app

ACROSS 1 Trek to Mecca 5 Astringent in taste 10 Something made on a shooting star 14 Brainstorm 15 Circus animal handler 16 Pot starter 17 1999 satire about a reality show 18 Erie or Cree 19 KOA visitor 20 Theoretical temperature at which molecular activity ceases 23 __-and-effect 26 Wimbledon doover 27 Quieted, with “down” 28 Wes in the Basketball Hall of Fame 30 __ Domingo 31 Astronomical phenomenon 35 Bambi’s aunt 36 “Mr.” with Jim Backus’ voice 37 In line for 40 0, 1, 2, 3, etc. 44 Pasty-faced 46 Ability spotted by a scout 47 Slow-moving mollusk 48 “__ was saying ... ” 51 Actress Rene 52 Rarity for a pitcher, nowadays 55 Some dadaist pieces 56 Go to pieces 57 Rocker Hendrix 61 “The Lion King” lion 62 Show beyond doubt 63 Eve’s partner 64 Represent unfairly 65 Fathered 66 Toy on a string

MONDAY, JULY 11, 2016 B5

105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County DON’T MISS THIS opportunity to own one of the best views in town. Newly remodeled, double lot, with lots of outbuildings, newer septic and freshly refinished hardwood floors and finished off with brand new windows. $30,000+ PRICE REDUCTION $362,750 MLS#291787 TEAM POWELL, CBU COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY (360)775-5826 FSBO: 1903 Stunning Craftsman home, in desirable Cherry Hill neighborhood, Walking distance to all ones needs. Tastefully updated. 2200 SF, with 9’ ceilings, larger 3 Br plus office, upstairs and a large master Br on main floor, 3 Ba (2 on main, 1 on 2nd floor). Kitchen with top of the line appliances with gas stove and range. Spacious living and formal dining room with original leaded glass windows. Plentiful storage throughout. beautifully landscaped with private covered deck and garden cottage. Heated 2 car garage with bathroom and covered carport. Serious, qualified buyers only. 232 W. 4th S t . , PA . A s k i n g $315,000. (360)477-4838 GREAT edge of town home, lots of space and a water view too! 3 BR, 2 BA with fenced backyard and 2 car attached garage. MLS#300339 $210,000 Jarod Kortman Remax Evergreen (360)912-3025

GORGEOUS 46.8 acres Own a little piece of heaven and history here in Sequim with this GORGEOUS 46.8 a c r e s . H e r e yo u c a n have it all, cattle, horses, timber and the perfect piece of land to build your dream home/barn, stable/workshop/RV garage whatever your heart desires. The Ol’ Chicken Coop Dance Hall sits on p a r t o f t h i s p r o p e r t y. There is no market value in the dance hall, just memories. The SE corner of property has approximately 16.70 acres of timber recently valued at $160,000. L/A has Timber Cruise information on file. MLS#291223 $472,000 Remax Prime Shawna Rigg 360-808-5448 SPACIOUS CUSTOM HOME Immaculate 4 br/2.5 ba., home located just across the street from the Peninsula Golf Course in a neighborhood of lovely homes. The huge wraparound porch welcomes you inside to gorgeous hardwood floors, 9ft ceilings w/ crown moulding and a propane fireplace w/ stone surround. The kitchen is beautifully remodeled w/ a huge center island, granite counter tops and walk-in pantr y. Spacious MBR w/ walk-in closet, shoe closet and attached bath w/ soak tub. All on a large and landscaped corner lot just minutes from town. MLS#301252 $379,900 Windermere Linda Kepler 360-477-4034

MOUNTAIN VIEWS 3.77 acres of pastureland, soils are registered, level lot, power and phone to property, community water share is paid, horses allowe, close to dungeness recreation area and wildlife refuge MLS#857981/291953 $130,000 Tyler Conkle lic#112797 (360)683-6880 (360)670-5978 WINDERMERE SUNLAND

SUNLAND TOWNHOUSE 2 Br, 2 Ba Townhouse with view of 4th and 9th Fairway, 1948 SF, open concept living, dining room, split floor plan, 2 master suites, walk-in closets, plenty of kitchen cabinets, 2 car garage. MLS#957126/301143 $285,000 Tyler Conkle lic# 112797 (360)683-6880 (360)670-5978 WINDERMERE SUNLAND

SUPER CUTE Built in 1994, located in a private cul-de- sac with fruit trees, covered front and back decks, a HUGE freestanding treehouse with swings. Indoor laundry room. Well done paint colors match wood-look vinyl flooring. A m o d e r n G R E ATROOM opens to the kitchen with views of the backyard, deck, and treehouse. MLS#301237/965053 $199,000 Charles W. Smith III 360-774-3330 TOWN & COUNTRY


B6

Fun ’n’ Advice

MONDAY, JULY 11, 2016

Dilbert

Child’s crying is driving neighbor to distraction

by Scott Adams

For Better or For Worse

Classic Doonesbury (1986)

Frank & Ernest

Garfield

DEAR ABBY: I live in a beautiful apartment in the perfect location and have been here for three years. This past year, my neighbors had a second baby. This child cries constantly during all hours of the night and most of the day. I hear the wailing and the parents yelling and slamming doors when they are frustrated. I thought as the child got a little older it would get better, but it hasn’t. He’s now 1½ and still crying constantly. I’m stressed out and losing sleep because of the constant commotion. In the beginning, the parents were tolerant of their child, and I didn’t complain because I didn’t want to stress them out. Now I feel stuck. Should I complain directly to them, contact the building manager or just make arrangements to move? I feel like a terrible person to complain. We must give young children and parents some leeway, but this isn’t their first child, and I worry that something more is going on. I love this place, but I cannot continue like this. Please help me. I’m losing my sanity and goodwill toward children. Losing My Sanity

by Lynn Johnston

by G.B. Trudeau

by Bob and Tom Thaves

has been filled with stories of Van Buren tragedy and heartache. So many innocent lives have been taken that it has proven to be challenging to process. Although I haven’t personally known anyone affected in these events, I feel the weight of grief on my heart. I know I’m not the only person who is confused about how to manage their emotions after national tragedies. Do you have any suggestions as to what to do during times like these? Wanting to Heal in Wisconsin

Abigail

Dear Wanting: Yes. But first, let me suggest what not to do. Do not remain glued to your television or computer screen taking in every graphic detail that invariably follows the announcement. Ration the input, and the “poison” will affect you less. Talk about your feelings with friends and/or family rather than bottling them up and letting them fester. And if it will make you feel less helpless, donate some money to the families who have been affected by these tragedies to help with funeral or other unexpected expenses. While it won’t fix their heartache — or yours — it will let them know that others care. If it won’t depress you further, participate in community rallies, vigils or other organized events to show support. This, too, can help.

________ Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, the late Pauline Phillips. Letters can be mailed to Dear Abby, P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069 or via email by logging onto www.dearabby.com.

Dear Abby: Recently, the news by Brian Basset

The Last Word in Astrology ❘ ARIES (March 21-April 19): Emotions will surface and could ruin your day if you aren’t prepared to take a deep breath and ignore what’s going on around you. Put more time and effort into self-discipline, saving money and making personal changes. 3 stars

Rose is Rose

DEAR ABBY

Dear Losing: It’s possible that something is wrong with the child. Talk to the building manager, explain the problem, and say that a year and a half of the racket is enough. You might learn that you are not the only tenant bothered by the constant crying and door-slamming. If the problem can’t be corrected, contact a lawyer and check to see if you have grounds to break your lease and get out of there. You have a right to the quiet enjoyment of your home. You have my sympathy.

by Jim Davis

Red and Rover

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Make an effort to help the underdog. Your efforts will pay off as long as you offer suggestions rather than a donation. A job opportunity will depend on how well you get along with your colleagues. Romance and family fun are encouraged. 3 stars

by Pat Brady and Don Wimmer

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Consider an offer carefully. Someone is likely to try to interest you in something that will leave you in a precarious position. Don’t be enticed by false advertising. Express your feelings and keep on moving. Avoid indulgence and waste. 5 stars

ZITS ❘ by Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Open up about the way you feel and what you would like to see happen. Your input will make a difference to the outcome of a situation. You cannot progress if you don’t acknowledge the need for change. Romance is encouraged. 2 stars

Dennis the Menace

by Hank Ketcham

Pickles

by Brian Crane

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Keep personal information a secret. Sharing too much will put you in a vulnerable position that will make you angry. Concentrate on personal gains and finding interesting ways to use your skills. A professional change will increase your earning potential. 4 stars VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Consider what you have to offer and you will find a way to utilize your strengths and experiences to the best of your ability. What you accomplish will draw recognition and an unexpected opportunity. Plan a romantic adventure. 3 stars

by Eugenia Last

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Keep your plans simple and doable. If you reach for the impossible, you will lose momentum. Don’t give in to lofty ideas that are likely to help someone else get ahead instead of you. Initiate personal changes. 4 stars CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Avoid emotional conversations. Do your best to stick to facts, and refuse to entertain someone who is blowing situations out of proportion. Review contracts and agreements and you’ll resolve pending concerns. Encourage someone you love. 2 stars

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Do what pleases you, because you may have trouble trying to please others. Don’t fight a losing battle. Bring about the changes that will stabilize your life and keep you moving in a positive direction. 3 stars

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Turn an idea into a reality. Hard work will be rewarded. You can bring about positive changes where money, legal matters and health issues are concerned. Take action based on the way you feel and you will get what you want. 5 stars

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Get into the groove and speak your mind. Take on something unusual. The more imaginative you are, the easier it will be to reach your goals. Planning a romantic getaway will encourage an improved relationship with someone special. 3 stars

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Take advantage of what comes your way. A financial opportunity will encourage you to pursue something you’ve always wanted to do. Romance will improve a personal relationship. Children will play a role in a decision you need to make. 3 stars

The Family Circus

by Bil and Jeff Keane


Classified

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

MONDAY, JULY 11, 2016 B7

105 Homes for Sale 505 Rental Houses Clallam County Clallam County

UPDATED AND MOVE-IN READY Don’t miss this delightfully updated 3 br/2 ba home situated on a quiet dead-end street! The charming covered front porch welcomes you inside to beautiful engineered wood floors and updated kitchen. You’ll love the upstairs master suite w/ a large walk-in closet, partial salt-water views and master bath w/ dual sinks and a jett e d t u b. T h e u p s t a i r s landing would make a great office or family r o o m . Fr e n c h d o o r s lead to the back deck and partially fenced back ya r d . L o t s o f s t o ra g e space in the unfinished basement! MLS#301183 $215,000 Windermere Anthony Parello, Broker 917-300-4623

311 For Sale Manufactured Homes PA: ‘79 mobile, large addition on 2 full fenced lots, 3 plus br., 2 ba., remodeled kitchen and bathroom. New tile flooring, new vinyl windows, all appliances included, No owner financing, Price reduced. $75,000. 452-4170 or 460-4531

PA : P R I C E R E DUCED!! OCEAN FRONT MILLION DOLLAR VIEW, mobile home in older park, 2 br, 1 ba. furnished. $14,500 obo. For sale by owner (360) 457-1185 PRE OWNED 38x42, 3 br., delivered and set. Cash buyer only. (360)681-0777

PROPERTY EVALUATION INTERNET MARKETING QUALIFIED TENANTS RENT COLLECTION PROPERTY MAINTENANCE INSPECTIONS AUTOMATIC BANK DEPOSITS EASY ONLINE STATEMENT ACCESS VISIT US AT

PORTANGELESRENTALS.COM OR

1111 CAROLINE ST. PORT ANGELES Properties by

Inc.

The

VACANCY FACTOR

is at a HISTORICAL LOW

452-1326

605 Apartments Clallam County Properties by

Inc.

The

VACANCY FACTOR

is at a HISTORICAL LOW

452-1326

AIR MATTRESS BUFFET: Oak, Queen includes built in 22x35x39, with mirror. air pump and platform. $60. (360)385-9334 $20. (360)681-3522 CANOPY: Green fiberA R E A RU G : 1 0 x 7 . 5 , glass, longbed, ‘99-’06 Beige, indoor/outdoor, full size Ford. $75 used indoors, excellent (360)477-1903 cond. $40. 452-3932 CARGO CARRIER: ARMOIR: For jewelr y, Roof rack, 14 X 87. $80. 39” tall, drawers, neck(949)232-3392 lace hooks, wood finish. $75. (360)683-7161 CARGO DIVIDER: behind seats, van, metal, AU TO S T E R E O : C D, 42”x62”. $35. am/fm, includes (4) (360)457-8715 speakers. $50. (360)452-9685 C A RT: M e t a l g a r d e n BASKETBALL HOOP c a r t . P u l l w i t h r i d i n g Por table, NBA. Rolling mower, great cond. $75. (360)928-9764 stand. $75. (360)460-2260. CEMENT MIXER: ElecBED: Queen size, in- tric, towable. $90 obo. (562)972-0798 cludes mattress, boxspring, and frame, clean. CFL BULBS: Low ener$100. (360)461-2284 gy, long lasting, (57) BED: Single, steel frame 60W to 150W. $20. (360)417-8118 with mattress and box spring. $50. (360)460CHAIR: Beautifully Up7188 or 452-5401 holstered, with foot stool. B E E R S T E I N S : V i n - $200. (206)567-2825 tage, (4) Ger man, (1) USA. $60 all. 683-9295 CHAIRS: (11) Green plastic chairs. $25 obo. BIKE: Expedition, 36”, (562)972-0798 21 speed, like new, paid $450. Sell $100. CHINA CABINET: 5’ x 7’ (360)681-6388 x 1.5. $200. (360)461-2075 BLANK CASSETTES: TDK 90 min. tapes (25) C H O P P I N G B L O C K : Maxell 60 min. (3). All for Kitchen Unit with 5 draw$15. (360)461-2240 ers $75 (360)681-8980. B O B B L E H E A D . Ke n Griffey Jr, 2013 Mariners COOKER: Camp Chef, propane, cast iron, with HOF, brand new. $40. stand. $85/obo. (360)457-5790 (360)683-7435 BOOKS: Harr y Potter, COUCH: 3 piece sech a r d c o ve r, # 1 - 7 s e t . tional, hide away, (2) re$69. (360)775-8005 cliners. $200. 797-2114 BOOTS: Womens 7.5 l e a t h e r m o t o r c y c l e CRAB POTS: (3) 27” stainless wire. $25. boots, double h. $40. (360)640-0556 (360)452-9146

is at a HISTORICAL LOW

452-1326

• 2 Ads Per Week • 3 Lines • Private Party Only

SOUND SYSTEM: Bose, CineMate series II, digital home theater speaker system. Like new. $150. (360)390-5267

TILLER: 30” Mechanical tiller, for John Deere models 240, 260, 265, 285, GT262 and GT242, 320 tractors. $950. (360)477-3542 T R AC TO R : ‘ 1 3 J o h n Deere, 37hp, includes JD backhoe/thumb. 4x4, still has 2 years on warr a n t y. B o t h e x c e l . $32,495 obo. (360)670-1350 T R AC TO R : F o r d N 9 with scraper, runs good, restorable. $3,000. (360)452-2615

6050 Firearms & Ammunition

6005 Antiques & Collectibles

6050 Firearms & Ammunition

S E M I AU TO M AT I C : Private party. Made in USA, FNX.40 cal. $450. FNX. 9mm. never been fired. $450. (360)460-8149

R V T I R E S : ( 2 ) VAC U U M : P r o Te a m ST235/80P16, almost M e g a Va c B a c k p a c k new, $100 each/obo. Vacuum Cleaner, $125. (360)683-2386 (360)417-7399

MUD FLAPS: Dura flaps fo r Fo r d d u a l l y, n ew. STEREO: AM/FM, cassette, turntable, speak$80. (360)582-1988 ers and remote. $50. (360)457-8241 NAIL GUN: Bostitch, 15 GA angled finish, with STEREO SPEAKERS: case, lots of nails. $90. (2) 14” high. $10 each or (360)531-0617 $15 both. 683-7161 OAK TABLE: 70” round, l a r g e l e a f, 4 c h a i r s . S T RO L L E R : J o g g i n g stroller, Schwinn, like $150. (360)460-1538 new. $129. 775-8005 PET CRATES: Various. TABLE: Solid oak top, $15 plus. (949)232-3392 30x30x30x, with metal PIANO: Kohler Camp- center post. $65/obo. (360)683-7435 bell, spinet. $200/obo. (360)461-2075 TA C K L E B O X : f o r PILATES: Malibu work- freshwater fishing and out machine, like new. salmon. $20. (360)504-2160 $150. (360)775-4433

VHS TAPES: (2) large boxes of vhs tapes, like new. $50. 452-6351 VIOLIN: Cremona, 3/4, from Strait Music, excellent conditon. $165. (360)606-2008 WEED WHACKER: Craftsman, gas, 27 cc, convertible, speed start. $60. (360)928-9494 WHEELS: (4) off 2014 Toyota, 17”, OEM, custom wheels. $200. (425)931-1897 WORK BOX: for full size pickup. $50/obo. (360)379-0342

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

GUNS: Excellent concealed carry, Springfield’s: XDS 9 mm, 3.3, $450. XDS .40 cal, 3.3, $450. XDS .45 cal, 3.3, $450. Private p a r t y, n e v e r b e e n fired. (360)460-8149

Peninsula Classified 1-800-826-7714

6080 Home Furnishings

6100 Misc. Merchandise

COUCHES: Loveseat, newer, ver y nice, set. $250. Couch. $150. (360)460-8378

Spa (Hot Tub). Solana Spa with attached tip cover. 220V Like New $1500. (360)460-1949

DAYBED: Dar k wood, with trundle, two twins, n i c e c ove r, l i ke n ew, $275.Firm. (360)452-5652

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

NO PHONE CALLS

6105 Musical Instruments

6140 Wanted JEWELERS: bench tools, gas rig/torches. & Trades Extensive professional hand tools/jigs and dies. C AT : D 6 C C r a w l e r . Tools used in the silver 1952 MGTD: Wanted a small car model. $8,500. (360) 457-8210 industry. Will sell all or (360)452-9351 part. (916)768-1233 Sequim NEEDED: Car or small truck, for WWII vet, 40 M I S C : C a n o e, a l u m i - plus years retired Seattle num, 17ft Grunman, Fire Dept. Will pay $500 obo. Singer vin- $5000. (360)683-4691 tage (40’s-50’s) featherweight sewing machine with acc., excel. cond. 6135 Yard & $250. (360)460-7581 Garden DUMP TRAILER: Big leave message. Tex 12LX, like new, RIDING 7’X12’ tlr. wt. 3570# R U G D O C TO R : P r o, LAWNMOWERS G V W R 1 2 , 0 0 0 # . used twice, with additional products. $250. $500.Call Kenny $6,000. (360)683-8437 (360)775-9779 683-0141 or 808-0312

Is your junk in a funk? You won’t believe how fast the items lying around your basement, attic or garage can be turned into cold hard cash with a garage sale promoted in the Peninsula Classified! Call us today to schedule your garage sale ad! Turn your trash into treasure!

4C235417

LONG DISTANCE No Problem!

• No Pets, Livestock, Garage Sales or Firewood

PIANO: Cherr y wood, DESK: Roll-Top, Early upright, with bench and American style roll top great tone. $350/obo. desk, excellent condi(360)477-3721 tion. New in 1975, well cared for since. 54’W x 6115 Sporting 26”D x 45”H. DoubleGoods file drawer on right 6055 Firewood, size side. Dark walnut color. Fuel & Stoves $ 600. (360)460-6375 I N F L ATA B L E B OAT: S e a w o r t hy, 1 1 ’ , w i t h FURN: Leather couch pump, oars, and battery FIREWOOD $200/cord a n d m a t c h i n g c h a i r, box. $250. (360)460-3639 white, exc. cond. $200. (509)885-0999 (360)683-2157 FIREWOOD: OPEN AGAIN IN JULY $179 MISC: Dark Oak China delivered Sequim-P.A. Hutch, very good condi3 cord special $499. tion, leaded glass doors, (360)582-7910 l i g h t e d i n t e r i o r. $ 5 0 0 www.portangelesfire obo. Noritake China 12 wood.com place setting, white and OIL STOVES: (3), oil blue plums, 6899 Count a n k s ( 2 ) . $ 5 0 0 / o b o, tryside. $150 obo. (360)504-3038 Wood stove. $500/obo. (360)808-3160 MOUNTAIN BIKE. SpeORIENTAL Rug: 9x12, cialized Stump jumper r e d . $ 1 , 8 0 0 . W a l n u t 29’er. Showroom Condi6065 Food & d r e s s e r w i t h c a r v e d tion, less than 100 miles. Farmer’s Market pulls. $300. D i s c b ra ke s, L o cko u t (360)582-0503 suspension. Have origiEGGS: Farm fresh from nal Sales slip and manuf r e e r a n g e c h i cke n s . als. $1,999. 6100 Misc. $4.25/dzn. Weekdays (360)302-0141. Merchandise (360)417-7685

6075 Heavy Equipment

BA R B I E D O L L S : I n or iginal boxes. Dated 80’s & 90’s. 126 dolls, Prices star t at $15. to $150. (360)683-5884.

Sequim/Dungeness PIANO: 1923 TulbranG r e a t l o t n e a r b e a c h san, was a player. $350. with Beach Access. Pri(360)477-1688 vate and quiet with open feeling. 3/8 acre next to open space. Safe neighborhood, plenty of park- 6010 Appliances ing. Heated, insulated large shop. Separate art studio. Well and septic. W A S H E R / D R Y E R : Older mobile home with Kenmore Elite, energy approx. 1,000 sq ft in- efficient, like new, top cluding studio and laun- loading, warranty good till Nov 1. $400 obo. dry. $119,900. (360)504-3368 (360)681-7775

FORD: Cam shaft ser- HOT WATER HEATER: 50 gallon, new. $200. vice kit. $10. (360)460-2260 (360)457-5299 JACKET: Womens FORD: Explorer, 1995, large, leather, motorcyruns and drives, leaks cle jacket. $100. tranny fluid. $200. (360)452-9146 (360)457-5299 K AYA K H O L D E R fo r FREE: 8 foot Canopy. Subaru roof, $60. Please (360)477-7340 call 360 681-8401 if interested. FREE: Bird feeders. Bird Feeders, hanging. Call LIFT Chair: $150. (360)808-6430 (949)241-0371

MOTERCYCLE TRAILER: $200. firm (360)457-8994

QUEEN: box spring, 5 THULE: Rooftop cargo inches high, excellent c a r r i e r, 8 4 ” x 2 1 ” x 1 1 ” . $200. (360)775-4727 condition. $50. (360)460-7195 TIRE: Goodyear, QUILT: Amish Double T115/70D14, like new, W e d d i n g R i n g Q u i l t m o u n t e d t e m p o ra r i l y. $20. 452-6351 Queen Size, $125. (360)417-7399 TOILET: Kohler. $25. (360)460-7195 R I D I N G L E AT H E R S : Ladies, jacket size 12, TOOL CHEST: and tool vest, HD patches, pants box, combo, on wheels, size 4. $150. 477-9584 3’ hight, 21” deep. $100. (360)928-3371 ROCKER: Light Brown Lazyboy Recliner. $80. TOYOTA: Corola, ‘84, 4 (949)241-0371 door, 5 speed, not runROD: F i s h i n g R o d . ning. $75. (360)477-7340 I M X G - L o o m i s, M B R , 783C, 6’-6”, $200 Call TRIMMER: Echo String, (360)808-6430 Echo SRM 230, excelR U G : A s i a n , S p h i n x lent condition. $125. (360)681-5393 Ariana, excellent condition, 8 X 11. $150. TRUNK: Old, large. $95. (360)808-4230 (360)582-0503

S D FR REE A FREE F

& Equipment

VACANCY FACTOR

Exerciser: Chi Machine, G R O O M I N G TA B L E : Sun Harmony, Aerobic, Dog, new. $100. (360)808-3160 with instr. and video. $200. (360)461-2240 G U I T A R : Ya m a h a , FLOOR MATS: (4) Rav F62955 acoustic steel 4 Toyota, winter mats. string w/ strap and case $200. (360)775-4727. $50. (425)931-1897

D A EE

Inc. 6045 Farm Fencing

The

DVD’S: Rock n’ Roll Hall side bur ner, excellent of Fame, complete set. condition. $100. (360)797-2114 $80. (360)582-1988

Monday and Tuesdays For items $200 and under

Rental Needed: 61 year old. Walker acces./ PLOT: Mt. Angeles Med i s a b l e d . S t u d i o o r - morial Park, Garden of room? (360)207-9283 Devotion. $1,750. (360)797-1019 R O O M M AT E : F u r n . room, wifi, phone, TV in room, utilities included. 6040 Electronics $475. (360)457-9006.

Properties by

D I V I N G G E A R : F i n s, F R E E : L a v e n d e r L A D D E R : E x t e n s i o n , m a s k , s n o r k e l ( S e a - cuttings, Sequim, you aluminum, 16’. $25. cut, bring scissors. (360)683-7380 mate temperglass). $15. (360)681-2297 (360)452-6842 LADDERS: (1) 5’ alumiDRAFTING MACHINE: F R E E : S m a l l c o u c h , num, step ladder. $5. (1) Charles Bruning, USA. hide a bed, mauve lift wooden step ladder. $3. chair, hospital bed, u(360)683-7380 $30. (360)683-9295 haul. (360)452-9347 L AW N S W E E P E R : DRESSER: 9 Drawers, ve r y l a r g e m i r r o r a t - FREE: Toro recycler, Craftsman. $60. 22”, self-propelled lawn (360)460-7792 tached. $40. mower, $50. (360)928-3371 (360)460-0006. Lift Chair: $150. (949)241-0371 DRESSER: Unique de- F R E E Z E R : C h e s t , sign, early 20th century, 21x31x36. $40/obo. L i g h t B r ow n L a z y b oy 3 drawers/cupboard. (360)385-9334 Rocker Recliner, $80. $150. (360)452-5957 (949)241-0371 GLIDER: Lifetime metal DRUM KIT: Pearl, bell, frame, plastic seat and MAT: Decorative, rice beginners. $100. back, 4’. $100. straw, 9ft. by 6ft. from (360)457-8715 (360)928-9494 Japan. $25. (360)457-8241 DRYER: Samsung front GOLFBALLS: 70 dozload, white, pedestal. en, pre-hit. $45. M I R R O R S : ( 2 ) N e w, Excel. cond. $200. (360)452-1277 white frame, 32x24. $60 (360)640-0556 GRILL: Gas, Bar-B-Q, each. (360)681-2023

E E F R FR E E A D SS

683 Rooms to Rent Roomshares 6035 Cemetery Plots

1163 Commercial Rentals

DINING TABLE: Oval, F R E E : L a r g e s o l ve n t K E Y B OA R D : C a s i o , POLE LAMP: Beautiful, TENNIS RACKETS: (2) 76x44, 6 padded chairs, parts cleaning tank with complete with stand and dark brown finish, 3 set- used, good shape, Dunbench. $35. Firm tings. $40. lop Power Plus. $25. Thomasville solid pecan, 15 gal. barrel. (360)606-2008 (206)567-2825 (360)452-6842 $150. (360)808-4230 (360)683-2455

5A246724

WATER VIEW! Quality built Childers/Bukovnik Construction home. 2184 SF, 2 br, 2 ba home on .40 acres in quality neighborhood features vaulted ceilings, propane fireplace, built in china cabinet, large master with double sinks and soak tub, indoor and outdoor enter taining space with French doors off dining room leading to a south facing covered patio, huge laundry/craft room, and oversized garage. MLS#301305 $449,000 Jean Irvine COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY (360)460-5601

OUR SERVICES INCLUDE:

PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM

SHERWOOD VILLAGE Beautifully upgraded 1900 sf. condo with views of the pond, greenbelt, and mountains. Features include hardwood flooring. Kitchen w/granite counters, cherry cabinets, and upgraded appliances. Living room w/stone faced propane fireplace. Den/office. Master suite w/double sinks and tiled walk in shower. Laundry room w/cherry cabinets a n d C o r i a n c o u o n t e r. Fenced private patio and 3 car garage. MLS#300590 $399,500 Tom Blore 360-683-4116 PETER BLACK REAL ESTATE

417-2810

RENTALS IN DEMAND

PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM

Price Reduced I n c r e a s i n g l y ra r e 2 . 4 acres a short distance from Discovery Trail, Audubon Center and Railroad Bridge Park. Convenient location close to the City of Sequim yet maintains rural atmosphere. Irrigation ditch on property, good soil and a very nice mountain view. If you are looking for a special proper ty come take a look at this. MLS#301036 $119,000 Ed Sumpter 360-808-1712 Blue Sky Real Estate Sequim

(360)

PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM

PEACEFUL MOUNTAIN VIEW 3 Br, 1.5 Ba, 1136 SF on just a little over 1 acre, b ra n d n ew c o n d i t i o n , built in 2012 move in r e a d y, o f fe r s p r i va c y, v i ew o f t h e b e a u t i f u l Olympics, room for outbuildings, gardening and orchard, irrigation water share, no mitigation required MLS#968208/301280 $274,500 Terry Peterson lic# 107780 (360)683-6880 (360)797-4802 WINDERMERE SUNLAND

360-452-8435 • 1-800-826-7714

91190150

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


B8 MONDAY, JULY 11, 2016

Classified

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS 671493673 7-10

SERVICE D •I •R •E •C •T •O •R •Y

MASONRY

TRACTOR

LAWN CARE

No job too small!

Larry’s Home Maintenance

I Fix Driveways,

Larry Muckley

Comercial & Residential

Call (360) 683-8332

Please call or visit our showroom for lowest prices on:

PAINTING

LARRYHM016J8

EARLY BIRD LAWN CARE

Cabinets

Interior/Exterior Painting & Pressure Washing

(360) 460-3319 (360) 582-9382 (360)912-1762

551325748

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

Quality Work at 360-452-2054 Competitive Prices 360-461-2248

“AFFORDABLE HOME IMPROVEMENTS” We Do It All All Carpentry, Kitchen & Bath Tile • Stone • Laminate • Hardwood

360-477-1935 • constructiontilepro.com

TREE SERVICE

“Give Haller a Holler!!!”

HART’S TREE SERVICE EXPERTS

DONARAG875DL

INC.

POWER WASHING ROOF TREATMENT MOSS REMOVAL 452-MOSS (6677) CONTR#MICHADH988RO

360-582-6845 Serving Neighbors in Clallam and Jefferson Counties lic #HARTSTS852MN

MECHANIC

Jami’s

Serving Jefferson & Clallam County

✓ Chimney Sweeping ✓ Yard Service ✓ Hedges/Trees ✓ Roof/Gutter Cleaning

# CCEAGLECB853BO

582-0384

Locally owned & operated for 16 years

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

ASE CERTIFIED MECHANICS

CAR CARE

360-461-5663

PAINTING

B&R Painting

Interior & Exterior Painting • Commercial and Residential • Drywall Texture and Repair Serving the Olympic Peninsula for over 20 years

Bruce Rehler owner

360-452-2209

ROOF CLEANING

ALLGONE ROOF CLEANING & MOSS REMOVAL

ERIC MURPHY

661619344

lic# 601517410

611080142

No Job Too Small

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CREEK BUILDER

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CONSTRUCTION, INC.

Excavation and General Contracting • Site Prep • Utilities • Septic Systems • Roads/Driveways

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GEORGE E. DICKINSON

S. Eunice St. APPLIANCE 914 Port Angeles SERVICE INC. 457-9875

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

Lic#3LITTLP906J3 • ThreeLittlePigs@Contractor.net

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

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APPLIANCES

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

CHIMNEY SERVICES PENINSULA CHIMNEY SERVICES, LLC 621541153

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS 6135 Yard & Garden

9802 5th Wheels

PAT I O F U R N I T U R E : HIGH END, POWDER COATED, Included: beve l e d g l a s s t a bl e w i t h base, 8 chairs, 1 sm. table, 2 chase lounge, 1 buffet bar, 5 matching pots, NEW custom cushions. $600. 683-8413

7025 Farm Animals & Livestock

DUTCHMEN: ‘95 Classic, 26’. Most of its life under roof, ex. cond., everything works. Price EWES: R e g . K a t a h d i n reduced. $2,500. Ewes: Breeding stock, (360)457-0780 TAME, big, healthy. Mature at 160-220lbs. No shearing. Deliver y available. Ave. $200 ea. No calls after 8 pm. 4522919 or redtoypoodles@nikola.com

7030 Horses

Automobiles 9817 Motorcycles 9292 Others

KAWASAKI: ‘08 Vulcan 900 Classic LT. 14K mi. $3,500. (360)457-6889

NEWMAR: ‘06 Excel- boat. Both are kevlar and fiberglass with oars, lent condition. $85,000. caned seats and seat(360)681-0244 backs. YakPacker boat t ra i l e r bu i l t fo r t h e s e boats with spare tire and mount. All lightly used. $6,700. (360)319-9132 BOAT: Sorensen, 12’, 16hp Suzuki, depth s o u n d e r, g a l v a n i z e d trailer, new tires, similar T R AV E L S U P R E M E : to Livingston. $1500. ‘01 38.5 ft. deisel push(360)582-1265 e r, b e a u t i f u l , e x c e l . cond. coach. 2 slides, 2 GLASSPLY: ‘79, 16ft. LED TVs and upgraded 70 hp and 8 hp Johnson LED lighting. 83K miles. included. ‘96 EZLoad 8.3L Cummins $47,500. t r a i l e r . G o o d c o n d . $5,000. (360)683-7002 (360)417-9401 W I N N E B A G O : ‘ 8 9 , GLASTRON: ‘78 15’ Class C, 23’ Ford 350, EZLDR 84, 70hp John5 2 K m l . , w e l l m a i n - son, won’t start. $800. (360)912-1783 t a i n e d , g e n e ra t o r, $7,500. (360)460-3347 SAIL BOAT: 28’ McGregor with trailer #138/150‘78. Work in progress, flushing toilet, power distribution point, beautiful mill wor k already finished, all appliances on hand. finished below rub rail/hull re-fiber glassed inside. Highly modified Winnie VISTA ‘14 30T interior. $4000 as is. New cond., non-smoker, (916)768-1233 3 glides, 21,300 miles. Sleeps 6, 40”HDTV, V10 engine, 4KW gen auto l e v e l s y s t e m AM/FM/DVD/CD, Bluetooth, rear & side view cameras, power awning. SAN JUAN CLARK $93,500, (360)473-3592, BOATS, 28’, Ready to billinda4552@gmail.com sail, excellent for cruisSequim ing or racing, rigged for easy single handling, all lines aft, sleeps 4 easily, 9832 Tents & standing room 6’2” in Travel Trailers cabin. NEW factory eng i n e , Ya n m a r 2 Y M 1 5 diesel 15hp, trailer 34’, dual axle with spare inver ter 2000 watt (12v DC to 110AC) with microwave, new 120 JIB Taylor Sails, main sail cover + spare 110 Jib Har king Roller Sur ler CRUISER: ‘10 Fun Find- Auto Helm 1000 - comer, 18’ with tipout and p a s s w i t h b u l k h e a d awning, barbecue, mi- m o u n t G A R M I N 1 8 2 crowave/convection ov- GPS with charts, navaen, large fridge/freezer, gation station with light. air conditioning. Sleeps $15,500. 4. Very little use, neat (360) 681- 7300 and clean. $14,000. (360)928-3761 UniFlyte Flybridge: 31’, 1971, great, well loved, HARTLAND: ‘13, Trail- b e a u t i f u l b o a t . Tw i n runner, 26’, sleeps 6, Chryslers, a great deal. great condition. $12,500. A steal at $14,500. (360)460-8155 (360)797-3904

9817 Motorcycles

KEYS: ‘07, 25’ (19’ SLB) Clean as a whistle, dometic fridge/freezer,AC, awning, dual marine batteries, electric tongue jack, new tires, winter H A R L E Y : ‘ 0 5 D y n a c o v e r a n d o t h e r u p - Glide. 40K mi. Lots of grades. $9,000. extras. $8,500 obo. (360)457-8588 (360)461-4189 K E Y S TO N E : ‘ 0 6 3 1 ’ Zephlin. $6,000 obo or trade for motorhome. (360)461-7987

HARLEY DAVIDSON: ‘05, Road King Police, 88 cu in, 34k miles, $6,500 firm. 461-2056

NOMAD: ‘08 19’ 194/SC Clean, well maintained, sleeps 4. Reduced to $9,500. (360)808-0852

H O N DA : 0 6 ” S h a d ow Sabre 1100, like new, 1600 actual miles. $5499. (360)808-0111

PROWLER: ‘97, 21’, no leaks, all systems work. very clean. $3,000 obo. (360)477-8696

HONDA: ‘97 1100 Shadow Spirit. Ex. cond. low miles, many extras. $2,300. (360)477-3437

TRAVEL TRAILOR: ‘10, Wildwood XLT,18’, only 1,950 lbs tounge weight, excellent condition, $6,800. (360)775-1075

HONDA: ‘98 VFR800, 23K ml., fast reliable, ext ra s, gr e a t c o n d i t i o n . $3,800. (360)385-5694

9802 5th Wheels

INDIAN: ‘14, Chief Classic, 1160 mi., extras. $17,000. (360)457-5766

Tr i u m p h T i g e r ‘ 0 1 . Three-cylinder 955cc, fuel injectied, liquid cooled. Top-box and factory panniers. Plenty of storage for tour ing. 31,600 miles. Maintenance up to date. MONTANA: ‘02 36’ 5th $4,000. (360)301-0135 wheel, very good cond., 3 slides, arctic pkg., oak YAMAHA: Vino, 49cc, 4 c a b i n e t s , f i r e p l a c e . stroke, like new. $950. $23,000/obo. (360)457- Leave message. 4399 or 888-2087 (360)452-0565 5th Wheel: ‘02 Ar tic Fox, 30’, 2 slide outs, Excellent condition, like new. $18,000. (360)374-5534

FORD: ‘04, T-Bird, 73K miles, well cared for. $15,800. call or text; (253)736-5902

FORD: ‘13 C-Max Hybrid SEL. 1 Owner. Excellent Cond. Loaded, l e a t h e r, AT, c r u i s e, PS, regen. power brakes, ABS, premium sound/ nav, power lift g a t e, p owe r h e a t e d seats, keyless entry, 41.7 MPG, 70k miles. Down sizing. $14,500/obo. Call (360)928-0168.

CHEV: ‘77 Heavy 3/4 ton, runs. $850. (360)477-9789 DODGE: ‘00 Dakota, 2 wheel drive, short bed, a l l p o w e r, t o w p k g . $5400. (360)582-9769 D O D G E : ‘ 0 0 P i c k u p, great shape motor and body. $3900 firm. (760)774-7874

F o rd : ‘ 9 1 , F 1 5 0 X LT Lariat Reg. cab longbed 2wd - 5.0l (302) v8, automatic, alloy wheels, new tires, running boards, tow ball, canopy, bedliner, bedslide cargo slider, power windows and door locks, cruise control, tilt, air conditioning, pioneer CD stereo. only 90K. VIN# 1FTDF15N5MPB10047 $4,495. Gray Motors 457-4901 graymotors.com FORD: ‘95 F250 Diesel, 269K miles, auto/overdrive, good cond. $5000 obo. (360)531-0735 FORD: 97’, F250 7.3L, Turbo diesel, tow package, 5th wheel tow packa g e, d u e l f u e l t a n k s, power chip, new tranny 2012. $9,900. (360)477-0917 FORD: ‘97, F350 XLT crew cab, diesel 7.3L, automatic, 193k mi, long bed, liner, shell, tow bar, more. $9.900. (360)582-1983

FORD: ‘14 Escape Titanium, 29K miles. $21,700. Loaded, like FORD: ‘99 F150 XLT, new.(505)994-1091 red, 4.6 V-8, 5 speed FORD: ‘94, Mustang G s t i ck , 4 w h e e l d r i ve, T, c o n v e r t i b l e , f a s t , 111K miles, excellent priced to sell. $3,300. condition $7000 (360)457-0780 (360)683-3888 JAGUAR: ‘87 XJ6 Se- GMC: ‘84 Sierra Classic. ries 3. Long wheel base, V-8, auto, with canopy, ver y good cond. $76K 116K miles. $2200. mi. $9,000. (360)460-9445 (360)460-2789 LEXUS: ‘00, GS 300, Platinum series, 160k, a must see, excellent condition. $6,800. (360)582-3082

9556 SUVs Others

L I N C O L N : ‘ 9 4 , To w n car, exceptionally clean, 180k miles, $2200. (360)452-7525 MERCURY: ‘07, Montego Premium Sedan 3.0L Duratec V6, autom a t i c , a l l oy w h e e l s , good tires, traction control, keyless entry, power w i n d ow s, d o o r l o ck s, mirrors, and pedals, p ow e r p r o g r a m m a bl e heated leather seats, cruise control, tilt, air conditioning, automatic climate control, 6CD mp3 stereo, information center, dual front and side curtain airbags. VIN# 1MEHM42197G615554 $5,495. Gray Motors 457-4901 graymotors.com

C H E V: ‘ 0 1 E x p r e s s 1 5 0 0 LT Pa s s e n g e r, L u x u r y E d i t i o n , V H S, 115K. $6000. 683-1260

CHEVY: ‘06 Uplander, 97K, nice condition. VOLVO: ‘02 S-40, Safe $6000. (360)683-1260 clean, 30mpg/hwy., excellent cond., new tires, CHEVY: ‘90 3/4 ton work a l way s s e r v i c e d w i t h van. $1,250. (360)460-4955 high miles. $4,995. (360)670-3345 TOYOTA: ‘87, Van 4wd LE, $1,300 with roof 9434 Pickup Trucks rack, w/o rack $1,000. In PA. (206)459-6420. Others

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

CHEV: ‘06 Monte Carlo, b e a u t i f u l , 2 d r, 9 1 K miles, perfect cond. $6400. (360)681-4940

by Mell Lazarus

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

CHEV: ‘96, Astro Van LS, power windows, T OYO TA : ‘ 1 0 P r i u s . locks, AWD, 180K miles, Leather, GPS, Bluetooth $2,000/obo. 808-1295 etc. 41K mi. $18,000. (360)477-4405

DODGE: ‘83, Pick up, with lift gate. $700. (360)457-9402

BMW: Mini Cooper, ‘04, 61K ml., 2 dr. hatchback, 1.6L engine, standard, excellent condition: $7,500. (360)461-4194

Momma ❘

MINI COOPER S: ‘07 SUZUKI: ‘86 Samari. 5 “Loaded Sport Package” s p e e d , 4 x 4 h a r d t o p, L o w m i l e s , n o r u s t , 143K mi. A/C. $5,200. $7200/obo. Call or Text (360)385-7728 (480)878-9075 SUZUKI: ‘93 Sidekick. N I S S A N : ‘ 1 1 3 7 0 Runs well, have title. Coupe. Sports pkg, new $2,000. (360)374-9198 tires. Still under warran- or 640-0004. ty, 19K mi., immaculate inside and out, silver in 9730 Vans & Minivans color. $24,000. (360)640-2546 Others

YA M A H A : ‘ 0 4 , 6 5 0 V Star Classic. 7,500 original miles, shaft drive, exc e l l e n t c o n d i t i o n , i n - PONTIAC: ‘98 Bonnecludes saddle bags and ville, great condition. $1,700. (360)797-1179 sissy bars. $4,800/obo. (253)414-8928 SATURN: Sedan, ‘97, r y c l e a n , r u n s bu t 9740 Auto Service ve needs engine work, & Parts many new parts, great tires. $400/obo. TRAILER: ‘05, for bike (360)460-4723 or quad. $400. 327 Chevy engine. $150. SUBARU: ‘09 Impreza, (360)457-6540 well maintained, 176K miles. Almost new tires. 9180 Automobiles $4, 500. (360)640-1258

JAYCO: ‘07 Jay Flight, 24.5 RBS. Sleeps 6, 12’ slide-out, 16’ awning, H O R S E T R A I L E R : 2 a/c, microwave, stereo/ horse, straight load, DV D w i t h s u r r o u n d Thoroughbred height, sound, outside shower Classics & Collect. new tires, needs minor gas grill. Aqua shed covAMC: ‘85, Eagle, 4x4, work, call for details. er for storage. $12,900. 92K ml., no rust, needs (360)417-7685. (360)928-3146 minor restoration. $3,700. (360)683-6135 SORREL MARE: AQHA 9050 Marine registered, sweet dispoCHEV: 1946 1/2 TON. sition, eager to please, Miscellaneous Was Idaho farm truck, fully trained for trail riding, for sale or lease, call Aluminum skiff: 10’, c o m p l e t e, s t o ck , r u s t for details. 417-7685. c u s t o m w e l d e d , w i t h free. Now garaged 35 oars, electric motor and y e a r s w i t h c o m p l e t e trailer with spare tire. f r a m e o f f r e s t o r a t i o n star ted. Chassis drive 9820 Motorhomes $975. (360)460-2625 train (216/3spd.) comB OAT : 1 5 ’ G r e g o r, pleted. All rebuilt stock ITASCA: ‘03, Sundanc- Welded aluminum, no and NOS parts. Includes er, 30’, class C 450, low l e a k s . 2 0 h p, n e w e r m a n u a l s , a s s e m b l y 38K miles, always gar- Yamaha. Just serviced guides, receipts, title & aged, 1 owner, leveling with receipts. Electric extensive collection of jacks, auto seek satellite trolling motor. Excellent N O S p a r t s . M o r e . TV, entertainment cen- t r a i l e r. $ 4 , 9 0 0 . B o b $4,800. (360)461-4332. ters, new tires, 2 slides, (360) 732-0067 DODGE: ‘78 Ram see to believe. BOAT: Larson, 16’, fi- C h a r g e r, 4 x 4 , l i k e a $44,900/obo 681-7996 berglass 40 hp mercury, Bronco. $1,400/obo (360)808-3160 ITASCA: ‘15, Navion, Eagle depth finder, with 25.5’, model 24G, Die- t r a i l e r. n e e d s m i n o r FORD: ‘60 Thunderbird. sel, 12K ml. exc.cond. 2 wor k, call for details. Upgraded brakes and ig417-7685 or 928-5027 slide outs, $91,500. nition. New Tires and (360)565-5533 BOAT: Marlin, with Mer- wheels. Looks and runs great. $13,500. MOTORHOME: South- Cruiser 135 hp. 16’. call (360)457-1348 wind Stor m, ‘96, 30’, 5-9pm, $3,800. (360)457-0979 51K, great condition, lots 9292 Automobiles of extras. $17,500. BOATS: 15’ Adirondak (360)681-7824 Others g u i d e b o a t , 1 2 ’ p a ck

9556 SUVs Others

MONDAY, JULY 11, 2016 B9

C H E V Y: ‘ 0 0 L i m i t e d SUV. AWD or 4 wheel drive, garage kept, new cond. in and out, low miles, loaded with options, must see. $6,950. (360)215-0335

Dodg e: ‘05, Durango SLT 4x4 - 4.7l v8, autom a t i c , a l l oy w h e e l s , good tires, running boards, roof rack, tow p a ck a g e , t i n t e d w i n d o w s , key l e s s e n t r y, p owe r w i n d ow s, d o o r locks, and mirrors, power drivers seat, cruise control, tilt, air conditioning, rear a/c, CD stereo, dual front airbags. only 94k miles. VIN# M i n i C o o p e r , ‘ 1 3 S 1D4HB48N45F578419 Hardtop, 9,300 ml. exc. $8,995 cond. extras, $19,000. Gray Motors (951)-956-0438 457-4901 graymotors.com S AT U R N : ‘ 0 1 L 2 0 0 . Power, leather, straight GMC: ‘98, Yukon XLT, body, new tires. Needs 4WD, new brakes, good work. $1000. 461-4898 condition, r uns great. VO L K S WAG E N : ‘ 0 3 , $3750/obo. 452-4299 or (360)460-4843. Golf GLS Hatchback 2.0L SOHC 4 cyl, J E E P: ‘02, Grand 5-speed manual, alloy wheels, new tires, sun- Cherokee, Overland ediroof, keyless entry, pow- tion, 4.7 HO V8, 4WD, er windows, door locks, tow pkg, 90K mi, runs and mirrors, cruise con- great. $4800. (360)417-6956 trol, tilt, air conditioning, CD stereo, dual front, side, and side cur tain JEEP: ‘09, Wrangler X, soft top, 59K ml., 4x4, 5 airbags. only 67k miles. speed manual, Tuffy seVIN# 9BWGK61J834006005 curity, SmittyBuilt bumpers, steel flat fenders, $7,495 complete LED upgrade, Gray Motors more....$26,500. 457-4901 (360)808-0841 graymotors.com

Notice of Intent to Renegotiate a Communications Site Lease The Washington Department of Natural Resources intends to renegotiate a lease for communications purposes on the property located in Jefferson County, Washington, legally descr ibed as follows: Lands located in Section 19, Township 26 North, Range 11 West. W. M., i n C l a l l a m C o u n t y, Washington, containing 0.05 acres, more or less. The property is currently zoned commercial forest by Clallam County. Interested par ties need to contact the Department of Natural Resources, Attn: Lois Anderson, P.O. Box 47014, Olympia, WA 98504-7014, or call (360) 902-1686, by July 25, 2016. Lease #52-B69711 Pub: July 11, 2016 Legal No: 710053

NOTICE OF INVITATION FOR BIDS SEALED BIDS will be received by the Board of Clallam County Commissioners at 223 East Fourth Street, Room 150, Port Angeles, Washington until 10:00 a.m., Tuesday, July 12, 2016, at which time they will be publicly opened and read aloud for:

The construction of approximately 2.15 miles of the Olympic Discovery Trail from Forest Service Road #2918 to the trail crossing on State Route 101 at milepost 218.48, including logging, clearing & grubbing, excavation, earthwork, drainage, surfacing, paving with hot mix asphalt, and other related work.

Complete plans and specifications may be obtained from the office of the Public Works Department, Courthouse,223 E.4th St., Ste. 6, Port Angeles, WA 98362-3015, (360)417-2319. Questions regarding this project may be directed to Pat McElroy at (360) 417-2391.

The sealed bids must be clearly marked on the outside of the envelope, “BID PROPOSAL - ODT- FS ROAD 2918 TO SR101 TRAIL CROSSING”. Address bid proposal to: Board of Clallam County Commissioners,223 E. 4th St., Ste. 4,Port Angeles, WA 98362-3015 or hand deliver to 223 E. 4th St, Room 150, Port Angeles, Washington. Bid documents delivered to other offices and received late by the Commissioners’ Office will not be considered nor will bids received by facsimile or e-mail.

Clallam County will determine the lowest responsible bidder in accordance with the terms of Clallam County Code Section3.12.070 and reserves the right to reject any and all bids and to waive informalities in the process or to accept the bid which in its estimation best serves the interests of Clallam County.

Clallam County in accordance with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964,78 Stat. 252,42 USC 2000d to 2000d-4 and Title 49, Code of Federal Regulations, Department of Transportation, Subtitle A, Office of the Secretary, Part 2l, 9931 Legal Notices Nondiscrimination in Federally-Assisted Programs of the Department of TransClallam County portation issued pursuant to such Act, hereby notifies all bidders that it will affirmatively ensure that in any contract entered into pursuant to this advertiseSUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON FOR ment, disadvantaged business enterprises as defined at 49 CFR Part 26 will CLALLAM COUNTY be afforded full opportunity to submit bids in response to this invitation and will In re the Estate of Alberta L. Wilcox, Deceased. not be discriminated against on the grounds of race, color, national origin, or sex in consideration for an award. NO. 16-4-00210-2 PROBATE NOTICE TO CREDITORS RCW 11.40.030 The attached contract plans, these contract provisions and the Standard The personal representative named below has Specifications for the above described project are hereby been appointed as personal representative of this APPROVED THIS 21st DAY OF June 2016. estate. Any person having a claim against the deBOARD OF CLALLAM COUNTY COMMISSIONERS cedent must, before the time the claim would be Michael C. Chapman, Chair barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limita- ATTEST: Trish Holden, CMC, Clerk of the Board tions, present the claim in the manner as provided PUBL June 27, July 4, 11, 2016 Legal No.706933 in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the personal representative or the personal representative’s attorney at the address stated below a copy of File No.: Trustee: 7443.20709 Northwest Trustee Services, Inc. Grantors: Jathe claim and filing the original of the claim with the son Scott Bondy, as his separate estate Grantee: Umpqua Bank successor in court in which the probate proceedings were com- interest by merger to Sterling Savings Bank Ref to DOT Auditor File No.: 2008menced. The claim must be presented within the 1216515 Tax Parcel ID No.: 063000 043607 Abbreviated Legal: Lt 8 Blk 436 later of: (1) Thirty days after the personal represen- TPA, Clallam Co., WA Notice of Trustee’s Sale Pursuant to the Revised Code tative served or mailed the notice to the creditor as of Washington 61.24, et seq. THIS NOTICE IS THE FINAL STEP BEFORE provided under RCW 11.40.020(1)(c); or (2) four THE FORECLOSURE SALE OF YOUR HOME You have only 20 DAYS from months after the date of first publication of the no- the recording date of this notice to pursue mediation. DO NOT DELAY. CONtice. If the claim is not presented within this time TACT A HOUSING COUNSELOR OR AN ATTORNEY LICENSED IN WASHframe, the claim is forever barred, except as other- INGTON NOW to assess your situation and refer you to mediation if you are wise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. eligible and it may help you save your home. See below for safe sources of This bar is effective as to claims against both the help. SEEKING ASSISTANCE Housing counselors and legal assistance may be available at little or no cost to you. If you would like assistance in determindecedent’s probate and nonprobate assets. ing your rights and opportunities to keep your house, you may contact the folDate of First Publication: June 27, 2016 lowing: The statewide foreclosure hotline for assistance and referral to housing Personal Representative: Terry A. Wilcox counselors recommended by the Housing Finance Commission Telephone: Attorney for Personal Representative: To l l - f r e e : 1 - 8 7 7 - 8 9 4 - H O M E ( 1 - 8 7 7 - 8 9 4 - 4 6 6 3 ) . W e b s i t e : Stephen C. Moriarty, WSBA #18810 http://www.dfi.wa.gov/consumers/homeownerAddress for mailing or service: ship/post_purchase_counselors_foreclosure.htm The United States DepartPLATT IRWIN LAW FIRM ment of Housing and Urban Development Telephone: Toll-free: 1-800-569403 S. Peabody, Port Angeles, WA 98362 4287. Web site: http://www.hud.gov/offices/hsg/sfh/hcc/fc/index.cfm?webLis(360) 457-3327 tAction=search&searchstate=WA&filterSvc=dfc The statewide civil legal aid Court of Probate Proceedings: hotline for assistance and referrals to other housing counselors and attorneys Clallam County Superior Court Telephone: Toll-free: 1-800-606-4819. Web site: http://nwjustice.org/whatProbate Cause Number: 16-4-00210-2 clear. I. On July 22, 2016, at 10:00 AM. inside the main lobby of the Clallam Pub: June 27, July 4, 11, 2016 County Courthouse, 223 East 4th Street in the City of Port Angeles, State of Legal No. 706555 Washington, the undersigned Trustee (subject to any conditions imposed by SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON FOR the Trustee) will sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder, payable at time of sale, the following described real property “Property”, situated in the CLALLAM COUNTY I n r e t h e E s t a t e o f C y n t h i a R . County(ies) of CLALLAM, State of Washington: Lot 8, Block 436, Townsite of Port Angeles, Clallam County, Washington. Situate in the County of Clallam, Dawson, Deceased. State of Washington. Commonly known as: 1630 West 15th Street Port AnNO. 16-4-00200-5 PROBATE NOTICE TO geles, WA 98363 which is subject to that certain Deed of Trust dated 02/14/08, recorded on 02/21/08, under Auditor’s File No. 2008-1216515, records of CREDITORS RCW 11.40.030 The personal representative named below has CLALLAM County, Washington, from Jason Scott Bondy, as his separate esbeen appointed as personal representative of this tate, as Grantor, to Clallam Title Company, as Trustee, to secure an obligation estate. Any person having a claim against the de- “Obligation” in favor of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. solely cedent must, before the time the claim would be as nominee for Sterling Savings Bank, its successors and assigns, as Benefibarred by any otherwise applicable statute of limita- ciary, the beneficial interest in which was assigned by Mortgage Electronic tions, present the claim in the manner as provided Registration Systems, Inc. solely as nominee for Sterling Savings Bank, its in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the successors and assigns to Sterling Savings Bank, under an Assignment/Sucpersonal representative or the personal representa- cessive Assignments recorded under Auditor’s File No. 2014-1305880. *The tive’s attorney at the address stated below a copy of Tax Parcel ID number and Abbreviated Legal Description are provided solely the claim and filing the original of the claim with the to comply with the recording statutes and are not intended to supplement, court in which the probate proceedings were com- amend or supersede the Property’s full legal description provided herein. II. No menced. The claim must be presented within the action commenced by the Beneficiary of the Deed of Trust is now pending to later of: (1) Thirty days after the personal represen- seek satisfaction of the Obligation in any Court by reason of the Grantor’s or tative served or mailed the notice to the creditor as Borrower’s default on the Obligation secured by the Deed of Trust. III. The provided under RCW 11.40.020(1)(c); or (2) four Beneficiary alleges default of the Deed of Trust for failure to pay the following months after the date of first publication of the no- amounts now in arrears and/or other defaults: Amount due to reinstate as of tice. If the claim is not presented within this time 03/16/2016. If reinstating after this date, please contact NWTS for the exact reframe, the claim is forever barred, except as other- instatement amount. Monthly Payments $37,144.45 Late Charges $1,288.44 wise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. Lender’s Fees & Costs $156.00 Total Arrearage $38,588.89 Trustee’s ExpensThis bar is effective as to claims against both the es (Itemization) Trustee’s Fee $950.00 Title Report $634.14 Statutory Mailings $0.00 Recording Costs $73.00 Postings $0.00 Sale Costs $0.00 Total Costs decedent’s probate and nonprobate assets. $1,657.14 Total Amount Due: $40,246.03 Other known defaults as follows: IV. Date of First Publication: June 27, 2016 The sum owing on the Obligation is: Principal Balance of $143,954.02, togethPersonal Representative: Jane E. Sexton er with interest as provided in the note or other instrument evidencing the ObliAttorney for Personal Representative: gation from 06/01/13, and such other costs and fees as are due under the ObStephen C. Moriarty, WSBA #18810 ligation, and as are provided by statute. V. The Property will be sold to satisfy Address for mailing or service: the expense of sale and the Obligation as provided by statute. The sale will be PLATT IRWIN LAW FIRM made without representation or warranty, express or implied regarding title, 403 S. Peabody, Port Angeles, WA 98362 possession, encumbrances or condition of the Property on July 22, 2016. The (360) 457-3327 default(s) referred to in paragraph III, together with any subsequent payments, Court of Probate Proceedings: late charges, advances costs and fees thereafter due, must be cured by Clallam County Superior Court 07/11/16 (11 days before the sale date), to cause a discontinuance of the sale. Probate Cause Number: 16-4-00200-5 The sale will be discontinued and terminated if at any time before 07/11/16 (11 Pub: June 27, July 4, 11, 2016 days before the sale date), the default(s) as set forth in paragraph III, together Legal No. 706563 with any subsequent payments, late charges, advances, costs and fees thereafter due, is/are cured and the Trustee’s fees and costs are paid. The sale may 9935 General 9935 General be terminated any time after 07/11/16 (11 days before the sale date), and before the sale by the Borrower, Grantor, any Guarantor or the holder of any reLegals Legals corded junior lien or encumbrance paying the entire balance of principal and interest secured by the Deed of Trust, plus costs, fees, and advances, if any Makah Environmental Restoration Team Remade pursuant to the terms of the obligation and/or Deed of Trust, and curing quest for Proposal (RFP) all other defaults. VI. A written notice of default was transmitted by the BenefiEnvironmental Restoration Services ciary or Trustee to the Borrower and Grantor at the following address(es): NAME AND ADDRESS Jason Scott Bondy aka Jason S. Bondy 1630 West The Makah Environmental Restoration Team is 15th Street Port Angeles, WA 98363 Jason Scott Bondy aka Jason S. Bondy conducting environmental restoration activities on 1919 East 1st Street Winthrop, WA 98862 Jason Scott Bondy aka Jason S. the Makah Indian Reservation near Neah Bay, Bondy 1630 West Fifteenth Street Port Angeles, WA 98363 Jason Scott Bondy Washington. Contractor services are required to aka Jason S. Bondy 1309 East 7th Street Port Angeles, WA 98362 Unknown remove contaminated soils and decommission an Spouse and/or Domestic Partner of Jason Scott Bondy aka Jason S. Bondy underground storage tank on an island off the coast 1630 West 15th Street Port Angeles, WA 98363 Unknown Spouse and/or Doof Cape Flattery. mestic Partner of Jason Scott Bondy aka Jason S. Bondy 1919 East 1st Street Winthrop, WA 98862 Unknown Spouse and/or Domestic Partner of Jason Proposals are due by 3:00 pm on July 29, 2016. To Scott Bondy aka Jason S. Bondy 1630 West Fifteenth Street Port Angeles, request a copy of the complete RFP from the MaWA 98363 Unknown Spouse and/or Domestic Partner of Jason Scott Bondy kah Environmental Division, please contact Steve aka Jason S. Bondy 1309 East 7th Street Port Angeles, WA 98362 by both Pendleton at (360)645-3289 or Marge Sawyer at first class and certified mail, return receipt requested on 04/03/14, proof of (360)645-3286. Restoration activities are schedwhich is in the possession of the Trustee; and on 04/04/14 Grantor and Boruled to begin on September 6 and be completed by rower were personally served with said written notice of default or the written September 27, 2016. notice of default was posted on a conspicuous place on the real property described in paragraph I above, and the Trustee has possession of proof of such The Contractor must e bonded and insured and service or posting. VII. The Trustee, whose name and address are set forth comply with the Makah Employment and Contractbelow, will provide in writing to anyone requesting it a statement of all costs ing Rights Act (MERCA) administered by the Maand trustee’s fees due at any time prior to the sale. VIII. The effect of the sale kah Employment and Contracting Rights Office will be to deprive the Grantor and all those who hold by, through or under the (MECRO). For questions regarding MERCA, conGrantor of all their interest in the Property. IX. Anyone having any objection to tact Rose Jimmicum at rosalle.jimmicum@mathe sale on any grounds whatsoever will be afforded an opportunity to be kah.com. heard as to those objections if they bring a lawsuit to restrain the sale pursuant PUB: July 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 2016 to RCW 61.24.130. Failure to bring such a lawsuit may result in a waiver of Legal No: 709925 any proper grounds for invalidating the Trustee’s sale. X. NOTICE TO OCCUPANTS OR TENANTS - The purchaser at the Trustee’s Sale is entitled to possession of the property on the 20th day following the sale, as against the Grantor under the Deed of Trust (the owner) and anyone having an interest junior to the Deed of Trust, including occupants who are not tenants. After the 20th day following the sale the purchaser has the right to evict occupants who are not tenants by summary proceedings under Chapter 59.12 RCW. For tenant-occupied property, the purchaser shall provide a tenant with written notice in accordance with RCW 61.24.060. The trustee’s rules of auction may be accessed at www.northwesttrustee.com and are incorporated by this reference. You may also access sale status at www.northwesttrustee.com and www.USA-Foreclosure.com. Date Executed: Northwest Trustee Services, Inc., Trustee Authorized Signature 13555 SE 36th St. Suite 100 Bellevue, WA 98006 Contact: Vo n n i e M c E l l i g o t t ( 4 2 5 ) 5 8 6 - 1 9 0 0 . B o n d y, J a s o n S . ( T S # FACEBOOK TWITTER 7670.20203) 1002.286875-File No. PeninsulaDailyNews pendailynews Pub: June 20, July 11, 2016 Legal No: 704727

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B10

WeatherWatch

MONDAY, JULY 11, 2016 Neah Bay 60/52

Bellingham 65/55 g

Olympic Peninsula TODAY Port Townsend 64/53

Port Angeles 63/54

Olympics Snow level: 8,000 feet

Forks 63/52

Sequim 64/52

Port Ludlow 66/53

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Yesterday

National forecast Nation TODAY

Statistics for the 24-hour period ending at noon yesterday. Hi Lo Rain YTD Port Angeles 66 53 Trace 14.84 Forks 65 50 0.70 58.76 Seattle 71 56 Trace 23.86 Sequim 75 54 0.00 6.90 Hoquiam 65 54 0.12 42.76 Victoria 66 53 0.34 17.11 Port Townsend 68 50 **0.00 11.89

Forecast highs for Monday, July 11

BURN

BAN IN EFFECT PENINSULA-WIDE

Aberdeen 65/53

TONIGHT

Low 54 Showers trickle down

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

64/53 To land upon our crowns

Billings 73° | 53°

San Francisco 68° | 54°

Port Townsend Dungeness Bay*

THURSDAY

Denver 89° | 60°

Chicago 91° | 69°

Los Angeles 77° | 65°

July 26 Aug 2

Victoria 66° | 54° Seattle 72° | 54° Tacoma 71° | 54°

Olympia 70° | 52° Astoria 66° | 54°

ORE.

Today

Sunset today Sunrise tomorrow Moonset tomorrow Moonrise today

Miami 90° | 81°

Nation/World

Hi Albany, N.Y. 68 Albuquerque 99 CANADA Amarillo 100 Anchorage 73 Asheville 87 Atlanta 94 Atlantic City 77 Spokane Austin 98 74° | 50° Baltimore 90 Billings 97 Birmingham 96 Bismarck 90 Yakima Boise 86 76° | 49° Boston 65 Brownsville 95 Buffalo 78 68 © 2016 Wunderground.com Burlington, Vt. Casper 96 Charleston, S.C. 95

Lo Prc Otlk 64 .56 Cldy 67 PCldy 71 Clr 58 Cldy 66 Cldy 71 Cldy 68 .13 Clr 78 PCldy 67 PCldy 60 .01 Rain 72 2.52 Rain 66 .18 PCldy 58 Rain 60 .19 Cldy 79 PCldy 63 .71 PCldy 61 .55 Cldy 50 Clr 76 PCldy

TODAY High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht 6:03 a.m. 5.8’ 12:19 a.m. 2.1’ 6:50 p.m. 7.1’ 12:12 p.m. 1.1’

TOMORROW High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht 7:08 a.m. 5.4’ 1:21 a.m. 1.9’ 7:37 p.m. 7.1’ 1:00 p.m. 1.8’

WEDNESDAY High Tide Ht Low Tide 8:18 a.m. 5.2’ 2:24 a.m. 8:25 p.m. 7.2’ 1:54 p.m.

Ht 1.6’ 2.4’

8:39 a.m. 4.0’ 9:06 p.m. 6.6’

3:47 a.m. 2.8’ 2:23 p.m. 2.6’

10:49 a.m. 4.0’ 9:38 p.m. 6.5’

4:40 a.m. 2.2’ 3:18 p.m. 3.6’

12:52 p.m. 4.5’ 10:12 p.m. 6.4’

5:25 a.m. 4:23 p.m.

1.5’ 4.4’

10:16 a.m. 4.9’ 10:43 p.m. 8.2’

5:00 a.m. 3.1’ 3:36 p.m. 2.9’

12:26 p.m. 4.9’ 11:15 p.m. 8.0’

5:53 a.m. 2.4’ 4:31 p.m. 4.0’

2:29 p.m. 5.5’ 11:49 p.m. 7.9’

6:38 a.m. 5:36 p.m.

1.7’ 4.9’

9:22 a.m. 4.4’ 9:49 p.m. 7.4’

4:22 a.m. 2.8’ 2:58 p.m. 2.6’

11:32 a.m. 4.4’ 10:21 p.m. 7.2’

5:15 a.m. 2.2’ 3:53 p.m. 3.6’

1:35 p.m. 5.0’ 10:55 p.m. 7.1’

6:00 a.m. 4:58 p.m.

1.5’ 4.4’

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

Warm Stationary

Pressure Low

High

July 19 9:12 p.m. 5:27 a.m. 12:55 a.m. 1:24 p.m.

-10s

-0s

0s

10s

20s 30s 40s

50s 60s

70s

80s 90s 100s 110s

Cartography © Weather Underground / The Associated Press

Charleston, W.Va. 84 Charlotte, N.C. 92 Cheyenne 96 Chicago 79 Cincinnati 83 Cleveland 79 Columbia, S.C. 102 Columbus, Ohio 82 Concord, N.H. 63 Dallas-Ft Worth 95 Dayton 82 Denver 97 Des Moines 86 Detroit 79 Duluth 74 El Paso 102 Evansville 85 Fairbanks 80 Fargo 83 Flagstaff 85 Grand Rapids 83 Great Falls 86 Greensboro, N.C. 90 Hartford Spgfld 69 Helena 84 Honolulu 87 Houston 98 Indianapolis 82 Jackson, Miss. 95 Jacksonville 100 Juneau 72 Kansas City 89 Key West 91 Las Vegas 104 Little Rock 91 Los Angeles 86 Louisville 85 Lubbock 97

à 116 in Death Valley, Calif. Ä 37 in Bryce Canyon, Utah

Atlanta 87° | 71°

El Paso 104° | 76° Houston 95° | 79°

Full

New York 84° | 65°

Detroit 87° | 64°

Washington D.C. 89° | 67°

Cold

FRIDAY

Washington TODAY

Ocean: S morning wind to 10 kt. Wind waves 1 ft or less. W swell 4 ft at 9 seconds. A chance of showers. Light evening wind. Wind waves less than 1 ft. W swell 4 ft at 9 seconds.

Port Angeles

First

Minneapolis 92° | 72°

Fronts

67/52 67/53 65/55 Shy sun graces And sends filtered Before the our lands light to our hands showers return

Strait of Juan de Fuca: NW morning wind 5 to 15 kt. Wind waves 2 ft or less. A slight chance of morning showers then a chance of afternoon showers. W evening wind 10 to 20 kt easing to 10 kt. Wind waves 1 to 3 ft subsiding to 1 ft or less.

La Push

New

The Lower 48

Cloudy

TEMPERATURE EXTREMES for the contiguous United States:

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

Marine Conditions

Tides

Last

Pt. Cloudy

Seattle 72° | 54°

Almanac Brinnon 66/55

Sunny

63 PCldy Memphis 72 PCldy Miami Beach 59 PCldy Midland-Odessa 60 PCldy Milwaukee 62 .01 PCldy Mpls-St Paul 65 PCldy Nashville 76 Cldy New Orleans 61 Cldy New York City 57 .69 Rain Norfolk, Va. 72 .03 Cldy North Platte 59 PCldy Oklahoma City 65 PCldy Omaha 71 PCldy Orlando 63 PCldy Pendleton 58 Rain Philadelphia 79 Clr Phoenix 66 Clr Pittsburgh 59 Cldy Portland, Maine 64 1.38 Cldy Portland, Ore. 51 Clr Providence 58 PCldy Raleigh-Durham 49 .07 Cldy Rapid City 69 Cldy Reno 61 .12 Cldy Richmond 55 Rain Sacramento 75 .01 Clr St Louis 80 .28 Cldy St Petersburg 60 Clr Salt Lake City 72 1.49 Rain San Antonio 75 PCldy San Diego 57 Cldy San Francisco 72 PCldy San Juan, P.R. 84 PCldy Santa Fe 83 Clr St Ste Marie 76 .01 Cldy Shreveport 66 PCldy Sioux Falls 68 Clr Syracuse 72 .02 PCldy Tampa

92 92 98 77 82 91 95 72 90 94 90 88 96 76 79 111 83 59 74 70 91 95 86 91 85 89 91 100 98 78 72 87 98 78 98 87 85 92

73 81 75 59 66 72 81 66 77 66 68 76 76 56 69 88 61 56 57 61 69 58 59 67 56 73 83 76 80 66 56 78 55 55 75 66 63 81

.48

.33 .53

.09 .01 .51

.07

.45 .04 .11

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

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

Topeka 91 Tucson 105 Tulsa 91 Washington, D.C. 93 Wichita 94 Wilkes-Barre 83 Wilmington, Del. 83

Hi Auckland 59 Beijing 92 Berlin 81 Brussels 70 Cairo 100 Calgary 65 Guadalajara 80 Hong Kong 89 Jerusalem 86 Johannesburg 65 Kabul 96 London 70 Mexico City 75 Montreal 79 Moscow 72 New Delhi 94 Paris 74 Rio de Janeiro 85 Rome 95 San Jose, CRica 78 Sydney 67 Tokyo 87 Toronto 85 Vancouver 72

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Clr Clr PCldy .18 PCldy Clr .18 Cldy .77 Clr

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Lo Otlk 49 PCldy 76 Heavy AM Sh 60 Sh/Ts 56 PCldy 74 Clr 53 Heavy AM Sh 60 PM Ts 81 Cldy/Ts 69 Clr 33 Clr 63 Clr 53 PCldy/Sh 55 PM Ts 62 Clr 59 PCldy/Rain 82 Ts 57 PCldy 70 Clr 71 Hazy 66 Ts 51 Cldy/Wind 74 PM Ts 66 Clr 57 Cldy


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