Thursday
Celebrating recovery
Partly sunny summer day forecast A10
Injured man to benefit at PA-Sequim rivalry game B1
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS July 14, 2016 | 75¢
Port Townsend-Jefferson County’s Daily Newspaper
Howard Street work to start
‘We’ve never seen so many’
City vetting bids to award contract BY CHARLIE BERMANT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
CRAIG WEAKLEY/PORT ANGELES WHALE WATCH CO.
A humpback whale feeding near Port Angeles. Whale watchers are reporting large groups of active humpbacks in the inland waters of the Salish Sea.
Humpback whale watchers report resurgence in Strait Increasing numbers point to comeback for inland waters BY ROB OLLIKAINEN PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — It’s “humpback heaven” in the Strait of Juan de Fuca, whale watchers say. The Pacific Whale Watch Association is reporting unprecedented numbers of humpback whales in recent weeks, particularly off the shores of Port Angeles and Victoria.
Whale-watching crews are seeing large groups of extremely active humpbacks — as many as 15 or 20 together — in the inland waters of the Salish Sea. “In 20 years of running whale-watch tours, I’ve never seen anything like what’s happening right now in Port Angeles,” said Capt. Shane Aggergaard of Port Angeles Whale Watch Co. “This is truly world-class whale watching. “We’ve never seen so many humpback whales in the central straits, and it shows no signs of stopping,” Aggergaard added in a news release. “I expect these sightings to continue well into the fall.” North Pacific humpback whales have
been making a comeback in the past few years after being threatened by commercial whaling, which was banned in 1966, according to the Pacific Whale Watch Association. The surge in inland-waters sightings this year has taken the “humpback comeback” to a new level, officials said. “It’s humpback heaven out there right now,” said Michael Harris, Pacific Whale Watch Association executive director. “About 20 years ago or so, we never saw humpback whales out there. The last three or four years, our crews started to see them all the time. TURN
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PORT TOWNSEND — Work on adding a portion of Howard Street to connect Sims Way and Discovery Road will begin as soon as the contract is awarded, possibly next week, City Manager David Timmons said. “We are ready to go and can begin as soon as the bid is approved,” he said. Howard Street currently ends about 800 feet north of Sims Way and 400 feet south of Discovery Road. The extension project will connect the two major thoroughfares by extending Howard Street. It includes the construction of a roundabout where the extension meets Discovery Road. It is expected to turn 82 acres of vacant and underutilized land into shovel-ready industrial property. The Port Townsend City Council has granted approval for Timmons to award the contract. The deadline for bids was last Thursday. Timmons opened the bids when they were received and is currently evaluating them with the intention of awarding the contract sometime next week. The project is estimated to take 185 days, about six months, and carried an engineer’s estimate of $4.4 million to $4.7 million.
Four bidders The four bidders, from lowest to highest, were Seton Construction, Port Townsend, $3.2 million; Strider Construction, Bellingham, $4.3 million; Interwest Construction, Burlington, $4.4 million; and IMCO General Construction, Ferndale, $4.6 million. While each bid must be examined for approval, policy requires the contract be offered to the lowest qualified bidder. TURN
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Plans shape up for Sims Way visitor center Hopes high for warmer welcome BY CHARLIE BERMANT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT TOWNSEND — Drivers traveling in and out of Port Townsend will be greeted by a landscaped visitors area that will orient them to the town if a proposed project comes to fruition. City Manager David Timmons told about 50 people of plans for the area of 2455 Sims Way during a Jefferson County Chamber of Commerce gathering Tuesday. The plan includes the demolition of a building last used as a visitors center in 2009 and its replacement with a public restroom, four new parking areas
including an electric charging station, landscaping the asphalt triangular area between Sims Way and Jefferson Street, creating new bike lanes and crosswalks, and cutting the now-dead-end Thayer Street through to Washington Street to create a thoroughfare. “This will become more than a sea of asphalt,” Timmons said. “It will create a special place where people will want to stop and gives us an opportunity to make a difference in how people see the town when they arrive.” Much is now undetermined about the project, including its scope, cost and timing, although
Timmons said “we could start doing something next year.” The plans were discussed during a chamber rebranding presentation at 2409 Jefferson St., which has been its office location for a year.
Rebranding The rebranding process began with the June 2015 move of chamber headquarters from the Haines Place Park and Ride at 440 12th St. to its new location, according to Executive Director Teresa Verraes. After the Northwind Arts Center relocated downtown in early CHARLIE BERMANT/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS 2015, the chamber moved to its The area around the old visitor center on Sims Way is to former space.
be refurbished with a building demolition and landscaping
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INSIDE TODAY’S PENINSULA DAILY NEWS 100th year, 167th issue — 2 sections, 18 pages
BUSINESS CLASSIFIED COMICS COMMENTARY DEAR ABBY DEATHS HOROSCOPE LETTERS NATION/WORLD
A7 B3 B5 A9 B5 A8 B5 A9 A4
*PENINSULA SPOTLIGHT
PENINSULA POLL A2 PUZZLES/GAMES A6, B4 SPORTS B1 WEATHER A10
A2
UpFront
THURSDAY, JULY 14, 2016
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Tundra
The Samurai of Puzzles
By Chad Carpenter
Copyright © 2016, Michael Mepham Editorial Services
www.peninsuladailynews.com This is a QR (Quick Response) code taking the user to the North Olympic Peninsula’s No. 1 website* — peninsuladailynews.com. The QR code can be scanned with a smartphone or tablet equipped with an app available for free from numerous sources. QR codes appearing in news articles or advertisements in the PDN can instantly direct the smartphone user to additional information on the web. *Source: Quantcast Inc.
PORT ANGELES main office: 305 W. First St., P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362 General information: 360-452-2345 Toll-free from Jefferson County and West End: 800-826-7714 Fax: 360-417-3521 Lobby hours: 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday through Friday ■ See Commentary page for names, telephone numbers and email addresses of key executives and contact people. SEQUIM news office: 360-681-2390 147-B W. Washington St. Sequim, WA 98382 JEFFERSON COUNTY news office: 360-385-2335 1939 E. Sims Way Port Townsend, WA 98368
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Newsroom, sports CONTACTS! To report news: 360-417-3531, or one of our local offices: Sequim, 360-681-2390, ext. 5052; Jefferson County/Port Townsend, 360-385-2335, ext. 5550; West End/Forks, 800-826-7714, ext. 5052 Sports desk/reporting a sports score: 360-417-3525 Letters to Editor: 360-417-3527 Club news, “Seen Around” items, subjects not listed above: 360-417-3527 To purchase PDN photos: www.peninsuladailynews.com, click on “Photo Gallery.” Permission to reprint or reuse articles: 360-417-3530 To locate a recent article: 360-417-3527
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS (ISSN 1050-7000, USPS No. 438.580), continuing the Port Angeles Evening News (founded April 10, 1916) and The Daily News, is a locally operated member of Black Press Group Ltd./Sound Publishing Inc., published each morning Sunday through Friday at 305 W. First St., Port Angeles, WA 98362. POSTMASTER: Periodicals postage paid at Port Angeles, WA. Send address changes to Circulation Department, Peninsula Daily News, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. Contents copyright © 2016, Peninsula Daily News MEMBER
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The Associated Press
Newsmakers Celebrity scoop ■ By The Associated Press
Dr. Phil sues Enquirer over abuse articles “DR. PHIL” MCGRAW and The National Enquirer are lining up for a courtroom brawl after the television talk show host and his wife filed a $250 million lawsuit against the supermarket tabloid and its sister publications, charging that they falsely accused him of being an abusive husband and a hypocrite who doesn’t practice what he preaches. The lawsuit was filed last week in Palm Beach County, Fla., against the Enquirer, its owner American Media Inc. and sister publications, Star Magazine and the website Radar Online. According to the suit, the publications damaged McGraw’s reputation by falsely accusing the TV
psychologist of physically and verbally abusing his wife, Robin. The artiMcGraw cles also said Robin McGraw tolerated the abuse and that the couple are getting divorced. The suit also says the Enquirer falsely accused McGraw of busting a man’s head with a beer mug during a drunken melee while in college in the early 1970s. The suit says such allegations unjustly harm the McGraws’ reputation as outspoken opponents of spousal abuse. It adds that Robin McGraw started a foundation aimed at helping battered spouses and that the couple’s marriage is solid. McGraw, 65, hosts the popular “Dr. Phil” talk show, where the booming-voiced
Texan is known for passing out folksy advice to guests with various problems. He also produces “The Doctors” and other TV shows and publishes best-selling diet and self-help books. Forbes magazine ranks him as the world’s fourthhighest-paid celebrity, with annual earnings of $88 million. “Dr. and Mrs. McGraw, after enduring years of the National Enquirer, Star and other American Media Inc. publications knowingly and recklessly printing outrageous lies about them, their marriage, their integrity and their character, have finally concluded that enough is enough and too much is too much,” their attorney, Lin Wood, said in a statement. American Media said in a statement that it will defend itself and will expose Phil McGraw’s “stale and fraudulent claims for what they really are.”
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS PENINSULA POLL TUESDAY’S QUESTION: Have you ever ridden a horse?
Passings By The Associated Press
BERNARDO PROVENZANO, 83, the convicted Cosa Nostra “boss of bosses” who reputedly led the Mafia’s powerful Corleone clan, died Wednesday, a decade after his capture in Sicily following decades of hiding in the countryside, a lawyer said. In recent years, Mr. Provenzano had been held under strict security measures at a Milan hospital. The lawyer, Rosalba Di Gregorio had cited Mr. Provenzano’s increasing physical frailty and mental infirmity in several failed attempts to persuade antiMafia prosecutors to ease the prison conditions intended to prevent mobsters from wielding power from behind bars. The reputed “capo dei capi” (top boss) was arrested in 2006 after 43 years as a fugitive. He had been convicted in absentia of more than a dozen murders, as well as being part of the Mafia’s leadership who ordered the 1992 bombings that, in separate attacks, killed Sicily’s top two anti-Mafia investigators, Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino. He was also convicted of being a mastermind behind Mafia bombings in 1993 in Rome, Milan and Florence, including one attack near the Uffizi art gallery. Mr. Provenzano was also convicted of being among those giving the order for the 1982 murder in Palermo of Carabinieri Gen. Carlo Alberto Dalla Chiesa, who had been dispatched to the Sicilian capital by the Italian government to lead the state’s uphill war against the Mafia. While young, Mr. Provenzano received the nickname “The Tractor” for
determination displayed in a mob career that began as a hitman. He was believed to have taken Mr. Provenzano in 2006 over the leadership of the Sicilian crime syndicate after the 1993 arrest of a fellow longtime fugitive boss, Salvatore “Toto” Riina. While in charge, investigator say Mr. Provenzano helped the Mafia dig its tentacles deeper into the lucrative world of public works contracts in Sicily, turning the mob into more of a white-collar industry of illegal activity, lessening its dependence on traditional money-makers like drug trafficking and extortion. He essentially thumbed his nose at authorities, who were trying to hunt down a man whose last photo was a confident-looking young man, in a jacket and tie, hair brushed back from a broad forehead, taken decades earlier. The man who had for years been Italy’s No. 1 fugitive was betrayed not by an informer or a rival
Seen Around
mobster, but by clean laundry. Police had tracked a package of clothes to a farmhouse on the outskirts of Corleone, the hilltop town that had inspired the fictional crime family name in “The Godfather.” Police had noticed the package leave his wife’s house in Corleone, then be delivered to a series of addresses until it finally was driven to the farmhouse.
No
95.4% 4.6% Total votes cast: 657
Vote on today’s question at www.peninsuladailynews.com NOTE: The Peninsula Poll is unscientific and reflects the opinions of only those peninsuladailynews.com users who chose to participate. The results cannot be assumed to represent the opinions of all users or the public as a whole.
Setting it Straight Corrections and clarifications The Peninsula Daily News strives at all times for accuracy and fairness in articles, headlines and photographs. To correct an error or to clarify a news story, phone Executive Editor Leah Leach at 360-4173530 or email her at lleach@peninsuladailynews.com.
Peninsula Lookback From the pages of the PENINSULA DAILY NEWS and Port Angeles Evening News
1941 (75 years ago) If there was a shortage of cool breezes yesterday (and today) and you got hot under the collar, don’t blame the OPM [Office of Personnel Management]. Cool temperatures aren’t a wartime priority — yet. It was Old Sol who sent those heat waves down your neck. Yesterday was the hottest day for the summer to date. Yesterday, he poured it on until 4:30 p.m., when the thermometer cried “uncle” at 86.4 degrees (tax included). Then he headed for the ocean. It was 74 at 9 a.m. But today — today
Peninsula snapshots
TWO TEENAGE GIRLS sharing the same music by walking close together down the store aisle with an earpiece apiece . . .
Yes
Laugh Lines
THE WASHINGTON TIMES is now reporting that Indiana Gov. Mike Pence has a 95 percent chance of being Donald Trump’s pick for vice presiWANTED! “Seen Around” items recalling things seen on the dent. North Olympic Peninsula. Send I’m not saying Chris them to PDN News Desk, P.O. Box Christie’s upset, but he was 1330, Port Angeles WA 98362; fax last seen at the top of the 360-417-3521; or email news@ Empire State Building peninsuladailynews.com. Be sure swatting at planes. you mention where you saw your Jimmy Fallon “Seen Around.”
would give an Arab sunstroke, said Leon Sutton, retired weather observer, as he wiped his brow and predicted today will top yesterday. It was 81 at 9 o’clock this morning.
as the airplane isn’t allowed to make a downwind landing. West Coast is currently making some landings at the Coast Guard Air Station on Ediz Hook.
1991 (25 years ago) 1966 (50 years ago)
It’s nearly worthless as tree growing land. It’s hot property as a regional resort with golf courses and housing. And it’s “priceless” to environmentalists as public forest. What’s more, it’s the same property: About 1,480 acres of state forest that makes up most of the proposed Cape Discovery Resort site on the Miller Peninsula east of Sequim. Figuring out how much that state forest is worth could become of the most closely watched and politically charged appraisals in recent times. Lottery “It’s a piece of dynamite,” said Bruce Erlwein, LAST NIGHT’S LOTClallam County assessor. TERY results are available At issue is how good a on a timely basis by phondeal the state can get for ing, toll-free, 800-545-7510 taxpayers if developers or on the Internet at www. decide to acquire the land walottery.com/Winning and build the 1,942-acre Numbers. Cape Discovery Resort.
Two plans of action to enable West Coast Airlines to continue to land at Clallam County Airport [Port Angeles] were discussed at the port commissioners’ meeting Wednesday. According to Federal Aeronautics Administration rules, the airline presently is unable to land from the east at the airport because of tall trees in Lincoln Park. An east landing going over the park is necessary when west winds prevail,
Looking Back From the files of The Associated Press
TODAY IS THURSDAY, July 14, the 196th day of 2016. There are 170 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: ■ On July 14, 1966, the city of Chicago awoke to the shocking news that eight student nurses had been brutally slain during the night in a South Side dormitory. The victims, ranging in age from 20 to 24, were Pamela Wilkening; Suzanne Farris; Mary Ann Jordan; Nina Jo Schmale; Valentina Pasion; Merlita Gargullo; Patricia Matusek; and Gloria Jean Davy. One woman, Corazon Amurao, survived by hiding under a bed. Drifter Richard Speck was convicted of the mass killing and condemned to death but had his sen-
tence reduced to life in prison, where he died in 1991. On this date: ■ In 1789, in an event symbolizing the start of the French Revolution, citizens of Paris stormed the Bastille prison and released the seven prisoners inside. ■ In 1865, the Matterhorn, straddling Italy and Switzerland, was summited as a seven-member rope party led by British climber Edward Whymper reached the peak. Four members of the party fell to their deaths during their descent; Whymper and two guides survived. ■ In 1881, outlaw William H. Bonney Jr., alias “Billy the Kid,” was shot and killed by Sheriff Pat
Garrett in Fort Sumner in presentday New Mexico. ■ In 1921, Italian-born anarchists Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti were convicted in Dedham, Mass., of murdering a shoe company paymaster and his guard. Sacco and Vanzetti were executed six years later. ■ In 1933, all German political parties, except the Nazi Party, were outlawed. ■ In 1945, Italy formally declared war on Japan, its former Axis partner during World War II. ■ In 1999, race-based school busing in Boston came to an end after 25 years. ■ Ten years ago: Israel destroyed the home and office of
Hezbollah’s leader, Sheik Hassan Nasrallah, and tightened its seal on Lebanon, blasting its air and road links to the outside world. ■ Five years ago: A federal judge in Washington, D.C., declared a mistrial in baseball star Roger Clemens’ perjury trial over inadmissible evidence shown to jurors. Clemens, who was accused of lying under oath to Congress when he denied ever using performance-enhancing drugs during his career, was acquitted in a retrial. ■ One year ago: NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft got humanity’s first up-close look at Pluto, sending word of its triumphant flyby across 3 billion miles to scientists waiting breathlessly back home.
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A4 Briefly: Nation Court rejects blocking Planned Parenthood cash SALT LAKE CITY — The Utah governor’s order to block funding to Planned Parenthood was probably a political move designed to punish the group, a federal appeals court wrote in a ruling that ordered the state to keep the money flowing. The 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver decided Tuesday there’s a good chance the governor’s order violated Herbert the group’s constitutional rights. Republican Gov. Gary Herbert cut off cash last fall for sexually transmitted disease and sex education programs following the release of secretly recorded videos showing out-ofstate employees discussing fetal tissue from abortions. The head of the Planned Parenthood Association of Utah hailed the ruling Wednesday as a victory for the clinic’s patients.
Shooting broadcast live NORFOLK, Va. — Police in Virginia said three men were seriously injured in a shooting that was broadcast live to Facebook. Police said in a release
Wednesday that one of the three men found shot in a car Tuesday evening was broadcasting live video to Facebook when the shooting occurred. A Facebook Live video was posted Tuesday evening showing three men sitting in a car, smoking and listening to music. About 5½ minutes into the video, gunshots can be heard. At least 30 rounds are fired in a 22-second span. Police said two 27-year-old men and a 29-year-old were taken to Sentara Norfolk General Hospital with “significant injuries.” Police say two of the men were doing better Wednesday, but one was still in critical condition.
Legal experts divided WASHINGTON — Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s public criticism of Donald Trump is dividing legal experts over whether the leader of the court’s liberal wing should recuse herself in any future case involving him. In an interview last week with The Associated Press, Ginsburg presumed Democrat Hillary Clinton will be the next president. Asked her thoughts on the possibility of a Trump win, she said, “I don’t want to think about that possibility.” She called Trump a “faker” who “really has an ego,” in a CNN interview. To The New York Times, she said: “I can’t imagine what this place would be — I can’t imagine what the country would be — with Donald Trump as our president.” The Associated Press
Briefly: World whipped, fed scraps and forced to work or fight each other for entertainment over an eightyear period in rural southern Romania, prosecutors said Wednesday. Three men and two boys LONDON — Theresa May aged between 10 and 12 were became Britain’s new prime minister on Wednesday, accepting an found chained up and were resinvitation to govern from Queen cued by police Wednesday in the Elizabeth II after the resignation mountain town of Berevoiesti of David Cameron. She promised during searches at the homes of suspects — members of an to lead a “one-nation” governextended Roma family. ment dedicated to social justice and making “Britain a country China warns countries that works for everyone.” After a BEIJING — China warned rousing speech other countries Wednesday defending his against threatening its security government’s in the South China Sea after an legacy, Caminternational tribunal handed eron and his the Philippines a victory by sayfamily left his ing Beijing had no legal basis home at 10 for its expansive claims there. Downing Vice Foreign Minister Liu Street for the Zhenmin said Beijing could May last time and declare an air defense identificamade the tion zone over the waters if it felt short drive to Buckingham Palthreatened, a move that would ace. Soon after, the palace consharply escalate tensions. But firmed that Cameron had “tenBeijing also extended an olive dered his resignation as prime branch to the new Philippine minister and First Lord of the government, saying the SouthTreasury, which her majesty was east Asian nation would benefit graciously pleased to accept.” from cooperating with China. Minutes later, May arrived at The Philippines, under a U.N. the palace, accompanied by her treaty governing the seas, had husband, Philip. Royal officials sought arbitration in 2013 on released a photo of May curtseyseveral issues related to its ing to the monarch and confirmed long-running territorial disputes the queen had “requested her to with China. In its ruling Tuesform a new administration.” day, the tribunal found China’s far-reaching claims to the South Male slaves rescued China Sea had no legal basis and that Beijing had violated BUCHAREST, Romania — the Philippines’ maritime rights. Dozens of vulnerable men and boys were kidnapped, chained, The Associated Press
New prime minister seated in Great Britain
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
A police officer bows his head during the funeral for Dallas Police Sr. Cpl. Lorne Ahrens at Baptist Church in Plano, Texas, on Wednesday. Ahrens and four other officers were slain by a sniper during a protest last week in downtown Dallas.
Thousands mourn 3 officers shot in Dallas Services held for 2 policemen, transit officer slain on street THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
DALLAS — Nearly a week after five officers were killed by a gunman in Dallas, memorial services for three of them drew thousands of mourners Wednesday. Services were held for Dallas Area Rapid Transit officer Brent Thompson, Dallas police Sgt. Michael Smith and Dallas police Sr. Cpl. Lorne Ahrens — all three slain in downtown Dallas last Thursday by a sniper during a march to protest recent fatal shootings of black men in Minnesota and Louisiana by police. The two other services are scheduled for Friday and Saturday.
ment officers in crisp formal uniforms to The Potter’s House, the Dallas megachurch headed by celebrity Bishop T.D. Jakes. Thompson’s wife, Emily, a fellow DART officer whom he had recently married, told the audience that the shooter, Micah Johnson, was a coward. “You know your hate made us stronger,” she said.
Detonated bomb
Johnson, 25, was killed when authorities used a robot to detonate an explosive as negotiations faltered. Nine officers and two civilians were injured in the attack. A funeral service for ThompPolice in uniform son was scheduled for later The service for Thompson, 43, Wednesday in Corsicana, south of drew hundreds of law enforce- Dallas. He is the first DART offi-
cer killed in the line of duty since the agency’s police force was founded in 1989. Also Wednesday, a few hundred mourners gathered for a Catholic funeral service in the suburb of Farmers Branch for Smith, a former U.S. Army Ranger known for his upbeat attitude and compassionate approach to others. Smith joined the Dallas police force in 1989. He once received a “Cops’ Cop” award from the Dallas Police Association. A public service was scheduled today for Smith at a Dallas church where he worked security. In the Dallas suburb of Plano, mourners were told of Ahrens’ work with the Los Angeles County sheriff’s department and time as a semipro football player before moving to Texas and joining the Dallas police force. The 6-foot-5, 300-pound Ahrens was known as a gentle giant and a voracious reader whose intelligence was equal to his size.
Aviation security, FAA funds focus of bill awaiting Obama BY JOAN LOWY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON — Congress passed an aviation bill Wednesday that attempts to close gaps in airport security and shorten screening lines but leaves thornier issues unresolved. The bill also extends the Federal Aviation Administration’s programs for 14 months at current funding levels. It was approved in the Senate by a vote of 89 to 4. The House had passed the measure earlier in the week and it now goes to President Barack Obama, who must sign the bill by Friday when the FAA’s current operating
Quick Read
authority expires to avoid a partial perimeter security. Investigators suspect a bomb had been smugagency shutdown. gled aboard a Russian Metrojet airliner that disintegrated over Focus on security Egypt last year. Responding to attacks by vioThe measure is the most signifilent extremists associated with the cant airport security bill to pass Islamic State group on airports in Congress in a decade, said Sen. Brussels and Istanbul, the bill John Thune, R-S.D., chairman of includes an array of provisions the Senate Commerce, Science and aimed at protecting “soft targets” Transportation Committee. outside security perimeters. But it also is notable for what Other provisions designed to it doesn’t contain: a plan to address potential “insider threats” remove air traffic control operawould toughen vetting of airport tions from the FAA and put them workers and other employees under the control of a private, with access to secure areas, nonprofit corporation run primarexpand random employee inspec- ily by segments of the aviation tions and require reviews of industry.
. . . more news to start your day
West: Los Angeles woman sentenced for online scam
Nation: Burglary suspect dies after stun gun shock
Nation: S.C. lawyer pleads guilty to defrauding sorority
World: Italian crash probe points to equipment failure
A WOMAN FROM Los Angeles has been sentenced for her role in cybercrime schemes uncovered after a Mississippi woman reported she was scammed. The Sun Herald reported 44-yearold Genoveva Farfan received a prison term of eight years Tuesday on guilty pleas to conspiracy to defraud the United States and two counts of aggravated identity theft. U.S. Judge Sul Ozerden in Gulfport, Miss., also fined her $2,500. Prosecutors said Farfan is among 20 people, including 11 from South Africa, indicted in a probe of internetbased mass-marketing schemes involving losses of $6.5 million.
A HOME BURGLARY suspect has died after police used a stun gun on him, authorities said, adding the suspect resisted officers who found him wrapped in material that looked like it came from house air conditioner ducts. Birmingham Police Lt. Sean Edwards said the Alabama homeowner called police early Tuesday to report someone yelling in his basement. Edwards said the suspect didn’t comply with verbal orders of the officers, and they used a stun gun several times as he continued to resist them. The unidentified suspect was later pronounced dead at a hospital where he was taken, according to police.
A SOUTH CAROLINA lawyer pleaded guilty to bank fraud in a scam involving construction of a $14 million sorority house at the University of Alabama, prosecutors said Wednesday. Jennifer Elizabeth Meehan, 39, pleaded guilty to submitting false invoices for equipment and furnishings for the new Gamma Phi Beta sorority house in Tuscaloosa, according to the U.S. attorney in Birmingham. The sorority’s massive house, which opened last year, was constructed during a more than $200 million building boom for Greek-letter social groups at Alabama, which boasts the nation’s largest fraternity and sorority community.
ITALIAN OFFICIALS ON Wednesday pointed to delayed, European Unionfinanced rail improvements and an antiquated telephone system as possible underlying causes of a head-on train crash that killed some two dozen people. The official death toll stood at 23, including the two train engineers and a farmer working his fields who was killed by flying debris from the crash. The prefect of Barletta, Clara Minerva, said relatives reported another four people unaccounted for and suggested that their remains could have been scattered within the wreckage, particularly in the area of highest impact.
PeninsulaNorthwest
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
(J) — THURSDAY, JULY 14, 2016
A5
Kilisut Harbor, Mystery Bay shut to shellfishing Department of Health closes area due to elevated levels of biotoxins
that causes PSP. Pacific Ocean beaches are under seasonal closure for all species.
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PSP poisoning
PORT TOWNSEND — Kilisut Harbor, including Mystery Bay, has been closed to recreational shellfish harvesting. The state Department of Health closed the area after shellfish samples were found to contain elevated levels of marine biotoxins that cause paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP), reported Michael Dawson of Jefferson County Environmental Health on Wednesday.
Danger signs Danger signs were being posted at public access points warning people not to consume shellfish from the area. The closure includes clams, oysters, mussels, scallops and other species of molluscan shellfish but does not apply to shrimp. Crabmeat is not known to contain the biotoxin, but the guts can contain unsafe levels. To be safe, clean crab
thoroughly and discard the guts, which are also known as the butter. Shellfish harvested commercially are tested for toxins prior to distribution and should be safe to eat, the state Department of Health said.
Other beaches Other Jefferson County beaches closed to recreational shellfish harvesting are Port Ludlow and Mats Mats Bay, and Strait of Juan de Fuca beaches from the Clallam County line east to Port Townsend, including Discovery Bay. All Clallam County beaches along the Strait are closed to recreational shellfish harvests due to the presence of marine biotoxins. Sequim Bay is closed due to diarrhetic shellfish poisoning, according to the state Department of Health. Other Clallam County beaches have been closed to all species for elevated levels of the marine biotoxin
Symptoms of paralytic shellfish poisoning can appear within minutes or hours and usually begin with tingling lips and tongue, moving to the hands and feet, followed by difficulty breathing and potentially death. The toxin cannot be CHARLIE BERMANT/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS detected by sight or smell, Once the Howard Street extension is finished, this field on the south end the health department said. of Port Townsend will host business, industry and retail, the city hopes. Neither cooking nor freezing destroys biotoxins.
Street: Construction
Latest details Recreational shellfish harvesters can get the latest information before they leave for the beach by visiting www.doh.wa.gov or phoning 800-562-5632. Health-related closures are in addition to seasonal closures regulated by Fish and Wildlife, found at www. wdfw.wa.gov. The emergency regulation hotline is 866-8805431.
CONTINUED FROM A1 about is to be built, so the company could “step right The project requires in� and begin the construcgrading and paving a new tion, Timmons said. roadway, installing municipal and franchise utilities, Underground utilities drainage, pedestrian The first step in the proimprovements and landcess will be to install the scaping, according to a call underground utilities, he for bids. Seton, the apparent low said. Construction was schedbidder, is currently working on the construction of a new uled to begin early this city water treatment facil- summer but was thwarted ity near where the round- by the clarification of a cler-
ical error on the last rightof-way acquisition, Timmons said. The city purchased portions of nine properties to make room for the new road, with the last purchase finalized earlier this week, he said.
________ Jefferson County Editor Charlie Bermant can be reached at 360385-2335 or cbermant@ peninsuladailynews.com.
Visitors: Proposals CONTINUED FROM A1
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
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GENERATIONAL REUNION
From left, Thuy Vo, Congsin Nungyen, Quynh Dang and Quanmong Le reunite at Vo’s house in Longview after having served in the South Vietnamese Army more than 40 years ago. It was a well-educated class of 1,000 South Vietnamese college students who were pulled out of school in their early 20s to fight “a hopeless war,� said Vo, who organized the gathering. Vo, a Longview businessman and former city councilman, has hosted previous reunions at his home. This year, about 30 people attended from all over the world.
Briefly . . . Fire damages residence in Sequim area SEQUIM — A fire damaged the bedroom of a Sequim residence, Clallam County Fire District No. 3 officials said. The fire was reported at 171 W. Sequim Bay Road at 1:11 a.m. Tuesday. “The fire was contained to the bedroom,� District No. 3 Assistant Chief Dan Orr said. “It appears accidental at this time, but we’re still
kind of poking down the road from an investigation perspective.� Orr estimated that the blaze caused about $20,000 in damage to the structure and resulted in the loss of about $10,000 in property.
‘Distracted’ play PORT TOWNSEND — Key City Public Theatre will present “Distracted� from 7:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. today at the playhouse, 419 Washington St. According to a news release: “What’s wrong with 9-year-old Jesse? He can’t sit still, he curses, he
Simultaneously, Jefferson Transit finished construction of its new Four Corners facility, where it moved operations into the space vacated by the chamber at the park and ride. At the new location, the chamber is sharing an expanded space with the Jefferson County Home Builders Association and the Washington Small Business Development Center,
Economic Development Council Team Jefferson and the visitors center. On Tuesday, Timmons said the multiple moves worked “because I made everyone homeless and gave them all a new home.�
“We don’t know what that will look like, whether it’s a paved road, a parking lot or just a gravel road,� he said. “We need to have a place where people can turn around.� Timmons said the project would probably be conDepends on support structed in phases as fundThe plans presented ing is secured. ________ Tuesday are suggestions, Timmons said, depending Jefferson County Editor Charlie on financial support and Bermant can be reached at 360the development of a satis- 385-2335 or cbermant@ factory conceptual design. peninsuladailynews.com.
Port Angeles port approves director pact on a split vote
for each year she has been administrators who report to employed as executive direc- a political body. tor up to a maximum of six “There is not the asserPORT ANGELES –– Port months’ total salary. tion that just because they do commissioners approved a a good job, they get to stay,� contract for the newly named Severance package he said. executive director after disBurke said that because Colleen McAleer, who agreeing on Karen Goschen’s voted against the contract, the port’s commission is an severance package. Commissioners voted 2-1 said she could not support elected body, the goals of the board could change drastiraps and you can’t get him Monday to approve the con- the severance package. into or out of pajamas. “I fully support Karen cally after an election. tract that will pay Goschen, Port Commissioner Con“His teacher thinks it’s named executive director on Goschen as executive direcattention deficit disorder. June 27, $145,000 annually. tor,� she said. “I will not sup- nie Beauvais presented four Dad says, ‘He’s just a boy.’ Goschen has served as port four months or anything examples of severance packages for local top administraAnd Mama’s on a quest for interim director since former close to that amount.� answers. McAleer said O’Hollaren tors if they are fired by their director Ken O’Hollaren “Is Jesse dysfunctional resigned effective Dec. 31. did not have a severance governing body. “I think we are right in or just different? Don’t we Her first day as executive package. all have ADD to some “I expect Karen Goschen line and are showing [Gosdirector was Monday. degree?� She will have a written will serve this port for years chen] respect,� Beauvais Admission is $10 for performance review and to come and she will decide said. McAleer replied, saying adults and $5 for students. compensation review after when she retires,� McAleer This is the first teen said. “[This] ties the hands of she can’t support four six months. months’ salary for Goschen production of the new If the port decides to fire a future commission. Young Artists’ Initiative. “No matter who we would just because other municiGoschen, the port is required For more information, to pay her up to six months’ have appointed, I would have palities have provided simivisit www.keycitypublic made these same comments.� lar severance packages. total salary. theatre.org/special-event“I will not vote for this Port Commissioner Steve Goschen would at first listing/distracted. receive four months’ salary Burke said it’s accepted prac- contract with four months’ Peninsula Daily News plus one additional month tice to provide severance for severance,� she said. BY JESSE MAJOR
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
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THURSDAY, JULY 14, 2016
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Naval air team evacuates woman from Ozette area PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
110 nautical miles to the woman and her grandson, the news release said. The crew arrived on scene at 7:38 p.m., hoisted the woman and her grandson aboard the aircraft, and flew them to OMC. The woman’s condition is not known. Hospitals will not provide statements on a patient’s condition without a name. The rescue was one of two Tuesday night. A second search and rescue crew left for an evacuation of an 84-year-old man from the Pasayten Wilderness in Okanogan County who was reportedly suffering from a loss of equilibrium. The Navy search and rescue unit operates three MH-60S helicopters from NAS Whidbey Island. The base has an agreement to assist Washington state with medical evacuations and search and rescue activities.
NEAH BAY –– A search and rescue team from Naval Air Station Whidbey Island evacuated an 89-year-old woman from a beach near Ozette and took her to Olympic Medical Center in Port Angeles. The woman, who was not identified, was suffering from exhaustion and leg pain that prevented her from being able to stand or walk, her grandson said when he called for help at about 4:40 p.m. Tuesday, according to a Navy news release. Initially, the search and rescue unit was unable to get to her location along the northern coast of the North Olympic Peninsula because of low clouds and heavy rain near Neah Bay, the Navy said. The crew refueled at Sanderson Field in Shelton before traveling along the southern edge of the Olympic Mountains and flying
Corrections officer accused of robbing Cheney discount store THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
CHENEY — Cheney police have arrested a state corrections officer in connection with an armed robbery at a discount store in Cheney over the weekend. Jeffery Pool was arrested by officers Tuesday as he arrived for work at the Airway Heights Corrections Center near Spokane. KXLY-TV said Pool appeared in Spokane County Superior Court on Wednesday, where his bail was set at $500,000.
Police say in court documents that Pool robbed the Dollar Tree store at gunpoint Saturday. Police say he tied up employees with zip ties and forced them into the store’s warehouse area with a gun. Employees told police they believed the suspect was a current or former employee because the person seemed to know store operations. Court documents show Pool worked at the store two years ago. It was not immediately clear whether Pool had an attorney yet.
NO
KEITH THORPE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Police and paramedics assist a female pedestrian who was struck by a car at Ninth and G streets in Port Angeles on Wednesday.
Pedestrian hit by car in Port Angeles BY ROB OLLIKAINEN PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
PORT ANGELES — An 86-yearold pedestrian was struck by a car near Park View Villas in Port Angeles on Wednesday, police said. Dolores Calsen, a resident of the retirement community, was taken to Olympic Medical Center with minor injuries, Officer Brian Stamon said. Calsen was walking eastbound on
the south side of the intersection of Ninth and G streets when she was struck by a car driven by Eric Maeder, 35, of Port Angeles, police said. The woman was about 5 feet into the intersection when she was hit by the southbound vehicle shortly after 3 p.m. “The driver did not see her until he entered the intersection,” Stamon said.
“He didn’t have enough distance to stop and struck the woman.” Maeder told police he did not see the woman because she was in a shadow, Stamon said. Maeder received a traffic infraction for failure to yield to a pedestrian, Stamon said. Calsen’s listed condition at the Port Angeles hospital was not immediately available Wednesday.
National forest seeks applicants for resource advisory committee PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
OLYMPIA — Applications are being accepted for the Olympic Peninsula Resource Advisory Committee. The RAC reviews and recommends land management projects that are on or adjacent to Olympic National Forest. Projects are funded under the Secure Rural Schools program. Applications must be received or postmarked by Aug. 15. The committee consists
of 15 members, and each is assigned to one of three categories. The Olympic Peninsula RAC has vacancies in all three categories. Category A represents organized labor, developed outdoor recreation, off-highway vehicle use, commercial recreation activities, energy development, commercial timber industry and federal grazing or other land use permits. Category B represents nationally recognized environmental organizations, regionally or locally recognized environmental orga-
nizations, dispersed recreation activities, archaeological and historical interests. Category C represents state, county or local elected offices; Native American tribes; school officials; or teachers and the public-atlarge. A four-year term would begin upon appointment by the secretary of agriculture. Committee members are not paid, but they are reimbursed for travel expenses. RAC members must be Washington state residents, preferably living in one of
the Olympic Peninsula counties. Meetings are held one to four times each year within Clallam, Jefferson, Thurston, Mason or Grays Harbor counties. The application is available at http://tinyurl.com/ PDN-RACapplication. Completed forms can be submitted in person or by mail to Olympic National Forest, Attn: Susan Piper, 1835 Black Lake Blvd. S.W., Olympia, WA 98512. For additional information, call 360-956-2435.
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Inspired, at some distance, by Molière’s Les Fourberies de Scapin, this “comic madness” is set in present-day Naples. Ottavio’s and Leandro’s fathers are away, leaving their sons in the care of guardians—Scapino and Sylvestro. Ottavio marries Giacinta and when he learns that his father plans to “marry him off ” he seeks Scapino’s help. The spirit of the play is evident at the outset, when a slapstick sequence is accompanied by a crazy song made up from the menu at an Italian restaurant. “A refreshing comedic romp!”
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Whales: Breaching, feeding
Populations climb Scientists say humpback populations in the northeast Pacific have climbed from about 1,600 in 1966 to more than 21,000 today. A combination of the whaling ban and an abundance of prey is contributing to the recent spate in humpback sightings, experts say. “Humpback whales have made a dramatic return to the Salish Sea in recent years and especially this year,” said John Calambokidis, senior research biologist and co-founder of the Cascadia Research Collective. “We’ve had lots of humpback whales offshore in past years and now more of them are coming into the inland waters. “That’s probably due to the increased numbers overall likely resulting in expanded areas of use, but also something to do with prey availability, which at this point is harder to determine in detail.” The Salish Sea includes the Strait of Juan de Fuca,
$ Briefly New peak for U.S. health care spending
CONTINUED FROM A1 “Now we’re seeing them congregate in these large groups, not unlike what you might see in Hawaii or Alaska,” Harris added. “One humpie after another, just an expanse of whales filling the seascape.” The Pacific Whale Watch Association represents 38 whale-watching and ecotourism companies operating out of 21 ports in Washington and British Columbia. Behemoth humpback whales can be seen breaching, rolling, slapping their pectoral fin and going on feeding frenzies. “They definitely seem to be finding plenty to eat, especially off Port Angeles and Victoria, and that may be a good sign,” Harris said.
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WASHINGTON — The nation’s health care tab this year is expected to surpass $10,000 per person for the first time, the government said Wednesday. The new peak means the Obama administration will pass the problem of high health care costs on to its successor. CRAIG WEAKLEY/PORT ANGELES WHALE WATCH CO.
A humpback whale lunges while feeding near Port Angeles as seen from the vessel Island Explorer 4 during a Port Angeles Whale Watch Co. tour. Strait of Georgia and Puget aging flexibility may be Sound, as well as their con- why humpback whales are necting channels and doing so well,” Reidy said. adjoining waters. ________ Humpback whales typically visit the Pacific Northwest from spring to fall before migrating south to warm-water breeding and calving grounds in Mexico, MARY RUTH Central America and Hawaii. RICKEL Rhonda Reidy, a naturalNovember 18, 1926 ist, marine educator and June 30, 2016 captain for the Victoriabased Prince of Whales Momma was born on Whale Watching, said the November 18, 1926, in humpback population Plad, Missouri, to Maude might be nearing its carryand Willis Medley. ing capacity in northern Mom entered into her feeding areas. Savior’s arms on June 30, The recent population 2016, in Bremerton Washboom might also represent ington. Our precious shifts in oceanographic and mother was then reunited ecological conditions that with the love of her life and affect the food chain, Reidy husband of 40 years and said in a Tuesday news our father, Tony Rickel. release. Mom was the most selfSightings of Southern less, loving and caring Resident orcas have been mother and grandmother more sparse this year than we could ever ask for. other years, wildlife officials We were all truly have said, attributing that blessed to have her in our to changes in the ecosyslives. tem, primarily in the availHer love for the Lord ability of their food, salmon, and those around her was wildlife officials said. evident everyday of her Humpbacks are largely life, as she truly lived her foragers that feed on krill life with a servant’s heart. and small schooling fish Every day of her life was such as sardine, anchovy an example for us all as to and herring. “The high degree of for-
Reporter Rob Ollikainen can be reached at 360-4522345, ext. 56450, or at rollikainen@peninsuladaily news.com.
Gold and silver Gold for August gained $8.30, or 0.6 percent, to finish at $1,343.60 an ounce Wednesday. September silver added 24.2 cents, or 1.2 percent, to $20.413 an ounce. Peninsula Daily News and The Associated Press
Death and Memorial Notice tional love that you showered upon us. You will forever be missed by us all and will forever live in our hearts. Until we all meet together again in heaven, our sweet and precious mother. Her favorite songs were “Amazing Grace,” “How Great Thou Art,” “When We All Get to Heaven” and many more. She is survived by her sons, Tony (Sonja) Rickel and Danny (Debbie) Rickel; her daughter, Mrs. Rickel Brenda (Mike) Stoehr; sisters Laura (Ethel) Montgomery and Louise Karr; how to live for the Lord. We will always be grate- grandchildren Jason ful for how she shared her Stoehr, Joe Cooper, J.R. love for Jesus with us and Rickel, Mitchell Rickel, Kimberly Nemchick, everyone she met. Thank you, Momma, for Dana Fisher and Jimmy always praying for us, and Bowcutt; great-grandchildren Alyssa Rickel, Matyour gentleness, and carthew and Ethan Nemchick, ing and giving ways, as Logan Kyra, Kaylee Rickel well as the support for us and Albi Bowcutt; and in all that we did — but, most of all, the uncondimany nieces, nephews,
family and friends. She was preceded in death by her husband, Tony Rickel; her mother and father, Maude and Willis Medley; sisters Mina, Alta, Alma and Fannie Medley, Lorene Maulin and Billie Burell; and brothers Loyd, Harvey, Homer and Arbie Medley. We are gathering by her graveside on Monday, July 18, 2016, at 1 p.m. for a celebration of her life, with songs and Scripture and memories to share. So please come as we gather together to remember her amazing and loving life. It will be held at Mount Angeles Memorial Park, 45 Monroe Road, Port Angeles. In lieu of flowers, we would appreciate any donations sent to Grace Baptist Church, 4221 South Mount Angeles Road, Port Angeles, WA 98362 (360-457-0150).
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Death and Memorial Notice HERREL RAY ‘PETE’ THROOP May 18, 1931 July 1, 2016 Herrel Ray “Pete” Throop was born to Herrel C. and Myrtle Throop on May 18, 1931, in Eugene, Oregon. He passed away on July 1, 2016, in Port Angeles. Pete grew up in Siletz, Oregon, and Glenwood, Washington. He later attended and graduated from high school in Florence, Oregon. Pete served in the Army and was a Korean War veteran. His military training in diesel mechanics sparked his keen interest in heavy equipment and Caterpillar machinery. Pete was also fortunate to have met best buddy Wayne Womack while in the Army, and they enjoyed an enduring friendship. Pete married Delores Thomas in Stevenson in 1955. They were married
Pete Throop for over 30 years and raised three sons and a daughter. He was later married to Darielle Sherman from 1988 to 2005. After several years working for Halton Tractor Company in Portland, Oregon, Pete followed his brother-in-law Ross Nedry to Port Angeles in 1968 and relocated his family to start a log hauling busi-
ness that continued until his retirement. Pete was preceded in death by his son Lynn; sisters Anna Throop, Doris Houghton and Kathering Steinbach; and brothers Harold, Edwin and Lloyd Throop. He is survived by his sister Louise (Larry) Stratton; brother Jerry (Margaret) Throop; sister-in-law Donna Throop; brother-inlaw Fred Steinbach; sons Jeff (Amy) and Dean Throop; and daughter Julie (Bill) Evenstad. His grandchildren are Mallory, Tera, Lindsay, Alexandria, Hunter and Tiara, and great-grandson Evan. Pete enjoyed spending time with others and had a great sense of humor. He will be missed dearly by family and friends. A gathering to celebrate his life will be held at the Eagles Aerie, 2843 East Myrtle Street in Port Angeles, at 1 p.m. on Saturday, July 23, 2016.
Death and Memorial Notice TYLER WATSON KELLY March 20, 1990 June 22, 2016 Tyler Watson Kelly passed away June 22, 2016, at his home in Marysville, Washington. He was 26 years old. He was born to Timothy Kelly and Sonya Breaum in Port Angeles on March 20, 1990. He graduated from Arlington High School in Arlington, Washington, in 2008 and went on to attend Everett Community College and Peninsula College. He graduated from U.S. Navy boot camp in Waukegan, Illinois, as well as Navy “A” school at Keesler Air Force Base in Mississippi, as an aerographer’s mate in 2015. He then worked at Tulalip Resort Casino in Marysville. Tyler was so many wonderful things all wrapped up into one unique human being. He was a loving son, brother,
Tyler Kelly grandson, cousin, uncle and friend. His laugh would light up the room, his conversations would make you think and his hugs would give you great comfort. He was generous with his love, praise and quick wit. He loved poetry, music, his guitar and people. He will always be remembered for the love and kindness he gave to everyone. He will be missed so
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Bull trout lawsuit targets 26 dams in Columbia River Basin THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
BOISE, Idaho — More than two dozen dams operating in Idaho, Oregon, Washington and Montana are harming bull trout and violating the Endangered Species Act, an environmental group says. A federal lawsuit filed by the Alliance for the Wild Rockies on Monday in Portland, Ore., names the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation and the Bonneville Power Administration as defendants. The alliance says the three federal agencies have failed to complete required consultations with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on how to operate 26 dams in areas designated as critical bull trout habitat. The group is asking a judge to force the agencies to complete those consultations that could lead to changes at the dams benefiting the federally protected bull trout. “We’re just trying to get them to do what they prom-
much but never forgotten. Tyler is survived by his parents, Timothy Kelly and Sonya Breaum; brothers Garrett and Gregory (Shawna) Traulson; nieces Cadence and Taylor Traulson; and grandmother Sally Gordon, all of Marysville. In Port Angeles, survivors include grandmother Suzanne Kelly; aunt and uncle Kimberly (Kelly) Lane and Michael Lane; and cousin Alexander Lane. In addition are uncles Tom Breaum of Ellensburg, Washington, and Bill Rhymes of Franklin, North Carolina; and cousins Tonya Hillius of Naches, Washington, Melissa Thompson of Palouse, Washington, and Alison Breaum of Selah, Washington. Tyler’s grandfather Larry Kelly preceded him in death. There will be a celebration of Tyler’s life Sunday, July 31, 2016, from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. at Ken Baxter Community Center, 514 Delta Avenue, Marysville.
lawsuit and didn’t have an immediate comment. A spokeswoman for the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation didn’t return a call from The Associated Press on Wednesday.
ised us they would do,” said Mike Garrity, executive director of the Missoula, Mont.-based Alliance for the Wild Rockies. The dams cited in the lawsuit include the four large dams that span the Columbia River where it forms the border between Oregon and Washington state. Four Snake River dams in Washington state are also named. Idaho and Montana have two dams each named in the lawsuit, and additional dams are listed in Oregon’s Willamette Basin, which feeds into the Columbia River. “Defendants have failed to protect and prevent adverse modification of certain rivers and streams designated as bull trout critical habitat,” the lawsuit says. Scott Lawrence, spokesman for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, said the agency doesn’t comment on pending litigation. Kevin Wingert, spokesman for Bonneville Power Administration, said the agency was reviewing the
BY KEITH RIDLER
Biological assessments Specifically, the lawsuit contends the agencies have failed to write biological assessments for many of the dams pertaining to bull trout and required following the 2010 designation of critical habitat for the species in the four states and a small portion of Nevada. The lawsuit also says the agencies, whether biological assessments have been written or not, haven’t taken the next required step and consulted with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on how best to manage the dams to benefit bull trout. “At some point, the alliance felt we needed to bring this into court to have these schedules brought into play and have these things done,” said Timothy Bechtold, an attorney representing the alliance.
Death and Memorial Notice the Nile, Sequim Elks Lodge No. 2642, Red Hat Society, PEO (Philanthropic Educational Organization), League of British Women and the hospital guild. She is survived by her husband, Frederick Robert Johnson; daughter Lori Ann (David Christopher) Shuck of Manhattan Beach, California; son Jeffrey Robert Johnson of Sequim; sisters Dorothy Jiron of Glendale, California, Elizabeth Waaler of Indio, California, and Gloria Rose of Downey, California; brothers Charles (Maritza) Rose of Oxnard, California, and Robert “Sonny” (Susan) Rose of Sequim; and granddaughter Allison Lauren Shuck of Manhattan Beach, California. She was preceded in death by her mother, Ada Phyllis Rose; father George Edward Rose; sister Patricia Pointer; and brother William Rose.
JOYCE AGNES JOHNSON January 16, 1937 July 3, 2016 Joyce Agnes Johnson, a 79-year-old resident of Sequim, passed away July 3, 2016, due to lung cancer. She was born to George Edward Rose and Ada Phyllis Schwitzer Rose in Shanghai, China, on January 16, 1937. On June 7, 1957, Joyce married Frederick Robert Johnson in Los Angeles, California. Joyce worked as an executive secretary for space and communications at Hughes Aircraft Company in El Segundo, California, and retired to the Olympic Peninsula in 1993. She loved to travel and
Mrs. Johnson had visited all 50 states. She was always excited for the Christmas holiday season, as it was her chance to go to California and visit family and longtime friends. She volunteered her time to various organizations and belonged to many clubs, including Lady of the Elks/Daughters of
The New York Times Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 1 Onetime Scandinavian automaker (containing the first part of the “double quote”) 5 Music’s Prince of Soul 9 Precious Australian exports 14 Abandon détente 19 Victimizes 21 Like pets but not strays 22 2015 Oscar winner Morricone 23 Solitary sort 24 Dream of many Koreans 26 Youngest “Brady Bunch” daughter 27 “No, no, it’s my treat!” 29 “____ Fideles” 30 Senatorial vote 31 “Key Largo” gangster Johnny 33 Church group 35 Break 36 Time periods in a polo match 39 U people? 41 Authoritarian announcements 44 Catch something 47 In the doldrums 50 Golden calf’s maker 51 Birds with throat pouches 54 Comp-sci acronym 56 Steep 57 Sitcom whose title character was Fran Fine 59 Perfumery oils
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BY PATRICK BERRY / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ
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60 ____-Cat 61 First secretary of homeland security 62 Tank tops? 64 Make noise while asleep 66 Corresponding expense? 67 First-chair violinist, perhaps 68 Person with an account 71 Political org. dating to 1854 74 Bear witness 75 Painkiller first sold in 1950 76 Unable to continue 77 Nameless network user 78 Some dumps 80 Image Awards org. 81 Hall of announcing 82 Pan’s home, in myth 84 Minority branch of Islam 86 Longtime Texas politico Phil 87 Free throws, e.g. 91 ____ horn 94 Judges to be 97 Use as a bed 98 Mom-to-aunt term 101 Actress Mason 103 Journalist/ columnist Carl 105 France : madame :: Italy : ____ 107 Request for permission 109 Showing few lights, as cities during W.W.II 112 Follow
113 Beeper from “a long time ago,” informally 114 Speaker of this puzzle’s “double quote” 115 Have another crack at 116 Long 117 Humorist Bombeck 118 Spotted (containing the last part of the “double quote”)
31 Repent of 32 Consents to 34 “Bearded” flower 36 Celebrate gloatingly 37 Grown-up pullet 38 Deceptive police op 40 Freight-train component 41 Delicately applies 42 Be deserving of 43 Treated with a preservative, as telephone poles 45 Teen spots DOWN 46 Michael’s wife in “The Godfather” 1 Like vindaloo 2 Golfer Palmer, to fans 47 One who seems responsible but 3 Health care giant isn’t 4 Disputed North Pole 48 Faux sophistication visitor 49 Slam 5 Sir, in Surrey 51 Reform Party 6 Emulate founder 7 Head guy in 52 “Idylls of the King” “Hamlet”? woman 8 Draw in 53 Shaver 9 Difficult duty 55 Without a date 10 Market problem 57 Explicitly 11 Technology 58 Med. care options eschewers 59 ____ Villa (English 12 Not secured, as a football club) gate 61 Like major generals 13 Reagan-era program, 62 Pushes in brief 63 Nonhuman 1930s 14 Went over film star 15 Crosses the sill 65 Draft picks 16 Pernod flavoring 66 Gun full of blanks, 17 Crowd scenes? maybe 18 “Woman With a 67 Shirt ornament Parasol” painter 68 Fanta competitor 20 Kikkoman product 69 Quarters 25 “Oliver!” director 70 Record label owned Reed by Sony 28 “____ any drop to drink”: Coleridge 72 As soon as
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73 Fires (up) 74 “We are always the same ____ inside”: Gertrude Stein 75 Nth degree? 76 Place for a throne 78 It’s all downhill from here 79 “I feel that way, too” 80 Hairsplitter’s objection
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92 Football Hall-ofFamer Bobby 84 “Homeland” network, for short 93 Private meeting 85 Darling 95 Mazda two-seater
104 “____ Flux” (1990s animated series)
86 Take a turn for the worse
96 Fully enjoy
106 Horatian collection
88 High rollers?
98 [Bo-o-oring!]
89 Add color to, in a way
99 Harden
83 Storm shower?
90 Lead-in to -itis 91 It may contain bugs
105 Cotillion attendee
108 Put
100 Underworld figure
110 “Gone With the Wind” studio
102 Vietnam War copter
111 Verdi’s “O patria ____”
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Thursday, July 14, 2016 PAGE
A9
Personal ties bridge racial divide IN JUST THE past few days, two African-American men were shot and killed by non-AfricanAmerican police officers in Minnesota and Louisiana and five non-African-American police officers were shot and killed in Dallas by an African-American man who declared he “wanted to kill white people, especially white officers.” The gap in our racially divided country Cal has never been Thomas wider. Immediately, familiar narratives came into play. The narrative for some African-Americans appears to reinforce the belief that racism and discrimination are responsible for whatever difficulties they face. For some whites, recent events seem to reinforce the narrative, seen on local news, that AfricanAmericans are violent criminals,
welfare cheats or liberal politicians out for themselves instead of others. Don’t we already have enough to fear from Islamic terrorists? Must we also fear racial conflict, stoked by groups like “Black Lives Matter”? Are we reverting to the ’60s when police officers were often seen as the enemy? Will some again refer to police officers as “pigs,” fuzz,” “The Man”? Will they have targets on their backs? Attorney General Loretta Lynch touched on part of the problem in her remarks about the Dallas ambush. She said we must “turn toward each other, not against another.” We don’t really know each other. Labels and images have replaced human contact. Social media tends to make the problem worse. Information shared there is often half-true or completely inaccurate. The “hands-up, don’t shoot”
narrative that followed the Ferguson, Mo., shooting of Michael Brown is just one example. Despite a thorough investigation that proved Brown did not have his hands up in an act of surrender to a police officer, the false narrative continues, with even members of the Congressional Black Caucus promoting it. If you are white and reading this, how many African-Americans do you know? If any, do you know the names of their family members? Have you ever shared a meal with them or invited them to your home? Do you attend church together? I ask these same questions of African-Americans. Dr. Martin Luther King once said, “11 o’clock on Sunday morning is the most segregated hour in Christian America.” Why is this? A church congregation should model equality and a common worship experience of the God who made us all and to whom racism is a sin. I was born in Washington, D.C., at a time when the city
Peninsula Voices Politics, politicians Usually, one chooses the lesser of two evils in voting. The modern politician is far from an image held by our Founding Fathers. George Washington took no salary, only had his expenses covered. Donald Trump is popular and unpopular, as is Hillary Clinton. Trump wants to make us strong and Clinton wants to make us comfortable. Their method of personal attack, while really ignoring all details of plans to improve our economy, infrastructure and educational opportunities, is no way to run for president. Trump is painted as
was segregated. The only black people I knew growing up were our two maids. I never knew their last names, which I later learned was a practice held over from slavery, a way to denigrate, demean and keep in one’s place. Later, when I began playing basketball, I met, traveled, showered and ate with African-American teammates. Sport is a great equalizer. It was said that the late congressman and football player Jack Kemp showered with more African-Americans than attend Republican political conventions. He showed up in poor neighborhoods and spoke up for the poor to the embarrassment of many white Republicans. He called himself a “bleeding heart conservative.” Kemp inspired others. Isn’t inspiration, not accusation, what we need now? Failed liberal policies, not racism, are mostly responsible for the condition in which poor African-Americans find themselves. Welfare dependency and the
OUR READERS’ LETTERS, FAXES AND
narrative that because one is black one will always be discriminated against keep many discouraged and defeated. There are more African-American politicians today than ever, even in the White House. Why isn’t their narrative inspiring the next generation? I think it’s because if the poor were to become self-sustaining they might not need liberal politicians. Poor African-Americans are a core Democratic voting bloc, despite receiving little in return from the politicians they help elect. What is the biggest lie and worst narrative of all? It’s that politicians can deliver economic and social salvation. Hating the police will not affect this narrative nor will it improve anyone’s circumstances.
_________ Cal Thomas is a Fox TV network commentator and syndicated news columnist. His column appears in the PDN every Thursday. Email via tcaeditors@tribune.com.
gregarious as Andrew Jackson, while Hillary is compared to Richard Nixon in honesty. Which is the lesser of these two heroes [or] evils? I don’t know, so I’m writing in George Costanza (not the actor Jason Alexander), the character. Jason could play the role. He avoids work hiding under a customized desk. He mumbles nonsense in a way that pleases everyone. His exuberance is contagious. He is the best actor for the role: president. George Lundburg, Port Townsend
Are we on the path to national ruin? I NEVER REALLY understood how fascism could have come to Europe, but I think I understand better now. You start with some fundamental historical transformation, like the Great Depression or the shift to an information economy. A certain number of peoDavid ple are dispossessed. Brooks They lose identity, selfrespect and hope. They begin to base their sense of selfworth on their tribe, not their behavior. They become mired in their resentments, spiraling deeper into the addiction of their own victimology. They fall for politicians who lie about the source of their problems and about how they can surmount them. Facts lose their meaning. Entertainment replaces reality. Once facts are unmoored, everything else is unmoored, too. People who value humility and kindness in private life abandon those traits when they select leaders in the com-
mon sphere. Hardened by a corrosive cynicism, they fall for morally deranged little showmen. And then perhaps there’s a catalyzing event. Societies in this condition are culturally tense and socially isolated. That means there are a lot of lonely, alienated young men seeking self-worth through violence. Some wear police badges; some sit in their rooms fantasizing of mass murder. When they act, the results can be convulsive. Normally, nations pull together after tragedy, but a society plagued by dislocation and slipped off the rails of reality can go the other way. Rallies become gripped by an exaltation of tribal fervor. Before you know it, political life has spun out of control, dragging the country itself into a place both bizarre and unrecognizable. This happened in Europe in the 1930s. We’re not close to that kind of descent in America today, but we’re closer than we’ve been. Let’s be honest: The crack of some abyss opened up for a moment by the end of last week. Blood was in the streets last week — victims of police violence in two cities and slain cops in
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another. America’s leadership crisis looked dire. The FBI director’s statements reminded us that Hillary Clinton is willing to blatantly lie to preserve her career. Donald Trump, of course, lies continually and without compunction. It’s very easy to see this country on a nightmare trajectory. How can America answer a set of generational challenges when the leadership class is dysfunctional, political conversation has entered a post-fact era and the political parties are divided on racial lines — set to blow at a moment’s notice? On the other hand … I never really understood how a nation could arise as one and completely turn itself around, but I think I’m beginning to understand now. Back in the 1880s and 1890s, America faced crises as deep as the ones we face today. The economy was going through an epochal transition, then to industrialization. The political system was worse and more corrupt than ours is today. Culturally things were bad, too. Racism and anti-immigrant feelings were at plague-like levels. Urban poverty was indescribable. And yet America responded. A
new leadership class emerged, separately at first, but finally congealing into a national movement. In 1889, Jane Addams created settlement houses to serve urban poor. In 1892, Francis Bellamy wrote the Pledge of Allegiance to give the diversifying country a sense of common loyalty. In 1902, Owen Wister published The Virginian, a novel that created the cowboy mythology and galvanized the American imagination. New sorts of political leaders emerged. In city after city, progressive reformers cleaned up politics and professionalized the civil service. Theodore Roosevelt went into elective politics at a time when few Ivy League types thought it was decent to do so. He bound the country around a New Nationalism and helped pass legislation that ensured capitalism would remain open, fair and competitive. This was a clear example of a society facing a generational challenge and surmounting it. The Progressives were far from perfect, but they inherited rotting leadership institutions, reformed them and heralded in a new era of national greatness.
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
So which path will we take? The future of the world hangs on that question. One way to think about it is this: America still has great resources at the local and social level. Here in San Antonio, there are cops who know how to deescalate conflicts by showing dignity and respect. Everywhere I go there are mayors thinking practically and non-dogmatically. Can these local leaders move upward and redeem the national system, or will the national politics become so deranged that it will outweigh and corrupt all the good that is done block by block? I’m betting the local is more powerful, that the healthy growth on the forest floor is more important than the rot in the canopy. But last week was a confidence shaker. There’s a cavity beneath what we thought was the floor of national life, and there are demons there.
_________ David Brooks is a columnist for The New York Times. Amy Goodman, who regularly appears on the PDN Commentary page on Thursdays, is off this week.
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
A10
WeatherWatch
THURSDAY, JULY 14, 2016 Neah Bay 62/52
➡
g Bellingham 70/55
Olympic Peninsula TODAY Port Townsend 68/53
Port Angeles 69/52
Olympics Snow level: 9,500 feet
Forks 69/52
Sequim 70/52
Port Ludlow 72/53
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
National forecast Nation TODAY
Yesterday Statistics for the 24-hour period ending at noon yesterday. Hi Lo Rain YTD Port Angeles 67 55 Trace 14.84 Forks 65 48 0.03 58.82 Seattle 76 57 Trace 23.86 Sequim 79 58 0.00 6.90 Hoquiam 65 53 Trace 42.77 Victoria 69 57 Trace 17.12 Port Townsend 68 57 **0.00 11.89
Forecast highs for Thursday, July 14
BURN
BAN IN EFFECT PENINSULA-WIDE
➡
Aberdeen 72/53
TONIGHT
Low 52 A cloudy night
FRIDAY
Billings 82° | 54°
San Francisco 66° | 52°
SATURDAY
Strait of Juan de Fuca: W morning wind 10 to 20 kt becoming NW 15 to 25 kt. Wind waves 1 to 3 ft building to 2 to 4 ft. W evening wind 25 to 35 kt easing to 15 to 25 kt. Wind waves 2 to 4 ft subsiding to 2 to 4 ft. Ocean: NW morning wind 10 to 20 kt. Wind waves 2 to 4 ft. W swell 5 ft at 7 seconds. NW evening wind 15 to 25 kt. Wind waves 3 to 5 ft. NW swell 7 ft at 7 seconds.
SUNDAY
Denver 89° | 58°
Chicago 89° | 72°
Miami 91° | 80°
Seattle 75° | 54° Olympia 77° | 51°
Tacoma 76° | 55°
Astoria 67° | 54°
Albany, N.Y. Albuquerque Amarillo Anchorage Asheville Atlanta Spokane Atlantic City 83° | 54° Austin Baltimore Billings Birmingham Yakima Bismarck 85° | 53° Boise Boston Brownsville © 2016 Wunderground.com Buffalo Burlington, Vt. Casper
TOMORROW High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht 10:33 a.m. 5.5’ 4:20 a.m. 0.6’ 10:01 p.m. 7.7’ 3:51 p.m. 3.0’
2:00 p.m. 5.1’ 10:49 p.m. 6.3’
6:06 a.m. 0.9’ 5:32 p.m. 5.0’
2:47 p.m. 5.6’ 11:28 p.m. 6.2’
6:43 a.m. 0.4’ 6:36 p.m. 5.4’
3:37 p.m. 6.3’
7:19 a.m. 1.0’ 6:45 p.m. 5.6’
12:26 a.m. 7.8’ 4:24 p.m. 6.9’
2:43 p.m. 5.7’ 11:32 p.m. 7.0’
6:41 a.m. 0.9’ 6:07 p.m. 5.0’
3:30 p.m. 6.2’
Hi 86 97 102 76 85 91 M 99 87 83 92 81 84 88 95 90 85 85
Lo 70 66 74 57 64 72 M 78 73 56 71 61 53 65 80 74 66 43
9:10 p.m. 5:30 a.m. 2:23 a.m. 4:23 p.m.
Prc
Otlk PCldy Clr Clr PCldy .04 PCldy Cldy Cldy PCldy .01 Rain Cldy .28 PCldy Clr Clr PCldy PCldy PCldy PCldy Clr
SATURDAY High Tide Ht Low Tide 11:28 a.m. 5.7’ 5:08 a.m. 10:47 p.m. 7.9’ 4:45 p.m.
Ht 0.0’ 3.0’
3:24 p.m. 6.0’
7:18 a.m. 7:31 p.m.
-0.2’ 5.6’
7:56 a.m. 0.4’ 7:49 p.m. 6.0’
1:05 a.m. 7.7’ 5:01 p.m. 7.4’
8:31 a.m. 8:44 p.m.
-0.2’ 6.2’
7:18 a.m. 0.4’ 7:11 p.m. 5.4’
12:11 a.m. 6.9’ 4:07 p.m. 6.7’
7:53 a.m. 8:06 p.m.
-0.2’ 5.6’
*To correct for Sequim Bay, add 15 minutes for high tide, 21 minutes for low tide.
Warm Stationary
Pressure Low
High
Aug 10 Tuesday
Sunset today Sunrise tomorrow Moonset tomorrow Moonrise today
-10s
-0s
0s
10s
20s 30s 40s
50s 60s
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80s 90s 100s 110s
Cartography © Weather Underground / The Associated Press
Charleston, S.C. 99 Charleston, W.Va. 87 Charlotte, N.C. 93 Cheyenne 88 Chicago 88 Cincinnati 85 Cleveland 93 Columbia, S.C. 101 Columbus, Ohio 88 Concord, N.H. 88 Dallas-Ft Worth 95 Dayton 88 Denver 91 Des Moines 88 Detroit 93 Duluth 81 El Paso 104 Evansville 80 Fairbanks 83 Fargo 83 Flagstaff 83 Grand Rapids 90 Great Falls 78 Greensboro, N.C. 91 Hartford Spgfld 87 Helena 78 Honolulu 88 Houston 97 Indianapolis 87 Jackson, Miss. 95 Jacksonville 95 Juneau 72 Kansas City 85 Key West 92 Las Vegas 105 Little Rock 94 Los Angeles 79 Louisville 83
79 70 70 54 68 72 75 75 72 58 79 72 54 72 71 66 80 72 61 64 47 72 53 71 67 51 77 81 71 75 70 57 74 84 81 78 64 75
.11
.25
.02 .11 .01 .81
.44 .03
.60
PCldy Rain PCldy Clr Cldy Cldy Cldy PCldy Cldy PCldy Clr Cldy Clr Cldy Rain PCldy Clr PCldy Clr Rain Clr Rain Cldy PCldy PCldy Cldy Clr PCldy Cldy PCldy PCldy Cldy Rain PCldy Clr PCldy PCldy PCldy
à 113 in Death Valley, Calif. Ä 29 in Stanley, Idaho
Atlanta 96° | 73°
El Paso 108° | 75° Houston 95° | 79°
Cold
CANADA Victoria 68° | 54°
New York 90° | 74°
Detroit 89° | 70°
Washington D.C. 96° | 73°
Los Angeles 80° | 64°
Full
Nation/World
TODAY High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht 9:29 a.m. 5.2’ 3:25 a.m. 1.1’ 9:14 p.m. 7.4’ 2:53 p.m. 2.8’
Port Townsend Dungeness Bay*
MONDAY
67/55 67/55 64/55 Showers to fall? Embrace sunlight Because clouds Oh dear. when it’s near soon reappear
ORE.
Port Angeles
First
Minneapolis 69° | 63°
Fronts
July 26 Aug 2
Washington TODAY
Marine Conditions
La Push
New
The Lower 48
Cloudy
TEMPERATURE EXTREMES for the contiguous United States:
Cartogra C Ca Cart Cartography og ogra g phy y by y Keith Keith ith h Thorpe Th T h / © Peninsula Daily News
67/54 Leads to overcast light
Tides
Last
Pt. Cloudy
Seattle 75° | 54°
Almanac Brinnon 75/55
Sunny
Lubbock Memphis Miami Beach Midland-Odessa Milwaukee Mpls-St Paul Nashville New Orleans New York City Norfolk, Va. North Platte Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Pendleton Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, Maine Portland, Ore. Providence Raleigh-Durham Rapid City Reno Richmond Sacramento St Louis St Petersburg Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco San Juan, P.R. Santa Fe St Ste Marie Shreveport Sioux Falls Syracuse
107 93 93 108 88 86 93 93 82 87 89 94 89 96 81 89 110 94 86 74 87 91 88 89 87 90 89 94 89 99 74 69 88 94 85 96 86 90
79 77 80 80 71 72 72 81 71 78 60 76 73 76 56 71 85 73 59 60 67 72 53 59 72 61 80 79 61 79 65 55 78 49 65 78 70 72
.03
.07
.01 .37
PCldy PCldy Cldy Clr Rain Clr Clr Cldy Cldy Cldy Clr PCldy Cldy Cldy Clr Cldy Clr Cldy Clr Cldy PCldy PCldy PCldy Clr Cldy Clr Cldy Cldy Clr PCldy Cldy Clr PCldy Clr PCldy PCldy PCldy Cldy
GLOSSARY of abbreviations used on this page: Clr clear, sunny; PCldy partly cloudy; Cldy cloudy; Sh showers; Ts thunderstorms; Prc precipitation; Otlk outlook; M data missing; Ht tidal height; YTD year to date; kt knots; ft or ’ feet
Tampa 94 Topeka 83 Tucson 106 Tulsa 94 Washington, D.C. 87 Wichita 90 Wilkes-Barre 90 Wilmington, Del. 84
73 74 83 80 75 75 71 72
.52
Rain Rain Clr .17 PCldy Cldy PCldy Cldy Rain
_______ Hi Auckland 60 Beijing 84 Berlin 64 Brussels 64 Cairo 102 Calgary 62 Guadalajara 79 Hong Kong 91 Jerusalem 87 Johannesburg 64 Kabul 94 London 69 Mexico City 75 Montreal 83 Moscow 79 New Delhi 93 Paris 67 Rio de Janeiro 84 Rome 86 San Jose, CRica 80 Sydney 62 Tokyo 83 Toronto 86 Vancouver 68
Lo Otlk 50 Cldy/Sh 69 PCldy/Ts 56 Sh 48 PCldy/Sh 75 Clr 48 PM Ts 60 PM Ts 82 Ts 70 Clr 33 Clr 62 Clr 53 PCldy 55 PM Ts 71 Heavy PM Ts 63 PCldy 82 Heavy PM Ts 47 PCldy/Sh 71 PCldy/Humid 62 PCldy 65 Ts 52 Clr 71 Cldy/Sh 68 PCldy/Ts 57 PCldy
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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Thursday, July 14, 2016 SECTION
SCOREBOARD, CLASSIFIEDS, COMICS In this section
B Outdoors
Squid party at City Pier SUMMERTIME AND THE squidding, while not easy, is an available option for those hungering for some calimari. The squid are around in the Michael Strait of Juan de Fuca, and squid Carman jiggers are catching them off Port Angeles’ City Pier in the midnight hour. You can’t keep a good squid down on the salt farm apparently, as some innate urge in their biology has them swimming toward the bright lights and big city atmosphere downtown. “They love bright lights and are so attracted to the lights they come close to the pier,” said Brian Menkal of Brian’s Sporting Goods and More (360-683-1950) in Sequim. “Sometimes you can see these white flashes in the water, and its a school of them.” Pacific squid, or market squid, or just plain squid, these cephalopods are closely related to octopuses. But these squid are decodopods, 10-legged creatures, two up on their octopus cousins. Squid found along the Strait of Juan de Fuca and inside Puget Sound are not the giant squid of maritime infamy. These are smaller, most well under six inches in size.
JAY CLINE/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Sequim’s Teo Johannes Nugent, left, and Port Angeles’ Kyle Trussell battle for the ball during the inaugural Super Cup. Trussell, severly injured while working as a land surveyor last year, will be the beneficiary of donations at Saturday’s rivalry game at Peninsula College.
Broken but not beaten Battered by bulldozer, Trussell on the mend BY MICHAEL CARMAN
The tried and true method
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Menkal suggests using standard glow-in-the-dark squid jigs that you can normally find at his store and other area tackle shops. Emphasis in the last sentence on “normally.” Menkal said a recent run on the item has left him awaiting a resupply set for later this afternoon. “You get yourself a squid jig and use a trout rod that has some sensitivity to it,” Menkal said. “If a squid grabs it, or you snag it, you’ll feel that. “That works just fine.” Menkal said the more adventurous squid will sometimes grab on to the jig with their tentacles.
PORT ANGELES — Almost whole again, Kyle Trussell hopes to walk unaided Saturday on the same cushioned artificial turf field he competed on last summer. Known for introducing the acrobatic backflip throw-in to area fields as a youth and high school soccer player, Trussell will never take locomotion lightly again. Not after what he’s been through in the aftermath of being nearly crushed to death by a 36,000-pound Caterpillar D-6 bulldozer in a Sept. 28 workplace incident. Trussell, 33, is the Man of Honor and will receive donations for medical expenses at the Port Angeles-Sequim Super Cup rivalry soccer match at Peninsula College’s Wally Sigmar Field at 5 p.m. Saturday. “I walked on the waterfront [Olympic Discovery] trail the other day for the first time [since he was injured] and was using a cane instead of a walker,” Trussell, who played in the inaugural edition of the area soccer derby last year, said. “My plan is to make an appearance without any cane, without a walker.” “I hope they have a jersey for me. I’d like to walk out with
An opposing viewpoint Port Angeles angler and lure designer Pete Rosko differs from the general consensus, preferring to use a setup of his own. “I use a 1/2-ounce, glow white Sonic BaitFish jig with a treble hook on the tail and the nose,” Rosko said. “The line/snap is attached to the nose. “I hold it about 10 ft below the surface and twitch it as if ice-jigging. “The squid eat the jig versus snagging.” He also has another setup in his tackle box. “The other rig I used is basically a snag rig with a tandem of three or four treble hooks in line,” Rosko said. “A light sinker, or glow-in-thedark Crippled Herring, Kandlefish or Sonic BaitFish can be used for weight at the end of the line. The night time is the right time for Rosko. “I like squid-jigging, after midnight on the City Pier, under the lights,” he said. Menkal warned squidders to avoid being hasty in bringing a hooked squid above the surface. “‘Let them hang out below for awhile,” Menkal said. “They will squirt that blue ink, so don’t raise the squid near you. They won’t wiggle off like a fish will, so there doesn’t need to be that same sense of urgency as you may have with a salmon. “And if you get that ink on your clothes it wont come out. Not even Tide [detergent] can help you.” Menkal told me a good story about a dapper gentleman who decided to go squidding while attired in a tan jacket nice enough to wear out on the town. TURN
TO
CARMAN/B3
Port Angeles when the teams are introduced and be part of the first kick at midfield.” Cane or no, the mere fact that Trussell is upright and getting his mobility back a little bit at a time, let alone alive, is difficult to comprehend. People aren’t built with the physical capacity to survive being run over by an enormous piece of industrial machinery.. That Trussell, a land surveyor who was severely injured while working on the landfill bluff stabilization project near the Port Angeles Regional Transfer Station, lived through the incident is the stuff of miracles.
Soccer ‘legend’ At the very least, Trussell’s travails add to the back story of a true “Port Angeles soccer legend,” as the headline read on goalWA, a soccer-devoted website, the week after he was injured. Trussell’s left ankle had an open fracture, his right femur was snapped, he suffered broken tibias and fibulas, his right leg was nearly wrenched off his body at the hip, five lumbar vertebrae were broken and his pelvis was crushed. Not to mention the damage it has done to his excretory systems and the 17 pints of blood
transfusions he underwent in the immediate aftermath of the event. Trussell was airlifted to Harborview’s trauma unit in Seattle, where he was placed on life support until he regained consciousness on Oct. 9. “I got off life support and checked my Facebook for the first time and I was overwhelmed,” Trussell said. “There were hundreds of messages and every single Port Angeles city league team had posted ‘a Get Well Trussell’ video. “I had so many people come and visit me and offer me support in the hospital I lost count.” Trussell’s longtime youth soccer coach Jeff Pitman, who also coached him at Peninsula College, remembers the early days of Trussell’s recovery. “You almost needed a ticket to get into his room there were so many people waiting to see him and wish him well,” Pitman said. He remained at Harborview an additional four weeks for surgeries and recovery, before coming home for an extended rehabilitation stint at Crestwood Convalescent Center. A GoFundMe account opened by family members while he was on life support collected more than $13,000 to cover medical expenses, but Trussell felt some guilt when he learned of its existence. “I was looking through all the notes people left me and I saw a donation from Beth Barrett, a girl I’ve known forever who has some young kids,” Trussell said.
“And she wrote they were donating their tooth fairy money. That blew me away. I just felt like I was OK. I didn’t want to take their tooth fairy money. I felt bad about that.” He’s now home, tended to by his girlfriend Opal Anderson, who’s served as the ever-present corner woman in Trussell’s fight for his life. And he’s visited often by a host of friends in the North Olympic Peninsula soccer community, including Pitman who visits Trussell every day. Other stalwarts are Sequim High School coach Dave Brasher and Parker Smith, the father of Trussell’s longtime teammate Rick Smith.
Indescribable nature Adjectives such as irrepressible and effusive can only go so far to describe Trussell. One gets the sense he would have been a handful in a high school classroom, sincere and no real trouble, but quick to offer a quip that could send his classmates into fits of laughter — a teacher tormentor. “It’s true. I’d say he’s one of those guys that’s just larger than life,” Brasher said. “He’s always been quick on his feet, so it’s thoroughly ironic that what got him was a slowmoving bulldozer,” Brasher joked. “The other amazing thing about him is he knows a million people, but he’s a really good listener. TURN
TO
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Wilder heading to regional tourney BY MICHAEL CARMAN PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
ISSAQUAH — Wilder Baseball Club dropped two of three games at the 16-18U Senior Babe Ruth State Tournament, but lived to play on at next week’s Pacific Northwest Regional in Quincy. The area team fell 3-1 to Lakeside Recovery on Wednesday, and will take the No. 2 seed to the regional tournament which opens Wednesday. “Yep, basically told them to move on from it,” Wilder coach Mike Politika said. “We have another week of baseball left and we will see what happens.” Curan Bradley was the hardluck loser on the mound for Wilder against Lakeside, throwing a complete-game five-hitter. “He sat down 10 in a row to
Baseball start the game,” Wilder coach Mike Politika said. Lakeside scored two runs in the fourth inning to take the lead. “They got those first two runs on a couple of hits and a throwing error,” Politika said. “But he threw really well. He got a lot of ground-ball outs, and for the most part we played solid defense except for that inning.” Wilder’s real troubles came with runners in scoring position. They managed to score one run on a passed ball in the first inning, but were unable to get more with the bases loaded and one out. “We had 10 hits and only got one run,” Politika said. “And we left 13 guys on base.
We have to do better in those situations.” Wilder allowed a two-run seventh inning rally in Tuesday’s opener, a 3-2 loss to the Moses Lake River Dogs. Tanner Rhodefer went 6 1/3 innings on the mound, allowing two runs on five hits and two walks, while striking out 10. Brady Shimko couldn’t shut the door in relief, allowing the game-winning run. Wilder starter Travis Paynter fared much better in a bounce-back 5-0 victory against the Ephrata Rock Hounds. Paynter tossed a one-hit shutout, striking out 13, while walking four. Wilder plated five runs in the top half of the seventh inning to break the game open. Lakeside Recovery 3, Wilder 1 Lakeside
0 0 0 2 0 0 1 —3
5
2
Wilder 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 —1 10 2 LP- Bradley Pitching Statistics Wilder: Bradley 7 IP, 5 H, 3 R, 1 ER, 2 BB, 2 K. Hitting Statistics Wilder: Bradley 1-3, R; Rhodefer 1-3, Hendry 2-4, 3 SB; Paynter 1-2; Gochnour 2-3, Grubb 2-3; Basden 1-2.
River Dogs 3, Wilder 2 Wilder River Dogs LP- Shimko
0 0 0 0 2 0 0 —2 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 —3
7 5
2 2
Pitching Statistics Wilder: Rhodefer 6 1/3 IP, 5 H, 2 ER, 2 BB, 10 K; Shimko 0 IP, H, ER, BB. Hitting Statistics Wilder: Bradley 2-2, 2 SB; Hendry 2-3, SB; Pederson 1-3; Boyer 1-3, Chapman 1-1.
Wilder 5, Ephrata 0 Wilder River Dogs WP- Bradley
0 0 0 0 0 0 5 —5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 —0
7 1
0 3
Pitching Statistics Wilder: Paynter 7 IP, H, 4 BB, 13 K. Hitting Statistics Wilder: Hurn 2-3, 2B, 3B, R, 2 RBI, SB; Basden 2-3, R, RBI, SB; Gochnour 1-1, R, SB, 2 HBP; Hendry 1-4, R, RBI, SB; Bradley 1-4.
________ Sports reporter Michael Carman can be contacted at 360-417-3525 or at mcarman@peninsuladailynews.com.
B2
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THURSDAY, JULY 14, 2016
Today’s
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
can be found at www. peninsuladailynews.com.
Scoreboard Calendar
Go to “Nation/World” and click on “AP Sports”
SPORTS PIC OF THE DAY
Today Baseball: Wilder at Senior Babe Ruth State Tournament, at Issaquah, TBD
Friday Baseball: American Legion AA District Tournament: North Kitsap vs. Chehalis, 10 a.m.; Capital-Olympic winner vs. Montesano, 1 p.m.; River Ridge vs. Centralia, 4 p.m.; EatonvilleLower Columbia winner vs. Olympic Crosscutters, 7 p.m.
Saturday Baseball: American Legion AA District Tournament: North Kitsap-Chehalis loser vs. Capital-Olympic-Montesano loser 10 a.m.; River Ridge-Centralia loser vs. Eatonville-Lower Columbia-Olympic Crosscutters loser, 1 p.m.; Capital-Olympic-Montesano winner vs. North Kitsap-Chehalis winner 4 p.m.; River RidgeCentralia winners vs. Eatonville-Lower Columbia-Olympic Crosscutters winner, 7 p.m.
Baseball American League East Division W L Baltimore 51 36 Boston 49 38 Toronto 51 40 New York 44 44 Tampa Bay 34 54 Central Division W L Cleveland 52 36 Detroit 46 43 Kansas City 45 43 Chicago 45 43 Minnesota 32 56 West Division W L Texas 54 36 Houston 48 41 Seattle 45 44 Oakland 38 51 Los Angeles 37 52
Tuesday’s Game American League All-Stars 4, National League All-Stars 2 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. Saturday’s Games Texas at Chicago Cubs, 11:20 a.m. Boston at N.Y. Yankees, 1:05 p.m. Toronto at Oakland, 1:05 p.m. Houston at Seattle, 1:10 p.m.
1 p.m. NBA TV Basketball NBA, Summer League (Live) 1:30 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Basketball NBA, Summer League (Live) 2 p.m. (47) GOLF PGA, Barbasol Championship, (Live) 3 p.m. NBA TV Basketball NBA, Summer League (Live) 5 p.m. NBA TV Basketball NBA, Summer League (Live) 5:30 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Basketball NBA, Summer League(Live) 7 p.m. NBA TV Basketball NBA, Summer League (Live) 7:30 p.m. (27) ESPN2 Basketball NBA, Summer League (Live) 10:30 p.m. (47) GOLF, The British Open Championship, Round 2, Site: Royal Troon Golf Club - Royal Troon, Scotland (Live)
3 a.m. (47) GOLF, The British Open Championship, Round 2, Site: Royal Troon Golf Club - Royal Troon, Scotland (Live) 5 a.m. (304) NBCSN Cycling UCI, Tour de France, Stage 13, BourgSaint-Andéol - La Caverne du Pont-d’Arc (Live)
Pct GB .591 — .517 6½ .511 7 .511 7 .364 20 GB — 5½ 8½ 15½ 16½
Today
Friday
Pct GB .586 — .563 2 .560 2 .500 7½ .386 17½
Pct .600 .539 .506 .427 .416
SPORTS ON TV
Latest sports headlines
BMX
RIDERS STEP UP
A total of $1,598 in donations was collected by 77 Port Angeles BMX Track riders during USA BMX’s annual Race for Life fundraiser for the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society fight against blood cancers. The top six fundraisers from the Port Angeles BMX Track are from left, to right, Makaylie Albin, $210; Josh Garrett, $160; Taylor Coleman, $130; Jaron Tolliver, $117; and Levi Bourm and Henry Bourm who each raised $90. Baltimore at Tampa Bay, 3:10 p.m. Cleveland at Minnesota, 4:10 p.m. Kansas City at Detroit, 4:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox at L.A. Angels, 6:05 p.m.
New York Miami Philadelphia Atlanta
National League Washington
East Division W L Pct GB 54 36 .600 —
Chicago St. Louis
47 41 47 41 42 48 31 58 Central Division W L 53 35 46 42
.534 6 .534 6 .467 12 .348 22½ Pct GB .602 — .523 7
Pittsburgh Milwaukee Cincinnati
46 38 32
43 .517 7½ 49 .437 14½ 57 .360 21½
West Division W L Pct GB San Francisco 57 33 .633 — Los Angeles 51 40 .560 6½
Colorado San Diego Arizona
40 38 38
48 .455 16 51 .427 18½ 52 .422 19
Friday’s Games Texas at Chicago Cubs, 11:20 a.m. 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. Saturday’s Games Texas at Chicago Cubs, 11:20 a.m. N.Y. Mets at Philadelphia, 4:05 p.m. Pittsburgh at Washington, 4:05 p.m. Colorado at Atlanta, 4:10 p.m. Milwaukee at Cincinnati, 4:10 p.m. Miami at St. Louis, 4:15 p.m. L.A. Dodgers at Arizona, 5:10 p.m.
Carman: Squid Fab four skip Olympics, but not Open CONTINUED FROM B1 too.” For more information on “This guy was doing the catching squid, visit tinyurl.com/PDN-Squid16. right thing, keeping them below the dock and keeping his jacket free of ink,” Men- River fishing class kal said. Menkal will offer a two“But there was a kid jig- part river fishing class at ging behind him who got his store in Sequim, 609 W. excited and brought his Washington St., No. 21, squid up too early. from 6 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. “That ink went everyTuesday and again Tueswhere and ruined the back day, July 26. of that tan jacket. No fault It’s an excellent introof his own, besides deciding duction for anglers looking to wear it in the first to find success on North place.” Olympic Peninsula rivers, Ward Norden, owner of or refresher for those seekSnapper Tackle Company, ing to brush up on their and a Quilcene resident, angling acumen. also has heard squid tales. Menkal will offer a host “Some of the visitors to of tips and tricks and point the condos on Discovery out some good spots to try Bay are already reporting your luck. catching hundreds in an The cost is $35. evening on their private Phone ahead to 360-683pier (no public access),” 1950 to reserve a spot. Norden said. ________ “Its time to check out Outdoors columnist Michael the public piers in Port Carman appears here Thursdays Townsend and Port Angeand Fridays. He can be reached at les, hang a light over the 360-452-2345, ext. 57050 or at water, and see if those mcarman@peninsuladailynews. tasty critters are there, com.
Police say Green punched Spartans’ football player THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
DETROIT — Golden State Warriors star Draymond Green struck a Michigan State football player in the jaw during a weekend confrontation near campus, tried to apologize and then had to sit in jail for a while until he could sober up, according to a police report released Wednesday. Senior cornerback Jermaine Edmondson claimed he was punched by Green early Sunday outside a restaurant in East Lansing, though officers patrolling the area said they saw or
heard a loud, open-handed “slap.” Edmondson said it was his second confrontation with Green in as many nights out. He told police that he and his girlfriend were choked Friday night by men who were with Green at Rick’s, a bar near campus. He said he spotted Green the next night and tried to talk to him, according to the police report. “I walk over and I tell Draymond that last night wasn’t cool,” Edmondson, who is from Canton, Ohio, said in an email to police.
BY DOUG FERGUSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
TROON, Scotland — Jordan Spieth, going for the third leg of the career Grand Slam, spent more time talking about a golf course he will never see. The majority of his press conference was taken up with questions about the Olympics in Rio de Janeiro and why he chose not to play. It was only when he was leaving the room that the 22-year-old Texan smiled and said to no one in particular, “Do we have a tournament this week?” Finally, yes. Colin Montgomerie, who lived across the street from Royal Troon when his father was the club secretary, hits the first tee shot when the British Open begins today. That should put to rest three days of consternation about another tournament — the Olympics — that doesn’t have nearly the history or the tradition of golf’s oldest championship. The International Golf Federation, run by former R&A chief Peter Dawson, took over Open week on Monday to announce that Olympic qualifying had ended and that Spieth
(along with Rory McIlroy, Jason Day, Dustin Johnson and 16 other men) was not playing. The next day, Spieth stood by his decision (“health concerns”) and said his goal would be to get to the Tokyo Games in 2020, assuming the men are still in the games. McIlroy followed him into the room and blasted golf officials who for the last seven years have preached the Olympics as an opportunity to grow the game. “I didn’t get into golf to grow the game,” McIlroy said. “I got into golf to win championships, and win major championships.” Claret jug, anyone? Spieth let it slip through his fingers last year at St. Andrews going for his third straight major, and he wound up holding it later that evening — but only because he was with Zach Johnson, the champion golfer of the year, when it was over. “I crave to have that trophy in my possession at some point,” Spieth said. “And to reach a third leg of the Grand Slam this week would be a fantastic achievement.” History is on his side, even if it’s more of a coincidence. The last six British
Open champions at Royal Troon dating to 1950 are Americans. Spieth arrived on the weekend and already saw the unpredictable nature of these Ayrshire links off the Irish Sea. The wind was into his face on Saturday and Sunday on the easier opening holes, and the prevailing wind at his back returned the following three days. Royal Troon is clearly a tale of two nines. The front nine typically is downwind and doesn’t have a par 4 longer than 422 yards. The back nine turns into the wind and doesn’t have a par 4 that his shorter than 430 yards. The common denominator? Bunkers dot the landscape on both sides, along with thick, prickly gorse bushes more prevalent at the turn. Fairway bunkers effectively are a half-shot penalty, possibly a full shot or more if the ball rolls up against the vetted faces. “We looked at the holes, and on paper it looked relatively simple,” Masters champion Danny Willett said. “But you start knocking it in a couple of the bunkers, up near the faces, the bunker design is a little bit
sneaky.” The closing holes into the wind can be a threeclub difference. The record score at Royal Troon is 12-under 272 when Leonard won in 1997. McIlroy has been feisty this week. He was annoyed by a newspaper headline that referenced the Fab Four and suggested he was close to becoming Ringo Starr, regarded as the least of four Beatles. It was only two years ago that McIlroy ended the summer of 2014 by winning two straight majors and leaving no question who was No. 1. Spieth, Day and Johnson have combined to win four of the last six majors, and McIlroy is now at No. 4 in the world. “I can’t worry about other guys,” McIlroy said. “I’m pretty confident that if I go out and play my best golf I’m going to win more times than not. I’ve got four major championships, and I’d love to add to that tally — just as those guys would love to add to their one or two majors that they have and just keep going.” What the Fab Four has in common is all of them want a claret jug — and none are going to the Olympics, anyway.
Cougars’ backup quarterback transfers to JUCO BY JACOB THORPE MCCLATCHY NEWS SERVICES
PULLMAN — Washington State backup quarterback Peyton Bender will play this season at Itawamba Community College in Fulton, Mississippi. The redshirt sophomore was already academically ineligible to play this fall for the Cougars. According to his father, Mike, Bender failed a mac-
roeconomics class and received a failing grade in another class after receiving too many unexcused absences. Mike Bender blamed Peyton’s decision to join a fraternity as a social member for his academic struggles. Both Leach and his father believed that Bender needed to mature and develop new social circles, possibly a wa y
from Pullman. “I said you can’t be a frat boy and a division one football player,” Mike Bender said. “If you’re going to choose to go down the path of a Division I athlete you’re held to a different standard, that’s the way life goes.” Mike Bender said that Washington State coach Mike Leach encouraged Bender to play at a junior college this fall to continue
receiving game experience (Bender does not have a redshirt year available) and then return to Pullman in January. “It was the result of all of his own stuff,” Mike Bender said. “He could have stayed. Leach wanted him to stay, but he would have been ineligible. He could have practiced and dressed with the team. He didn’t fail out of school.”
SportsRecreation
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
THURSDAY, JULY 14, 2016
B3
Trussell: ‘He sees a great future for himself’ CONTINUED FROM B1 He’ll remember your name, what’s going in your life. “Kyle’s always been memorable himself, too, somebody you would never forget when you talk to him.” Pitman also pointed to Trussell’s gale-force personality. “He’s got such an infectious personality, really, the best kind of infection if you are going to have to have one,” Pitman said with a laugh. “Whatever he says it’s the truth. He will tell you the truth every time, even if its painful to hear. “And he keeps such a sense of humor about himself. “Most people would have never survived this, and I think it’s a testament to Kyle being in really good shape from continuing to play soccer and his attitude.” “I think a lot of people would have just given up and died.”
The beautiful game Soccer has been a mainstay in Trussell’s life since he first booted a ball at the age of 4. He was a team member of Storm King Image, the first select, club-level competitive soccer program on the North Olympic Peninsula. Those Image players were the backbone of the Port Angeles High School boys soccer team’s run to the Class 4A state soccer championship game in 2000. Trussell, a junior, played in midfield for the Roughriders (19-0-1), who fell on a weak goal in a 1-0 loss to Snohomish in the state title game. “Kyle is the type of player who would pull off bicycle kicks at midfield to
JAY CLINE/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Port Angeles’ Kyle Trussell eyes the ball after Sequim’s Teo Johannes Nugent kicks the ball upfield during the 2015 Super Cup rivalry game. Sequim won the inaugural local soccer derby 1-0. Donations will be accepted at the game for Trussell, severely injured on the job last year. save balls,” Pitman, whose son Justin also played on the team, said. “That’s a non-threatening area where you really don’t have to go all-out to save possession. But that’s Kyle. “One time he did that and he came down and knocked himself out with a concussion. “I’ve visited him in the hospital three or four different times for different injuries before this ever happened.”
Trussell kept playing soccer, suiting up for Pitman at Peninsula College until a ligament injury in his leg cut his college career short. “I saw [Peninsula College Athletic Director] Rick Ross at the practice area at [Cedars at] Dungeness golf course the other day and told him he needs to keep a scholarship open for me,” Trussell said. “I’ve still got eligibility left.” Trussell also played in
tournaments around Puget Sound and Canada, making friends from countless countries — all for the love of soccer. A longtime staple of the Port Angeles Parks and Recreation leagues and the Sequim eight-man indoor league, Trussell has a name for his style of play. “I call myself a Clint Dempsey (referring to the U.S. National team standout and Seattle Sounders midfielder),” Trussell said.
“I’m a withdrawn forward, or a lazy center midfielder because I don’t do defense.” Trussell isn’t cleared to do anything more strenuous than chip or putt a golf ball, but he’s eagerly anticipating beginning a rehab program in the coming weeks. Much of his energy has been spent consumed in bureaucratic battles with the state Department of Labor and Industries and his insurance provider. “It’s a cumbersome process,” Trussell said. “I understand a lot of people are abusing the system but I didn’t get run over by a bulldozer to abuse the system.” While he deals with the government and the insurance company, a second GoFundMe account for Trussell was opened at www.gofundme.com/urjwfqx8. When the department declined to fund the purchase of a combination recumbent bike/elipitical machine, Pitman, Brasher and Smith chipped in and purchased one for him. He’s yet to use it, but said he can’t wait to get back to working out. Trussell was floored when Port Angeles Super Cup commissioner Tim Tucker said Saturday’s rivalry game would be played in his honor. “I was overwhelmed with emotion,” Trussell said. “I couldn’t hold my tears back.” Trussell is looking forward to the intensity and seeing all his soccer friends at Saturday’s game. “I went to one city league game for my team when I was in a wheelchair while I was at Crestwood and I never went up there again because it was just too hard. I couldn’t handle it at the time,” Trussell said. “But I’m ready now. I
want to see everybody and I want them to see how good I’m doing,” he said. “I’m really looking forward to being around the guys.” Pitman marvels at his growth. “He’s shown so much perseverance and handled everything so well,” Pitman said. “He was a good person before, but he’s grown so much. And a lot of that comes from his girlfriend, Opal Anderson, the most supportive person maybe on Earth. “He’s happy with the way things are turning out right now, he sees a great future for himself.”
Ready to fight Pitman asked Trussell a difficult question recently. “I was asked the other day if I could take it and all I’ve gone through back, and my answer is no,” Trussell said. “And that’s because how often do you get to prove to yourself what you are made of and if you can overcome something like this? “Not that I ever really wanted to, but I had to.” In shock in the immediate aftermath of the incident, Trussell, lying face down on the earth tried to get in the push-up position to lift himself off the ground. His attempts, thankfully, were restrained by Jeff Gladish, another bulldozer operator who saw the incident occur. But the effort to rise to his feet lingers in Trussell’s memory. “I look at it like I had two choices: lay there and die or fight and get whatever I can out of life,” Trussell said. “And I’m a fighter.”
________ Sports reporter Michael Carman can be contacted at 360-4173525 or at mcarman@peninsuladailynews.com.
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PERFORMANCE G I G A N T I C G A R AG E IMPROVEMENT Sale: Fri. 7/14 Sat. 7/15 COORDINATOR Sun. 7/16 9-4pm. 526 W Summer Breeze Ln. Col- $31-$39K/yr DOQ. PT lectibles, A little bit of w/ par tial benes. Req: 5+ yrs exp. in mental or everything. medical hlth care, MA in SW or counslng. HEARTLAND: ‘12, Resume/cvr ltr to: PBH North Trail 21 FBS, with 118 E. 8th St. power slide, awning, Port Angeles, WA 98362 hitch, jacks, queen bed, peninsulabehavioral.org u-shape dinette, large EOE fridge freezer, spacious rear bath with corner PUMPKIN PATCH shower, plus equalizer FLEA MARKET hitch. $15,900. Sat., 8-3 p.m., 64 Kitch(360)681-4856 en Dick Rd. No reservations needed. $20 per MISC: Upholstry fabric, space. Gates open at many patterns perfect 6:30 a.m. for vendors. for jackets, handbags, More info: chair covering or art pro(360)461-0940 jects. 3-10 yards, $3. and up. (360)301-0498 TAC K B OX : C u s t o m made horse tack box. MOVING SALE: 38”x26”x21”, very good Fri. 7/15 - Sat. 7/16 8- condition. $200/obo. N o o n . 1 0 3 2 M e d s ke r (360)582-7030 Rd. Quality fur niture, b a r - b - q , t r e a d m i l l , TEACHERS! Retirement DVD’s, lamps, pictures, sale!. Sat. 8-2. 339 E. p a t i o f u r n i t u r e , c o l - Scrivner Rd (off Old Mill) l e c t i bl e s a n d l o t s o f 30 yr. collection of supp. h o u s e h o l d i t e m s ! N o tchng mat. 1000+ books. Early Birds. Household items, serger, bike, XC skis, & M OV I N G S A L E : Fr i . - more. No ear ly birds, Sat. Sun., 8-4 pm., 1302 please. B e n t C e d a r s W a y. Woodworking tools and Y A R D S A L E : S a t . furniture. 9-3pm and Sun. 9-2pm, 185 S. Bagley Creek Rd. Just east of Wilder’s AuPARKWOOD Commu- t o. H o u s e h o l d i t e m s, nity Yard Sale: Fr i.- c l o t h i n g , m e n s s t u f f, Sat., July 15 - 16, 9-3 ALOT of stuff! p. m . , 2 6 1 5 2 0 H w y 101, south side of 101 TRAILER: ‘74 Prowler, b y S e a r s . O v e r 2 0 18’, $1,500. homes participating! (360)460-0515
74 year old white male, 5’7”, 160lb. easy going, nice looking, good health, non smoker, non drinker. Sometimes uses a walker for now. Looks 65, seeking a nice lady friend around similar age or older in the PA/Seq. area. I have alot to offer. Lets grow old together. (360)-406-0412 or 4526151
3020 Found FOUND: 5 year membership pin of AOPA. (360)417-8908 FOUND: IPod, Westside near bluff, 7/7. (360)457-0655 FOUND: On Old Schoolhouse Rd. neutered male cat, red and white, 6/15. (360)797-7655
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 escapements for summer chinook, fall chinook, fall coho, and winter steelhead, preparing pre-season run-size estimates and post-season reports, developing Tribal fishing models, recommending IGN fishing schedules to tribal fisheries committee, and recording and reporting sampling information from catch. In addition, this person supervises a 5-6 full time fish tech employees. Must have a M.S. degree in fisheries biology or related field or a B.S. degree and a minimum of two years’ experience as a Bio I, salary $56-62 Visit our website at www.quileutenation.org for a job application/description. Or call 360374- 4366 YARD SALE: Fri.-Sat., 8-4 pm., 2430 E. Ryan Dr. Chetta’s Yard Sale.
FOUND: Seq. 7/11 Prescription glasses, Pinnell Rd near Robin Hill Park. Claim at Sheriffs office.
3023 Lost LOST: Cat, female Gray tabby with white paws a n d b e l l y, S B a g l e y Creek (360)477-8493 LOST: Kayak/ski dr ysuit, neon colored, John Wayne Marina, 7/8 (360)775-8322
4026 Employment General All positions hiring at cafe in Discovery Bay. Call Dan after 11:30, (360)379-9131 Alterations and Sewing. Alterations, mending, hemming and some heavyweight s ew i n g ava i l a bl e t o you from me. Call (360)531-2353 ask for B.B. CNA: Part Time, ideally available for all shifts, including weekends. Apply in person at: Park View Villas, 8th & G Streets, P.A.
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
Blue Meadow Farm Rustic Riding. Learn horseb a ck r i d i n g f r o m t h e ground up! Private lessons for all ages. Schooling horses on site. Exper ienced, Licensed, Insured. Acres of fields and trails. Call (360)775-5836
FIELDNOTES Back Alley Flea Market July 15th, 16th, & 17th 10-6pm Fri. and Sat. 10-4pm Sunday 123 E Washington (360)683-8208
3010 Announcements
4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment General General General 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.
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.
EXPERIENCED MECHANIC WANTED We are looking to hire a full time, experienced mechanic to complete our technical team. Applicant can apply in person, we would love to see a resume as well. Wage depends on experience. Applicant must have their own tools. Bayview Transmission and Muffler, Inc. 2026 East First St. Port Angeles, WA 98362 360-452-3497 360-452-3136
FT Facilities Director LOCAL SURVEYING in Port Angeles, WA COMPANY Visit: Accepting applications fo r Pa r t y C h i e f, a n d feiromarinelifecenter.org for details Chainman. Willing to train chainman. GROOMERS HELPER: Send resume to: Fo r s m a l l d o g s. Pa r t info@clarkland.com time. (360)417-3762
Classified
B4 THURSDAY, JULY 14, 2016
ACROSS 1 UV filter once widely used in sunscreens 5 Word in Italian dishes 9 Italian for “wasp� 14 Lifetimes 15 Sign on for more service 16 One-__ chance 17 Music in 62Across 19 Swedish-born Chan actor 20 Cunning 21 River through Kazakhstan 23 Dating letters 24 Fisherman’s knot 26 They may be independent 28 Race town near Windsor Castle 30 People never seen in “Peanuts� 32 Word with smoke or kisses 33 Arthurian address 34 Very old thing 38 Sylvan sticker 39 Performer in 62Across 41 Thurman of “Henry & June� 42 More than just suggest 44 Salyut successor 45 Snead has won three of them, briefly 46 Existing: Lat. 48 Work with a team 49 Misconception 52 Brown shade 54 Brown address ending 55 Bausch’s partner 57 Opens up 60 Cover story 62 Fighting venues suggested by this puzzle’s circles 64 Levels, in Leeds 65 Comic strip canine 66 Mind, with “for� 67 College near Albany 68 D-Day craft 69 What it’s risky to build on?
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS 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. ORGANIZED PEOPLE Solution: 4 letters
S L A O G D E P E N D A B L E By Matt Skoczen
7/14/16
DOWN 1 Haydn sobriquet
Wednesday’s Puzzle Solved
E L A G E N I T U O R E A N F
T N A N I A D A P T T G E E E
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Y V A T N E I C I F O R P U F
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7/14
Adapt, Capable, Careful, Classify, Deadline, Decisive, Delegate, Dependable, Detail, Diligent, Duteous, Earnest, Effective, Exact, Fast, Finicky, Focused, Fussy, Goals, Group, Intent, Logical, Manage, Neat, Optimistic, Order, Perfect, Plan, Precise, Prepare, Proficient, Ready, Routine, Standardized, Structured, Thorough, Tidy, Timely Yesterday’s Answer: Mathematician 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.
HISSU Š2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC All Rights Reserved.
KYNID Š2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
7/14/16
51 First two-time Best Actress Oscar winner Rainer 53 Lille lasses: Abbr. 56 Pals 58 Folklore fiend 59 Wee part of a min. 61 Big __ 63 Brightened, with “up�
39 Oscar-winning song immortalized by Nat King Cole 40 “Mon __!� 43 About .62 mi. 45 Discourse on verses 47 $, for one 48 Many a trucker 49 Causes of trembles 50 Dwight’s two-time opponent
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2 Food thickener 3 Visual media soundtrack Grammy Award 4 Presently 5 Winning, with “on� 6 Med. nation 7 Doozie 8 Brief summary 9 Crook, e.g. 10 Phot. lab request 11 They may be taken on “Jeopardy!� 12 British coin additive? 13 Chilean range 18 Number for two 22 Highly in favor of 25 Metz milk 27 Letters with Arizona or Missouri 28 Short for short? 29 Swing around 31 “Wee� pours of Scotch 33 Mariners’ home, familiarly 35 Pea variety 36 Apple variety 37 Hit violently, as waves against the shore
C T O P T I M I S T I C D T F
LAMFEE Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
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4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment General General General
Guest Service Agent $11 - $14, DOE Housekeepers Starting $10.50
10008for 4 weeks!
$
Apply in person at 140 Del Guzzi Dr. P.A.
OTHER PAPERS CHARGE FOR ONE AD ONCE A WEEK s -ORE SPACE TO PROMOTE YOUR BUSINESS daily. s ! VARIETY OF LOW PRICED AD SIZES AVAILABLE s PENINSULA $AILY .EWS SUBSCRIBERS daily.
PERFORMANCE IMPROVEMENT COORDINATOR $31-$39K/yr DOQ. PT w/ par tial benes. Req: 5+ yrs exp. in mental or medical hlth care, MA in SW or counslng. Resume/cvr ltr to: PBH 118 E. 8th St. Port Angeles, WA 98362 peninsulabehavioral.org EOE
s 2EACH READERS daily IN THE PENINSULA $AILY .EWS s .O LONG TERM COMMITMENTS s $AILY EXPOSURE ON THE WORLD WIDE WEB
1 column x 1�...........................$100.08 (4 Weeks) 1 column x 3�...........................$160.08 (4 Weeks) 1 column x 2�...........................$130.08 (4 Weeks) 2 column x 2�...........................$190.08 (4 Weeks) 2 column x 3�...........................$250.08 (4 Weeks) 3 column x 3�...........................$340.08 (4 Weeks)
only
$100
08
(4 Weeks)
only
$190
08
(4 Weeks) only $
16008
(4 Weeks) only
$13008
(4 Weeks)
Deadline: Tuesdays at Noon
To advertise call Denise at 360-452-8435 or 1-800-826-7714
04915
P ENINSULA DAILY NEWS
REPORTER / EDITOR Sought for the Por t Townsend / Jefferson County bureau of the Peninsula Daily News, a six-day a.m. newspaper on Washington state’s beautiful North O l y m p i c Pe n i n s u l a . This full-time position is for a proven selfstarter with experience on a weekly or a daily who can spot the most newsworthy and compelling stories of East Jefferson County and produce stories and p h o t o s fo r a zo n e d edition each of the six days of publication. You will work from a room with a view — a private office on the w a t e r f r o n t i n Po r t Townsend, an historical seaport known for its Victorian architecture and artistic ambiance — coordinating with editors in the Port Angeles office. Compensation includes medical, vision, life insurance, 401(k) and paid vacation. The PDN, nearly a century old, is a communityminded, family-focused local newspaper and Web enter pr ise that is the main news provider for the North O l y m p i c Pe n i n s u l a . Check us out at www.peninsuladailynews.com. The Peninsula Daily News is part of Washington state’s largest newspaper group, Sound Publishing Inc. If you meet the above qualifications, email yo u r r e s u m e, c ove r letter addressing how yo u f i t o u r r e q u i r e ments and at least 3 non-returnable writing samples, to careers@sound publishing.com. No phone calls, please.
HOTEL MAINTENANCE Days Inn, responsible for general repairs in and around the hotel.These duties include, general repair in guest rooms, common areas. Repairs can include minor electrical, plumbing, carpentry, painting, finish work, mechanical and guest related ser vices. All around handyman Pool maintenance daily, experience required. Email resume to: daysinnportangeles@gmail.com HR BENEFIT SPECIALIST $16-$19/hr DOE/DOQ PT with partial benefits. Must have exp. in benefit Administration and knowledge of basic investment pr inciples. Req: BA in HR or Bus. Admin. 3 yrs of exp.in HR or related field. Resume/cvr ltr to: PBH 118 E. 8th St., Port Angeles, WA 98362 peninsulabehavioral.org EOE 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.
LPN/RN M E D I C A L A S S I S TANT needed part-time, for a family practice office. Resumes can be dropped off at 103 W. Cedar St. Sequim, WA
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.
LINE COOK and Dishwasher: Experienced. Apply in person between the hours of 2-5 p.m. Downriggers 115 E. Railroad Ave. Suite 207
Production Worker Established bio-medical company seeking motivated multi-tasker for assembly/production work. Customer service or sales experience a plus fo r gr ow t h w i t h i n o u r team. Wage $10-$11/hr plus benefits. Mail resume to Human Resources, PO Box 850, Carlsborg, WA 98324. SABAI THAI Looking to hire clean, energetic and hardworking individual to join our team as a dishwasher and also a line chef. Must be efficient and able to multitask. Please drop off resume between 4-9 p.m. 903 W. 8th St.
Fun ’n’ Advice
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
Dilbert
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Classic Doonesbury (1986)
Frank & Ernest
Garfield
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DEAR ABBY: We have been attending the weddings of our friends’ children and work colleagues. We enjoy them, but we have noticed a change in some of the traditions. The best man’s and maid of honor’s toasts to the bride and groom seem to have devolved into telling stories about their past escapades. This includes tales of all-night partying, how drunk they were, other embarrassing incidents and “digs” at the bride and groom. Some of these speeches can go on for more than 10 minutes. Abby, many guests attending these celebrations really don’t care to hear these kinds of things. I’m sure the couple’s new boss or their grandparents are quite shocked at some of the revelations they hear. Has this occasion turned into a roast? Don’t Know What to Make of It
by Lynn Johnston
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by Bob and Tom Thaves
by Brian Basset
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by Pat Brady and Don Wimmer
ZITS ❘ by Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman
Dennis the Menace
❘
by Hank Ketcham
Abigail Van Buren
time to find someone with the same goals I have? Confused in Florida
Dear Confused: Ask yourself which is more important to you — a loving and emotionally supportive spouse or a hard worker who may be less so. Only you can decide the answer to that question.
The Last Word in Astrology ❘ ARIES (March 21-April 19): Be smart with your money. Pay close attention to pricing options and good deals. Look for products that will help you look and perform your best. Romance will improve your mood. Positive changes are heading your way. 3 stars
Rose is Rose
DEAR ABBY
Dear Abby: I am the mom of three wonderful little girls, but as of late not so wonderful. My husband and I work hard to teach them manners and respect, but we can’t seem to get across to them to be grateful for what they have. We don’t have a lot of money Dear Don’t Know: It appears that because we live on one income, and we some of the weddings you have don’t spoil them often because we can’t attended have. afford to. There are occasions when someTwice now, one of my girls has been times the less said the better, if only to unhappy with a gift she received. protect the guilty, and this is one of The first one she threw away; the them. second she refused to even accept. This isn’t how we raised her. Dear Abby: I am a 22-year-old I thought about doing some volunwoman who enjoys achieving things in teer work with them, but I fear they life. For example, I recently bought a are too young for it (4, 7 and 9). house and paid for all the remodeling I want to raise kind, caring and with my own money. giving girls. I have been with my boyfriend for Your thoughts on this matter would seven years (on and off). He was my be great. first boyfriend, first kiss, etc., and Grateful Mom in Colorado because of that, I have always felt a deep connection with him. Dear Grateful Mom: Your 7- and My problem is he doesn’t have 9-year-olds are not too young to learn goals for the future and just lives his that many children have far less than life a day at a time. they do. Sometimes people need to see He’s comfortable with his lowwith their own eyes the challenges income job and doesn’t plan on going that others have to cope with in order to school. to appreciate how fortunate they are. He moved into my house six I think your idea of having them do months ago, which makes our relasome volunteer work with you is an tionship that much more serious. excellent one, and it is not too early to Something I absolutely adore about start. him is his loving nature. ________ He drops whatever he is doing to Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, be there for me emotionally, and everyone who meets him tells me how lucky also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, the late Pauline PhilI am to have found such a great guy. lips. Letters can be mailed to Dear Abby, P.O. My question is, should I stay with Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069 or via my loving, caring boyfriend or is it email by logging onto www.dearabby.com.
by G.B. Trudeau
by Jim Davis
Red and Rover
B5
Guests perplexed by wedding toasts
by Scott Adams
For Better or For Worse
THURSDAY, JULY 14, 2016
Pickles
❘
by Brian Crane
by Eugenia Last
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Say “no” to something you cannot afford. A practical approach to everything you do will be necessary if you don’t want to be left scrambling to pay off debt. Don’t try to buy love. 2 stars
medical, legal or financial demands. Making changes at home or to the way you live will end up being more beneficial than anticipated. Do your research to avoid being misled by others. 3 stars
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Deal with matters that concern family, neighbors TAURUS (April 20-May or issues in your commu20): Make a choice and nity. Taking action and stick to your decision. It offering alternatives will put doesn’t pay to be inconsis- you in a position of leadertent. Someone will become ship. Delegate work annoyed with you if you instead of taking on all the don’t consult with them responsibilities yourself. before making changes. 4 stars Business travel will result LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. in a new beginning or 22): Don’t get angry over opportunity. 3 stars situations at work. Do your GEMINI (May 21-June best to take care of your 20): Take initiative and own responsibilities and make alterations that will refrain from voicing your allow you to use your men- opinion. Personal and protal and physical abilities to fessional improvements will the fullest. Refuse to let ensure that you protect anyone interfere with your your position. 3 stars responsibilities. Falling short of your goals will lead SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. to regrets. 3 stars 21): Don’t give in to someone who tries to belittle you CANCER (June 21-July or take over. Do your best 22): Give your all and do to put an end to any rivalry your best. Your determina- by being positive and doing tion and passionate way of your best. Your excellence going after what you want will be impossible for anywill pay off. An unusual one to overcome. 3 stars turn of events will encourage you to try something SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Take care of new. 5 stars
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): A residential move will ease your stress and give you the incentive to start anew. Putting some muscle behind your ideas and plans will ensure that you reach your goals. Money will come from an unusual source. 4 stars
The Family Circus
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AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): An emotional outburst can be expected if you let a friend or relative get to you. Put your efforts into getting along with your coworkers and doing your fair share of the work. Personal improvements will bring excellent results. 2 stars PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Draw up and sign contracts. Getting together with people who work in your industry will give you a better understanding of what’s required of you and how you can get ahead. Sincerity will win favors and advancement. 5 stars
by Bil and Jeff Keane
Classified
B6 THURSDAY, JULY 14, 2016
105 Homes for Sale 505 Rental Houses Clallam County Clallam County
4026 Employment 4026 Employment 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale General General Clallam County Clallam County
Independant Carrier in search of Substitute Carrier for Combined Motor Route for Sequim Area Substitue(s) needed fo r we 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
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 escapements for summer chinook, fall chinook, fall coho, and winter steelhead, preparing pre-season run-size estimates and post-season reports, developing Tribal fishing models, recommending IGN fishing schedules to tribal fisheries committee, and recording and reporting sampling information from catch. In addition, this person supervises a 5-6 full time fish tech employees. Must have a M.S. degree in fisheries biology or related field or a B.S. degree and a minimum of two years’ experience as a Bio I, salary $56-62 Visit our website at www.quileutenation.org for a job application/description. Or call 360374- 4366
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS Has a newspaper route available in the Po r t Tow n s e n d a r e a , Kala Point and Marrowstone Island. Deliver y star t time is approximately 2 am. Six days per week, 200-220 subscribers approximated $1200 per month plus tips. This is a contracted position not - employee. Must have dependable, economical vehicle and car insurance. You must be dependable and at 4080 Employment least 18 years of age. If Wanted you are interested please call: Dons Handy Services 360-452-4507 Weeding, pruning, weed eating, landscape improvement. many other jobs ask. (484)886-8834 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 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 Support Staff To wor k with adults w i t h d eve l o p m e n t a l disabilities, no experie n c e n e c e s s a r y, $ 1 0 . 5 0 h r. A p p l y i n person at 1020 Caroline St. M-F 8-4 p.m.
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) LAWN CARE Mowing, edging, pruning, hedging, weeding, hauling and more. (360)461-5034 or 461-0794 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 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
BRAND NEW TOWNHOUSE You won’t find any steps inside this brand new 3 br/2 ba townhouse in the Fair Weather subdivision! This home is currently under contract, but similar townhouses are being built in this neighborhood! Heated and cooled by an energy efficient ductless heat pump and a propane fireplace in the spacious living room w/ durable laminate flooring. Fully fenced back yard w/ a covered deck that looks out to partial mountain v i ew s. P r o fe s s i o n a l l y manicured front yards a n d ex t e r i o r m a i n t e nance included in your HOA fee. MLS#301277 $245,000 Windermere Kelly Johnson 360-477-5876 BUILDING SITE WITH VIEWS! Gorgeous building site in Dungeness, only minu t e s a w ay f r o m o u t standing crabbing, clamming, and fishing, souther n exposure, mountain views and even some water view, $350 water hook up fee, septic design and permits paid ($2000), bring your plans or manufactured home! MLS#971596/301340 $60,000 TEAM SCHMIDT Mike lic# 15329 Irene lic#15328 (360)683-6880 1-800-359-8823 WINDERMERE SUNLAND
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
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 CALLING ALL Remax Prime GOLFERS Shawna Rigg Investors beware! Not 360-808-5448 many lots left to build your dream home on. PEACEFUL Both lots 7 and 10 are MOUNTAIN VIEW available. If you’re look- 3 Br, 1.5 Ba, 1136 SF on ing at the scenic Penin- just a little over 1 acre, sula Golf Course. Cen- b ra n d n ew c o n d i t i o n , trally located close to built in 2012 move in town, medical, restau- r e a d y, o f fe r s p r i va c y, rants and shopping. Bus v i ew o f t h e b e a u t i f u l line availability near by. Olympics, room for outDrive by and take a look, buildings, gardening and or walk the golf cart path orchard, irrigation water to capture the stunning share, no mitigation reviews of what could be quired yo u r “ we l l m a n i c u r e d MLS#968208/301280 b a ck ya r d ” . G o r g e o u s $274,500 Northerly views between Terry Peterson the trees of the Straits lic# 107780 and Victoria and to the (360)683-6880 west, lush green land(360)797-4802 scape between the 8th WINDERMERE and 9th holes. SUNLAND MLS#292127 $120,000 Remax Prime Price Reduced Shawna Rigg I n c r e a s i n g l y ra r e 2 . 4 360-808-5448 acres a short distance from Discovery Trail, AuCAMP EVERYDAY dubon Center and RailCamp Runamuck has 5 road Bridge Park. Conacres of peace and soli- venient location close to tude. All the berries you the City of Sequim yet can eat, all the wildlife maintains rural atmosyou can see, without the phere. Irrigation ditch on noise, just relax in the property, good soil and a hot tub and look at the very nice mountain view. stars. 4 BR, 2.5 Ba, over If you are looking for a 2400 square feet, 2 car special proper ty come garage and extra space take a look at this. for your workshop. Floor MLS#301036 $119,000 to ceiling granite fireEd Sumpter place and a large gen360-808-1712 erator. Blue Sky Real Estate Becky Jackson Sequim MLS#301196 $349,900 COLDWELL BANKER SHERWOOD VILLAGE UPTOWN REALTY Beautifully upgraded (360)808-0147 1900 sf. condo with views of the pond, COUNTRY LIVING greenbelt, and mounNear Discovery Trail, 2 tains. Features include Br, 2 Ba, 1404 SF, stainhardwood flooring. Kitchless steel appl. and island in lg. kitchen, warm en w/granite counters, colors, vaulted ceilings, cherry cabinets, and uplarge windows, attached graded appliances. Liv2 c a r g a ra g e, l o t s o f ing room w/stone faced storage, low yard main- p r o p a n e f i r e p l a c e . t e n a n c e, f u l l y fe n c e d Den/office. Master suite w/double sinks and tiled back yard walk in shower. Laundry MLS#938565/300877 room w/cherry cabinets $185,000 a n d C o r i a n c o u o n t e r. Deb Kahle Fenced private patio and lic# 47224 3 car garage. (360)683-6880 MLS#300590 $399,500 (360)918-3199 Tom Blore WINDERMERE 360-683-4116 SUNLAND PETER BLACK REAL ESTATE DON’T MISS THIS opportunity to own one of SPACIOUS CUSTOM the best views in town. HOME Newly remodeled, douImmaculate 4 br/2.5 ba., ble lot, with lots of outbuildings, newer septic home located just across and freshly refinished the street from the Pehardwood floors and fin- ninsula Golf Course in a ished off with brand new neighborhood of lovely w i n d o w s . $ 3 0 , 0 0 0 + homes. The huge wraparound porch welcomes PRICE REDUCTION $362,750 MLS#291787 you inside to gorgeous hardwood floors, 9ft ceilTEAM POWELL, CBU ings w/ crown moulding COLDWELL BANKER and a propane fireplace UPTOWN REALTY w/ stone surround. The (360)775-5826 kitchen is beautifully remodeled w/ a huge cenMOUNTAIN VIEWS 3.77 acres of pasture- ter island, granite counland, soils are regis- t e r t o p s a n d w a l k - i n tered, level lot, power pantr y. Spacious MBR and phone to property, w/ walk-in closet, shoe community water share closet and attached bath is paid, horses allowe, w/ soak tub. All on a close to dungeness rec- large and landscaped reation area and wildlife corner lot just minutes from town. refuge MLS#301252 $379,900 MLS#857981/291953 $130,000 Windermere Tyler Conkle Linda Kepler lic#112797 360-477-4034 (360)683-6880 WATER VIEW! (360)670-5978 Quality built Childers/BuWINDERMERE kovnik Construction SUNLAND home. 2184 SF, 2 br, 2 SUNLAND TOWNba home on .40 acres in HOUSE quality neighborhood 2 Br, 2 Ba Townhouse features vaulted ceilings, with view of 4th and 9th propane fireplace, built Fairway, 1948 SF, open in china cabinet, large concept living, master with double sinks dining room, split floor and soak tub, indoor and plan, 2 master suites, o u t d o o r e n t e r t a i n i n g walk-in closets, plenty of space with French doors kitchen cabinets, 2 car off dining room leading garage. to a south facing covMLS#957126/301143 ered patio, huge laun$285,000 dry/craft room, and overTyler Conkle sized garage. lic# 112797 MLS#301305 $449,000 (360)683-6880 Jean Irvine (360)670-5978 COLDWELL BANKER WINDERMERE UPTOWN REALTY SUNLAND (360)460-5601
NEW KITCHEN AND MORE! Completely remodeled and updated, this 3 br and 2 ba., home is move-in ready. Granite counters. Stainless steel appliances. New bathrooms. A deck with saltwater view. MLS#301316 $255,000 Jeanine Cardiff (360)460-9221 JACE The Real Estate Company 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 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 yard. Lots of storage space in the unfinished basement! MLS#301183 $215,000 Windermere Anthony Parello, Broker 917-300-4623
311 For Sale Manufactured Homes
605 Apartments Clallam County
Properties by
Inc.
PRE OWNED 28x44, 3 br., delivered and set. Cash buyer only. (360)681-0777
S E M I AU TO M AT I C : Private party. Made in USA, FNX.40 cal. $400. FNX. 9mm. never been fired. $400. (360)460-8149
6055 Firewood, Fuel & Stoves
The
VACANCY FACTOR
is at a HISTORICAL LOW
452-1326
APT: Amazing MidCent-Mod. Mt. Vw. All new: 1 Mst BR, 1 Den, 2 Bth, W/D. No pet/smoking. (360)582-6463.
683 Rooms to Rent Roomshares Rental Needed: 61 year old. Walker acces./ disabled. Studio orroom? (360)207-9283 R O O M M AT E : F u r n . room, wifi, phone, TV in room, utilities included. $475. (360)457-9006.
1163 Commercial Rentals
Properties by
Inc.
The
VACANCY FACTOR
FSBO: Sequim, mfg. 2 br., 2 ba., spacious, bonus room, master suite with walk in closet, newly remodeled, with appliances, includes 2 sheds, c o ve r e d c a r p o r t a n d porch, in a 55 plus park. $74,500. (360)582-0941
6050 Firearms & Ammunition
EAST P.A.: Close toSafeway, 2 Br., 1.75 ba, $700, 1st, last, dep., inc. sewer, water, garbage, yard maint. (360)457-3194.
PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM
by Mell Lazarus
PORTANGELESLANDMARK.COM
❘
is at a HISTORICAL LOW
452-1326
6005 Antiques & Collectibles
FIREWOOD $200/cord (360)460-3639 FIREWOOD: OPEN AGAIN IN JULY $179 delivered Sequim-P.A. 3 cord special $499. (360)582-7910 www.portangelesfire wood.com
(360)
417-2810
RENTALS IN DEMAND
BEDROOM SET: Sleep Number bed, twin, x-tra long, adjustable head, almost new, $1,200 obo. 6 drawer dresser and matching nightstand, c h e r r y w o o d c o l o r. $100.Please call after 5pm. (360)477-9260 DESK: Roll-Top, Early American style roll top desk, excellent condition. New in 1975, well cared for since. 54’W x 26”D x 45”H. Doublesize file drawer on right side. Dark walnut color. $ 600. (360)460-6375 ORIENTAL Rug: 9x12, r e d . $ 1 , 8 0 0 . Wa l nu t dresser with car ved pulls. $300. (360)582-0503
6100 Misc. Merchandise
OUR SERVICES INCLUDE:
Spa (Hot Tub). Solana PLOT: Mt. Angeles Me- Spa with attached tip morial Park, Garden of cover. 220V Like New $1500. Devotion. $1,750. (360)460-1949 (360)797-1019
6040 Electronics
SOUND SYSTEM: PROPERTY Bose, CineMate series EVALUATION II, digital home theater system. Like INTERNET MARKETING speaker new. $150. (360)390-5267 QUALIFIED TENANTS RENT COLLECTION 6045 Farm Fencing & Equipment PROPERTY MAINTENANCE TILLER: 30” Mechanical tiller, for John Deere INSPECTIONS models 240, 260, 265, 285, GT262 and GT242, AUTOMATIC 320 tractors. $950. (360)477-3542 BANK DEPOSITS T R AC TO R : ‘ 1 3 J o h n EASY ONLINE Deere, 37hp, includes STATEMENT ACCESS JD backhoe/thumb. 4x4,
VISIT US AT
PORTANGELESRENTALS.COM OR
1111 CAROLINE ST. PORT ANGELES Properties by
Inc.
still has 2 years on warr a n t y. B o t h e x c e l . $29,995 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
The
VACANCY FACTOR
is at a HISTORICAL LOW
GUNS: Excellent concealed carry, Springfield’s: XDS 9 mm, 3.3, $450. XDS .40 cal, 3.3, $400. XDS .45 cal, 3.3, $400. Private p a r t y, n e v e r b e e n fired. (360)460-8149
452-1326
RIFLE: Browning, lever action 243, scope, extra clip, sling and 7.5 boxes o f s h e l l s , c a s h o n l y. $750. (360)809-0032
8142 Garage Sales 8183 Garage Sales Sequim PA - East E S TAT E S A L E : Fr i . 7/15-Sat. 7/16 8-2pm 834 Gunn Rd. High quality heir looms and antiques for sale. Fishi n g g e a r, f r a m e d a r t wor k, wide var iety of Asian antiques and artwor k, pendants, snuff bottles, vases and pottery, wall hangings.
6105 Musical Instruments PIANO: Cherr y wood, upright, with bench and great tone. $350/obo. (360)477-3721
6115 Sporting Goods
YARD SALE: Fri.-Sat., 8-4 pm., 2430 E. Ryan Dr. Chetta’s Yard Sale.
YA R D S A L E : S a t . 9-3pm and Sun. 9-2pm, 185 S. Bagley Creek Rd. Just east of Wilders Aut o. H o u s e h o l d i t e m s, c l o t h i n g , m e n s s t u f f, ALOT of stuff!
ESTATE SALE: Fri.-Sat. 8435 Garage 9-4pm, 111 N. Solmar D r. S e q . M u l t i fa m i l y. Sales - Other Areas ‘20’s-50’s furniture, coll e c t i b l e s , h o u s e h o l d E S TAT E S A L E : Fr i . Sat.-Sun. July 15,16,17. goods. Nice Stuff. 191 Elk Loop Dr. Furniture, Avon collectable, FIELDNOTES Curio cabinet. Back Alley Flea Market 7025 Farm Animals July 15th, 16th, & 17th 10-6pm Fri. and Sat. & Livestock 10-4pm Sunday 123 E Washington EWES: R e g . K a t a h d i n (360)683-8208 Ewes: Breeding stock, TAME, big, healthy. MaG A R AG E S A L E : Fr i . ture at 160-220lbs. No 7/15 8-3pm, 252 Cays s h e a r i n g . D e l i v e r y Rd. Multi -Family Sale. available. Ave. $200 ea. Quality outdoor clothing, No calls after 8 pm. 452household furnishings. 2 9 1 9 o r r e d t o y p o o dles@nikola.com And lots more!
OIL STOVES: (3), oil t a n k s ( 2 ) . $ 5 0 0 / o b o, Wood stove. $500/obo. GARAGE SALE: Fri on(360)808-3160 ly, 8-4pm, 71 McFarland Dr, (off Happy Valley). 6065 Food & Housewares, women’s Farmer’s Market clothing size large, yard art, furniture and some EGGS: Farm fresh from tack, a wide assortment. f r e e r a n g e c h i cke n s . $4.25/dzn. Weekdays G A R AG E S A L E : Fr i . (360)417-7685 Sun., 10-6pm, 4852 Sequim Dungeness Way, past Nash’s. Please park 6075 Heavy in field. Collectibles, anEquipment tiques, lamps, furniture, pictures, household C AT : D 6 C C r a w l e r . items. Added to daily. $8,500. (360) 457-8210 G A R AG E S A L E : S a t . 7/16 only, 9-4pm, 120 Wallace Way, (South on River Rd, West on Secor Rd, South on Wallace Way.) Seq. Downsizing from 3000 sq ft home to a 5th wheel! This includes 29 years accumulation of house, barn and garage treasures, DUMP TRAILER: Big as well as unique meTex 12LX, like new, chanical and eletronic 7’X12’ tlr. wt. 3570# items. Absolutely no earG V W R 1 2 , 0 0 0 # . ly birds, gate opens at $6,000. 9am. 683-0141 or 808-0312 G A R AG E S A L E : S a t . only, 07/16, 9-3pm., 371 6080 Home West Deytona, Seq. Lots Furnishings of household items.
BA R B I E D O L L S : I n or iginal boxes. Dated HOT TUB: Hotspring, 7’ 80’s & 90’s. 126 dolls, X 7’. Works good, water Prices star t at $15. to in it. Sequim $500. Sequim/Dungeness G r e a t l o t n e a r b e a c h $150. (360)683-5884. (360)710-4848 with Beach Access. Private and quiet with open PIANO: 1923 Tulbran- J E W E L E R S : b e n c h feeling. 3/8 acre next to san, was a player. $350. tools, gas rig/torches. (360)477-1688 open space. Safe neighExtensive professional borhood, plenty of parkhand tools/jigs and dies. ing. Heated, insulated Tools used in the silver large shop. Separate art 6010 Appliances industry. Will sell all or studio. Well and septic. part. (916)768-1233 Older mobile home with Sequim approx. 1,000 sq ft including studio and laun- W A S H E R / D R Y E R : M I S C : C a n o e, a l u m i Kenmore Elite, energy dry. $119,900. num, 17ft Grunman, efficient, like new, top (360)681-7775 $ 5 0 0 o b o. ( 3 6 0 ) 4 6 0 loading, warranty good 7581 leave message. till Nov 1. $400 obo. (360)460-8149 R U G D O C TO R : P r o, 505 Rental Houses used twice, with addiClallam County tional products. $250. (360)683-8437 6035 Cemetery Plots
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Momma
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
7030 Horses
Blue Meadow Farm Rustic Riding. Learn horseb a ck r i d i n g f r o m t h e ground up! Private lessons for all ages. Schooling horses on site. Exper ienced, Licensed, Insured. Acres of fields and trails. Call (360)775-5836
HORSE TRAILER: 2 horse, straight load, Thoroughbred height, new tires, needs minor work, call for details. (360)417-7685.
SORREL MARE: AQHA registered, sweet disposition, eager to please, fully trained for trail riding, for sale or lease, call for details. 417-7685.
7045 Tack, Feed & Supplies
TAC K B OX : C u s t o m made horse tack box. 38”x26”x21”, very good condition. $200/obo. (360)582-7030
G I G A N T I C G A R AG E Sale: Fri. 7/14 Sat. 7/15 9820 Motorhomes Sun. 7/16 9-4pm. 526 W Summer Breeze Ln. Collectibles, A little bit of ITASCA: ‘03, Sundancer, 30’, class C 450, low everything. 38K miles, always garaged, 1 owner, leveling MOVING SALE: Fri. 7/15 - Sat. 7/16 8- jacks, auto seek satellite N o o n . 1 0 3 2 M e d s ke r TV, entertainment cenRd. Quality fur niture, ters, new tires, 2 slides, bar-b-q, treadmill, s e e t o b e l i e v e . DVD’s, lamps, pictures, $44,900/obo 681-7996 patio fur niture, coll e c t i b l e s a n d l o t s o f ITASCA: ‘15, Navion, h o u s e h o l d i t e m s ! N o 25.5’, model 24G, Diesel, 12K ml. exc.cond. 2 Early Birds. slide outs, $91,500. (360)565-5533 MOVING SALE: Sat. Sun. 8-4pm 1504 S 3rd MOTORHOME: SouthAve. E xe r c i s e e q u i p m e n t , e n t e r t a i n m e n t wind Stor m, ‘96, 30’, c e n t e r, b a b y i t e m s , 51K, great condition, lots home decor, propane of extras. $17,500. (360)681-7824 stove, ladies handbags shoes and clothing, computer parts and accessories. PARKWOOD Community Yard Sale: Fr i.Sat., July 15 - 16, 9-3 p. m . , 2 6 1 5 2 0 H w y 101, south side of 101 by Sears. Over 20 homes participating!
T R AV E L S U P R E M E : ‘01 38.5 ft. deisel pushe r, b e a u t i f u l , e x c e l . cond. coach. 2 slides, 2 PUMPKIN PATCH LED TVs and upgraded FLEA MARKET LED lighting. 83K miles. Sat., 8-3 p.m., 64 Kitch- 8.3L Cummins $42,500. en Dick Rd. No reserva- (360)417-9401 tions needed. $20 per space. Gates open at W I N N E B A G O : ‘ 8 9 , 6:30 a.m. for vendors. Class C, 23’ Ford 350, More info: 52K ml., well main(360)461-0940 t a i n e d , g e n e ra t o r, $7,500. (360)460-3347 TWISTED HINGE joins the BIG SALE at the LITTLE RED BARN. Stop by and see us Lavender Fest We e k e n d : Fr i , S a t , Sun 9to4 at 120 Forrest Rd off W Sequim Bay Rd next to Blackberry Forest Lavender Winnie VISTA ‘14 30T Farm. Something for New cond., non-smoker, ever yone! Antiques, 3 glides, 21,300 miles. vintage, re-purposed Sleeps 6, 40”HDTV, V10 g o o d s . P l e a s e l i k e engine, 4KW gen auto s y s t e m Tw i s t e d H i n g e o n l e v e l AM/FM/DVD/CD, BlueFacebook! tooth, rear & side view cameras, power awning. 8180 Garage Sales $93,500. (360)473-3592, billinda4552@gmail.com PA - Central Sequim E S TAT E S A L E : S a t , 9-4pm, 5414 S. Doss 9832 Tents & Rd, PA (up Mt. Angeles) Travel Trailers Furniture, baby items, and too much to list.
I N F L ATA B L E B OAT: S e a w o r t hy, 1 1 ’ , w i t h pump, oars, and battery box. $250. GARAGE SALE: Fr i.(509)885-0999 Sat., 8-4 pm., 339 Viewcrest. Quilters and fisherman. Come and buy. 6125 Tools MISC: Sears 230 Amp arc welder, 230 V, $75. Sears 340 Vac Air compressor, 5 hp, 33 gal. air tank, on wheels. $100. Oxy-Acetylene weldingcutting set with cart, 4 ft tanks, hoses, gloves, some tools, $100. (360)797-1945
6135 Yard & Garden
M OV I N G S A L E : Fr i . Sat. Sun., 8-4 pm., 1302 B e n t C e d a r s W a y . CRUISER: ‘10 Fun FindWoodworking tools and er, 18’ with tipout and awning, barbecue, mifurniture. crowave/convection ovTEACHERS! Retirement en, large fridge/freezer, sale!. Sat. 8-2. 339 E. air conditioning. Sleeps Scrivner Rd (off Old Mill) 4. Very little use, neat 30 yr. collection of supp. and clean. $14,000. (360)928-3761 tchng mat. 1000+ books. Household items, serger, bike, XC skis, & HARTLAND: ‘13, Trailmore. No ear ly birds, runner, 26’, sleeps 6, great condition. $12,500. please. (360)460-8155
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
8182 Garage Sales PA - West
RIDING LAWNMOWERS $500.Call Kenny (360)775-9779
8183 Garage Sales PA - East
8142 Garage Sales Sequim
GARAGE SALE: SAT ONLY! 9AM TO 4PM., 2810 South Oak St. PA., Baby items, baby clothes and much more.
ESTATE SALE: Fr i. Sat. 9-3pm. 511 Wilcox Lane. Antiques, collectibles, furniture, pott e r y, m a n s t u f f, a n d more unique items. All M u s t G o ! Pa r k c o u r teously. Cash Only.
AN AWESOME SALE: Fri. Only, 8-3pm, 1717 W 15th St. PA. (off I St, near fairgrounds), Don’t miss this one.
GARAGE SALE: SatSun, 8-2pm, 1323 E. 4th St. PA. (in alley), Baby clothes, baby items, and much more.
HEARTLAND: ‘12, North Trail 21 FBS, with power slide, awning, hitch, jacks, queen bed, u-shape dinette, large fridge freezer, spacious rear bath with corner shower, plus equalizer hitch. $15,900. (360)681-4856
KEYS: ‘07, 25’ (19’ SLB) Clean as a whistle, dometic fridge/freezer,AC, awning, dual marine batteries, electric tongue jack, new tires, winter cover and other upgrades. $9,000. (360)457-8588
ClassifiedAutomotive
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
THURSDAY, JULY 14, 2016
Tire noise sounds like plane Dear Doctor: We have a 2004 Nissan Maxima with over 110,000 miles. After purchasing a new set of tires, we started to hear noise. When the car goes to 50 mph, the noise starts to sound like an airplane diving. This does not interfere with the driving, as everything is great with this vehicle. The muffler is quiet, the air conditioner works great, the steering goes wherever you want it to go, the pickup is fantastic and it’s easy on gas. Roseann Dear Roseann: An airplane sound at 50-plus mph may not be from the tire tread design. It could be a wheel bearing (front or rear). If you open the window slightly or turn the steering wheel either way, does the sound change? I recommend you take the car to a shop that employs ASE-certified technicians or find a AAAapproved shop in your area and let them road-test the car with you.
Gasket issue? Dear Doctor: I have a 1988 Chevrolet with the 5.7liter 350 cubic-inch V-8 engine. Antifreeze is getting into
THE AUTO DOC the motor oil. Is a leaky intake manifold gasket the cause? Did Chevrolet have defective intake and head gaskets back in
Junior Damato
oil.” Greg Dear Greg: There are many additive products for both oil and gas. The ZMAX product you mention does a lot of advertising in media publications geared toward automotive enthusiasts. If you want to try the product, then check your mileage before applying it. Wait three weeks after you add the product and then recheck your mileage for any improvements or changes.
Car of the Week
unheated garage seldom will go below freezing.
Input on Honda HR-V
Dear Doctor: I’m interested in buying a 2016 Honda HR-V. Did you testdrive this vehicle? Patricia Dear Patricia: The 2016 HR-V is all-new from Honda. I had the HR-V for a week and found it to fit the needs of compact crossover utility vehicle buyers who do not need Honda’s larger CR-V. 1988? Stacey The 1.8-liter four-cylinDear Stacey: Chevrolet Good to go? der engine pumps out 141 did have problems with cylhorsepower. Dear Doctor: I do my inder heads and soft camThe AWD system is benown oil changes, and I shafts in the early days. eficial in Snow Belt areas However, I don’t think it’s always purchase a good and for doing light off-road quantity of motor oil and an intake manifold gasket travel, like going on a filters. problem. I use synthetic oil in one camping trip — but cerYou can perform a leaktainly not rock climbing. of my vehicles and convendown test or pressurize one There are three trims tional oil in the other. cylinder at a time. offered on the HR-V, startDoes oil go bad and spoil? If you decide to remove Can I keep an unopened can ing at $19,115. the cylinder heads, then ________ have them magnaflux-tested of motor oil for two years without it breaking down? at a machine shop. Junior Damato is an accredMy motor oil is kept in ited Master Automobile Technimy unheated garage, and I cian, radio host and writer for ‘Snake oil’? Motor Matters who also finds make certain that the plasDear Doctor: What do tic oil containers are kept off time to run his own seven-bay garage. Questions for the Auto you think of ZMAX oil and the cold concrete garage Doc? Send them to Motor Matters, gas treatment brand? floor. Tom P.O. Box 3305, Wilmington, DE A few guys use this Dear Tom: I have not 19804, or info@motormatters.biz. brand and they swear by it. seen sealed oil spoil. I like Personal replies are not possible; But I’d like to know if the idea of keeping it off questions are answered only in the column. you think this is just “snake the cold floor. Your
9832 Tents & Travel Trailers
9050 Marine Miscellaneous
K E Y S TO N E : ‘ 0 6 3 1 ’ Zephlin. $6,000 obo or trade for motorhome. (360)461-7987
Aluminum skiff: 10’, custom welded, with oars, electric motor and trailer with spare tire. $975. (360)460-2625
NOMAD: ‘08 19’ 194/SC Clean, well maintained, sleeps 4. Reduced to $9,500. (360)808-0852
B OAT : 1 5 ’ G r e g o r, Welded aluminum, no l e a k s . 2 0 h p, n e w e r Yamaha. Just serviced with receipts. Electric TRAILER: ‘74 Prowler, trolling motor. Excellent 18’, $1,500. t r a i l e r. $ 4 , 9 0 0 . B o b (360)460-0515 (360) 732-0067 TRAVEL TRAILOR: ‘10, Wildwood XLT,18’, only 1,950 lbs tounge weight, excellent condition, $6,800. (360)775-1075
BOAT: Larson, 16’, fiberglass 40 hp mercury, Eagle depth finder, with t r a i l e r. n e e d s m i n o r wor k, call for details. 417-7685 or 928-5027
9802 5th Wheels
BOAT: Marlin, with MerCruiser 135 hp. 16’. call 5-9pm, $3,800. (360)457-0979
9050 Marine Miscellaneous
B7
2016 Nissan Sentra BASE PRICE: $16,780 for S manual; $17,630 for S with CVT; $18,030 for FE; $18,550 for SV; $20,410 for SR; $22,170 for SL. PRICE AS TESTED: $25,545. TYPE: Front-engine, front-wheel drive, five-passenger, compact sedan. ENGINE: 1.8-liter, four-cylinder with CVTCS. MILEAGE: 29 mpg (city), 38 mpg (highway). LENGTH: 182.1 inches. WHEELBASE: 106.3 inches. CURB WEIGHT: 2,943 pounds. BUILT IN: Aguascalientes, Mexico. OPTIONS: Technology package (includes adaptive cruise control, NissanConnect premium services, forward emergency braking) $1,230; premium package (includes moonroof, Bose premium audio with eight speakers, dual, illuminated vanity mirrors) $1,130; carpeted trunk and floor mats $180. DESTINATION CHARGE: $835. The Associated Press
9817 Motorcycles 9292 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles 9292 Automobiles Others Others Others Others Others INDIAN: ‘14, Chief Classic, 1160 mi., extras. $17,000. (360)457-5766
SAN JUAN CLARK BOATS, 28’, Ready to sail, excellent for cruising or racing, rigged for easy single handling, all lines aft, sleeps 4 easily, standing room 6’2” in cabin. NEW factory eng i n e , Ya n m a r 2 Y M 1 5 diesel 15hp, trailer 34’, dual axle with spare inver ter 2000 watt (12v DC to 110AC) with microwave, new 120 JIB Taylor Sails, main sail cover + spare 110 Jib Har king Roller Sur ler Auto Helm 1000 - compass with bulkhead mount GARMIN 182 GPS with charts, navagation station with light. $15,500. (360) 681- 7300
YAMAHA: Vino, 49cc, 4 stroke, like new. $950. Leave message. (360)452-0565
9740 Auto Service & Parts CHEVY: ‘94 S10 Blazer, Needs engine. $400 for everything or parting out. (360)457-4383. TRAILER: ‘05, for bike or quad. $400. 327 Chevy engine. $150. (360)457-6540
9180 Automobiles Classics & Collect. AMC: ‘85, Eagle, 4x4, 92K ml., no rust, needs minor restoration. $3,700. (360)683-6135
L I N C O L N : ‘ 9 4 , To w n car, exceptionally clean, BMW: Mini Cooper, ‘04, 180k miles, $2200. (360)452-7525 61K ml., 2 dr. hatchback, 1.6L engine, standard, excellent condition: Mini Cooper, ‘13 S Hardtop, 9,300 ml. exc. $7,500. (360)461-4194 cond. extras, $19,000. (951)-956-0438 CHEV: ‘06 Monte Carlo, b e a u t i f u l , 2 d r, 9 1 K MINI COOPER S: ‘07 miles, perfect cond. “Loaded Sport Package” $6400. (360)681-4940 Low miles, no rust, FORD: ‘04, T-Bird, 73K $7200/obo. Call or Text (480)878-9075 miles, well cared for. $15,800. call or text; N I S S AN: ‘11 370 (253)736-5902 Coupe. Sports pkg, new tires. Still under warranty, 19K mi., immaculate inside and out, silver in color. $24,000. (360)640-2546
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: 1946 1/2 TON. Was Idaho farm truck, c o m p l e t e, s t o ck , r u s t free. Now garaged 35 years with complete frame off restoration star ted. Chassis drive train (216/3spd.) completed. All rebuilt stock and NOS parts. Includes manuals, assembly guides, receipts, title & extensive collection of FORD: ‘14 Escape TitaNOS parts. More. nium, 29K miles. $21,700. Loaded, like $4,800. (360)461-4332. new.(505)994-1091 DODGE: ‘78 Ram C h a r g e r, 4 x 4 , l i k e a FORD: ‘94, Mustang G T, c o n v e r t i b l e , f a s t , Bronco. $1,400/obo priced to sell. $3,300. (360)808-3160 (360)457-0780 FORD: ‘60 Thunderbird. Upgraded brakes and ig- JAGUAR: ‘87 XJ6 Senition. New Tires and ries 3. Long wheel base, wheels. Looks and runs ver y good cond. $76K mi. $9,000. great. $13,500. (360)460-2789 (360)457-1348
MERCURY: ‘07, Montego Premium Sedan 3.0L Duratec V6, automatic, alloy wheels, 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
VO L K S WAG E N : ‘ 0 3 , Golf GLS Hatchback 2.0L SOHC 4 cyl, 5-speed manual, alloy wheels, new tires, sunroof, keyless entry, power windows, door locks, and mirrors, cruise control, tilt, air conditioning, CD stereo, dual front, side, and side cur tain airbags. only 67k miles. VIN# 9BWGK61J834006005 $7,495 Gray Motors 457-4901 graymotors.com
TOYOTA : ‘ 0 0 , C a m r y, excellent running condition, newer tires, 125K miles. $2,500. (360)509-0633 T OYO TA : ‘ 1 0 P r i u s . Leather, GPS, Bluetooth etc. 41K mi. $18,000. (360)477-4405
9434 Pickup Trucks Others
NISSAN: ‘91 240 SX, 91K miles, red, new tires, good shape, moon roof. $3000. 681-8403
CHEV: ‘77 Heavy 3/4 ton, runs. $850. (360)477-9789 CHEVY: ‘01 Silverado 1500 Ext. cab, shortbed. 5.3 L, canopy, 134K mi., $5,000 (360)460-2931
PONTIAC: ‘98 Bonneville, great condition. SATURN: Sedan, ‘97, $1,700. (360)797-1179 VOLVO: ‘02 S-40, Safe ve r y c l e a n , r u n s bu t clean, 30mpg/hwy., exn e e d s e n g i n e w o r k , S AT U R N : ‘ 0 1 L 2 0 0 . cellent cond., new tires, many new parts, great Power, leather, straight a l way s s e r v i c e d w i t h tires. $400/obo. body, new tires. Needs high miles. $4,995. (360)460-4723 (360)670-3345 work. $1000. 461-4898
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
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WILDER AUTO 1-888-813-8545 101 and Deer Park Rd, Port Angeles www.wilderauto.com
671653542
BOATS: 15’ Adirondak g u i d e b o a t , 1 2 ’ p a ck boat. Both are kevlar and fiberglass with oars, caned seats and seatbacks. YakPacker boat 9817 Motorcycles 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. DUTCHMEN: ‘95 Clas- $6,700. (360)319-9132 sic, 26’. Most of its life under roof, ex. cond., BOAT: Sorensen, 12’, everything works. Price 1 6 h p S u z u k i , d e p t h reduced. $2,500. s o u n d e r, g a l v a n i z e d (360)457-0780 trailer, new tires, similar to Livingston. $1500. (360)582-1265 H A R L E Y: ‘ 0 5 D y n a Glide. 40K mi. Lots of GLASSPLY: ‘79, 16ft. extras. $8,500 obo. 70 hp and 8 hp Johnson (360)461-4189 included. ‘96 EZLoad t r a i l e r . G o o d c o n d . HARLEY DAVIDSON: $5,000. (360)683-7002 ‘05, Road King Police, 88 cu in, 34k miles, G L A S T R O N : ‘ 7 8 1 5 ’ $6,500 firm. 461-2056 JAYCO: ‘07 Jay Flight, EZLDR 84, 70hp John24.5 RBS. Sleeps 6, 12’ son, won’t start. $800. slide-out, 16’ awning, H O N DA : 0 6 ” S h a d ow (360)912-1783 a/c, microwave, stereo/ Sabre 1100, like new, DV D w i t h s u r r o u n d SAIL BOAT: 28’ McGre- 1 6 0 0 a c t u a l m i l e s . sound, outside shower gor with trailer #138/150- $5499. (360)808-0111 gas grill. Aqua shed cov- ‘78. Work in progress, er for storage. $12,900. flushing toilet, power dis- HONDA: ‘97 1100 Shad(360)928-3146 tribution point, beautiful ow Spirit. Ex. cond. low mill wor k already fin- m i l e s , m a n y e x t r a s . MONTANA: ‘02 36’ 5th ished, all appliances on $2,300. (360)477-3437 wheel, very good cond., hand. finished below rub 3 slides, arctic pkg., oak rail/hull re-fiber glassed HONDA: ‘98 VFR800, c a b i n e t s , f i r e p l a c e . inside. Highly modified 23K ml., fast reliable, ex$19,999/obo. (360)457- interior. $4000 as is. t ra s, gr e a t c o n d i t i o n . 4399 or 888-2087 $3,800. (360)385-5694 (916)768-1233
Tr i u m p h T i g e r ‘ 0 1 . Three-cylinder 955cc, fuel injectied, liquid cooled. Top-box and factory panniers. Plenty of storage for tour ing. 31,600 miles. Maintenance up to date. $4,000. (360)301-0135
LEXUS: ‘00, GS 300, Platinum series, 160k, a must see, excellent condition. $6,800. (360)582-3082
661637503
2006 SUBARU OUTBACK PRICE REDUCED!
VIN#4S4BP61C267307889
More photos @ graymotors.com
2005 CHRYSLER PT CRUISER LIMITED EDITION
2005 HONDA CR-V EX AWD SPORT UTILITY
2003 TOYOTA CAMRY SOLARA SE
VIN#3C8FY68B55T633419
VIN#JHLRD77835C017853
VIN#2T1CE22P83C026358
ONE OWNER!
More photos @ graymotors.com
CLEAN CARFAX!
More photos @ graymotors.com
LOW MILES!
More photos @ graymotors.com
2.5I AWD WAGON - 2.5L 4 CYL, AUTO, ALLOYS, ROOF RACK, KEYLESS ENTRY, PWR WINDOWS, DOOR LOCKS, MIRRORS, & DRIVERS SEAT, HEATED SEATS, CRUISE , TILT, AC, CD STEREO, DUAL FRONT AIRBAGS. ACCIDENT FREE CARFAX! SPARKLING CLEAN INSIDE & OUT! LOCAL TRADE-IN! *
2.4L DOHC 4 CYL -ONLY 72,301 MI - IMMACULATE WAGON INSIDE & OUT, LOADED UP WITH OPTIONS. LEATHER PWR DRIVER’S SEAT, PWR WINDOWS, LOCKS, CRUISE, TILT, WHEEL, REAR FOLDING SEATS, CHROME ALLOYS, CHROME EXHAST, AM/FM RADIO, CD PLAYER ARE ALL INCLUDED IN THE LIMITED EDITION. *
2.4L I-VTEC 4 CYL, 5 SPD MANUAL, ALLOYS, PRIV GLASS, SUNROOF, KEYLESS ENTRY, PWR WINDOWS, DOOR LOCKS, & MIRRORS, CRUISE, TILT, AC, CD/ CASSETTE STEREO, DUAL FRONT AIRBAGS. ONLY 133,000 MILES! GREAT FUEL ECONOMY! *
2.4L VVT-I 4 CYL, AUTO, ALLOYS, GOOD TIRES, REAR SPOILER, KEYLESS ENTRY, PWR WINDOWS, DOOR LOCKS, MIRRORS, & DRIVERS SEAT, HEATED LEATHER SEATS, CRUISE, TILT, AC, JVC CD/CASSETTE STEREO, DUAL FRONT AIRBAGS. ONLY 78,000 MILES! *
www.graymotors.com
www.graymotors.com
www.graymotors.com
www.graymotors.com
$6,995
GRAY MOTORS Since 1957
CALL 457-4901
1937 E. First, Port Angeles
1-888-457-4901
$5,995
GRAY MOTORS Since 1957
CALL 457-4901
1937 E. First, Port Angeles
1-888-457-4901
$8,995
GRAY MOTORS Since 1957
CALL 457-4901
1937 E. First, Port Angeles
1-888-457-4901
$6,995
GRAY MOTORS Since 1957
CALL 457-4901
1937 E. First, Port Angeles
1-888-457-4901
*SALE PRICES ARE PLUS TAX, LICENSE AND A NEGOTIABLE $150 DOCUMENTATION FEE. ALL VEHICLES ARE ONE ONLY AND SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE. PLEASE SEE DEALER FOR DETAILS. THIS AD EXPIRES ONE WEEK FROM DATE OF PUBLICATION.
Dealers, To Advertise Here: Call Vivian Hansen @ 360-452-2345 ext. 3058 TODAY for more information!
Classified
B8 THURSDAY, JULY 14, 2016 9434 Pickup Trucks 9434 Pickup Trucks Others Others
9556 SUVs Others
9556 SUVs Others
9730 Vans & Minivans 9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices Others Clallam County Clallam County
D o d g e : ‘ 0 5 , D u ra n g o SLT 4x4 - 4.7l v8, automatic, alloy wheels, good tires, running boards, roof rack, tow package, tinted wind o w s , k e y 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# 1D4HB48N45F578419 $8,995 GMC: ‘98, Yukon XLT, Gray Motors 4WD, new brakes, good 457-4901 condition, r uns great. graymotors.com $3750/obo. 452-4299 or (360)460-4843.
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. DODGE: ‘83, Pick up, (360)477-0917 with lift gate. $700. C H E V Y: ‘ 0 0 L i m i t e d (360)457-9402 SUV. AWD or 4 wheel drive, garage kept, new FORD: ‘89, F150 Lariat, cond. in and out, low ex t r a c a b, l o n g b e d , miles, loaded with op136K ml., $2,500/obo. tions, must see. $6,950. (209)617-5474 (360)215-0335 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: ‘99 F150 XLT, red, 4.6 V-8, 5 speed s t i ck , 4 w h e e l d r i ve, 111K miles, excellent condition $7000 (360)683-3888 GMC: ‘84 Sierra Classic. V-8, auto, with canopy, 116K miles. $2200. (360)460-9445
9556 SUVs Others
JEEP: ‘09, Wrangler X, soft top, 59K ml., 4x4, 5 speed manual, Tuffy security, SmittyBuilt bumpFORD: ‘95 F250 Diesel, ers, steel flat fenders, 269K miles, auto/over- complete LED upgrade, drive, good cond. $5000 more....$26,500. obo. (360)531-0735 (360)808-0841
JEEP: ‘02, Grand Cherokee, Overland edition, 4.7 HO V8, 4WD, tow pkg, 90K mi, runs great. $4800. (360)417-6956
PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
9730 Vans & Minivans Others CHEV: ‘96, Astro Van LS, power windows, locks, AWD, 180K miles, $2,000/obo. 808-1295
SUZUKI: ‘86 Samari. 5 s p e e d , 4 x 4 h a r d t o p, 143K mi. A/C. $5,200. (360)385-7728 SUZUKI: ‘93 Sidekick. Runs well, have title. CHEVY: ‘06 Uplander, $2,000. (360)374-9198 9 7 K , n i c e c o n d i t i o n . or 640-0004. $6000. (360)683-1260
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 TOYOTA: ‘87, Van 4wd LE, $1,300 with roof rack, w/o rack $1,000. In PA. (206)459-6420.
9931 Legal Notices Clallam County Request for Proposals T h e M a k a h Tr i b e i s seeking RFP bids from industrial/remedial contractors for removal of an above ground storage tank on the Makah Indian Reservation. To request a bid information packet contact Angela Tetnowski at 360-6453155 or by email angela.tetnowski@makah .com Submittal deadline 7/15/16 by 3:00PM Pub: July 3, 7, 14, 2016 Pub: Forum, 7, 14, 2016 Legal No.708851
NO. 16-4-00167-0 NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF CLALLAM IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF: GEORGIA A. WAWRO, Deceased. The Personal Representative named below has been appointed as Personal Representative of this estate. Any persons having a claim against the Decedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the Personal Representative or the Personal Representative’s attorney at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the Court. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) Thirty days after the Personal Representative served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided under RCW 11.40.020(1)(c); or (2) four months after the date of first publication of the Notice. If the claim is not presented within this time frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the Decedent’s probate and non-probate assets. Date of first publication: July 14, 2016 Personal Representative: Maureen H. Urban Attorney for Personal Representative: Curtis G. Johnson, WSBA #8675 Address for Mailing or Service: Law Office of Curtis G. Johnson, P.S. 230 E. 5th Street Port Angeles, WA 98362 (360) 452-3895 Pub: July 14, 21, 28, 2016 Legal No. 710431
9935 General Legals
9935 General Legals
Makah Environmental Restoration Team Request for Proposal (RFP) Environmental Restoration Services
The Makah Environmental Restoration Team is conducting environmental restoration activities on the Makah Indian Reservation near Neah Bay, Washington. Contractor services are required to remove contaminated soils and decommission an underground storage tank on an island off the coast of Cape Flattery.
Proposals are due by 3:00 pm on July 29, 2016. To request a copy of the complete RFP from the Makah Environmental Division, please contact Steve Pendleton at (360)645-3289 or Marge Sawyer at (360)645-3286. Restoration activities are scheduled to begin on September 6 and be completed by September 27, 2016.
The Contractor must e bonded and insured and comply with the Makah Employment and Contracting Rights Act (MERCA) administered by the Makah Employment and Contracting Rights Office (MECRO). For questions regarding MERCA, contact Rose Jimmicum at rosalle.jimmicum@makah.com. PUB: July 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 2016 Legal No: 709925
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Cabinets
551325748
“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
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
lic# 601517410
582-0384
# CCEAGLECB853BO
Locally owned & operated for 16 years
(360) 638-0044 or (360) 620-9589 Kingston www.flyingwrench.net
ASE CERTIFIED MECHANICS
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
allgone1274@gmail.com Port Angeles, WA 360-775-9597
661619344
No Job Too Small
• Diesel Repair & Welding • Heavy Equipment Repair • Trucks, Marine, RV’s, Trailers • 10,000 sq ft Shop • Authorized DOT Inspection Station • Fully Equipped on-site Service Trucks Now Offering Commercial Tires
S
Call For Free Estimate We Build Rain or Shine
Licensed - Bonded BRPAI**088QZ
PROPERTY MAINTENANCE
✓ Hauling/Moving
CREEK BUILDER
Specializing in Decks • Patios and Porches Cedar • Composite • Tigerwood • Sunwood – Design and Construction –
641571804
MAINTENANCE
24 hour emergency service
E AG L E
531256831
INC.
30 YEAR CRAFTSMEN
DECKS AND PATIOS
5C1491327
Climbing Arborist Tree Removal Tree Topping Pruning Excavation
611080142
360-452-8435 OR 1-800-826-7714
Quality Work at 360-452-2054 Competitive Prices 360-461-2248
ROOF CLEANING
Since 1987
661615772
651139687
To Advertise
GENERAL CONST. ARNETT
Contr#KENNER1951P8
Jerry Hart
NO MOLES
CALL NOW
HOME IMPROVEMENTS
45769373
Licensed Cont#FOXPAPC871D7
PEST CONTROL
360-683-8328
Every Home Needs “A Finished Touch”
5B636738
FAST SERVICE • LICENSED FULLY INSURED FREE ESTIMATES SENIOR DISCOUNT
www.BarrettLandscaping.com
32743866
457-6582 (360) 808-0439 (360)
651614638
ANTHONY’S SERVICE SPECIALIZING IN TREES
(360) 477-1805
EXCAVATING
PAINTING
In s id e , O u ts id e , A ny s id e
Est.1976
(360)452-3963 or (360)683-1596
Reg#FINIST*932D0
Painting & Pressure Washing
Designs, Landscapes, Aesthetic Pruning, Renovations, Irrigation & Lighting
TREE SERVICE
Free Estimates • Senior Discounts Licensed • Bonded • Insured
FOX PAINTING
Barrett Landscaping
Lic#603401251
Appliances
360-452-3706 • www.nwhg.net
LANDSCAPING
(253)737-7317
Flooring
42989644
Complete Lawn Care Hauling Garbage Runs Free Estimates BIG DISCOUNT for Seniors
We Offer Complete Yard Service
360-460-0518
Contractor # GEORGED098NR Mfd. Installer Certified: #M100DICK1ge991KA
YOUR LOCAL FULL-SERVICE DEALER & PARTS SOURCE
23597511
Lawn & Home Care
Lic. # ANTOS*938K5
Visit our website: www.dickinsonexcavation.com Locally Operated for since 1985
larryshomemaintenaceonline.com
RDDARDD889JT
65608159
Mr MANNYs
FREE ESTIMATES!
AA
CONSTRUCTION, INC.
Excavation and General Contracting
• Site Prep • Utilities • Septic Systems • Roads/Driveways
LAWNCARE
LANDSCAPING
LOW RATES!
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!
EXCAVATING/SEPTIC
431015297
LICENSED • INSURED • BONDED
41595179
360-683-4349
Grounds Maintenance Specialist • Mowing • Trimming • Pruning • Tractor Work • Landscaping • Spring Sprinkler Fire Up • Fall Cleanup and Pruning
APPLIANCES
CAR CARE
CHIMNEY SERVICES PENINSULA CHIMNEY SERVICES, LLC 621541153
Sweeping • Water Sealing Caps • Liners • Exterior Repair Serving the Olympic Peninsula
13 Years Experience Veteran Owned & Operated
360.928.9550
Port Angeles, WA www.peninsulachimneyservices.com Cont ID#PENINCS862JT
451054676
HIRE LOCAL
Lic# 602584850
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.