Bremerton Patriot, August 28, 2015

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PATRIOT BREMERTON

KITSAP WEEKLY REACH SKYWARD: Local astronomy ‘slam,’ other events introduce Kitsap to wonders above us

FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015 | Vol. 18, No. 25 | WWW.BREMERTONPATRIOT.COM | 50¢

IN THIS EDITION

Suspect arrested Central Kitsap murders Authorities: Test fire round in suspect’s possession matches 11 shell casings found at crime scene BY CHRIS TUCKER CTUCKER@CENTRALKITSAPREPORTER.COM

NEWS Crews fight state’s largest complex fire

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OPINION Coordinating Kitsap County fair is a ‘ballet’

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NEWS Bremer Trust manager to retire

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NEWS Gabriel Gaeta trial to begin Jan. 11

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CENTRAL KITSAP – Kitsap County Sheriff ’s Office detectives said investigating the murder of Heather Kelso and Kaden Lum was like putting the many pieces of a puzzle together. They were trying to use all those bits and pieces to – as Lt. Det. Earl Smith put it – “paint a picture.” The picture KSCO painted was released Aug. 20 in the form of a nine-page certificate of probable cause. The document shows details of suspect Geraldo “Jerry” Castro DeJesus, 30, of Port Orchard, whom KSCO alleges committed the murders.

There were four people in trailer No. 21 at Kariotis Mobile Estates at 3060 NE McWilliams Road in Central Kitsap in the early hours of March 28: Kelso, her roommate Jalisa Lum’s 2-year-old son, Kaden, and Kelso’s friend, Mathew Dean. Jalisa and Kaden fell asleep around midnight. Dean said that Kelso went outside to smoke. Two gun shots rang out and Kelso came back inside with bullet wounds in each leg. Dean was then shot and yelled for Jalisa to call 911. He went into the room where Jalisa and Kaden were sleeping and jumped out the window. SEE KARIOTIS, A8

Chris Tucker / staff photo

Sheriff Gary Simpson addresses members of the press at the Kitsap County administration building on Aug. 20 following the arrest of Geraldo DeJesus in connection with a double-homicide.

Father says slain son ‘just Almost 500 people an all-around good kid’ homeless in Kitsap; BY PETER O’CAIN POCAIN@SOUNDPUBLISHING.COM

PORT ORCHARD — Kaden Lum’s father, James Trammell, spoke to members of the media following a detective’s briefing Aug. 20. Tr a m m e l l s a i d t h at although the arrest of Geraldo DeJesus is comforting, it won’t bring back his son. “It doesn’t change anything; nothing’s gonna bring him back but to know that (DeJesus is) not breathing the fresh air or enjoying the Fourth of July he just had or July 24 on Kaden’s birthday while he was out possibly spending time with his family, to know that he won’t have that again is pretty comforting,” Trammell said. Trammell said he’s never met DeJesus, but has suspected him all along. He believes DeJesus wasn’t after Kaden the

James Trammell, father of Kaden Lum. night of the murders. “My personal opinion is that Kaden wasn’t intentional,” Trammell said. “Heather may be a different story but I don’t think Kaden was intentional.” He said waiting for the arrest of a suspect has never left his mind. “The first thing you think about when you wake up, the

last thing you think about when you go to sleep,” Trammell said. “It’s like somebody’s just drilling into the side of your head.” He’s tried to cope by immersing himself in work and with motorcycles. “Work and motorcycles. That’s about it,” Trammell said. “Get up, go to work, come home, get on the bike, then when I get back at night go to sleep. Sleeping’s the only thing that turns my brain off.” Kaden would’ve turned 3 years old July 24. Trammell said he loved playing outside and especially loved being with his mother. “He was just an all-around good kid,” Trammell said. “I mean, everybody says that about their own kid but he wasn’t even old enough to know right from wrong.”

likely more BY ROBERT SMITH RSMITH@SOUNDPUBLISHING.COM

496. According to statistics gathered during Kitsap County’s annual Point in Time Count earlier this year, that’s how many people who could be classified as homeless in Kitsap County. The Kitsap Continuum of Care Coalition — a collection of private and public social-services agencies in the county — reported the figures, which are to be part of an updated Kitsap Homeless Housing Plan presented to the Board of County Commissioners by the end of this year. While the numbers of homeless individuals help define the problem in Kitsap County, it’s not the whole story. Kirsten Jewell, human services coordinator with the county’s Housing and Homelessness program as administered by the Department of Human Services, said the number of homeless identified is probably low. “There’s definitely an undercount because we don’t have data from people who are not seeking services,” Jewell said. Jewell said two-thirds of the people in Kitsap County seeking services and attempting to get stable housing have been homeSEE HOMELESS, A9

The Bremerton Patriot: Top local stories, every Friday in print. Breaking news daily on BremertonPatriot.com and on Facebook


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Friday, August 28, 2015

North Kitsap residents have a look at proposed Point Hotel BY RICHARD WALKER RWALKER@SOUNDPUBLISHING.COM

LITTLE BOSTON — The 12- to 18-foot totem pole that Jake Jones will carve for The Point Hotel will contain a lot of symbolism. Two hands holding a copper plate, representing wealth. A chief. A bear holding an orca, a symbol of the Port Gamble S’Klallam Tribe. But in a way, the totem pole will symbolize how far the Tribe has come

since it began building its new economy some 20 years ago. Jones, a former Port Gamble S’Klallam Tribe chairman, remembers when the Tribe had $2,000 in the bank, when the Tribe’s housing authority couldn’t get bank loans to fund new-home construction, when the roads on the reservation were dirt. “Our enterprises were shellfish and salmon,” Jones said. “All of us worked out at the mill. Then the mill

shut down.” Empowered by the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act, the Port Gamble S’Klallam Tribe began building a new economy. “We talked about a hotel then, but we had to build our own enterprises first,” Jones said. “We built the casino first, and when we started making money, we built the store. Those enterprises helped the Tribe build funds so it could afford to (borrow).” Now, “we’re doing much better

financially, We don’t have to depend on the outside anymore.” The Port Gamble S’Klallam Tribe hosted an open house regarding its proposed four-story, 94-room hotel, Aug. 20 in The Point Casino Event Center. It was a chance for residents to learn more about the project, including the construction schedule and on-site amenities, and peruse site plans and project renderings on display. Ground work is expected to

begin in fall. The hotel will be built adjacent to The Point Casino and is scheduled to be open in fall 2016. The hotel will create 35-40 jobs, boosting the number of people employed by the Port Gamble S’Klallam Tribe to 500, according to employment numbers posted by the Kitsap Economic Development Alliance. “It’s been a long time coming,” Jones said of the hotel project. SEE HOTEL, A3

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Gaeta back in court for pre-trial hearing; trial to start Jan. 11 BY ILY GOYANES REPORTER-PATRIOT CORRESPONDENT

PORT ORCHARD — Superior Court Judge Jennifer Forbes presided over a packed courtroom Aug. 21 as Gabriel Gaeta, accused of raping and murdering a young neighbor in 2014, sat quietly in the jury box during a hearing on the status of the discovery process and to set a trial date. Discovery is a pre-trial procedure in which the prosecutor and the defense attorney can obtain evidence from the other party or parties by means of a request for answers to interrogatories, request for production of documents, request for admissions and

Ily Goyanes / staff photo

Gabriel Gaeta in court Aug. 21. depositions, and subpoenas. During the proceedings,

Gaeta alternated between looking straight down and straight ahead unless responding to questions from the bench. He is charged with first-degree murder and first-degree rape of a child, both with aggravating circumstances. Gaeta allegedly raped and murdered Jenise Wright, 6, last year in East Bremerton. Jenise’s body was found in the woods near Steele Creek Mobile Home Park, where she and Gaeta were neighbors, five days after her parents reported the child missing. Authorities say the defendant’s DNA matched samples taken from the crime scene, leading to his arrest on Aug. 9,

2014. A search warrant served at his home the same day led to the discovery of bloodstained clothes, including a pair of underwear, one shirt, and a pair of shorts, as well as a bloody towel, according to the certificate of probable cause submitted by Detective Elizabeth Gundrum of the Kitsap County Sheriff’s Office. Jenise’s disappearance gar-

nered national headlines, leading to extensive media coverage, including a KIRO 7 interview with Gaeta’s mother, Tina Wright (no relation to the victim), who tearfully responded to the reporter’s questions about the search for Jenise, “It’s sad ... it hurts.” At the time of the interview, she had no idea that Jenise’s body would soon be found

and that her son would be charged with the child’s murder. Gaeta, a star wrestler at Olympic High School at the time, attended a vigil for Jenise after the discovery of her body. Gaeta is next scheduled to appear in court at 1:30 p.m. Sept. 25 for another pre-trial hearing. Trial is scheduled to begin Jan. 11.

Bremer Trust manager to retire BREMERTON – Since its formation in 1987, the Bremer Trust has distributed more than $8 million to Olympic College. These funds have contributed to the construction of a new building on the Bremerton campus, in addition to providing scholarships, award programs, land and equipment for numerous academic programs. The financial outlook of the Bremer Trust wasn’t always so bright. The Trust endured a dark era, nearly collapsing in the late 1980s as one Bremerton business after another relocated to Silverdale and the newly constructed Kitsap Mall. The departures hurt

downtown Bremerton causing the value of properties to fall, several of which were owned by the Trust. Outgoing Trust manager Mike Connolly was instrumental in turning around this charitable organization. Connolly was a longtime employee of the College serving as vice-president and interim-president at the time of his appointment to manage the Trust in October, 1987. He will retire from his position Sept. 1. “Mike deserves a lot of credit for the work he did to improve the financial standing of the Bremer Trust,” said current trustee John F. Mitchell, a partner with local law firm

Sanchez, Mitchell, Eastman & Cure. “He strengthened partnerships in the community and made transactions that have helped secure its financial stability.” Today the Trust is healthy with a good balance of diversified investments, which is great news for OC as the sole beneficiary of the Trust. “The Bremer Trust is directly responsible for some of the buildings our students enjoy today, like the Sophia Bremer Child Development Center and our residence hall,” OC President Dr. David Mitchell said. Steve Rice of Bremerton architecture firm Rice Fergus Miller will replace Connolly.

HOTEL

a 44-seat meeting space, a 64-seat casual dining restaurant, and a large outdoor gathering area that includes an outdoor kitchen and a fire pit that will be used for clam and salmon bakes. Another major feature planned for the hotel is Northwest Coast Native art throughout the property. Currently, this is expected to include specially created installations in the lobby, a series of totem poles in the outdoor gathering area, and a four-story welcome pole, which will feature a “paddles up” design to greet guests as they arrive on the property. Guests at The Point Hotel will have access to entertainment at the event center, events at Heronswood, and other area attractions. Ultimately, a new casino and event center will be built south of the hotel, S’Klallam officials said, with the current casino — a tensioned-fabric membrane building — used for some other form of entertainment. The Tribe plans to construct a full-scale mockup of

a standard hotel room on the floor of The Point Casino, to be completed by the end of the year.

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The hotel will be the latest addition to the Tribe’s economic development portfolio, which includes the casino and event center; Heronswood, the 15-acre botanical garden and events venue; Gliding Eagle Marketplace; and Ravenwood Market. The Point Hotel (www. thepointcasinoandhotel.com) will be the second-largest hotel and one of five in North Kitsap. The largest, Suquamish Clearwater Casino Resort, has 183 guest rooms and offers six restaurants and cafes, a spa, live entertainment, and golf at the Suquamish-owned White Horse Golf Club. The Poulsbo Inn & Suites, on Highway 305, has 83 guest rooms and offers local-getaway packages. The Guesthouse Inn & Suites, next to Poulsbo Village, has 63 rooms. The Blue Water Inn, on Highway 104 in Kingston, has 20 rooms. The Point Hotel will have

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OPINION Bremerton

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Question of the week

This week’s question: Do you want extensive coverage of the Geraldo DeJesus trial in October? Vote and see results online at www.bremertonpatriot.com

WWW.BREMERTONPATRIOT.COM

Friday, August 28, 2015 | Bremerton Patriot

Help those in fire-ravaged areas A

s you read this, our fellow Washingtonians in fire-ravaged Chelan, Ferry and Okanogan counties are fighting for the lives of their neighborhoods and their communities. More than 16 wildfires have consumed 600,000 acres; the Okanogan County fires alone have burned 370,000 acres, setting an unfortunate state record. At least 200 homes are confirmed as destroyed. Homes are being lost today. Evacuations are still in effect. Three young firefighters, all of them with local roots, died in the Methow. Our neighbors in Chelan, Ferry and Okanogan counties need our help. We ask you, if you haven’t already, to contribute to support these communities in need. Cash (or credit) donations are extremely important, and will help the non-profit agencies closest to the action help those who are most affected. Here are some targets of donations that have our confidence: • Okanogan County Community Action Council. Go to www.occac. com. All funds donated go to local disaster relief. • Community Foundation of North Central Washington. Go to www. cfncw.org; you’ll see “Community Fund” options to direct funds toward one area or another. • Chelan Valley Hope, a nonprofit community service organization. Contributions will assist people who were burned out of their homes in the Chelan area. The funding appeal comes through a web platform called “Give Naked” as “Give #104,” here is the web link: http://givenaked.org/ • www.Gofundme.com/methowfirefighters. Fund will assist the families of firefighters who were killed, and will assist the firefighters who were injured, in the Methow Valley. • Aid for injured or homeless livestock: Okanogan County Sheriff’s Office has an Emergency Animal Response Services Team, providing shelter and food for injured and homeless livestock. Checks only to Okanogan County Sheriff, attn Deputy Yarnell, 123 N. 5th Ave, Room 200, Okanogan, WA 98840. Memo line must say “Animal Relief/Rescue.” • Volunteers: DNR is still looking for qualified volunteers. Go to www. dnr.wa.gov/wildfirevolunteer. Thank you for anything you can do to help North Central Washington in its time of greatest need.

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Lots of effort required to make Fair happen Starting last Wedneseral cleaning. My Turn day, the Kitsap counA week out, the fair ty fair has been in full staff start the logistics of swing: The rides, the coordinating the various Robert Zollna food, the displays and all groups, clubs and vendthe animals are a great ers, issuing passes and time to be had for all. But camping spots. how did all this happen? Four days out, a steady stream of According to Sunny Saunders, the trucks, trailers, RVs, and flatbeds Kitsap lead safety manager, planning arrive at the grounds as clubs groups for the next year’s fair begins as soon as and venders jockey to start setting up the previous one is over. The fair board booths and displays. holds monthly meeting year-round to Three days out, the constant plan and coordinate all aspects of fair sound of banging rings out across management. the grounds as sound stages, tables, “Each department checks in and booths,and carnival rides are erected. gives updates to any planning for the Two days out, judging and ribbons next year’s fair or to address any prob- are awarded and displayed, food vendlems with the previous year,” Saunders ers start to unfold their trailers and a says. weeks worth of food and drinks are Along with just the logistics of delivered onsite. planning and executing such a large The day before the fair, like Noah’s event, they are always on the look-out ark, convoys of horse trailers, catfor new and exciting attractions to tle trucks and passenger cars full of add to the festivities. This year a few chickens, rabbits, and ducks signal the of the new things include three new animals have arrived. Every one has food vendors including a taco truck, a to pass a vet check and takes 10 hours old time photo dress up photo booth, to complete. A traffic jam of sorts and selfie stations located at key points develops as animals, trailers and peoalong the grounds. ple wait patiently for their turn. The As the fair date draws closer, a cho- campgrounds are full and a temporary reographed ballet starts to swing into community springs into existence, gear: a month out the parks depart- friendships a year apart are renewed, ment gives the grounds a thorough and children ride bikes among the odd going-over, grass is cut, trees are pair of llamas being led about for exerpruned and all the lighting and plumb- cise. All this happens while people are ing are inspected and repaired. staking up tents and even tepees. Three weeks out, volunteers fan out At the other side of the fair, Dave and touch up paint, sweep and do gen- Reimers is polishing a sphere machine

“While you enjoy the fair and all it has to offer, think of the massive number of dedicated people that work very hard behind the scenes to make it happen.” – a rather steampunky looking contraption used for making irregular shaped rocks into perfectly polished spheres. When asked what it takes for his organization, the Kitsap mineral and gem club, to do the fair every year he says, “It takes two 20-foot trailers, eight hours to just set up the display cases and another two days to fill them with club members displays.” He feels quite passionate about teaching the younger generation about gem and mineral collecting and that the fair is the perfect opportunity to share knowledge and peak a general interest with the younger crowd. The next building down is the Bremerton Northern Model railroaders club, with over 30 years at the fair they have “set up” taken to a fine art, the huge display of meticulous detailed landscapes and working rail cars was designed by their vice president Tom Barrett to break down into SEE FAIR, A5

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Participation trophies: good or bad? James Harrison, a Pittsburgh Steelers linebacker, last week sent back his sons’ trophies because they were the dreaded kind, received only for participating in a sport. Harrison’s sons are only 8- and 6-years old, so it’s easy to imagine big, teary eyes, and little hands grasping for the plastic trophy that was supposed to boost their self-esteem. Then again, when your dad is an NFL linebacker, you likely have other ways to feel good about yourself, like front row seats to the Super Bowl. Harrison’s Instagram post announcing his plans to return his sons’ trophies read in full: “I came home to find out that my boys received two trophies for nothing, participation trophies! While I am very proud of my boys for everything they do and will encourage them till the day I die, these trophies will be given back until they EARN a real trophy. I’m sorry I’m not sorry for believing that everything in life should be earned and I’m not about to raise two boys to be men by making them believe that they are entitled to something just because they tried their best ... cause sometimes your best is not enough, and that should drive you to want to do better ... not cry and whine until somebody gives you something to shut u up and keep

Navy Wise

Sarah Smiley you happy.” My first thought was, “Wow, I didn’t know Instagram allowed so many characters for one post.” My second thought was, “go Harrison.” My third thought involved regret for contributing to this culture of entitlement when I gave away goodie bags to every child who attended my boys’ birthday parties. In the real world, only the birthday boy gets a gift. The attendees are lucky if they get cake to awkwardly eat with a plastic fork in a corner of the office conference room. It’s the same with trophies. In real life competition, there is one winner and a bunch of losers. That’s why Jerry Seinfeld, in “I’m Telling You for the Last Time,” (https://

goo.gl/q7ySI4) joked that he’d never want to win a silver medal: “If you win the gold, you feel good. If you win the bronze, you think: ‘Well, at least I got something.’ But if you win the silver, it’s like: ‘Congratulations! You ... almost won.’ ‘Of all the losers, you came in first of that group.’ ‘You’re the number one ... loser.’ ‘No one lost ... ahead of you.’” The world always knows who won—even when no one is keeping score. Erik Brady, writing for USA TODAY Sports (http://goo.gl/sKwKsk), touched on this phenomenon, but to make a different, pro-participation-trophy point. He called the argument over these freebie trophies “nonsense.” “Kids always know the fastest kid on the playground and the best players on their teams,” Brady wrote. “They know the difference between winning and losing and the distance between first place and last.” Yes, exactly. That’s why the participation trophy eventually feels empty. Brady continued: “They do not grow up to believe they are winners in life just because they got a tin trophy for finishing fifth in rec league basketball.” Well, tell that to my tone-deaf husband who hums every song to what sounds like the tune to Gilligan’s

“I’m not about to raise two boys to be men by making them believe that they are entitled to something just because they tried their best ... cause sometimes your best is not enough, and that should drive you to want to do better.” Island. For many years, he thought he could sing because someone in elementary school told him he had a good voice. I spent the first decade of our marriage undoing that damage and listening to him sing Chicago’s “If You Leave Me Now.” But back to Brady’s first point: Kids already know who won. They really do. My youngest son once threw his baseball helmet on the ground because he got out at first base and no one made him go to the dugout. “Didn’t anyone see that I got out?” he yelled. “I’m supposed to be out!” Which is why this whole argument about participation trophies really should be taken to the kids, not fought with ideas and words between adults. I mean, do today’s kids even want these plastic paper weights? I asked three that I know personally: Child No. 1, age 14: “Participation trophies do not give me more self-esteem or anything. In fact, it just

deprives me of the chance of getting a REAL trophy.” Child No. 2, age 12: “I played Little League and I wanted to get the Championship trophy. I wanted to win. That’s why I loved Little League. They didn’t hand out freebies. Participation trophies don’t make kids strive to do better. They make them think they have already achieved it. Also, they make it so the people who do achieve the athletic or academic standards feel like they didn’t earn anything because EVERYONE got one.” Child No. 3, age 8: “Participation trophies? What’s that?” As I read this aloud to child one, two, and three, they were offended that I “chopped up their long quotes.” One was mad that the other got more space. And so I told them, “Well, if you had written it better, it would have made it into print. Welcome to the real world of publishing.”

Gateway Christian Schools Robert Zollna / staff photos

Scene from the fair set-up: ABOVE: Llamas and their wranglers stand by. RIGHT: A fair ride sits ready to be assembled.

FAIR CONTINUED FROM A4

separate modules that stack onto nine carts and all fit in a enclosed 24-foot trailer like a jigsaw puzzle. Club member Bob Jenson said that it took 5,000-6,000 hours to assemble the layout with the cost of doing events like the fair are paid for through club dues, yard sales and swap meets. Not everything goes totally smoothly: during the night the Olympic Bird Fanciers outdoor aviary was vandalized, throwing the club

behind schedule. A team of Navy Volunteers and other fair groups pitched in to repair and repaint the large octagon-shaped gazebo, putting the club back on schedule. “This is really like a community with a common goal, a wonderful group of people,” said Annie Park, a bird club member. So, While you enjoy the fair and all it has to offer, think of the massive number of dedicated people that work very hard behind the scenes to make it happen. The Kitsap County Fair runs from Aug. 26-30.

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Friday, August 28, 2015

Central Stage Theatre to perform ‘Godspell’ Sept. 11-Oct. 4 Central Stage Theatre of Kitsap County kicks off the 2015-2016 season with “Godspell.” Directed by Ty Brillhart, with music and vocal direction by Allison Verhofstadt and choreography by Gracie Raiford, “Godspell” is based on the Gospel

of Matthew, with music by Stephen Schwartz and book by John-Michael Tebelak. “Godspell” is a modern adaptation of the parables of Jesus, focusing on stories of friendship, kindness, acceptance and love. It features a wide

range of music genres from country to pop and rock and roll to gospel. “‘Godspell’ is a show that I hold very dear to my heart. I have been in the show twice and have seen it multiple times throughout the years,” Brillhart said. “It has been a dream of

mine to be able to direct this show. ‘Godspell’ is very high energy with great life lessons and something the whole family can enjoy.” Opening night for “Godspell” is Sept. 11, with additional performance on Sept. 12, 13, 18, 19, 20, 25, 26, 27,

and Oct. 2-4. Friday and Saturday performances are at 7:30 p.m. Sunday performances are at 4 p.m. American Sign Language performances are on Sept. 25-26. Ticket prices range from $8-$15 and can be purchased at the door. Learn more at www.cstock.org.

Central Kitsap High grad earns NUWC Keyport scholarship KEYPORT – Central Kitsap High School class of 2015 graduate Katie George was awarded a $1,500 scholarship from the Naval Undersea Warfare Center Division during the Federal Manager’s Association’s annual scholarship award ceremony Aug. 11. George was given the Ed Lesinski Scholarship – a $1,500 award named for the first technical director at NUWC Keyport. It is given to students seeking a degree in engineering or a scientific field. George will attend Washington State University. Kyle Kirkbride was also awarded an Ed Lesinski scholarships. He plans to study at Virginia Wesleyan College in Norfolk, Virginia. Additionally, six Foun-

dation Scholarships worth $1,000 each were given to Heidi Doughty, Cameron Crook, Nikia Frohlich, Kellen Traxel, Richard Lavoie, and Adam Steenkamer. The scholarships – funded by FMA volunteer activities such as food and merchandise sales – are awarded to high-achieving college and high school students whose parents are NUWC Keyport employees. NUWC Keyport’s FMA has given out $159,500 in scholarships since 1988. In 2015 more awards were given than in any previous year. NUWC Keyport has provided technical capabilities that support America’s dominance in the undersea domain for more than a century.

Courtesy photo

NUWC Keyport’s Commanding Officer, Captain Francis Spencer, left, and Technical Director Alan Kent, right pose with FMA Scholarship winners and their parents. Photo by Bre Zinter.

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Marijuana increasingly a cause of vehicle crashes, data show KITSAP – Newly released data from the Washington Traffic Safety Commission show that marijuana is increasing as a factor in deadly crashes. The number of drivers involved in deadly crashes who tested positive for marijuana increased 48 percent from 2013 to 2014. “We have seen marijuana involvement in fatal crashes remain steady over the years, and then it just spiked in 2014,” said Dr. Staci Hoff, WTSC Data and Research Director. From 2010-2014, nearly 60 percent of drivers involved in fatal collisions were tested for drugs. Among these tested drivers, approximately 20 percent (349 drivers) tested positive for marijuana. However, just testing positive for marijuana doesn’t necessarily indicate if a driver was actually affected by the drug at the time of the crash since marijuana can be detected in a person’s blood for days or even weeks after a person uses the drug. This new data is able to distinguish between drivers who test positive for THC, the impairing substance in marijuana and those who have residual marijuana in their system from prior use which may have occurred days ago. The number of drivers testing positive for active THC has steadily increased, from

less than half of marijuana positive drivers in 2010 up to almost 65 percent of drivers in 2013. In 2014, an alarming 85 percent (75 of 89 drivers) of drivers testing positive for marijuana were positive for impairing levels of THC. “With this data we are finally able to see who was high during the crash versus which drivers had used marijuana in the past few days,” said Hoff, “The answer in 2014 is most of them were high.” Approximately half of these THC-positive drivers exceeded the 5 ng/ml THC per se limit (A “per se” limit is the amount of a substance in a person’s blood that according to Washington law makes the person DUI notwithstanding other evidence.) According to the new data, the driver with the highest THC level was tested at 70 ng/ ml. Half of these THC-positive drivers were also under the influence of alcohol, the majority of those also exceeded the alcohol per se limit of 0.08 BAC. The largest increase in THC-positive drivers were among males ages 21-25, from only 6 in 2013 up to 19 in 2014 – the most significant increase among any other age group. The WTSC Research and Data Division, in collaboration with the WA State Patrol

“It is our hope that by publicizing these extra patrols more people will plan ahead if they will be drinking or using marijuana. Don’t risk getting arrested for a DUI, or causing a life-changing tragedy. Designate a sober, drug-free driver.” – Darrin Grondel, WTSC director Toxicology Lab, abstracted drug types and levels for drivers in fatal crashes back to 2008. The full report and complete analysis of this data is expected to be released in September. “This study is a step towards answering the myriad of questions we have about the impact of legalized marijuana on driving. We will continue to explore the implications of this information,” said Hoff. A new law prohibits drivers and passengers from using marijuana while driving. It also prohibits anyone from keeping marijuana in the vehicle unless it is in its original sealed packaging or is stored in the trunk or some other area of the car not normally occupied by people. “This data shows why this new law is so important,” said Darrin Grondel, WTSC Director, referring to the new statute passed during this year’s legislative session.

‘Socialpreneurs’ topic of next business forum The Kitsap Business Forum will present “The Boomerang Effect: The Socialpreneur Movement and How It Brings Life to Your Business” Sept. 8. Kevin Wiley, The Latitude 48 Group at Ameriprise Financial, and Shannon Bruce, Excell Puget Sound, will co-lead a discussion with Christie Johnson of Purpose Boutique. Johnson will share her insight on the “Socialpreneur Movement” – what it is, how it affects company culture, and how companies and communities can both benefit by creating this culture in the work place. The goal is to focus on a local company that

is changing lives for good, creating an inspiring culture and leveraging resources for positive change. Attendees will discover what the impact is on Kitsap businesses, their employees and the community. There will also be a time for open questions. The forum will be at the Kitsap Conference Center, 100 Washington Ave., in Bremerton. Parking is provided in the Anthony’s parking spaces, first floor blue level. The program is from 7:30-9 a.m. RSVP to 360-692-6800, or register online at http://KitsapBusinessForum.com.

From 2008 through 2014, more than 1,100 people died in impaired collisions in Washington. Impaired driving is involved in nearly half of all traffic deaths and more than 20 percent of serious injury collisions. The highest per-

centage of these deaths occurs during the summer months. That is why the WTSC participates in the National Drive Sober or Get Pulled Over campaign. From Aug. 21 through Labor Day, the Commission is letting the public know that extra officers will be out across the state at times and locations where DUI is a problem. “It is our hope that by publicizing these extra patrols more people will plan ahead if they will be drinking or using marijuana,” said Grondel. “Don’t risk getting arrested for a DUI, or causing a life-changing tragedy. Designate a sober,

drug-free driver.” In Kitsap County, the Bainbridge Island, Bremerton, Naval Base Kitsap, Port Orchard, Poulsbo and Suquamish Police Departments, the Kitsap County Sheriff ’s Office and the Washington State Patrol will be teaming up and participating in the extra patrols, with the support of the Kitsap County Traffic Safety Task Force. All of these extra patrols are part of Target Zero—striving to end traffic deaths and serious injuries in Washington by 2030. For more information, visit www.targetzero.com.

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COURT REPORT The following charges were filed in Kitsap County District court: The Force was not with a 23-year-old Bremerton man who tried to shoplift $129 worth of Star Wars-themed clothing from the Kitsap Mall JC Penney store Aug. 22. The man allegedly put on a pair of stolen Star Wars “Empire Elements” jogging pants under his regular pants. He also had a Tie Fighter T-shirt and other items. A store employee caught the rebel scum as the man tried to flee the mall. The man told KCSO that he intended to give the items to a friend for his birthday. Robert Patrick Stark, 29, of Silverdale, was charged with burglary. According to a Port Orchard police statement, Stark allegedly was at the Port Orchard Walmart when he placed a store item inside a box for a shower caddy. He then paid for the shower caddy, but not the concealed merchandise.

Edward Randolph Paluck, 33, of Bremerton, was charged with residential burglary. He allegedly kicked a door open and assaulted a woman who had a no-contact order against him. Mary Arlene Gomez, 38, of Bremerton, was charged with possession of a controlled substance (methamphetamine). Nathaniel Lauifi, 31, of Bremerton, was charged with possession of a controlled substance (methamphetamine). Tahni Alayne Keene, 29, of Bremerton, was charged with possession of a controlled substance. A 22-year-old Bremerton woman was charged with promoting prostitution. Dustin Lewis Morris, 23, of Bremerton, was charged with rape of a child in the second degree.

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OBITUARIES Mark Fawcett BREMERTON — Mark Fawcett passed peacefully at Harrison Medical Center in Bremerton on Aug. 16. He grew up in Winona, Minnesota. He met his wife of 46 years, Gay, in Philadelphia at the Buck Ridge Ski Club. He is survived by his wife; daughters, Kim and Susie; and brothers, OJ and Raymond. Mark attended graduate school at the University of Minnesota, receiving a PhD in organic chemistry. He spent most of his career working for DuPont in Wilmington, Delaware. His passions outside of work included his family, canoeing, and rocks and minerals. Mark was a member of the U.S. National Whitewater Team in the 1960s and participated in three world championships. He also volunteered as a U.S. swimming official for 20 years. Mark and Gay moved to Bremerton in 1999, where he

could continue pursing his passions. He spent time volunteering for the Kitsap Gem & Mineral Society and was a past president. He also spent time volunteering at the Bremerton and Central Kitsap school district libraries and at Harrison Medical Center Rehab. At his request, no memorial is planned. He was dearly loved and will be missed by many.

Eric A. Rasmussen Eric was born March 22, 1942 in Chicago and was raised in East Grand Rapids, Michigan. Eric was devoted to his high school sweetheart, Carole Wolcott, and he went home to be with Jesus the day after their 51st anniversary. He graduated from Albion College in 1964 and then The University of Michigan Medical School in 1970. After an internship in Spokane he served in the Navy retiring in 1992. He went into private practice in Kitsap County as

an ENT physician in 1984, retiring in 2001. Eric is survived by his wife, Carole, sister Karen Schaefer (Fritz) of Georgia, his daughter Kirsten McCall (Rob) of Renton, son Leif (Nicole) of Roy and son Rick (Tiffany) of Georgia and four precious grandchildren Kathryn, Nicholas, Emma and Katelyn. A memorial service will be held at CKPC August 29 at 11 am. A complete obituary may be found at CookFamilyFuneralHome.com.

Van erupts in flames after burglary chase PORT ORCHARD – Two Gig Harbor men were captured Aug. 23 by Port Orchard Police after they led a highspeed chase through Port Orchard with a van holding fishing gear worth thousands of dollars. Ricky Ray Rogers and Nathan Wayne Spaulding reportedly entered a Bay Street storage unit early Sunday morning and removed fishing gear with an estimated value of up to $10,000. The items, owned by charter boat operator Randy Jones of Venture Charters of Port Orchard, were identified as fishing rods and reels, as well as other fishing items. Just as the pair were departing the storage unit, Jones approached one of the men, who fled to a white van. Jones followed the men through town, who were driving at a high rate of speed. Port Orchard Police joined the pursuit after Jones called 911. Kitsap County Sheriff ’s Office deputies also joined the chase to track down the suspects. As the van neared Bremerton National Airport, its tires hit a curb and caused them to deflate. Sparks from

South Kitsap Fire and Rescue photo

Two Gig Harbor men were captured Sunday morning by Port Orchard Police after they led a chase through Port Orchard with a van holding fishing gear worth thousands of dollars. the tire rims caused the van to erupt in flames. Port Orchard Police spokesman Dale Schuster said one of the men tossed some of the stolen gear from the van during the pursuit. “It’s a good thing no one was hurt” during

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the chase, Schuster said. The men were apprehended by police at Highway 3 and Lake Flora Road. While most of the fishing gear was destroyed in the fire, some items tossed during the pursuit have yet to be found.

Anyone who may have the fishing gear are asked to call Port Orchard Police at 360876-1700. The two men have been booked into Kitsap County Jail on burglary charges and eluding police.

Firefighting equipment stolen from Cabin Fire QUILCENE – Sunday evening after firefighters left the Cabin Fire on the Hood Canal Ranger District, $2,000 of mission-critical equipment was stolen. The thief ignored an operational road closure and took an 1,800-gallon folding water tank, hose and fittings. Without this equipment the fire grew to ten acres.

Rescue Mission Ladies tea set for Sept. 17 KARIOTIS Come enjoy a delicious time of food, fun, & fellowship during the second annual Cup of Hope Ladies Tea Sept. 17 There is no cost to attend this delectable culinary event, sponsored by the Kitsap Rescue Mission. Attendees will be given the opportunity to donate and to learn how they can be part of the solution for homelessness in Kitsap County. Bremerton’s Mayor Patty Lent will the special guest speaker. The tea is 11 a.m. - 1 p.m. at Ambrosia Catering, 4954 WA-303, in Bremerton. To register, call Jenny at 360-373-3428.

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The shooter came into the room and shot Kaden in the head. Minutes later, around 2:18 a.m., KCSO deputies arrived at the scene. Kelso was found dead at the scene with four gunshot wounds, including two to the head. Lum was transported to Harrison Medical Center where he died. Dean survived. Jalisa said that because of the dim lighting and the fact that she didn’t have her contact lenses in she couldn’t see who the shooter was. Bloody shoe prints and 11 9mm shell casings were found at the scene. Jalisa and Dean were not wearing shoes that night. DeJesus was aware that the daughter he and Kelso shared was staying at a friends house that night, and wouldn’t be in Kelso’s trailer. At 5 a.m. – about two hours, 42 minutes after the shooting – police located DeJesus’ black Honda Accord parked near his Port Orchard residence. The engine was still warm. Officers kept the apartment under surveillance and then made contact with DeJesus at 8:15 a.m. He was the sole

Firefighters had to work hard to regain control of the fire. “It’s hard to believe” states District Ranger, Dean Yoshina, “with the limited resources available nationally that someone would take a water tank that was being used to protect the forest and public.” The closure of Forest Service Road

2530 beyond the 2530-100 has been in place since AUG. 12, and remains in effect. An investigation is underway. Anyone with information about this theft is asked to call 360-765-2218.

occupant of the apartment, as his ex-wife and children were staying at friend’s houses. After police brought DeJesus out, his ex-wife arrived. DeJesus and his ex-wife allowed police to search the Honda and the apartment. DeJesus told his ex-wife that his gun was missing. Detectives found a case for a 9mm gun and one magazine in the apartment. There was no gun in the case, but the case did contain a “test fire” round. An ammunition box that was missing ten rounds was also found. The WSP crime lab later found that “the test fire round (from Geraldo’s pistol box) was fired from the same pistol as all shell casings recovered from the homicide scene” – positive identification of the weapon. But KCSO cannot say with certainty who was holding that gun when it was used to kill Kelso and Lum. “We don’t have the weapon,” said KCSO Deputy Scott Wilson, who said that markings on the shell casings were like “fingerprints” that could identify the particular gun they were fired from. The gun itself could be at the bottom of Puget Sound, or who knows where. Wilson said there are no eye witnesses

nor DNA samples that link DeJesus to the shooting. That’s why KCSO is trying to “paint a picture.” DeJesus told detectives he bought a 9mm handgun and two magazines from a friend two years ago and later gave it to Kelso for protection. He said he last saw the gun in its case on January, 2015, at Kelso’s home. But investigators found no gun at Kelso’s home and other people whom detectives interviewed gave differing accounts of the gun’s whereabouts. A muddy pair of Van’s shoes were found in the apartment. The tread pattern was similar to prints found at the crime scene. DeJesus had small cuts and dried blood on his left leg and the injury appeared to be caused by something sharp and pointed. DeJesus said it was a work injury. Detectives interviewed co-workers but they could not verify the injury. DeJesus said he worked until 10:40 p.m on March 27 and then went to a friend’s house that was located less than a mile from Kariotis Mobile Estates. Then he went to the 76 gas station on South Kitsap Boulevard in Port Orchard to buy beer and chips. SEE KARIOTIS, A9


Friday, August 28, 2015

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He told detectives he then went back to his ex-wife’s apartment and sat in his car, “stewing” about his personal situation with his children, and smoked cigarettes. Then he said he went inside, watched Netflix and went to sleep. Investigators, however, found no record of his Netflix account being accessed on March 28. Kelso obtained a protection order March 5 to keep DeJesus away. In it, Kelso stated, “I am fearful that the violent behavior I have described in this petition will continue or escalate now that I have ended our relationship … I don’t feel safe with him having guns. He is going to be very angry at me for getting this order.” Kelso described DeJesus yelling and spitting in her face, hitting his own daughter and punching holes in walls near Kelso. DeJesus pled not guilty Aug. 21. Below is a timeline of events as described in KCSO’s certificate of probable cause: 2011-2013: DeJesus purchases a 9mm Smith and Wesson handgun and two ammunition magazines from a friend sometime around 2011 and 2013. Sept., 2014: Kelso’s phone records show her asking DeJesus to pawn his gun. DeJesus tells her it’s not registered. Jan. 2015: DeJesus told detectives he last saw his gun January, 2015. (He later said he gave it to Kelso for protection. “I’m thinking it’s still in the case,” DeJesus told detectives.) Feb. 24: Kelso obtains a temporary protection order. DeJesus moves out of Kelso’s residence and moves in with his ex-wife. March 5: Kelso is granted a one-year protection order. DeJesus is ordered to not possess firearms. March 10: DeJesus provides a list of items he wants from Kelso’s residence. There is no mention of a gun. March 17: In a Facebook message, Kelso tells a friend that DeJesus “has been harassing me and I have a no-contact order.” March 18: Kelso activates a new phone with a different phone number. • Phone records show DeJesus used his iPhone to visit websites such as www. advancedbackgroundchecks.com that are used to search for persons and phone numbers. It appears he didn’t find Kelso’s new number. • DeJesus sends a text message to a friend: “Just waitin man waitin on this damn lawyer to call me and this bullshit to be right. It’s killing me to see my daughter lexi crying every night and writing letters to her sissy. F**k man I’m stewing in frustration everyday.” March 21: DeJesus uses his third phone (of three phones he owned) to call Port Orchard police. He said a friend of Kelso’s had called his phone and harassed him. • Kelso’s Facebook account is deleted. The Internet Protocol address logged with the deletion is associated with the residence of DeJesus’ ex-wife. A password for Kelso’s account is also changed twice from the same IP address. The account apparently had been hacked into (see below). March 22: DeJesus calls 911 using his third phone to report a vehicle prowl to Bremerton Police. DeJesus said his iPhone 4 was missing and there was a cigarette burn mark on the roof. March 23: Kelso’s current Facebook page is created using an IP associated with DeJesus.

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March 26: Phone records show DeJesus made two calls to Kariotis Mobile Estates, where Kelso lived. A manager said DeJesus told him to watch for “shady characters” at Kelso’s home. March 27: Phone records show DeJesus watched Netflix on his iPhone at 9:57 a.m. (not the night prior to the homicides as DeJesus had stated – see below.) There was no Netflix activity logged on March 28. • Around 1 p.m., DeJesus visits the daughter he and Kelso shared at the home of one of Kelso’s friends. He knows his daughter will be there overnight and not at Kelso’s home. • DeJesus’ financial records show a purchase was made at McDonald’s at 6755 Highway 303 at 1:05 p.m. • Around midday, Kelso borrows Jalisa Lum’s car to go to Jack-in-the-Box, 0.6 miles from the McDonald’s that DeJesus was at. Kelso called her grandmother around 1:34 p.m. The conversation lasts more than 20 minutes. Kelso tells her grandmother she saw DeJesus and had to go. • Around 10:40 p.m., DeJesus leaves his place of work, PSNS. He then visits friend B.N.’s house on Clover Blossom Lane in Bremerton, not far from Kariotis Mobile Estates. • Surveillance video shows DeJesus’ vehicle was at B.N.’s house from 11:07 p.m. until 12:24 a.m. March 28. March 28: Around 12:30 a.m. an unidentified man with a Halloween mask, black gloves, long sleeved Van’s sweatshirt and black jogging pants is seen jumping a fence near Helena Drive near Kariotis Mobile Estates. • Surveillance video shows DeJesus visits the 76 gas station in Port Orchard to buy beer and chips at 12:49 a.m. (This is the last time DeJesus’s location is confirmed until after the shootings.) • DeJesus sends a text to B.N. at 1:24 a.m. and another to his ex-wife at 1:45 a.m. • At 2:18 a.m., 911 is called regarding shots fired. Kelso and Lum are killed. Crime scene investigators find no guns nor ammunition in Kelso’s home. Ten 9mm Federal brand shell casings are found. • At 5 a.m., Port Orchard police locate DeJesus’ Honda Accord on Sidney Avenue in Port Orchard. The hood is warm to the touch. They monitor the residence. • At 8:15 a.m. Port Orchard police contact DeJesus at the home and search the apartment and vehicle. They find the beer and chips DeJesus had purchased at the 76 station earlier are still in the bag, unopened. Muddy Van’s brand shoes are found that had a tread pattern that matched prints found at the crime scene. March 30: Detectives serve a search warrant on DeJesus’ residence. A case for a 9mm gun is found, but no gun is in the case. A “test fire” round, and one ammunition magazine with 15 rounds of ammunition are found. A box of 9mm Federal Hydra-Shok ammunition is also found with 10 rounds missing. The type of ammunition appeared to be the same make and model as those found at the crime scene. • DeJesus’ ex-wife is interviewed. She says DeJesus had earlier got the gun case back from Kelso. DeJesus told his ex-wife to put the gun case in the garage. The box felt heavy, as if a gun were inside. DeJesus said Kelso put tools in the box to make it feel heavy, and said there wasn’t actually a gun in the box, and he said the gun was actually missing.

• DeJesus tells investigators he last saw the gun at Kelso’s house. DeJesus asks to speak to an attorney. April 7: All internet history on DeJesus’ phone prior to this date had been erased. April 8: Detectives tell DeJesus’ they want to return his car, as they were done searching it. They give him a ride to the office and released the car to him. Detectives served a warrant on his cell phone and ask DeJesus why there was no activity logged the night of the homicides. DeJesus said he watched Netflix before going to sleep that night. April 15: DeJesus reports being kidnapped in Port Orchard, giving a description of a male who wore a Van’s sweatshirt and ski mask. He said it started when he saw the dome light was on in the Jeep he had borrowed. He went to investigate and was forced into the Jeep and was forced to withdraw cash from an ATM. He said the suspect burned his face with a cigarette. April 17: Port Orchard police interview DeJesus. DeJesus sobbed without tears during the interview and changed details of his story several times, eventually stating that a skinny white male with blonde hair, his age, his bangs up, wearing a Van’s sweatshirt, blue jeans and skate shoes came to his ex-wife’s apartment two weeks ago and demanded $1,000. The suspect bummed a cigarette and asked DeJesus what police knew about the “murder” and said he would be back. DeJesus said the man was the same man who kidnapped him on April 15. April 30: The Washington State Patrol crime lab states that photographs of bloody shoe prints at the crime scene match shoes as Ipath Ras or Ipath O’ Connor skate shoes. The probable cause states, “Nearly all of Geraldo’s shoes are skateboard shoes.” May 6: Investigators ask DeJesus where his third phone is located. DeJesus says it was stolen on March 28. • DeJesus’ ex wife tells investigators she put the gun case in the garage (see March 30 interview above) 1 1/2 weeks prior to the homicides. She says DeJesus never owned Ipath shoes. She thought it unusual that his vehicle had been prowled twice within weeks. June 4: A deputy finds an 11th 9mm shell casing not far from Kelso’s residence. • Investigators receive the results of a Netflix search warrant. There was no activity on the account on March 28. June 11: A coworker of Kelso tells investigators that one week before she was killed she told him she had to block her Facebook account because DeJesus was becoming possessive, controlling and deleting her Facebook friends. She said DeJesus beat her and had weapons and she was afraid for her life. July 27: The WSP crime lab reports “the test fire round (from Geraldo’s pistol box) was fired from the same pistol as all shell casings recovered from the homicide scene.” Aug. 20: DeJesus is arrested at work and charged with two counts of first-degree murder and one count of first-degree assault. Additional information: • Detectives interview a man who said Kelso said DeJesus took all his guns with him when he moved out of Kelso’s home. • J.H. told detectives that Kelso’s Facebook page had been hacked, and her name changed to “Lammas Kelso.” • One of Kelso’s co-workers said Kelso told him that DeJesus threatened to kill her if she tried to keep their baby away from them.

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less less than a month. She said that’s why the count is emphasized as being done “at a point in time.” Where are the homeless? The pervasive stereotype of a homeless individual is a disheveled man sitting at an urban street corner bumming for cash. It’s actually far more complicated to delineate that population, Jewell said. “There are a lot of myths about homelessness,” she said. “The chronic homeless person on a street corner is just a small percentage of the population. Regardless of their situation or circumstance, we consider anyone who doesn’t have stable housing to be homeless.” She defines stable housing as a situation in which the housing is permanent and self-supporting. It’s much more likely, Jewell said, that a homeless person is employed — often working two part-time jobs — and still unable to secure permanent shelter. Some of those homeless people are single moms struggling to support children after a divorce, abandonment by a partner or a break from family. Jennifer Hardison, executive director of South Kitsap Helpline, said many of those who use her agency’s services are “people who have had

unexpected events in their lives that have greatly affected their lives.” Hardison said her organization, dominated by a large food bank, has a steady stream of chronically homeless people who visit but are unable to fully take advantage of her agency’s services. “They don’t have a place to store items that we give out,” she said. “We’ve developed a “lunch box” program for the chronically homeless where they can pick up a meal they can take with them and eat later.” Food, or the inability to buy it, is often “the tip of the iceberg,” Hardison said. “There are some underlying issues like not being able to find better paying jobs, not having adequate transportation to get to their work, or medical issues.” Those singular issues can sabotage a homeless person’s efforts to rise above their homelessness. Even a small sum of money — $80 — can mean the difference between having a steady income and not having a job. Hardison said a man arrived some time ago at the food b a n k asking for help.

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Friday, August 28, 2015

Crews battle Eastern Washington Fires Okanogan complex fire the largest in state history

Photos courtesy of The Daily Herald

Clockwise: An air tanker drops fire retardant on a hillside above a neighborhood on Lake Chelan as the First Creek fire blazed; Snohomish County firefighter Tyler Compton (left) talks with Capt. Jason Kestle while working to protect structures above Lake Chelan; plumes of smoke from the First Creek wildfire are visible near the west shoreline of Lake Chelan; A crew of Snohomish County firefighters from Fire District 21, build a fire line by clearing away brush to protect homes and other structures.

Legal Notices IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF KING In re the Estate of WILLIAM JAMES STEPHENSON Deceased NO.15-4-04956-6SEA NOTICE TO CREDITORS The Personal Representative named below has been appointed and has qualified as Personal Representative of this estate. Persons having claims against the decedent must, prior to the time such claims would be barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limitations, serve their claims on the Personal Representative or the Attorneys of record at the address stated below and file an executed copy of the claim with the Clerk of this Court within four months after the date of first publication of this notice or within four months after the date of filing of the copy of this notice with the Clerk of

the Court, whichever is later or, except under those provisions included in RCW 11.40.011 or 11.40.013, the claim will be forever barred. This bar is effective as to claims against both the probate and non-probate assets of the decedent. DATE OF FILING COPY OF NOTICE TO CREDITORS WITH CLERK OF THE COURT: August 24, 2015. DATE OF FIRST PUBLICATION: August 28, 2015 DATED: August 20, 2015 /s/James C. Sprague James C. Sprague, Personal Representative Harold G. Booker, Attorney for 7445 South 114th Street Seattle, Washington 98178 Date of first publication: 08/28/15 Date of last publication: 09/11/15 (CKR-653742)

For Kitsap Countywide Legal listings, please turn to Real Estate Now/Kitsap Classifieds IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF KITSAP In re the Estate of Marc D. Gianneschi, Deceased. NO. 15-4-00097-6 Probate Notice to Creditors RCW 11.40.030 The Personal Representative named below has been appointed as personal representative of this estate. Any person having a claim against the deceased 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 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 in which the probate proceedings were commenced.

The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) Thirty (30) days after the personal representative served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided under RCW 11.40.020(3); 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 deceased’s probate and nonprobate assets. DATE OF FIRST PUBLICATION: August 28, 2014. Personal Representative: Athena W. Abad Attorney for Estate: Lincoln J. Miller Address for Mailing or Service: 19586 10th Avenue N.E., Suite 300 P.O. Box 2172 Poulsbo, WA 98370 Presented by: /s/Lincoln J. Miller LINCOLN J. MIILLER,

WSBA #25306 Attorneys for Estate Date of first publication: 08/28/15 Date of last publication: 09/11/15 (CKR653717) IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON FOR KITSAP COUNTY IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF: PHYLLIS EVA MAURER, Deceased. NO. 15-4-00653-2 PROBATE NOTICE TO CREDITORS RCW 11.40.030 The Personal Representative(s) named below has been appointed as Personal Representative(s) of this estate. Any person 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(s)

or Personal Representative’s attorney at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the Court in which the probate proceedings were commenced. The claim must be presented within the later of : (1) Thirty days after the Personal Representative(s) 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 with 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 nonprobate assets. DATE OF FIRST PUBLICATION: August 14, 2015. Personal Representative(s): Jill J. McNeil Attorney for the Person-

al Representative(s)/Estate: KEVIN P. MORAN WSBA#8516 BENNETT MORAN & GIANNESCHI, INC. P.S. Address for Mailing or Service: 9057 WASHINGTON AVE., N.W., SILVERDALE, WA. 98383 Telephone: (360) 698-3000 Presented by: BENNETT MORAN & GIANNESCHI, INC., P.S. By: KEVIN P. MORAN WSBA #8516 Attorneys for Estate Date of first publication: 08/14/15 Date of last publication: 08/28/15 (CKR650538) Whether you’re buying or selling, the Classifieds has it all. From automobiles and employment to real estate and household goods, you’ll find everything you need 24 hours a day at www.SoundClassifieds.com

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COMMUNITY BRIEFS Veterans motorcycle run Sept. 5 SILVERDALE – The Military Vets Motorcycle Club and BPOE Veteran’s Run is scheduled for Sept. 5 beginning at the Silverdale Harley Davidson and zooming through Hood Canal Loop to the Bremerton Elks Lodge. Registration at 9 a.m. with last bike out by 11:30 a.m. $10 rider and non-motorcycle entries; $5 for passengers; $10 for poker run. Proceeds benefit Retsil Veterans Home and the Fisher House Veterans Home. Contact Syd Nunez for more information at 360-649-0392 or 206-8557535.

CKHS class of 1950 to meet Sept. 5 SILVERDALE – A luncheon to celebrate the 65-year reunion of Central Kitsap High School class of 1950 will be held at the Olive Garden restaurant in Silverdale on Sept. 5 at noon. Classmates and schoolmates are welcome to buy a lunch and share memories. For reservations call Peggy at 360-6926478 or Jackie 360-779-7697.

Kitsap Mall encourages kids to Stomp Out Bullying

performances on Dec. 13, April 15-16, and May 22. Weekly rehearsals are held on Tuesday evenings.

Park clean-up crew to be recognized by mayor Aug. 28 BREMERTON – A neighborhood group that cleaned up Lower Rota Vista Park will be recognized by Mayor Patty Lent and Bremerton Parks Director Wyn Birkenthal at a special ceremony on Friday, Aug. 28, at 11 a.m. The event will take place at the park, which is tucked away at the end of Elizabeth Avenue near Bremerton’s Evergreen Park. Prior to the clean-up, the park had been trashed and vandalized by drug users and others. One of the attractions of the park is its unique importance for bird watchers and Kitsap Audubon Society members. It offers an exceptional wildlife viewing point for a unique colony of Pelagic Cormorants and a pair of Peregrine Falcons that nest beneath the Warren Avenue Bridge. The site is so special to bird watchers that Kitsap Audubon funded installation of a set of steps and a hand rail to improve access, and created an interpretive sign explaining the significance of this unusual wildlife viewing site. For more information, contact Gene Bullock at 360-394-5635 or genebullock@comcast.netl. For directions to Lower Rota Vista Park call Bremerton Parks and Recreation at 473-5305.

SILVERDALE – Kitsap Mall and iHeart Radio are partnering with STOMP Out Bullying – the country’s leading bullying and cyber-bullying prevention organization – to raise awareness and give kids a platform to express their opinion and feelings about bullying before heading back to school through two events and an Instagram video sweepstakes. A STOMP Out Bullying Block Party is scheduled for BREMERTON – It’s time to Raise the Roof. Saturday, Aug. 29, 12-2 p.m. including music, food, fashion and chances to win prizes. iHeart Radio Help end poverty housing by attending Habitat for emcee Supa Sam will play the summer’s hottest Humanity’s 15th annual Raise the Roof dinner and hits while attendees can enjoy mini makeovers, a silent auction fundraiser Sept. 19. henna, food samplings, watching the B-Boy dance Doors open at 5:30 p.m. at the Kitsap Conference competition showdown and more. Center. Dinner will be served at 7 p.m. To combat cyber-bullying, the mall asks teens Tickets are $55 per person or $400 for a table of and kids to upload a short video to Instagram eight. Visit http://goo.gl/S5GBND to purchase explaining how they plan to take a stand against tickets. bullying and cyber-bullying during the school year. When they use the hashtags #STOMPOutBullying Habitat for Humanity is now accepting donations and #KitsapMall, they will be entered for a chance 280945_4.75_x_6 4/7/15 AM Pagethat 1 will be on display for the silent11:05 auction baskets to win four tickets to an amazing local iHeart during the event. To donate, please contact Adam Radio concert. The contest runs Monday, Aug. 10 through Saturday, Aug. 29.

Habitat for Humanity fundraiser Sept. 19

Bremerton Symphony Orchestra to hold auditions Sept. 8 BREMERTON – The Bremerton Symphony Orchestra will hold auditions on the evening of Sept. 8 at the Bremerton Symphony Association office, 532 5th St. in Bremerton. Current openings for clarinet, French horn, percussion and all strings; other orchestra musicians can audition for the “on-call” list. Appointment required. To schedule an audition and obtain the audition repertoire, please contact Gary Dahl, Personnel Manager, at 360-536-2038 or email gdahl@bremertonsymphony.org.

Bremerton Symphony Chorale to hold auditions Sept. 8 BREMERTON – Bremerton Symphony Chorale, an all-volunteer chorus under music direction of LeeAnne Campos, will hold auditions at 6 p.m. on Tuesday, Sept. 8, at the Olympic College Music Building in Bremerton. Experienced musicians with sight-reading capability, of all voice types, are encouraged to set up a ten-minute audition time by contacting the symphony via telephone at 360-373-1722 or via email at kalbright@bremertonsymphony. org, with “BSC Auditions” as the subject line. This season’s repertoire includes Vaughan-Williams’ Benedicite, Gilbert and Sullivan’s HMS Pinafore, and Alexander Nevsky. Season repertoire includes The Magnificat and Tchaikovsky, H.M.S Pinafore, and Alexander Nevsky and Disciples, with

Simmons at da@kitsaphabitat.org or 360-479-3853.

Sustainable agriculture session Sept. 27 BREMERTON – The Kitsap Community and Agricultural Alliance will present “Creating a sustainable, thriving, and profitable local food network: A Day with Joel Salatin” on Sunday, Sept. 27. Those interested may attended one or all for these events: • Kiana Lodge Brunch, 10:30 a.m.-1 p.m. • Bremerton High School Performing Arts Center panel discussion, with Laura Ryser-WSU Extension Kitsap, Zach Wailand-Dharma Ridge Farms, and Jackie Cross-Tom Douglas Restaurants, 2:30-4:30 p.m. • Kitsap Grown Harvest Dinner, Olympic College Bremer Student Center. Doors open at 4 p.m.; dinner 5-7 p.m. Learn more at kitsapag.org.

Beatles tribute Oct. 18 BREMERTON – “In My Life - A Musical Theatre Tribute to the Beatles” is the award-winning musical biography of the Beatles through the eyes of manager Brian Epstein, featuring the live music of renowned tribute band, Abbey Road. The show is widely considered by industry insiders to be the most unique Beatles show in decades. The production returns to the Admiral Theatre in Bremerton on Sunday, Oct. 18 at 7 p.m. The show sold out this theatre last year. Tickets are $25 - $55 and may be purchased online at www. admiraltheatre.org, by phone at 360-373-6743, by fax at 360-4050673 or at the theatre box office located at 515 Pacific Ave., in downtown Bremerton. The show is appropriate for all ages.

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County Council for Human Rights celebrates the 25th year of the annual Conference for Human Rights with a look back at human rights issues in Kitsap County over the last 25 years. The annual conference is scheduled for Dec. 4 at the Kitsap Conference Center in Bremerton. Opening the conference this year will be Leonard Forsman, chairman of the Suquamish Tribe since 2005 and a member of the tribal council for over 20 years. He will give a presentation on “10,000 Years of History Here on This Land.” Forsman is a longtime advocate for tribal education, cultural preservation and habitat protection. As chairman, he has supported the preservation of the Suquamish tribe’s cultural identity. Keynote speaker for the 2015 Conference for Human Rights will be Robin DiAngelo, a professor of critical multicultural and social justice education. She is currently director of Equity for Senior Services for Seattle and King County and co-developed the City of Seattle’s race and social justice initiative anti-racism training. Her exploration into how race has shaped her life brought her deeper insight into how location socializes individuals to collude with racism. Tickets for the conference Dec. 4 go on sale in September. For more information on the Kitsap County Council for Human Rights, visit http://www. kitsapgov.com/boards/humanrights/hrcboard.htm.

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WWW.BREMERTONPATRIOT.COM | WWW.CENTRALKITSAPREPORTER.COM

Friday, August 28, 2015

R E L AT I O N S H I P S . CUTE & AFFORDABLE | Suquamish Super cute 3 BR home offers fresh paint, open flr plan & all appliances. Fenced yard, deck & easy commute to Kingston/BI ferries. MLS# 833848 $189,900. Dave Muller · 360.620.4299

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MOVE-IN READY | Kingston Open concept, sleek kit, wood floors & trendy designer colors. In-town location, private backyard & ample storage. MLS#836538 $309,900. Catherine Arlen · 360.340.8186

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4 Bedroom, 2.75 bath home with water & mountain views. Main floor includes 2 living spaces, large kitchen and dining room. MLS #835938. $320,000. Steve Derrig · 360.710.8086 Summer Davy · 360.535.3625

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Beautiful daylight basement home on .42 ac.: Skylights, Vaulted Ceilings, MasterBath, Walk-in Closet & Pantry, Decks, Hot Tub & more! 2br/3ba MLS#837132 $349,000. Art Locke · 360.710.1101 artlocke@windermere.com

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Beautiful 2688 sf craftsman style home. Open floor plan with stunning hardwood floors, lrg master and fully fenced yard. MLS# 830084. $385,000. Ida Bear · 206.992.2327

Classic Saltbox replica of 100 yr old farmhome on .95 ac PLUS detached studio.Brilliantly spacious with every amenity imaginable.3br/3ba MLS#836951 $430,000. Dana Soyat · 360.710.8534 soyatsells@windermere.com

Beautiful mountain view home w/convenient location! 4 bdrms/3 bths, glass-enclosed sun room, master on main, large lot. #834399. $439,000. Terry Burns & Liz Bailey · 360.649.3335

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KITSAPWEEKLY

AUG. 28-SEPT. 3, 2015 | ARTS, CULTURE, ENTERTAINMENT & KITSAP CLASSIFIEDS | 65,000 CIRCULATION

Reach

for the

stars

Local astronomy ‘slam,’ other events introduce Kitsap residents to the wonders above us

Great White at Clearwater on Sept. 5

Cover story, pages 3-4

See calendar, page 5


KITSAPWEEKLY

PAGE 2

FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015

La Push and Rialto Beach A photo is worth a thousand words. And when the photos are of the breathtaking shores of the Quileute Nation town of La Push and Rialto Beach, well ... we decided to let these photos by Annie LaValle of Sound Publishing tell the story AT A GLANCE Round-trip distance: 282 miles (Bainbridge), 260 miles (Poulsbo), 290 miles (Bremerton), 298 miles (Port Orchard). Info: www.quileute nation.org, www.olympic peninsula.org

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FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015

KITSAPWEEKLY

PAGE 3

“We — as humans — we’re the way in which the universe is asking questions about itself.” ` — Phil Marshall, astrophysicist

The more we look, the more we learn What space is telling us about ourselves BY CHRIS TUCKER ctucker@soundpublishing.com With reporting by Peter O’Cain

O

lympic College professor Bob ob Abel held up a beer as he began his talk on the universe at the Pacific Planetarium. The beer, he said, was made from elements such as carbon, hydrogen and oxygen. Just like you. “You and I … we’re made of, mostly, hydrogen, carbon, nitrogen and oxygen,” Abel said. Those elements — the stuff that life is made from

— is the result of a proton fusion process that began with the Big Bang. Simply put, “You and I are made of the guts of stars,” Abel said. Beer sounds better than “guts.” Residents joined more than 200 scientists gathered in Bremerton Aug. 16-22 to explore other heavy subjects that are rooted in space. Is there life on other planets? Are dangerous asteroids headed toward Earth? How much does the Milky Way galaxy weigh? What’s up with dark matter — the mysterious stuff that comprises some 73 percent of the mass and energy in the universe? These questions and more are being pondered by scientists, and they hope the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope now

under construction in Chile can help find answers to those galaxy-sized questions. As part of their convention, scientists reached out to the public at several seminars, including a series of free, 12-minute “Astronomy Slam” talks held at the Bremerton Bar & Grill, Collective Visions Gallery, Kitsap Historical Society and Museum, Pacific Planetarium and Toro Lounge. It’s as much an exploration of human kind as it was of the final frontier. At Pacific Planetarium Aug. 18, Stanford University astrophysicist Phil Marshall said he wanted to understand how the universe worked by making a model of it. “We — as humans — we’re the way in which the universe is asking

COME CELEBRATE PORT ORCHARD! SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 5, 2015 125 YEARS OF PORT ORCHARD

See STARS, Page 4

Pancake Breakfast • Farmers Market • Antique Car Show Peter Storeth Mural Show • Historical Display • Marbles Tournament Weavers and Spinners • Tour of City Hall • Tour of Carlisle II Square Dance Demonstration • Art Walk • “Patriotic Music Tribute” Family Friendly & Fun Street Dance

Lots of Exhibits by many local organizations! Please bring a can of food for the SK Helpline Foodbank

Phil Marshall gives a talk about dark matter during an “Astronomy Slam” at the Pacific Planetarium in Bremerton. In the foreground is a large telescope. Photo above: Chris Tucker, Sound Publishing. Cover and top of page 3: NASA

Free Shuttle Service with Kitsap Airporter from Kitsap County Court House to Boat Launch and Port Orchard Armory to Mitchell at the corner High School Entrance then onto Peninsula Feed 9:00 AM to 4:00 PM Go to PO125.com for more information


KITSAPWEEKLY

PAGE 4

FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015

Faith and optimism in our quest for perfection Suzanne O’Clair is a practicing astrologer available for readings. Contact her at 360-509-6400 or at ostarsabove.com.

STARS ABOVE KITSAP SUZANNE O’CLAIR

Full Moon: Virgo/ catching up with what was Pisces he radiant Sun joins shoved aside until later. the largest planet in This is later! A powerful full moon our cosusually pours on mos, Jupiter, the tension of in the most polarity. But this pragmatic sign peaceful Pisces of all, Virgo. moon joins with With the otherworldly largness of Neptune. With Jupiter in the Jupiter the faithsign of Virgo’s ful joining the picayune Sun in Virgo, perdetails, there haps in the light is a dilemma, of this moon we but our urge Suzanne O’Clair will find inspirato tidy up and tion for a spiritual make right practice or service. Then, builds on Jupiter’s faith and optimism in our quest as we allow Spirit to flow in the simple actions of for perfection. our hands maintaining a Everyone has a job that we learned from someone. body, a family, a home, a relationship and a job, the Parents, teachers, bosses, daily tasks become elevatmentors and coaches ed to spiritual service. expect us to tend to our Can you see the Light? daily lessons and drills. Can you sense the Task? Diet, exercise and everyHoroscopes day tasks that are barely Aug. 29 to Sept. 12 noticed (unless undone) Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. grab our attention. This 22), you must manage is the yearly phase of

T

Stars

Continued from page 3 questions about itself,” Marshall told the packed audience. Dark matter is like a gigantic cloud of gas that invisibly permeates our entire disc-shaped galaxy, he said. “We know that the galaxy is a disc of stars. We see it as a stripe in the sky. And it’s living in this giant halo of dark matter. And the dark matter particles seem to be going every which-way when we look at the simulations,” Marshall said. Those dark matter particles aren’t rotating in a disk, but instead are like a cloud of gas. He mentioned that the constellation Cygnus is his favorite, because the solar system is speeding in the direction of Cygnus at a speed of around 200 kilometers per second. “So, we know what it feels like to fly through a cloud of gas when you’re cycling along: you feel the wind in your hair. So

we’re flying through a cloud of dark matter. And if we were able to feel dark matter in our hair, we’d feel it from the direction of Cygnus. “So, I like to go out at night and look at Cygnus and imagine the darkmatter wind blowing.” Marshall said the weight of the Milky Way is about one trillion times the mass of our sun. Abel said 33 talks (like Marshall’s) from some of the world’s best astronomers were held in Bremerton during the convention. Part of the appeal of hosting the convention in Bremerton, he said, was that they can have a larger impact with a smaller venue than if they held their meeting in a larger city such as Seattle. Kitsap residents packed the talks to hear what the scientists had to say. “We’re learning so much,” Abel said. “Every year, we become less uncommon. I mean, we now know of 31 planets around other stars that could support life, theoretically. They’re the right

usual tasks while straddling an increased awareness of the necessity of being you even as you ponder your closest relationships. Your service is to that magnificent job of being human and spiritual. It’s a stretch, but under Jupiter’s blessing, it seems simple. Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22), responsiveness to others takes a break as a contemplative period arises. Communication comes with a personal flare focusing on your desires and affections. Consider allowing intuition to guide your work. Worries lift. Jupiter provides a guardianship you only notice when quiet. Shhhh ... Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21), if you aren’t getting rave reviews and kudos, you are in the wrong job! Cast your net wider and seek admiring associates. What are your future hopes and dreams? Your guardian angel wants to help. Ask for what you want with intention. You can have it! Your past is not your future. Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21), a steady,

AT A GLANCE Want to know more about stars, planets and galaxies? Try a skywalk or a planetarium show. SKYWALKS: First Fridays of each month at the Pacific Planetarium, 817 Pacific Ave., Bremerton. Admission: $3 at the door, or at www.brownpa pertickets.com. A 30-minute walk under the night skies of the Pacific Northwest. www. pacificplanetarium.com. SUNDAY PLANETARIUM SHOWS: Noon, 1 p.m., 2 p.m. and 3 p.m. Sundays at the Pacific Planetarium, 817 Pacific Ave., Bremerton. Admission: $5 at the door, or at www. brownpapertickets.com. Every show is different. Info: www.pacificplanetarium.com.

size where humans can live on them for that size and the right distance from their star so they can have the right temperature. Now, there are a lot of other things — depends on what the atmosphere’s like. We found 31 Earthlike planets already and then at the same time,” Abel said.

no-nonsense approach at work opens important doors. Do the details and show people how downto-it you can be? If you are following your true beliefs and desires, it won’t feel like drudge. It will be what it takes to meet your destiny. Big opportunities arise all year. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19), day-to-day flow lifts you up if you can hear the deeper message, feel the flow behind the words. Make big plans. Seek inspiration through travel, reading, church, lectures. If groups you associate with aren’t providing inspiration, clean house. You have no obligation to them. Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18), you may be cashing in in more ways than one. Respect for your ideas was hard won the last few years. Financial acumen and close, enduring friends come together with business ideas that finally get traction. Don’t lose faith in your personal skills and resources. This is a team effort. Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20), sympathy

and intuition is your arena, and the full moon has you operating at peak demand. Through your friends, Jupiter offers broadening stability as visions take on their final forms. The spring eclipse awakened you. Dreams and visions can be made real — stay focused, stay inspired. Aries (March 21-April 19), summer’s fun doesn’t slow down for you even as work expands and dream time calls, both day and night. An “aha” moment shows you where you create your own undoing. Someone you consider dull may be your finest teacher in terms of steadiness and details. Be courageous — be you! Taurus (April 20-May 20), take a break for recreation and play. Your personal charisma shines, but you haven’t a clue — people just seem easier to get along with. The inner children of childhood create a tug-of-war on the home front. Put your adult panties on and speak up for what you want. Then, go get it yourself! Gemini (May 21-June 20), vacations

always come two weeks too late. Home and work are the highlight of this full moon but neither ring your chimes. Fun with a friend is what’s needed. Talk about what you really, really want. Let intuition guide at work — which doesn’t mean daydream. Your base expands this year. Cancer (June 21-July 22), a watery full moon sets your mind a wanderin’ to broad horizons. Teaching, learning and traveling lead to beneficial contacts this year. Women friends nudge you to act for what you want. Don’t underestimate your managerial skills and executive abilities. Build on what has meaning for you. Leo (July 23-Aug. 22), Venus and Mars continue the Leo-tango, activating more fun and personal expression. As Jupiter moves to Virgo, resources and skills needed to further those plans become clear. Self-esteem is high enough to see you through beginning steps. Be you and do the work to earn the success.

We’re made from dead stars

Bang, stars begin to form. Clouds of gas begin to collapse under gravity,” and become hotter and hotter with temperatures around 27 million degrees with pressures 250 billion times the pressure we feel on Earth. The charged protons resist one another, usually, but in those intense conditions, they can fuse together. “In our sun right now, from what we can see, it’s taking hydrogen — single protons — and it’s shoving them together under those intense conditions and making helium.” But not all mass is conserved: Some of it is converted into energy as gamma rays. “It takes those gamma rays about 100,000 to a million years to make it to the edge of the sun. And then about eight minutes and 20 seconds to get to us.” The sun will continue its fusion process until it runs out of fuel in about five billion years. When the fuel runs out, the sun will cool, collapse and start

burning hydrogen in the outer core. It will become denser and denser until helium fuses together. The process results in heavier elements such as carbon, nitrogen and oxygen — the stuff that life is made from. The sun is only large enough to fuse elements up to carbon, but stars twice as large can create iron, which has 26 protons. Some stars can create gold. “This gold on my finger — that was made in a supernova,” Abel said. “We’re all made of star stuff … we’re proof that stars lived before us.” He added, “Is there life elsewhere in the universe? Well, we’ve just started looking. We’ve already found 31 planets that could be Earth-like.” Water is one of the most common molecules in the universe. “We’re made of very common stuff. The more we look, the less uncommon we seem.” ONLINE AND NEXT WEEK: Close encounters of the Fifth Kind?

Let’s return to that beer that Abel held up earlier. Each atom has a nucleus of protons (with a positive charge) and neutrons, with electrons whizzing about in orbit. “If I took that nucleus and blew it up to the size of a softball, the nearest electron would be in Belfair,” Abel said. The difference between carbon and nitrogen and oxygen is just the number of protons inside that nucleus. “If I have one proton, that’s called hydrogen. If I have two, it’s helium. You and I, we’re mostly a lot of carbon, right? So that’s six protons. And nitrogen is seven and oxygen is eight and this gold in my ring is a lot more. And where do these come from?” Some 13.8 billion years ago — about 20 minutes after the Big Bang — the universe was three-quarters hydrogen and onequarter helium, Abel said. “About 500 or 600 million years after Big


KITSAPWEEKLY

FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015

Paula Gill is the featured artist at Collective Visions Gallery in Bremerton. Visit the gallery during First Friday Art Walks. Info: 360-3775232.

kitsapcalendar Calendar submissions The Kitsap Week calendar is a free listing of events in Kitsap County. To submit an event, email the name of the involved organization, the event’s date, purpose, cost (if applicable) and contact information to mbeahm@northkitsapherald.com.

BENEFITS & EVENTS CONVERSATION FORUM: 1:30-3 p.m. Aug. 28, Bainbridge Public Library, 1270 Madison Ave., Bainbridge Island. Join a dialogue about living in the Northwest. Info: www.krl.org or 206-8424162. BOOK SALE: 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Aug. 29, Kingston Farmers Market. Kingston Friends of the Library hosts the book sale; proceeds go to the library. SCARLET ROAD FUNDRAISER: 9 a.m. Aug. 30, Applebee’s, Silverdale. Scarlet Road provides longterm, holistic care to women and children within the Kitsap Peninsula who have been victims of sexual exploitation. Tickets $10. Info: www.scarletroad.org. TEA PARTY MEETING: 7-8:30 p.m. Aug. 31, Silverdale Beach Hotel. The Kitsap Patriots TEA Party August meeting program will be “The Federal Reserve: Impact on the U.S. Economy and the U.S. Citizen.” Free and open to public. kitsappatriots.wordpress.com. DOG PHOTO CONTEST: Through August, Verksted Gallery, 18937 Front St., Poulsbo. Free and open to the public. Voting is open Aug. 16-31. Best dog photo, most humorous, and best dog and pal. Info: www.verkstedgallery.com or 360-697-4470. BOOKS ON TOP: 7:30-9 p.m. Sept. 2, Treehouse Cafe, 4569 Lynwood Center Road, Bainbridge Island. Stop by the library for a book and move list, and learn about book and movie history and trivia. Info: www.krl.org or 206-842-4162. KINGSTON CITIZENS ADVISORY COUNCIL: 7 p.m. Sept. 2, Kingston Fire Station on Miller Bay Road. KCAC will host presentations on efforts in Kingston to improve water quality, stream restorations and salmon homecomings. stillwatersenvironmen talcenter.org or 360-297-1226. FRIENDS OF THE LIBRARY BOOK SALE: 1-4 p.m. Sept. 3 and 12, Bainbridge Public Library, 1270 Madison Ave., Bainbridge Island. bifriends.org or 206-842-4162. FIRST FRIDAY ART WALK: 5-7 p.m. Sept. 4, Bainbridge Public Library, 1270 Madison Ave., Bainbridge Island. “Art of the Flower” photographs by Cheryl Feeney on display in September. Info: 206-842-4162 or www. bainbridgepubliclibrary.org. ARTIST RECEPTION: 5-8 p.m. Sept. 4, Collective Visions Gallery, Bremerton. Paula Gill is the featured artist. Inspired by the Pacific Northwest, Gill uses ceramics, ink and paper to capture the

coastal terrain and atmosphere. Also visit Collective Visions Gallery during First Friday art walks. Info: 360-377-5232. FALL FASHION: 6-8 p.m. Sept. 4, The Island Gallery, 400 Winslow Way, No. 120, Bainbridge Island. First Friday artist reception. Through Sept. 27, the wearable art from the gallery’s collection of artist-designers will be on display. Info: www.theis landgallery.net. MARBLE TOURNAMENT: 11 a.m. Sept. 5, Port Orchard Library, 87 Sidney Ave., Port Orchard. Celebrate Port Orchard’s 125th anniversary with an old-fashioned marble tournament. Registration forms available at the library. Info: www.krl.org or 360-876-2224. GREAT WHITE IN CONCERT: 7 p.m. Sept. 5, Suquamish Clearwater Casino. Re-charged and re-focused, Great White channels their raw, sweet and all-at-once dangerous sound into their live performances. $20. Info: www. clearwatercasino.com. PARENTING IN A DIGITAL WORLD: 7 p.m. Sept. 8, Group Health Cooperative Classroom, 10452 Silverdale Way, Silverdale. Sally Kidder Davis will be sharing and answering questions on “Parenting sanely in a digital world.” Free; open to all. Info: 360-7795362 or 360-697-3922. STILLWATERS BOOK SALE: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Fridays through Sundays, Sept. 11 to Oct. 11. at Stillwaters Environmental Center, 26059 Barber Cut Off Road, Kingston. Volunteer opportunities Aug. 28-29, and Sept. 1-4 and 8-10. Info: still watersenvironmentalcenter.org or 360-297-1226. ISLAND SCHOOL TOURS: 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. weekdays at The Island School, 8553 NE Day Road, Bainbridge Island. For grades K-5. Call ahead at 206-842-0400. Info: www.theislandschool.org. KITSAP STORIES FROM 1889 EXHIBIT: At the Kitsap Historical Society & Museum, 280 Fourth St., Bremerton. An exhibit featuring stories of Kitsap’s people and places in 1889, the year Washington achieved statehood. BAINBRIDGE HISTORICAL MUSEUM’S FREE FIRST THURSDAY: Admission to the prize-winning Bainbridge Island Historical Museum is free on the first Thursday of each month. Open 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at 215 Ericksen Ave. Info: www.bainbridgehistory.org. BINGO: 5 p.m. Sundays, and 6 p.m. Wednesdays, at the Bremerton Elks Lodge on Pine Road. Open to the public. Concession stand and bar. 360-479-1181.

BPA JUGGLING: 7-8:30 p.m. first Sundays, Bainbridge Performing Arts, 200 Madison Ave. For experienced, beginning and closet jugglers. Free. Info: 206-8428569, www.bainbridgeperformingarts.org, email tchallinor@ bainbridge performingarts.org. FREE MEAL: 3-4 p.m. Saturdays at the Christian Life Center cafeteria, 1780 Lincoln Ave., Port Orchard. KITSAP CARES: Everyday in 2015, Kitsap residents can go online to learn more about charities and being charitable in Kitsap. Find out more online at www. facebook.com/kitsapcares aboutcharity365. Info: kitsap caresrealestate@gmail.com.

NAVAL UNDERSEA MUSEUM STORE SEEKS VOLUNTEERS:

The museum store at the Naval Undersea Museum in Keyport is recruiting weekday volunteers. Shifts are 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. and 1-4 p.m. Schedules are flexible each month. Base access not necessary. Info: 360-697-1537. WILD ABOUT TREES: 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, 8-11 a.m. Sunday through Oct. 4, The Gallery at Grace, 8595 NE Day Road, Bainbridge Island. Trees in Art features drawings, paintings and engravings by a group of Northwest artists who share a deep affinity for trees. Info: treesinart.wordpress.com.

CLASSES BOOK A COMPUTER TRAINER: Bainbridge Public Library, 1270 Madison Ave., Bainbridge Island. Sign up for an hour with a computer trainer and get your questions answered. Call 206842-4162 for info or to schedule an appointment. BOOK A COMPUTER TRAINER: Port Orchard Library, 87 Sidney Ave., Port Orchard. Sign up for an hour with a volunteer computer trainer and get your questions answered. Schedule an appointment at the library or by calling 360-876-2224. Info: www.krl.org. BOOK A COMPUTER TRAINER: Book a computer trainer at Bainbridge Public Library. Sign up for an hour with a computer trainer and get your questions answered. Days, times and trainer expertise varies. Call for info or to schedule an appointment, 206-842-4162. Info: www.krl.org. GARDENING WITH FERNS: 10 a.m. to noon Sept. 5 and 12, Bainbridge Public Library, 1270 Madison Ave., Bainbridge Island. In-depth study of ferns presented by John van den Meerendonk. Info: www.krl.org or 206-842-4162. KNITTING: 6-7:30 p.m. Sept. 8, Port Orchard Library, 87 Sidney Ave., Port Orchard. Course will focus on a technique or two at a time, and provide hands-on guidance to master basic skills. Registration required at library. www.krl.org or 360-876-2224. LIBRARY EBOOKS AND AUDIO: 1-3 p.m. Sept. 8, Bainbridge Public

PAGE 5

Submitted Library, 1270 Madison Ave., Bainbridge Island. Learn to download library ebooks and audiobooks to your electronics. Register in advance: 206-842-4162. Info: www.krl.org. SKYWALKS: First Fridays of each month at the Pacific Planetarium, 817 Pacific Ave., Bremerton. $3 at the door, or at www. brownpapertickets.com. A 30-minute walk under the night skies of the Pacific Northwest. www.pacificplanetar ium.com. SUNDAY PLANETARIUM SHOWS: Noon, 1 p.m., 2 p.m. and 3 p.m. Sundays at the Pacific Planetarium, 817 Pacific Ave., Bremerton. $5 at the door, or at www.brownpapertickets.com. A planetarium show with exhibits. Every show is different, in a simulated universe. Info: www. pacificplanetarium.com. SQUARE DANCE LESSONS: Paws and Taws Square Dance Club hosts lessons 7-9 p.m. Mondays at Kitsap Square Dance Center, 6800 Belfair Valley Road, Bremerton. $3 adult, $1.50 youth, first night free. Singles, couples and families welcome. Info: 360-9305277 or 360-373-2567 or www. pawsandtaws.net.

MEETINGS & SUPPORT GROUPS 12-STEP BIBLICAL-BASED RECOVERY GROUP: 7-8:30 p.m. Wednesdays, Cornerstone Christian Fellowship, 901 N. Wycoff, Bremerton. “Honu Life in Christ”: a support group for addictions/ compulsions, alcohol, drugs and general life issues recovery. Info: David, 360-509-4932. ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS: 5-6 p.m. daily at 1223 Finn Hill Road, Poulsbo. ABUSE RECOVERY MINISTRY & SERVICES: Free faith-based domestic abuse victim recovery classes for women. These weekly classes are designed to help women heal from domestic abuse. Participants may begin attending at any time. Info: 866-262-9284 for confidential time and place. AMERICAN LEGION VETERANS ASSISTANCE OFFICE: Open 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. every Thursday (except holidays), 19068 Jensen Way, Suite 3A, Poulsbo. Free services to assist veterans and widows with VA claims. 360-779-5456. AT EASE TOASTMASTERS: 7-8 p.m. Wednesdays, Subway meeting

room, 3850 Kitsap Way, Bremerton. Learn valuable public speaking, evaluation and leadership skills in a friendly, supportive atmosphere. Info: Dave Harris, 360-478-7089 or harriscd.wa@ comcast.net. BAINBRIDGE ISLAND TOASTMASTERS: 7:15-8:30 p.m. the second and fourth Wednesdays, in the Winslow Arms Apartments Clubhouse, 220 Parfitt Way, Bainbridge Island. An afternoon club meets 11:50 a.m. to 1 p.m. on first and third Thursdays. Open to all interested in developing their speaking skills in a fun, supportive environment. Info: bain bridgeisland.toastmastersclubs. org, www.uspeakeasy.com. BREMERTON NORTHERN MODEL RAILROAD CLUB: 7-8 p.m., first Mondays, United Way Building, 647 Fourth St., Bremerton. Guests welcome. Info: bremer ton-northern@comcast.net. BREMERTON LIONS CLUB: Meets 11:45 a.m. every Wednesday at Ambrosia Catering. Open to all. Learn about community service opportunities. 360-613-9953. BRIDGE GROUP: 8 a.m. Tuesdays, Stafford Suites, 1761 Pottery Ave., Port Orchard. Free to play, $4 for lunch. Info: Denise Hoyt, dhoyt@staffordcare.com, 360874-1212. CAREGIVERS SUPPORT GROUP: 2 p.m. Tuesdays, Rolling Bay Presbyterian Church, 11042 Sunrise Drive NE, Bainbridge Island. Sponsored by Interfaith Volunteer Caregivers. Info: Karen, karen.carson@comcast.net, 206842-3539. CENTRAL/SOUTH KITSAP WOMEN AND CANCER SUPPORT GROUP: 10:30 a.m. to noon, second and fourth Thursdays, Radiation Oncology Library, Harrison Medical Center, 2520 Cherry Ave., Bremerton. Facilitators: Sue-Marie Casagrande, oncology social worker; and Bonnie McVee, life coach and cancer survivor. Info: 360-744-4990, www.harrison medical.org. COMPUTER TRAINING: Noon to 4 p.m. Wednesdays, Bainbridge Library, 1270 Madison Ave. Sign up for an hour with a computer trainer and get your questions answered. Info: 206-842-4162. DEPRESSION & BIPOLAR SUPPORT GROUP: 6-7:30 p.m. Tuesdays, Saint Paul’s Episcopal Church, 700 Callahan Drive, Bremerton. Open to those living with de-

pression and/or bipolar disorder, and loved ones and supporters of people living with mood disorders. Richard, 360-377-8509. EDWARD JONES COFFEE CLUB: 8:15 a.m. fourth Wednesday, Edward Jones, 2416 NW Myhre Road, Suite 102, Silverdale. Current market and economy updates. To reserve a seat, call Beth Halvorson, 360-692-1216. FOOD ADDICTS IN RECOVERY ANONYMOUS: 7-8:30 p.m. Wednesdays, Manette Community Church, 1137 Hayward Ave., Bremerton. Membership is open to anyone who wants help with their eating habits. Info: www. foodaddicts.org, FAKitsap@ gmail.com. GRIEF SUPPORT GROUP: 5 p.m. second and fourth Thursdays, Rolling Bay Presbyterian Church, 11042 Sunrise Drive NE, Bainbridge Island. Sponsored by Interfaith Volunteer Caregivers. Info: Robin Gaphni, rgaphni@ seanet.com, 206-962-0257. JOB APPLICATION HELP: 2-4 p.m. Fridays, Bainbridge Public Library. Tune up your resume and get job application assistance. Schedule a half-hour meeting for help with your cover letter, interview techniques, job searches and career change. Info: 206842-4162 or www.krl.org. KEYPORT COFFEE HOUR: 9-10 a.m. Wednesdays, Keyport Mercantile, 15499 Washington Ave. NE. Get to know your neighbors, with coffee and tea compliments of the Merc. Info: keyportschules @wavecable.com. KITSAP AL-ANON: Al-Anon meeting for anyone troubled by another person’s drinking. Sundays: 8 a.m. Manchester Library; 10 a.m. Winslow Arms Apartments, Bainbridge Island. Mondays: 10 a.m. Our Savior’s Lutheran Church, Bremerton, noon; Harper Church, Port Orchard; 7:30 p.m. Saint Barnabas Church, Bainbridge Island; 7:30 p.m. Belfair House Of Hope. Tuesdays: Noon, Silverdale Lutheran Church; 7:30 p.m. First Lutheran Church, Port Orchard; 5:30 p.m. Park Vista Apartments, Port Orchard; 7 p.m. First Lutheran Church, Poulsbo. Wednesdays: 10:30 a.m. Belfair Haven Of Hope; Noon, First Lutheran Church, Poulsbo; 5:30 p.m. West Sound Treatment Center, Port Orchard. Thursdays: Noon, Port Gamble S’Klallam Wellness Center, Kingston; Noon, Holy Trinity Church, Bremerton; 5:30 p.m. First Christian Church, Bremerton; 7 p.m. First Lutheran Church, Poulsbo; 7:30 p.m. First Lutheran Church, Port Orchard. Fridays: Noon, Bethany Lutheran Church, Bainbridge Island; 7:30 p.m. First Lutheran Church, Port Orchard. Info: www.kitsap-al-anon.org. KITSAP AUDUBON: 7-9 p.m. Sept. 10, Poulsbo Library, 700 NE Lincoln Road, Poulsbo. Film on birds and habitat. Info: 360-394-5635, genebullock@comcast.net or www.kitsapaudubon.org. KITSAP COUNTY AMATEUR RADIO CLUB BREAKFAST: 9-11 a.m. first Saturdays of the month at A&C Diner, 3561 Wheaton Way, Bremerton. $5-10 per person. Info: www. kcarc.org. See CALENDAR, Page 6


KITSAPWEEKLY

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Calendar

KNITTING GROUP: 3 p.m. Wednesdays, Liberty Bay Books, 18881 Front St. NE, Poulsbo. All skills welcome. Info: Suzanne Droppert, 360-779-5909, liberty baybooks@embarqmail.com. LOW VISION SUPPORT GROUP: 1-3 p.m. Sept. 9, Bainbridge Public Library, 1270 Madison Ave., Bainbridge Island. Speaker and refreshments each month. Info: www.krl.org or 206-842-4162. MOTHERS GROUP: 9:30-11 a.m., most first and third Thursdays during the school year at Grace Episcopal Church on Bainbridge Island. For mothers of all beliefs and backgrounds, with children of all ages. Life Coach Bev Gaines leads engaging discussions on how to nurture self-awareness,

Continued from page 5 KITSAP MAC USERS GROUP: 10:30 a.m. to noon, third Thursdays of the month, at All Star Lanes, 10710 Silverdale Way, Silverdale. $20 yearly dues per family. All welcome. Presentations and discussions of interest to Mac users. Info: www.kitsapmug. com, kmug3@comcast.net. KIWANIS OF SILVERDALE: 6:30 p.m. first and third Mondays, Fleet Reserve Association, 11281 Old Military Road, Silverdale. To promote volunteer community service. Info: Roy Meyers, 360373-3917, kcmp1@comcast.net.

reflection and growth. Tuition includes an on-site childcare program for infants and young children. Info: www.momsmorn ingretreat.com. NORTH KITSAP PARENT SUPPORT GROUP: Do you want to be part of a support group for families of gifted children? Call 360-6382919 or email northkitsapgift ed@gmail.com. OLYMPIC KOI AND WATER GARDEN CLUB: Looking for new members. Meetings are once a month at various locations centered around Poulsbo and Port Orchard. Info: Helen Morgan, 360779-1475, email hrmorgan314@ gmail.com.

OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS: Meets 9:15 a.m. Saturdays at Eagle Harbor Community Church, Bainbridge Island and 5 p.m. Wednesdays at Winslow Arms Retirement Home community room, Bainbridge Island. Info: 206-780-0121. PORT ORCHARD LIONS CLUB: 7 p.m. first and third Thursday of each month, Subway restaurant, 435 SW Sedgwick Road, Suite 105. Open to all. Community service opportunities. Info: 360731-5877. PORT ORCHARD TOASTMASTERS CLUB: 6:30 p.m. first and third Tuesdays, Park Vista, 2944 SE Lund Ave., Port Orchard. Members learn to improve their speaking and leadership skills.

KITSAP WEEKLY CROSSWORD

Crosswords

ANSWERS

Across

10. Railway coach with reserved seats (2 wds)

33. More inexplicable

11. Victorian, for one

34. Representations of Mary mourning Jesus

12. “A jealous mistress”: Emerson

36. Dog command

21. Type of poem, e.g. an ode

37. 1973 triple crown winner

22. “___ moment”

40. Live wire, so to speak

25. Brawl

42. Hungarian

26. Beauty

43. Aimless

27. “... ___ he drove out of sight”

46. Rich soil mixture

30. Always, in verse

47. Bean counter, for short

31. Any thing

50. Childhood disease with red spots

32. Area of South Africa

52. Diamond stat

35. Kind of palm

54. Contiguous

37. “Buona ___” (Italian greeting)

58. Burning

38. Scandinavian shag rug

61. ___ vera

39. Poets’ feet

62. Box office take

40. Beaver’s work

63. Brownish gray

41. “___ to Billie Joe”

64. Absorbed

44. Blossom

65. Sean Connery, for one

45. Big ___ Conference

66. Moth larva that spins tent-like webs

47. Invertebrates’ posterior intestines

67. “Trick” joint

48. Igneous rock formed below the earth’s surface

13. “The Catcher in the ___”

34. Submarine’s viewing device

49. Holdings 51. Utter 53. Anxiety

9. Asparagus unit 14. The America’s Cup trophy, e.g. 15. “Mi chiamano Mimi,” e.g. 16. Dawdle 17. Perlman of “Cheers” 18. Atomizer output 19. Be bombastic 20. Grades five through eight (2 wds)

Reach Your Constituents

29. Curb, with “in”

Down

5. Demoiselle

We’ve Got You Covered

9. Butt of jokes

28. “Malcolm X” director

68. Beach shades

1. “Drat!”

23. Back street

24. Glut

1. Skin-related

55. Brio

2. For some time

56. Catch, in a way

3. Bug

57. Allocate, with “out”

4. Mark

58. Absorbed, as a cost

5. Charades, e.g.

59. Joke

6. Western blue flag, e.g.

60. Big galoot

7. Reduced instruction set computer (acronym) 8. Carpenter’s machine

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People helping pets...pets helping people. Harmony is a 1 yr old sleek all black female who came to us from Ocean Shores with her 6 kittens. She is a very friendly, people oriented girl. She likes to sit on laps and shoulders to watch tv or help with computer work. She was a mostly outdoor cat before but has definitely come to enjoy the perks of indoor life. Harmony is at the Poulsbo Petco this week. 1-888-558-PAWS • www.pawsbink.org

FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015 Visitors welcome. Info: Bill Slach, 360-895-8519. POSTPARTUM SUPPORT GROUP: 6:30 p.m. first and third Tuesdays of the month, at the Chiropractic Lifestyle Center, 991 NE Riddell Road, Bremerton. Kitsap HOPE Circle, open to pregnant and postpartum moms. Non-judgmental, advice-free support and encouragement for adjusting to baby. Info: www.kistaphopecir cle.org. POULSBO NOON LIONS MEETING: Noon Thursdays, First Lutheran Church, 18920 4th Ave., Poulsbo. PULSE RECOVERY GROUP: 6-7 p.m. Thursdays, at Cafe Noir, 3261 Mount Vintage Way, Silverdale. Men’s 12-step biblical-based group. Info: 360-697-3777, of fice@cornerstonealliance.org. PULSE FAITH DISCUSSIONS: 7-8 p.m. Thursdays at Cafe Noir, 3261 Mount Vintage Way, Silverdale. Weekly discussions about faith and culture. Info: 360-697-3777, office@cornerstonealliance.org. QUAKER SILENT WORSHIP: 1011 a.m., Sundays at Seabold Hall, 14450 Komedal Road, Bainbridge Island. Agate Passage Friends Meeting. Info: 206-3174526. REIKI CIRCLE: 6-9 p.m. second and fourth Tuesdays, a private home on Bainbridge Island. Free. New members welcome. New to Reiki? No problem. Attunements and classes available. Info: 206-384-7081. ROTARY CLUB OF EAST BREMERTON: 7:15 a.m. Wednesdays, McCloud’s Grill House, 2901 Perry Ave., No. 13, Bremerton. Info: Patty Murphy, 360-479-6500. ROTARY CLUB OF SILVERDALE: 12:15 p.m., Thursdays, Kitsap Golf & Country Club. Info: Chuck Kraining, 360-471-5385. SILVERDALE SUNRISE LIONS CLUB: Meets 7 a.m. every Tuesday at All Star Lanes in Silverdale. SUPPORT GROUP FOR WOMEN WITH CANCER: Noon to 1:30 p.m. second and fourth Tuesdays, Rolling Bay Presbyterian Church, 11042 Sunrise Drive NE, Bainbridge Island. Info: Karen, karen. carson@comcast.net. TEAM SCARVES: 2-4 p.m. Sept. 1 and 7-8:30 p.m. Sept. 3, Port Orchard Library, 87 Sidney Ave., Port Orchard. Learn to make your own fleece scarf with this fun, no-sew project. Info: www. krl.org or 360-876-2224.

WEST SOUND FREE CLINIC: 5:30-8 p.m. first Fridays at Gateway Church in Poulsbo, 18901 8th Ave.; 4:30-7:30 p.m. second Mondays at St. Vincent de Paul, 1117 N. Callow Ave., Bremerton; 1-4 p.m. fourth Tuesdays at YWCA bottom floor, 905

Pacific Ave., Bremerton; and 1-4 p.m. fourth Thursdays at St. Vincent de Paul, 1117 N. Callow Ave., Bremerton. Free primary medical care, labs, some medicine, etc. The clinic provides medical care to those that have difficulty affording regular care, and does not take medical insurance. Staffed by volunteer licensed medical workers. Info: sy mens@msn.com or drop by. WOMEN’S SUPPORT GROUP: 6-7:30 p.m. second and fourth

Tuesdays, Suquamish. Safe, supportive confidential group that deals with healing from domestic abuse in all forms. Info: bink@ ywcakitsap.org, 206-780-2931.

FITNESS & SPORTS BAINBRIDGE ARCHERY: The Bainbridge Island Sportsmen’s Club Archery Range is open to the public 4-6 p.m. Wednesday, and 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sundays. Rental equipment available, range fee applies. Experienced range officer on site to help. KITSAP ULTIMATE FRISBEE: Weekly pick-up game 10 a.m. to noon Saturdays. See the pick-up section on www.discnw.org. QI GONG AT NELSON PARK: 12:30-1 p.m. Tuesdays at Nelson Park, 317 NW Lindvig Way, Poulsbo. Relax body and mind with Qi Gong. Often using silk-reeling exercises, five-element movements and channel/organ balancing. Info: 360-598-3206 or www.nourishinglifeacupunc ture.com.

KIDS & FAMILY KIDIMU FREE FIRST THURSDAY: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sept. 3, KiDiMu, 301 Ravine Lane NW, Bainbridge Island. Families are invited to explore KiDiMu on free-admission day, sponsored by Wells Fargo. Hands-on exhibits and hart activities. Info: www.kidimu. org or 206-855-4650. BLUE STAR MUSEUMS: Through Sept. 7 at KiDiMu, 301 Ravine Lane NW, Bainbridge Island. KiDiMu invites active-duty military personnel and their families to explore the museum free of charge. Info: www.kidimu.org or 206-855-4650. MINIMU: Sept. 10 and 24 at KiDiMu, 301 Ravine Lane NW, Bainbridge Island. Meet other new parents and babies (birth to 18 months). Share experiences, play and learn from one another. $7 for non-members, free for members. Baby sign language practice on Sept. 24. Info: www. kidimu.org or 206-855-4650. LEGO CLUB: 4:30-5:30 p.m. at the Port Orchard Library. Dig into our massive Lego collection to make original Lego creations with a show and tell afterward. Members are also welcome to bring creations from home to show and tell. For children in grades K-6. MESSY MONDAY: 10:30-11:30 Mondays through September at KiDiMu, 301 Ravine Lane NW, Bainbridge Island. Messy experimentation and sensory exploration encouraged. Free with admission or membership. Info: www.kidimu.org or 206855-4650. TUESDAY TUNES: Tuesdays in September at KiDiMu, 301 Ravine Lane NW, Bainbridge Island. Join local musician David Webb for a guitar sing-along and enjoy favorite American folk hits for kids. Info: www.kidimu.org or 206-855-4650. MATH WEDNESDAY: 10:30-11:30 a.m. Wednesdays through September at KiDiMu, 301 Ravine See CALENDAR, Page 7


KITSAPWEEKLY

FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015

Artist Susan Walker presents a painting demo 12:30 p.m. Sept. 5 at Bainbridge Arts and Crafts, 151 Winslow Way, Bainbridge Island. No registration necessary. Info: www. bacart.org or 206842-3132.

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Continued from page 6 Lane NW, Bainbridge Island. Practice critical-thinking skills while having fun. Free with admission or membership. Info: www.kidimu.org or 206-8554650. ABC THURSDAY: 10:30 a.m. some Thursdays at KiDiMu, 301 Ravine Lane NW, Bainbridge Island. Practice early literacy skills with senses, movement and games. Free with admission or membership. Info: 206-855-4650 or kidimu.org. SCIENCE SATURDAYS AT THE NAVAL UNDERSEA MUSEUM: 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. first Saturdays of the month at the Naval Undersea Museum, Keyport. Take a closer look at all things science with hands-on activities and demonstrations that change monthly. www. nvalunderseasmuseum.org. BAINBRIDGE LIBRARY STORY TIMES: Toddlers, 10:30 a.m. Mondays. Babies, Tuesdays, preschool, Wednesdays. Free. 1270 Madison Ave., Bainbridge Island. 206-842-4162, www.krl.org. PRESCHOOL STORYTIME: 10:30 a.m. Wednesdays, Bainbridge Public Library. Join the children’s librarian for stories, rhymes and early literacy activities. Recommended for children ages 3-6. Info: www.krl.org. STORYTIME FOR LITTLE ONES: 10:30 a.m. Tuesdays, Manchester Library, 8067 E. Main St., Port Orchard. Share stories, rhymes, songs and fun. Stay for music and crafts. Info: 360-871-3921, www.krl.org. TODDLER STORYTIME: 10:30 a.m. Mondays, Bainbridge Public Library. Get a jump start on reading at this early literacy storytime geared just for toddlers, age 18 months to 3 years. Info: 206-8424162 or www.krl.org.

TEENS TEEN WRITERS GROUP: 3:30-5 p.m. Sept. 10 and 17, Bainbridge Public Library, 1270 Madison Ave., Bainbridge Island. Bring laptops or notebooks and join other teens to meet up and write in this informal setting. Grades 7-12 only. Info: www.krl.org or 206-842-4162.

FARMERS MARKETS BAINBRIDGE FARMERS MARKET: 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturdays through Nov. 14, at the Town Square

at City Hall, 280 Madison Ave. Farmers, ready-to-eat food, crafters, local food processors and live music. Info: www.bain bridgefarmersmarket.com. BREMERTON FARMERS MARKET: 4-7 p.m. Thursdays at Evergreen Park, 1400 Park Ave.; 10:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Sundays at the ferry terminal, Washington Avenue and First Street. Through Oct. 15. Info: www.bremertonmarket. wordpress.com. KINGSTON FARMERS MARKET: 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., through October at 25931 Central Ave. near the ferry terminal. Info: email info@ kingstonfarmersmarket.com, www.kingstonfarmersmarket. com, or Facebook. PORT ORCHARD FARMERS MARKET: 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturdays through October on the waterfront at Marina Park. Info: www. pofarmersmarket.org. POULSBO FARMERS MARKET: 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturdays to Dec. 10, on the corner of 7th Avenue and Iverson Street. Info: www. poulsbofarmersmarket.org. RAVENWOOD MARKET: 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Fridays through Sept. 11, by the Gliding Eagle Market Place in Little Boston. SILVERDALE FARMERS MARKET: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Tuesdays, through September in the Old Navy/Best Buy parking lot. Info: www.silver dalefarmersmarket.com SUQUAMISH FARMERS MARKET: 3-7 p.m. Wednesdays next to the Masi Shop on Highway 305, Suquamish. Info: www.suqua mishfarmers market.org or info@ suquamishfarmersmarket.org. KITSAP FRESH ONLINE MARKET: Access Kitsap Fresh’s online market/coop at kitsapfresh.org on Sundays and Mondays. Kitsap Fresh is an online farmers market dedicated to Kitsap-grown food and crafts, distributing all year. Distribution is 2:30-6:30 Wednesdays at Slippery Pig, Poulsbo.

ARTS TALES OF OLD PARIS: 9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Aug. 1-29, Almost Candid Frame & Fine Arts, 10978 NE SR 104, Suite 109, Kingston. Featuring elegant, retrospective, European-style art of Max Hayslette. Info: almostcandid@me.com or 360-297-1347. ARTIST RECEPTION: 6-8 p.m. Sept. 4, Bainbridge Arts & Crafts, 151 Winslow Way, Bainbridge Island. First Friday artist reception. Info: www.bacart.org or 206-8423132.

ART ON THE STREET: 2-5 p.m. Sept. 5, downtown Port Orchard. Port Orchard Bay Street Association sponsors art on the street, featuring local artists and musicians. Info: www.krl.org or 360-876-2224. AGRICULTURE AND WILDLIFE: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, Bainbridge Performing Arts, 200 Madison Ave., Bainbridge Island. Month-long gallery exhibit featuring “Agriculture and Wildlife of the Pacific Northwest,” by Matt Schmidt. Pen and ink and acrylic on wood art reflecting the region’s natural history. Free. Info: www. bainbridgeperformingarts.org or 206-842-8569. PAINTING DEMO: 12:30 p.m. Sept. 5, Bainbridge Arts & Crafts, 151 Winslow Way, Bainbridge Island. Lively painting demonstration with one of the September featured artists, Susan Walker. $200, $190 for members, $180 for students. Register at the gallery or call 206-842-3132. Info: www. bacart.org. FRIENDS OF THE LIBRARY BOOK SALE: 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sept. 6, Port Orchard Library, 87 Sidney Ave., Port Orchard. Giant book sale on the library’s front lawn during the Taste of Port Orchard. Info: www.krl.org or 360-8762224.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26TH

SEPTEMBER 11TH & 12TH Tickets $20 Reserved | $15 GA Show 8:00 PM

Get your tickets today

CATCH THE HAWKS GAMES HERE See it on our 19 foot big screen

See CALENDAR, Page 8

Tickets $10 advance & $15 day of show Doors 7:00 PM | Show 8:00 PM Get your tickets today

SUMMER IS GRAND You could win

$50,000

LITERARY ART BOOK DRIVE: Bainbridge Arts and Crafts seeks books to help build up the Bainbridge Library’s collection of art, architecture and design. Drop books off at 151 Winslow Way, during business hours. BOOK SALE IN BREMERTON: Noon to 4 p.m. every Tuesday and Thursday at the Downtown Bremerton Library, 612 Fifth St., Bremerton. Money from sales helps support library community programs. Book donations are accepted at the library during regular hours of operation. Info: 360-377-3955, www.krl.org. BOOKS ON TAP: 7-8:30 p.m. Sept. 1, Whiskey Gulch, 2065 Bay St., Port Orchard. Tap into your inner genius, and dazzle with your encyclopedic knowledge of book and movie trivia. Stop by Port Orchard Library for a book and movie list. Info: www.krl.org or 360-876-2224. FERRY TALES BOOK GROUP: 3:50 p.m. Bainbridge Island to Seattle ferry; and 4:40 p.m. Seattle to

A tribute to Boston & Styx with David Victor of Boston

GRAND PRIZE

Saturday, August 29th 7:00 PM - 10:00 PM

See the Wildcard Club for details

| Full entertainment schedule online

Kingston, WA • www.the-point-casino.com • 1.866.547.6468 Tickets available now at these locations: In the gift shop | On our website For more information Call 866.547.6468 | Ages 21 and over The Point Casino is proudly owned and operated by The Port Gamble S’Klallam Tribe. See the Wildcard Players Club for complete details. You must be a member of The Point Casino’s Wildcard Players Club to participate in some programs. Some restrictions may apply. Point Casino promotions, offers, coupons and/or specials may not be combined without marketing management approval. Management reserves all rights to alter or cancel without prior notice. You must be at least 21 years old to participate in gaming activities, to attend entertainment events and to enter lounge/bar areas. Knowing your limit is your best bet—get help at (800) 547-6133.

TPC-5507-4 Kitsap_week.indd 1

8/25/15 3:26 PM


KITSAPWEEKLY

ISLA BONITA: 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Fridays, 316 Winslow Way, Bainbridge Island. Host: Eon Smith.

KIRTAN: 7:30 p.m. first Thursdays, Grace Church, 8595 NE Day Road, Bainbridge Island. Kirtan is musical yoga, a practice of singing the names of the divine in call-and-response form. Info: 206-842-9997, email grace@ gracehere.org. KITSAP KICKERS LINE DANCING CLUB: 6 p.m. Fridays, 5 p.m. Sundays at Jackson Memorial Hall, 1961 Washington St., Silverdale. For beginners. $2 donation per night. Non-smoking, non-drinking family club. Info: 360-2779159.

KITSAP PINES CHORUS MEETING: 6:30-9 p.m. Thursdays at Christ the Rock Community Church, 4100 SW Old Clifton Road, Port Orchard. Part of Sweet Adelines International, a group of women singers, a capella, barbershop style. Info: 360-710-8538, www. kitsappines.org.

FIRST FRIDAY ART WALK: 5-8 p.m. each first Friday, along Fourth

THEATER “WIZARD OF OZ”: 5 p.m. Aug. 30 and 3 p.m. Sept. 6, at WWCA, 521 Bay St., Port Orchard. Info: www.wwca.us. EDGE IMPROV: 7:30 p.m. Saturdays, Bainbridge Perform-

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Harbors Home Health & Hospice is an equal opportunity employer.

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Email resume to: Melissa@myhhhh.org Or mail to: HR Dept., Harbors Home Health & Hospice, 201 7th St., Hoquiam, WA 98550.

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Email resume to: Melissa@myhhhh.org Or mail to: HR Dept., Harbors Home Health & Hospice, 201 7th St., Hoquiam, WA 98550.

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on the beautiful scenic coast of Washington State!

Harbors Home Health & Hospice has been a part of the Pacific Northwest for over 30 years!

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Harbors Home Health & Hospice is an equal opportunity employer.

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Harbors Home Health & Hospice, a leading agency committed to providing Grays Harbor with a variety of in-home healthcare services, is currently seeking full-time Registered Nurses. Harbors offers competitive salaries with a great benefits package. Individuals will be responsible for working with a team of health care providers in the coordination of skilled nursing care in a home setting. Come join the leading team! Home Health, hospice, acute care, and/or skilled nursing facility experience preferred. Requires current Registered Nursing license, driver's license, auto insurance and reliable transportation.

Position requires an Oasis certification, as well as, experience with Medicare/Medicaid and private insurance regulations. Harbors offers competitive salaries with an excellent benefits package.

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Harbors Home Health & Hospice is currently seeking a UR Nurse for its clinical team. This position is responsible for reviewing patient documentation to ensure compliance with state and federal Home Health and Hospice guidelines. Responsible for ensuring appropriate ICD-9 and ICD-10 coding and sequencing while working directly with clinical staff to clarify documentation and data integrity, as well as, the integrity and consistency of OASIS documentation.

Sudoku

KITSAP WEEKLY SUDOKU

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on the beautiful scenic coast of Washington State!

ISLAND FILM GROUP: 7-9 p.m. Sept. 9, Bainbridge Public Library, 1270 Madison Ave. This month’s movie is “Lost in America,” rated R. Info: www.krl.org or 206-842-4162.

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Utilization Review RN

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ing Arts, 200 Madison Ave., Bainbridge Island. Improvised comedy. $16 for adults, $12 for seniors, students, youth, military and teachers. Info: www. bainbridgeperformingarts.org or 206-842-8569.

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Work as a

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BREMERTON’S FIRST FRIDAY

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MUSIC & DANCE BREMERTON SYMPHONY CHORALE AUDITIONS: 6 p.m. Sept. 8,

Olympic College Music Building, Bremerton. To schedule an audition time, call 360-373-1722 or email kalbright@bremerton symphony.org. BREMERTON ORCHESTRA AUDITIONS: 6-7:30 p.m. Sept. 8, 532 Fifth St., Bremerton. Openings for clarinet, French horn, percussion and strings. Schedule an audition: 360-536-2038 or gdahl@ bremertonsymphony.org. BLUEWATER GALLERY LIVE MUSIC: Live music 2-4 p.m. Saturdays., 5-8 p.m. during Poulsbo’s Second Saturday Art Walk. 18961 Front St., Poulsbo. 360-598-2583.

RANGER & THE RE-ARRANGERS: 6 p.m. Sept. 17, Silverdale Antiques, 9490 Silverdale Way.

DOWNPOUR BREWING: 5-8 p.m. Thursdays, at Downpour Brewing, 10991 Highway 104, Kingston. Patrons can bring any food or non-alcoholic drink they like. All ages welcome.

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Bainbridge Island ferry, Sept. 10. Join the discussion for the monthly title. www.krl.org or 206-842-4162. SILVERDALE WRITERS’ ROUNDTABLE: 9:30 a.m. Saturdays, Cafe Noir, 3261 NW Mount Vintage Way, No. 101, Silverdale. Looking for writers. 360-830-4968.

ACOUSTIC JAM AT SLIPPERY PIG: 6-9 p.m. Tuesdays at the Slippery Pig Brewery, 18801 Front St., Poulsbo. For all ages, instruments and experience. A digital keyboard is available.

COOKIES CLUBHOUSE: 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. every night, except 10:30 p.m. to 1 a.m. Wednesdays, Cookies Clubhouse, 332 S. National Ave., Bremerton. Info: janicez123@hotmail.com or 505412-9662. MANETTE SALOON: Thursdays at the Manette Saloon, 2113 E. 11th St., Bremerton. Amy O hosts.

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JAM SESSIONS

KARAOKE

COOKIES CLUBHOUSE: 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. every night except Wednesdays, 10:30 p.m. to 1 a.m. Wednesdays at Cookies Clubhouse, 332 S. National Ave., Bremerton. cookiesclubhouse@ gmail.com or 360-373-5643.

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Calendar

SLIPPERY PIG WEEKLY IRISH MUSIC: 7-9 p.m. Wednesdays, at the Slippery Pig Brewery, 18801 Front St. NE, Poulsbo. A circle of musicians play Irish music.

MARK LEWIS AT CASA MEXICO: 6-9 p.m. Fridays, Casa Mexico, 1918 NE Poulsbo Ave., Keyport. Internationally acclaimed saxophone and flute master Mark Lewis performs almost every Friday, with a different guest pianist each week. Aug. 28: Trent Leurquin bass, Steve Nowak guitar, special guest Lonnie Williams. Sept. 4: John Stowell, guitar. Sept. 11: David Friesen, bass. Sept. 25: Milo Petersen, guitar. Rhonda Stewart, 360-692-2540 or rhonda@marklewismusic.com.

MANETTE SALOON: Wednesdays at Manette Saloon, 2113 E. 11th St., Bremerton. Jack Parker hosts.

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PAYDAY DADDY: Here’s Payday Daddy’s schedule. Aug. 28: 8 p.m. to midnight, Blue Goose,

IRISH MUSIC

JAZZ

REDSHIFT: The last Sunday of the month at The Treehouse Cafe, 4569 Lynwood Center Road, Bainbridge Island. An evening of original music, jazz standards and unexpected arrangements..

THE GREEN MUSE: 8-10 p.m. Tuesdays, Pegasus Coffee House, 131 Parfitt Way, Bainbridge Island. Ethan J. Perry hosts a music, spoken word and poetry open mic night. All ages welcome.

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ROCK AND BLUES BANDS: 9 p.m. to 1 a.m., Fridays and Saturdays, at Sheila’s Portside Pub, 18779 Front St., Poulsbo. A different rock and blues band every week. Check Sheila’s Portside Pub Facebook page for more information.

DJ DUFF AT THE POINT CASINO: Late nights on Fridays, after live music, in the Boom Room at The Point Casino, 7989 NE Salish Lane, Kingston.

SIMCO NEWTON TURNER TRIO: Second and fourth Fridays of the month at the Suzanne Maurice Wine Bar at Pleasant Beach Marketplace, Bainbridge Island.

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BLUES AND ROCK

DJ JOE FRANK AT OZZIE’S PLACE: At All Star Lanes, 10710 Silverdale Way, Silverdale. No cover.

OPEN MIC

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SLIPPERY PIG BLUES AND BEERS: 7-10 p.m. Thursdays at the Slippery Pig Brewery, 18801 Front St. NE, Poulsbo.

BISCUITS & GRAVY JAM: 6:30-10 p.m. Thursdays, Pegasus Coffee House, 131 Parfitt Way, Bainbridge Island. Ethan J. Perry hosts a session in the round. Free, open to all musicians.

ARENA SPORTS BAR: 6-8:30 p.m. Tuesdays, at Arena Sports Bar and Grille, 4111 Wheaton Way, Bremerton. Free to play. Hosted by trivia jockey JonBoy. Prizes from local businesses each week. TRIVIA TIME LIVE: Pub trivia at multiple venues across Kitsap. Sundays: 6:30 p.m. Cookie’s Clubhouse, Bremerton. 7 p.m. Hare & Hounds, Poulsbo. Mondays: 7 p.m. at Whiskey Creek Steakhouse, Keyport, Slippery Pig Brewery, Poulsbo, and Westside Pizza, Bainbridge Island. Tuesdays: 6:30 p.m. Ghostfish Brewing Company, Seattle. 7:30 p.m. Alehouse on Winslow, Bainbridge. 7:30 p.m. Tizley’s Europub, Poulsbo. 7 p.m., Slaughter County Brewery, Port Orchard. Wednesdays: 7 p.m. Silverdale Beach Hotel, Silverdale. 7 p.m., The Plate & Pint, Bainbridge Island. 7 p.m. Bella Luna Pizzeria, Suquamish. Thursdays: 7 p.m. Bainbridge Island Brewing, Bainbridge Island. 7 p.m. Casa Mexico, Keyport. Fridays: 7 p.m. Envy Bar & Grill, Poulsbo. Info: www.triviatimelive.com.

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GUITARIST/VOCALIST TERRY ENYEART: 7 p.m. first Wednesday of each month, at Whiskey Creek Steakhouse, 1783 Highway 308 NE, Keyport.

DJs

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BLUES/BLUEGRASS

MUSIC TO OUR BEERS JAM: 7-9 p.m. Wednesdays, Bainbridge Island Brewery, 9415 Coppertop Loop NE. Open jam night hosted by Ethan J. Perry & His Remedy Band.

SLIPPERY PIG: 7-10 p.m. Fridays, at the Slippery Pig Brewery, 18801 Front St. NE, Poulsbo.

DIXIELAND JAZZ: 5-9 p.m. first Tuesdays, McCloud’s Grill House, 2901 Perry Ave., Bremerton. Next jazz performance Aug. 4. Bourbon Street All Stars. Info: 360-373-3093.

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GARY WALKER AND FRIENDS: 5-7 p.m. every Saturday, at Suzanne Maurice Wine Bar at Pleasant Beach Marketplace, Bainbridge Island. Acoustic rock songs from the 1970s to the present. Free.

Port Orchard. Aug. 29: 6-9 p.m. Brownsville Marina Deli, Bremerton. Sept. 7: 3:30-5 p.m., Blackberry Festival, Bremerton boardwalk. Info: www.payday daddyband.com.

Street and Pacific Avenue in Downtown Bremerton. Shops and galleries open late. Live music.

Generated by http://www.opensky.ca/~jdhildeb/software/sudokugen/ on Thu Jun 25 18:51:23 2009 GMT. Enjoy!

ACOUSTIC ROCK

MANCHESTER PUB: 9 p.m. Fridays, at the Manchester Pub, 2350 Colchester Drive E, Port Orchard.

Ranger & the Re-Arrangers will celebrate their 30th anniversary with a free Gypsy Jazz music concert. Info: 360-692-2462.

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KITSAPWEEKLY

FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015

Chelan’s wineries hit hard by fires NW WINES W ildfires are seemingly affecting every corner of the Pacific Northwest. One of the hardest-hit areas has been Washington’s Lake Chelan. A lightning storm the morning of Aug. 14 caused several fires to erupt, destroying thousands of acres of forest, burning dozens of buildings, sending residents fleeing and keeping visitors away

By ANDY PERDUE and ERIC DEGERMAN

during a crucial period in Lake Chelan’s tourist season. One small winery, Ventimiglia Cellars, was destroyed the evening of Aug. 14, just hours after owner Ron Ventimiglia was forced to evacuate. He got out with two cases of

wine and some computers. He plans to rebuild and already is making arrangements to crush grapes this fall at an alternative location. July and August are the most important months for Lake Chelan, which relies heavily on tourism dollars. And that goes for most of the wineries in the region, which sell nearly all of their wines directly to visitors. The region is crafting delicious wines, among them gold-medal winners at this summer’s North Central Washington Wine Awards. Once the smoke clears, head to Lake Chelan to try these wines, or give

PAGE 9

them a call and order a few bottles. You’ll help the wine region’s fire-ravaged economy, and you’ll enjoy some great wine. n Legend Cellars NV Vincitore, Columbia Valley, $30: Using Cabernet Franc, this winery on the north shore of Lake Chelan has crafted an unusual treat: an offdry vermouth. It opens with huge aromas of dark chocolate and coffee, followed by flavors of dark cherry. It’s beautifully balanced with ample acidity and almost no alcohol showing up in the finish. Vermouth is a rare concoction in the Pacific Northwest, so this is a delicious discovery. (18.2

Kitsap’s Dining & Night Life Guide

percent alcohol) n Tsillan Cellars 2014

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Central Kitsap Reporter 360-308-9161

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Port Orchard Independent 360-876-4414

8-28-15


KITSAPWEEKLY

PAGE 10

Chelan

Continued from page 9 Estate Nudo Unoaked Chardonnay, Lake Chelan, $18: More and more Chardonnays are being crafted tree-free as consumers are enjoying the bright fruit of the grape without restraints. Aromas and flavors of apple, lemon-lime, peach and tropical fruit are backed by bright acidity that leads to a delicious finish. (13.7 percent alcohol) â– Tunnel Hill Winery 2013 Syrah, Lake Chelan, $30: Award-

winning documentary filmmaker Guy Evans is also pretty handy with winemaking along the south shore of Lake Chelan. This gorgeous Syrah reveals aromas and flavors of ripe dark berry, black pepper and floral notes. The fruit, acidity and tannin are beautifully integrated and give way to milk chocolate on the finish. (15.9 percent alcohol) â– Cairdeas Winery 2012 Counoise, Yakima Valley, $36: This fast-rising winery on the north shore of Lake Chelan brought in this rare red variety from the Yakima Valley and has

An Aug. 14 wildfire destroyed Ventimiglia Cellars. All the wineries around Lake Chelan rely heavily on tourism dollars in July and August. Ron Ventimiglia / Contributed

crafted a luscious red with aromas and flavors of Marionberry, blackberry jam, baked brownie and rich, opulent tannins. (14

Pleasant Harbor Marina Resort

percent alcohol) ■Rio Vista Wines 2013 Malbec, Columbia Valley, $32: Owner/ winemaker John Little earned best of show at last year’s North Central Washington Wine Awards, and he follows up that success with this delicious Malbec. The nose is loaded with aromas of raspberry, florals and vanilla,

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FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015 giving way to flavors of ripe berry jam, buttered toast and dried herbs. It’s all backed with refreshing acidity. (14.5 percent alcohol) ■Benson Vineyards Estate Winery 2012 Cabriovese, Lake Chelan, $34: This showpiece winery and vineyard on the north shore of Lake Chelan near Manson has crafted a delicious Super Tuscan-style blend of Cabernet Sauvignon and Sangiovese. The resulting wine reveals aromas and flavors of bayberry, pomegranate, complex spices and mouthwatering acidity, all backed by bright,

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food-friendly acidity and beautiful tannins. (13.9 percent alcohol) ■Vin du Lac Winery 2013 Lehm Riesling, Lake Chelan, $23: Longtime Lake Chelan winemaker Larry Lehmbecker has crafted a delicious Riesling with aromas of baked apple drizzled with honey followed by flavors of white pepper, lime and Golden Delicious apple. Pair this with baked chicken or Thai cuisine. (13.6 percent alcohol) — Eric Degerman and Andy Perdue, Great Northwest Wine, www. greatnorthwestwine.com.

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KITSAPWEEKLY

FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015

PAGE 11

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HARVEY R. GUEVARA; RENE F. CHERRY; INHERITANCE FUNDING COMPANY, INC. AS ASSIGNEE OF INTEREST FROM HEIR CINNAMON DANIELS-UNDER AGREEMENT DATED 1/23/2012 AND FILED I N K I T S A P C O U N T Y; BAYSHORE WEST ASSOCIATION OF OWNERS; STATE OF WASHINGTON; UNITED STATES OF AMERICA; OCCUPANTS OF THE PREMISES, Defendants. NO. 14-2-01195-6 SHERIFF’S PUBLIC NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL PROPERTY TO: LESLIE DANIELS; CINNAMON DANIELS; HARVEY R. GUEVARA; RENE F. CHERRY; INHERITANCE FUNDING COMPANY, INC. as assignee of interest from heir CINNAMON DANIELS under agreement dated 1/23/2012 and filed in Kitsap County; BAYSHORE WEST ASSOCIATION OF OWNERS; State of Washington; United States of America; Occupants of the Premises; and any persons or parties claiming to have any right, title, estate, lien or interest in the real property described in the complaint, Judgment Debtor(s) The Superior Court of Kitsap County has directed the undersigned Sheriff of Kitsap County to sell the property described below to satisfy a judgment in the above-entitled action. Legal Description: UNIT 50, BUILDING E OF BAYSHORE WEST CONDOMINIUM, RECORDED IN VOLUME 1 OF COND O M I N I U M P L AT S , PAGES 26 THROUGH 30. INCLUSIVE, UNDER AUDITOR’S FILE NO.7706290139 AND AMENDED UNDER AUDITOR’S FILE NOS. 7707210096 AND 781020146, 8609240150, 8706300149 AND 8908010208, RECORDS OF KITSAP COUNTY, WASHINGTON. Post Office Address: 924 Shorewood Drive, #50, Bremerton, WA 98312; Assessor’s Property Tax Parcel or Account Numb e r : 8005-005-050-0006.

The sale of the above described property is to take place: Time: 9:00 am Date: Friday, October 2, 2015 Place: Main Entrance, Kitsap County Courthouse 614 Division Street, Port Orchard, WA The judgment debtor can avoid the sale by paying the judgment amount of $184,919.02, together with interest, costs and fees, before the sale date. For the exact amount, contact the Kitsap County Sheriff’s Office at the address stated below: GARY SIMPSON, SHERIFF Kitsap County, Washington By: David White Chief of Investigations and Support Services Kitsap County Sheriff’s Office 614 Division Street Port Orchard, WA 98366-4688 Phone: 360-337-7104 Attorney for Plaintiff: RCO LEGAL, P.S. Synova M. L. Edwards, Attorney 13555 SE 36th St., Ste 300 Bellevue, WA 98006 425-458-2121 Date of first publication: 08/28/15 Date of last publication: 09/18/15 (KCD653650)

v. LESLIE DANIELS; CINNAMON DANIELS; HARVEY R. GUEVARA; RENE F. C H E R RY; I N H E R I TANCE FUNDING COMPANY, INC. AS ASSIGNEE OF INTEREST FROM HEIR CINNAMON DANIELS-UNDER AGREEMENT DATED 1/23/2012 AND FILED I N K I T S A P C O U N T Y; BAYSHORE WEST ASSOCIATION OF OWNERS; STATE OF WASHINGTON; UNITED STATES OF AMERICA; OCCUPANTS OF THE PREMISES, Defendants. No. 14-2-01195-6 WRIT FOR ORDER OF SALE (ZERO MONTH REDEMPTION PERIOD) A WRIT FOR ORDER OF SALE HAS BEEN ISSUED IN THE ABOVE CAPTIONED CASE, DIRECTED TO THE SHERIFF OF KITSAP COUNTY, COMMANDING THE SHERIFF AS FOLLOWS, WHEREAS, FROM: THE KITSAP COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT CLERK’S OFFICE TO: THE SHERIFF OF KITSAP COUNTY, WASHINGTON On June 1, 2015, an in rem Judgment and Decree of Foreclosure after stipulation (“Judgment”) was entered in favor of Nationstar Mortgage LLC d/b/a Champion Mortgage Company (“Plaintiff”) against Defendants Rene F. Cherry and Bayshore West Association of Owners; and in rem Judgment and Decree of Foreclosure after Default was entered against Cinnamon Daniels; Harvey R. Guevara; Inheritance Funding Company, Inc. as assignee of interest from heir Cinnamon Daniels under agreement dated 1/23/2012 and filed in Kitsap County; State of Washington; United States of America; Occupants of the Premises; and any persons or parties claiming to have any right, title, estate, lien or interest in the real property described in the complaint. The Judgment forecloses the interests of all the Defendants in and to the following described property (“Property”) commonly known as 924 Shorewood Drive, #50,

Bremerton, WA 98312 for the total sum of $230,381.63 with interest thereon at the rate of 12.00% per annum beginning on June 1, 2015 until satisfied. The Property situated in KITSAP County, State of Washington, is legally described as: UNIT 50, BUILDING E OF BAYSHORE WEST CONDOMINIUM, RECORDED IN VOLUME 1 OF CONDOMINIUM P L AT S , PA G E S 2 6 THROUGH 30. INCLUSIVE, UNDER AUDITOR’S FILE NO.7706290139 AND AMENDED UNDER AUDITOR’S FILE NOS. 7707210096 AND 781020146, 8609240150, 8706300149 AND 8908010208, RECORDS OF KITSAP COUNTY, WASHINGTON. THEREFORE, pursuant to RCW 61.12.060, and in the name of the State of Washington, you are hereby commanded to sell the Property, or so much thereof as may be necessary, in order to satisfy the Judgment, including post-judgment interest and costs. MAKE RETURN HEREOF within sixty days of the date indicated below, showing you have executed the same. Pursuant to RCW 6.21.050(2), the Sheriff may adjourn the foreclosure sale from time to time, not exceeding thirty days beyond the last date at which this Writ is made returnable, with the consent of the plaintiff endorsed upon this Writ or by a contemporaneous writing. WITNESS, the Honorable WILLIAM C. HOUSER Judge of the Superior Court and the seal of said Court, affixed this 7 day of July, 2015, at Port Orchard, Washington. By: DAVID W. PETERSON Superior Court Clerk By: SUZANNE ANDERSON Deputy Clerk Presented by: RCO LEGAL, P.S. By: SYNOVA M L EDWARDS []Laura Coughlin, WSBA #46124 [X]Synova M. L. Edwards, WSBA #43063 []Eric D. Acuario, WSBA #47852

Attorneys for Plaintiff THIS WRIT SHALL BE AUTOMATICALLY EXTENDED FOR 30 DAYS FOR THE PURPOSES OF SALE. THE SALE DATE HAS BEEN SET FOR FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2015 AT 9 : 0 0 A . M . , AT T H E MAIN ENTRANCE, KITSAP COUNTY COURTHOUSE, PORT ORCHARD, WASHINGTON. Y O U M AY H AV E A RIGHT TO EXEMPT PROPERTY FROM THE S A L E U N D E R S TATUTES OF THIS STATE, INCLUDING SECTIONS 6.13.010, 6.13.030, 6.13.040, 6.15.010 AND 6.15.060 OF THE REVISED CODE OF WASHINGTON, IN THE MANNER DESCRIBED IN THOSE STATUTES. GARY SIMPSON, SHERIFF By: DAVE WHITE Chief of Investigations and Support Services Date of first publication: 08/28/15 Date of last publication: 10/02/15 (KCD653656)

Real Estate Auction Nominal Opening Bid: $10,000 7515 E Van Buren Ave, Port Orchard 3BR 2.5BA 1,916sf+/Auctions: 5:15PM Wed., Aug. 19 1300 Terrace Ct NE, East Wenatchee 3BR 2BA 1,425sf+/Auctions: 9AM Thu., Aug. 20 Open: 1-4pm Sun Aug 9 and 2 hrs before auction. Visit williamsauction.com or call 800.982.0425 Bid live from anywhere at auctionnetwork.com Philip R. Heiliger Re Lic 24486 Scott Samuel Musser Auc Lic 2175 Buyer’s Premium May Apply! Real Estate for Sale Lots/Acreage

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IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON FOR KITSAP COUNTY N AT I O N S TA R M O RTGAGE LLC D/B/A CHAMPION MORTGAGE COMKPANY, its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff, v. LESLIE DANIELS; CINNAMON DANIELS;

TO: LESLIE DANIELS; CINNAMON DANIELS; HARVEY R. GUEVARA; RENE F. CHERRY; INHERITANCE FUNDING COMPANY, INC. as assignee of interest from heir CINNAMON DANIELS under agreement dated 1/23/2012 and filed in Kitsap County; BAYSHORE WEST ASSOCIATION OF OWNERS; State of Washington; United States of America; occupants of the premises; and any persons or parties claiming to have any right, title, estate, lien or interest in the real property described in the complaint, JUDGMENT DEBTORS SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF KITSAP N AT I O N S TA R M O RTGAGE LLC D/B/A CHAMPION MORTGAGE COMPANY, its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff,

Employment General

Employment General

EDITOR Sound Publishing has an immediate opening for Editor of the Journal of the San Juans in the beautiful San Juan Isl a n d s o f Wa s h i n g t o n state. This is not an entry-level position. Requires a hands-on leader with a minimum of three years newspaper experience including writing, editing, pagination, photography, and InDesign skills. editing and monitoring social media including Twitter, FaceBook, etc. We offer a competitive compensation and benefits package including health insurance, paid time off (vacation, sick, and holidays), and 401K (currently with an employer match.) If you are interested, please email your cover letter, r e s u m e, a n d u p t o 5 samples of your work to: hr@soundpublishing.com Please be sure to note: AT T N : E D J S J i n t h e subject line. Sound Publishing is an Equal Opportunity Employer (EOE) and strongly supports diversity in the wor kplace. Check out our website to find out more about us! www.soundpublishing.com Every moment is an opportunity for an extraordinary experience OPENINGS FOR: **************************

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KITSAPWEEKLY

PAGE 12

Expand your market, advertise in the Classifieds today

Employment General

Experienced Inside Sales Consultant Be a part of the largest community news organization in Washington! Sound Publishing, Inc. is looking for a selfmotivated, results driven person interested in a career in multi-media sales. In this exciting role you will leverage your drive and creativity to develop, customize, and sell marketing programs to local businesses and private party adver tisers. Qualified candidate will be able to: Sell advertising to meet and exceed goals; Make sales presentations and c l o s e s a l e s ove r t h e phone and through use of email; Prioritize work flow and thrive in a fastpaced environment with multiple deadlines. Media experience a plus but not required. If you have the noted skills, please email your resume and cover letter to: hr@sound publishing.com Attn: KCDSALES This position, based in Poulsbo, receives hourly pay plus commissions and a benefits package. Sound Publishing Inc. is an Equal Oppor tunity E m p l oye r ( E O E ) a n d strongly supports diversity in the wor kplace. Visit our website to learn more about us! www.soundpublishing.com Classifieds. We’ve got you covered. 800-388-2527

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MOVING SALE; Quality i t e m s. Wo o d e n g u e s t chair with needle point $50. Round mirror with wood frame $50. 360779-3146. PA P E R S H R E D D E R Fellowes Power Shredder P11C, brand new in box, never used $65. GAS WEED WACKER Home Lite 17” gas straight trimmer, brand new in box, never used $85. 253-857-0539 PORTER CABLE electr ic saw $25. Yamaha Keyboard $25. Outdoor pet feeder $25. 360-2657246. S E I KO QUA RT Z D I VER’S WATCH - excellent shape, comes with two bands. 200 meter depthe range. Instant day / d a t e H a r d i ex C r y s t a l $140 obo. 253-857-0539 WATER SKI/LIFE PRESERVER VESTS: Two Cut-n-Jump water ski vests, sizes 32-36 and 42-44, yellow, $15 each or OBO. (360) 697-1816.

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VIN#KNDJT2A14B7309320

VIN#1FTDX1863VKA05278

$7,988

2013 NISSAN LEAF 4DR STOCK #H1601013

VIN#1N4A0C94DC423404

2008 NISSAN ALTIMA 4DR STOCK #PV4317E

STOCK #PV4392

VIN #1N4AL21E48N455780

$10,988

$10,999

2012 HYUNDAI VELOSTER 3DR CPE WAS $14,999

2013 DODGE DART WAS $17,999 STOCK #H15156A

(ACTUAL CAR NOT PICTURED)

STOCK#H15192A VIN#KMHTC6AD8CU018263

$13,988

$15,988

2012 TOYOTA CAMRY WAS $18,999

2012 HYUNDAI ELANTRA GT STOCK #PV4421

2014 HYUNDAI TUCSON AWD WAS $27,999

$12,988

STOCK #H15178D VIN #4T4BF1FK9CR161256

VIN #KMHD35LE6DU025198

$16,988 2012 AUDI A3 4DR WAS $26,999

STOCK #PV4374 VIN #5XYZGDA8XCG100163

$24,998

VIN#1C3CDFBA1DD329691

STOCK #PV4287A VIN #KM8JUCAG7EU791127

(ACTUAL CAR NOT PICTURED)

$16,988

$23,988

2014 VOLKSWAGEN CC R-LINE WAS: $29,999

2015 AUDI A4 2.0T PREMIUM WAS $37,999

$26,799

$34,987

STOCK #PV4358 VIN# WVWAP7AN7EE539583

QUALITY CERTIFIED USED VEHICLES:

Our entire used car inventory (excluding economy vehicles) are covered by our 3 month/3000 mile warranty. This will take the worry out of purchasing a used vehicle. This special warranty also covers seals and gaskets, which is very unusual in automotive dealer warranties. Drive off our lot knowing you are covered!

WAS $19,999 STOCK #PV4403 VIN #1VWAT7A3XEC051652

STOCK #V15170A VIN #WAUBFAFLXFN001504

4949 Auto Center Blvd in Bremerton Auto Center Next to “Coca Cola”

KITSAPVW.COM 360-377-3855

Ad expires 9/3/2015. Subject to prior sale. All prices + Tax, License & $150 negotiable documentary fee paid at signing.

Food & Farmer’s Market

BIG VALLEY Growers; organic-grown produce. Avail Thur., Fri. & Sat. look for yellow A-Frame sign, mid Big Valley Rd. Just 3.3 miles from Bond Road. FRESH, WHOLE Albacore Tuna or Blast Frozen, $2.60/lb I deliver! 360-789-8172 Mail Order

Canada Drug Center is your choice for safe and affordable medications. Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy will provide you with savings of up to 90% on all your medication needs. Call today 1-800-418-8975, for $10.00 off your first prescription and free shipping. CPAP/BIPAP supplies at little or no cost from Allied Medical Supply Network! Fresh supplies delivered right to your door. Insurance may cover all costs. 800-902-9352 V I AG R A a n d C I A L I S USERS! 50 Pills SPECIAL - $99.00. FREE Shipping! 100% guaranteed. CALL NOW! 844586-6399 Miscellaneous

Acorn Stairlifts. The AFFORDABLE solution to your stairs! **Limited t i m e - $ 2 5 0 O f f Yo u r Stairlift Purchase!** Buy Direct & SAVE. Please call 1-800-304-4489 for F R E E DV D a n d b r o chure. Cannondale Quick 4 womans bike Like new used twice only stored in garage $400obo Free Spirit mens bike $40.00 360 638-2597 Find the Right Carpet, Flooring & Window Treatments. Ask about our 50% off specials & our Low Price Guarant e e . O f f e r E x p i r e s Soon. Call now 1-888906-1887 GET HELP NOW! One Button Senior Medical A l e r t . Fa l l s , F i r e s & Emergencies happen. 24/7 Protection. Only $14.99/mo. Call NOW 888-772-9801 KILL BED BUGS! Buy Harr is Bed Bug killer C o m p l e t e Tr e a t m e n t Program/Kit. Harris Mattress Covers add Extra Protection! Available: ACE Hardware. Buy Online: homedepot.com POOL TABLE, excellent condition, 1” 3 piece slate, $800/OBO. (360)871-2043


KITSAPWEEKLY

FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015 Cats

Miscellaneous

K I L L ROAC H E S ! B u y Harr is Roach Tablets. Eliminate Bugs-Guaranteed. No Mess, Odorless, Long Lasting. Available at Ace Hardware & The Home Depot

LOST MAINECOON TABBY CAT ON 8/11 area of New Brooklyn, Miller, Fletcher Bay. Coloring is unique: reddish / brownish with white. Skitttish, so please call if found or seen 206-212-0252.

KILL SCORPIONS! Buy Harris Scorpion Spray. Indoor/Outdoor, Odorless, Non-Staining. Effective results begin after spray dries. Ava i l a bl e : T h e H o m e Depot, Homedepot.com, ACE Hardware

Find your perfect pet in the Classifieds. www.SoundClassifieds.com

Dogs

Dogs

AKC English Mastiff Kennel has 5 week old puppies available. Accepting deposits now. Great purebred family pets. Ideal security dogs. Perfect show dogs. Extremely gentle & patient. 3 boys & a girl. Colors are an Apricot Male, a Red-Brindle Male, a Brindle Male & a Fawn Female. Kingston. $2500. Francis 360-5359404.

PIXIE BOBS Cat KittenTICA Registered. Playful, lots of fun! Hypo-all e r g e n i c , s h o r t h a i r, some polydactyl, short tails, very loving and loyal. Box trained. Excellent markings. All shots and www.springhillfarmfeed.com wor med. Guaranteed! springhillfarmfeed@gmail.com Ta k i n g d e p o s i t s n ow ! Treasure Hunting? R e a d y f o r F o r e v e r Check out our Recycler Homes in July/August. ads before someone Prices starting at $350. else finds your riches C a l l fo r a p p o i n t m e n t : 425-235-3193 (Renton) The opportunity to make a difference is right in SOLD IT? FOUND IT? Let us know by calling front of you. Sporting Goods 1-800-388-2527 so we RECYCLE THIS PAPER can cancel your ad. 1932 Chevrolet ConfedFind It. Buy It. Sell It. erate Coach “Elliott”, fulLooking for the ride ly restored with less that Find your perfect pet of your life? 50,000 or iginal miles. in the Classifieds. www.SoundClassifieds.com $39,950. (360)378-4575 www.SoundClassifieds.com 24 hours a day MOVING SALE; Quality items. Furniture; Mission s t y l e d i n i n g t a bl e / 4 chairs/ leaf $450 & side table $250. Baker lounge chair w/ ottoman $ 5 5 0 . Wo o d e n g u e s t chair with needle point $50. Painting by Gerald Sager; winter scene $400. Wall Clock: Gustav Becker 1870 ’s German with chimes $1000. Plus lots more! 360-7793146.

KITSAP SERVICES

~Lonestar Painting & Construction LLC Painting, Remodeling, Siding, Etc. Accepting All Major Credit Cards. Free Estimate; Call Now 360-895-5405

GOT CLUTTER? WE TAKE IT ALL! Junk, Appliances, Yard Debris, etc. Serving Kitsap County Since 1997

Need to sell old exercise equipment? Call 800-388-2527 to place your ad today. Need to sell some furniture? Call 800-388-2527 to place your ad today. The opportunity to make a difference is right in front of you. Recycle this paper.

Home Services Lawn/Garden Services

ALL YARD CARE SERVICE General Yard Service, Haul, Edge, Trim, Lawn & Grounds Maintenance, Weed Control, Plant, Beauty Bark, Power Washing and Much More. Please call for a free estimate

360-689-6327

LONESTC880LH. Bonded. Insured.

Home Services Hauling & Cleanup

ANIMAL RESCUE FAMILIES Low Cost Spay/Neuter open to all pet owners Sept 5th & 12th, Sat at East Bremerton Petco, 12 noon-4pm. Co-payment is $25 for each pet, vaccinations are required at time of the surgery. Kittens/ puppies need to be over 3 months old, dogs not older then 8 years, and dogs/cats can’t be in heat or pregnant. Max of 5 vouchers per family. Payment is due the day you apply for a voucher. Cash only! For more info, please contact ARF at 360-698-6576.

Have a service to offer? Contact Jennie today: 866-296-0380 jmorello@soundpublishing.com

Professional Services

YARD CARE General Yard Service, Haul, Edge, Trim, Lawn & Grounds Maintenance, Weed Control, Plant, Beauty Bark, Power Washing, and much more.

Free Estimate 360-689-4210

360-377-7990 / 888-993-4285

Home Services Pole Builder / Storage

Home Services Landscape Services

MADE IN AMERICA! BUILT TOUGH!

MINI-EXCAVATOR! Rolando Landscaping & Contractor Grating, Digging, Drainage, Design Landscaping, Rock Walls, Crush Rock, Mow, Land Clearing, Sprinkler Systems, Sod, Seed, Thatching, Bark, Prune, Hedges, Tree Trimming, Haul, Junk Removal, Pressure Wash, Clean Roof & Gutters.

Free Estimatee. Rolando 360-801-2707.

10 Years Experience. Residential & Commercial. Insured. Lic.#ROLANL*855BT

Double Carport~ $1,095

Free Delivery & Install 360-277-0200

www.allsteelnw.com sales@allsteelnw.com Domestic Services Child Care Offered

LIMITED CHILD CARE AVAILABLE YOU TRIED CALLING THE REST NOW CALL THE BEST; EVERGREEN LANDSCAPING

Flexible availbility in my B.I. home for ages 1 and up.

Lawn Install, Repair & Maint. Flagstone, Patios, Walkways. Clean Gardens & Planting. Pressure Washing.

206-941-8302

* FREE ESTIMATE * 10% OFF FOR SENIORS * Call Enrique now 360-633-5575 or 360-297-3355. chavez702014@gmail.com LIC#EVERGLS899JG Home Services Property Maintenance

All Things Basementy! Basement Systems Inc. Call us for all of your basement needs! Waterproofing, Finishing, Structural Repairs, Humidity and Mold Control F R E E E S T I M AT E S ! Call 1-800-998-5574

DIVORCE $155. $175 with children. No court appearances. Complete p r e p a ra t i o n . I n c l u d e s custody, support, proper ty division and bills. BBBmember. (503) 7725295. www.paralegalalt e r n a t i ve s . c o m l e g a lalt@msn.com

PAGE 13

Reach over a million potential customers when you advertise in the Service Directory. Call 800-388-2527 or

www.SoundClassifieds.com

BANKRUPTCY DEBT RELIEF Low Cost Chapter 7 STOP!! Garnishment * Foreclosure * Repossession HALT!! Creditor Harassment! 30 minute FREE CONSULT (360)876-6858 Go to: www.jpbrodylaw.com We are a debt relief agency. We will help you file for relief under the bankruptcy code.

Also Divorce/Wills

NORTH KITSAP

CENTRAL KITSAP

BREMERTON

NEW ON MARKET SUQUAMISH $198,000 Better than new! 2011 double-wide MFH with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, detached garage on ± 1/2 acre lot. Convenient to Bainbridge & Kingston ferries. Penny McLaughlin 206618-5123 View at www.johnlscott.com/61710

CENTRAL KITSAP $199,000 CK neighborhood w/3 bedrooms, 2 baths. 1 story home! huge patio area, garden shed, cherry & Hazel nut trees and mature landscaping w/soaker hose. Shelley Morritt 360-710-4372 View at www.johnlscott.com/56771

BREMERTON $115,000 Spacious condo, 2 bedrooms, 1.75 baths. Beautiful grounds, covered parking. 1 year home warranty included. Melissa Duryea 206595-6968 View at www.johnlscott.com/98798

NEW ON MARKET POULSBO $325,000 Scandia farmhouse located on ± 1.5 acres w/4 bdrm country farmhouse. Hardwood floors, root cellar in detached 2-car garage. Convenient to Poulsbo & Silverdale. Penny McLaughlin 206-618-5123 View at www.johnlscott.com/67819

SEABECK - NEW! $279,500 Truly quaint fixer in the Miami Beach area!! Currently 2BR/2.25BA, extra partially finished rooms upstairs, needs work & a major clean up! Central K schools! Mark Strombeck 360340-6233 View at www.johnlscott.com/24324

POULSBO $340,000 This spacious home offers 3198 sqft. 4+bdrms, family rm & a beautiful eat-in kitchen w/granite counters & huge pantry. Nice private backyard & a community park. Ken West 360-990-2444 View at www.johnlscott.com/11554

NEW ON THE MARKET $288,900 Beautiful home now awaits you, 4 bd, 2.5 ba, formal din Rm., living Rm., spacious family Rm., roomy 2-car attac gar/work shop, very economical gas heat. Pablo Lozano 360-377-0046 View at www.johnlscott.com/51571

KINGSTON $408,900 New home by Capstone Homes, Inc. lg .42 acre lot, curb appeal. slab granite kitch cntr tops, 3-car gar, 3 bd, bonus rm plus den 2.5 ba, approx. 2633 sq ft Tommy Jones 360731-9685 View at www.johnlscott.com/85864

CENTRAL KITSAP $325,000 4 bedroom in Illahee. Kitchen has granite and stainless appliances, lg living rm has soaring ceilings & library tucked away. On over 1/4 acre w/decks Sarah Canfield 360-473-6670 BREMERTON - NEW!! $214,950 View at www.johnlscott.com/89987 Huge value! 4BR/2.5BA, + den, open floor SEABECK $687,000 plan with master & 3BR upstairs. Also has 2 Once in a lifetime opportunity! 4065 sf home car attached garage, built in 2013 and close on 22.75 ac w/custom landscape. Waterways to everything. Come See!! Dean Nygaard 425w/covered & suspension bridges. 40X60 shop 359-4466 & stable w/electricity. Brian & Sharna McArdle View at www.johnlscott.com/92143 360-710-1444 or 710-0644 NEW ON THE MARKET $229,500 View at www.johnlscott.com/11393 Breathtaking 180* view from this 2 BR Sahali Condominium in a tranquil neighborhood setting! Cathedral (open beam) ceiling in LR and wood burning F/P. Roger Duryea 360-377-0046 SOUTH KITSAP View at www.johnlscott.com/96268 PORT ORCHARD $186,900 Secluded cabin in the middle of downtown BREMERTON $256,000 Port Orchard! Views of the Olympics & Move In Ready! Plenty of room in this spacious Sinclair Inlet! 2BR/1BA w/new furnace & 2300 SF home w/4 bd, 3 ba. Mstr w/soaking tub water heater + basement for storage!! Rick & deck overlooking ptrivt bkyrd. New fence, and Ellis 360-871-1600 AHS warranty incl. Jean Bradford 360-620-4774 View at www.johnlscott.com/86823 View at www.johnlscott.com/75365

POULSBO $415,000 Custom 1 story, 3 bd, 2.5 ba beauty is nestled on park-like .96 acre lot with lovely gardens and trees. There has been a complete remodel. Penny Guimond 360-620-0882 View at www.johnlscott.com/86307 NEW ON MARKET POULSBO $438,000 This 3 bdrm, 2.5 bth, 2188 sqft home lives like new on a shy 2.5 acres! Open flr plan, mstr w/5-piece bath & generous upgrades throughout. A commuters delight. Tara Scouten 360-620-0577 View at www.johnlscott.com/89651

NEW ON MARKET POULSBO $450,000 Well maintained 3bd/2ba rambler, barn w/stall(s), 24x48 outbuilding, 18x45 RV building, level usable land, central to Poulsbo, $299,000 Silverdale, Keyport & Bremerton! Penny EASY LIVING Upgraded kitchen with tile countertops, McLaughlin 206-618-5123 Maple cabinets and SS appliances. And WOW View at www.johnlscott.com/55142 - when you see the walk-in pantry! Cozy gas POULSBO $480,000 fireplace in the FR/GR area. Jamie Jensen Custom home w/american cherry hrdwd flrs, 360-620-9351. seamless granite slab countertops, 5-piece View at johnlscott.com/17178 mstr. Used as 4bdrm w/2.5 ba. Professional $299,950 landscaping. Easy walk to beach! Penny PORT ORCHARD - NEW! Beautiful move-in ready 4BR/2.5BA home! McLaughlin 206-618-5123 Hardwood floors, living room, dining room, View at www.johnlscott.com/99072 family room, deck, Grand staircase up to master suite! 3 car garage & more. Beth Allen 360-895-5226 BAINBRIDGE ISLAND View at www.johnlscott.com/85257

BREMERTON - REDUCED!! $169,900 Here is a classic Manette home with views of the Mountains & water. 3 bedrooms, hardwood floors, newer shower, heat pump plus tons of attic & basement storage! Eric Von Marbod 360-710-2010 View at www.johnlscott.com/50351 PRICE REDUCED BREMERTON $207,000 4bdrm, 2.5 bath rambler that offers lrg rms, fresh laminate, vinyl & carpet throughout. New kitch range, newer vinyl windows, finished 2-car gar & fully fenced. Jeri Coleman 360-621-7131 View at www.johnlscott.com/82256 MANETTE $209,000 Updated view rambler in Manette. 3 bd, 1.75 ba. 1424 sq ft 1 level living with views of the water and mtns. Large level backyard on quiet cul-desac. Joe Simon 360-265-2259 View at www.johnlscott.com/29937

NEW ON THE MARKET $478,000 Superb Illahee home with fantastic view across Sound to Bainbridge Island. Main floor has 1918 square feet w/fabulous Master Bdrm & 5pc mstr ba. Norma Straw 360-434-5981 View at www.johnlscott.com/44449 WATERFRONT $895,000 This private waterfront haven awaits you! Outdoor covered lv/din space, large deck w/builtin Viking Grill. Enormous detached garage shop. Garry Wanner & Karin Ahlman 360-265-9809 View at www.johnlscott.com/68440

LAND & LOTS

PRICE REDUCED BAINBRIDGE $675,000 Beautiful 125’ Agate Pass Waterfront w/1.6 acres! Great location w/potential. Older home w/a newer 4 bdrm septic installed. Detached 1272 sqft shop/greenhouse. Jim Lake 360337-9817 View at www.johnlscott.com/76715

PORT ORCHARD - REDUCED! $365,000 Pride of ownership throughout this 4BR/3BA, 2719 sq ft home, 1/2 acre with 3 car garage & granite counters in kitchen & baths, master on the main in Manchester JB Bartel, CRS, GRI 360-731-1051 View at www.johnlscott.com/13083

PRICE REDUCED KINGSTON $79,500-$98,500 2 great lots available, both are over 1/2 acre with Mountain & Sound views, water available & ready to build. Sonny Woodward 360-731-5269 View at www.johnlscott.com/67569

CONSTRUCTION HAS BEGUN $899,000 2 single-level homes in 1 building. Live in one, rent the other! Florence K is a sunny, convenient, new community located in town, in a clearing in the woods. Eileen Black 206696-1540. View at johnlscott.com/62382

PORT ORCHARD - NEW! $375,000 Simply beautiful 4BR/2.75BA home situated on 1.68 acres of park like property! Open floor plan, large master suite, French doors to deck & 3 car garage! Mark Strombeck 360-340-6233 View at www.johnlscott.com/81058

VACANT LAND $95,000 Great building lot in historic Ft. Ward neighborhood near miles of trails and waterfront access in nearby Fort Ward State Park. Close proximity to Lynwood. Tim and Jana Wilkins 206-380-7345 or 206-941-3109. View at johnlscott.com/70372

JOHN L. SCOTT KITSAP COUNTY OFFICE LOCATIONS Bainbridge Island | Jamie Jensen, Managing Broker ��������������� (206) 842-5636 Kingston | Frank Wilson, Managing Broker ��������������������������������������� (360) 297-7500 Poulsbo | Frank Wilson, Managing Broker ���������������������������������������� (360) 779-7555 Port Orchard | Jacqui Curtiss, Managing Broker �������������������������� (360) 876-7600 Silverdale | Lee Avery, Managing Broker ���������������������������������� (360) 692-9777 Bremerton | Lee Avery, Managing Broker ��������������������������������� (360) 377-0046 John L. Scott Real Estate has 122 offices, some offices are independently owned and operated.


KITSAPWEEKLY

PAGE 14

FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015

Financi n Availab g le!

s!! Final Ddaay y!

Dogs

Call To

SWEET TOY POODLE “Taffy” is loving, healthy 5 year old female. Beautiful Tuxedo color less then 5 lbs. We travel often and she needs compaionship. Spade, all shots and medical histor y. $ 4 0 0 . P l e a s e c a l l 206-780-2641.

For a $300 Off coupon ... Visit us at Facebook/PermaBilt

Garage/Moving Sales Kitsap County

Bremerton HUGE Garage Sale Fri, Sat. & Sun. Aug. 28th, 29th & 30th 8am-4pm. antique, truck, treasures 259 NE Watson CRT off central valley Rd. Brownsville Multi Family downsizing Garage sale Fr iday & Saturday August 28th & 29th - 9am-4pm, kitchen, medical care, womens clothing, toys, household & lots more rain or shine 11050 Ogle Rd. NE KINGSTON.

MOVING SALE this Fri 28 th , Sat 29 th & Sun 30th Furniture, portable generator, household, garage and more! Located at 35209 Hood Canal Dr

Concrete Included!

Concrete Included!

4” Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, (2) 4” Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, 14’x7’ 10’x9’ Metal framed split sliding door w/cam-latch closers, 8’x7’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/self- raised panel steel overhead door, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges 6’x4’ metal framed cross-hatch sliding door w/cam-latch closers, closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent. & stainless steel lockset, 2’ poly eavelight, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent. 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel $

16,125

14,765

$

213mo.

$

$

10,587

$

11,466

• 18 Sidewall and Trim Colors With Limited Lifetime Warranty (DENIM Series excluded) • Engineered For 85 MPH Wind Exposure B and 25# Snow Load* • 2” Fiberglass Vapor Barrier Roof Insulation • Free In-Home Consultation • Guaranteed Craftsmanship • Plans • Engineering • Permit Service • Erection

Hundreds of Designs Available!

26,989

$

DELUXE 2 CAR GARAGE 20’ x 24’ x 8’

24,679

$

2’

355mo.

$

eavelight,

10’

continuous

20,833

$

flow

ridge

vent.

300mo.

$

DELUXE L SHAPE GARAGE 24’ x 48’ x 9’ & 24’ x 24’ x 9’

Concrete Included!

4” Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, (2) 10’x8’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/stainless steel lockset & self-closing hinges, 18” eave & gable overhangs, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent, bird blocking at gables. $

32,588

$

35,650

469mo.

$

3 STALL BARN 20’ x 48’ x 9’

DAYLIGHT GARAGE & SHOP 24’ x 36’ x 10’

Concrete Included!

poly

22,494

$

Concrete Included!

4” Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, (1) 10’x12’ & (1) 9’x8’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/stainless steel lockset & self-closing hinges, 3’6”x3’9” PermaBilt awning w/enclosed soffit, 5/12 roof pitch, coffer truss, 2’ poly eavelight, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent.

*If your jurisdiction requires higher wind exposures or snow loads, building prices will be affected.

Marine Miscellaneous

lockset,

153mo.

$

RV GARAGE 32’ x 36’ x 12’

ALL BUILDINGS INCLUDE:

Poulsbo BARNYARD SALE/Multi Family. Fri. & Sat., August 28 & 29, 9am-3pm. 5,000 watt generator, Sony sound system, furniture, 66’ Mustang & much, much more! 24091 Stottlemeyer Rd. NE.

1 9 ’ B O AT T R A I L E R $250. Ready to roll. New tires and r ims. As is. Please call 10 am to 2 pm 360-830-4785.

MODIFIED GRID BARN 30’ x 36’ x 10’

1 CAR GARAGE 16’ x 20’ x 8’

2 CAR GARAGE & HOBBY SHOP 24’ x 30’ x 8’

Concrete Included!

Automobiles Others

AU TO I N S U R A N C E S TA R T I N G AT $ 2 5 / MONTH! Call 877-9299397 Yo u c o u l d s ave o ve r $500 off your auto insurance. It only takes a few minutes. Save 10% by adding proper ty to quote. Call Now! 1-888498-5313

Here’s a great idea!

Need Cash? Advertise with us!

selling in the Over classifieds 85 percent isofeasy our community call us today! newspaper

1-800-388-2527 readers

4” Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, 16’x7’ raised panel steel overhead door, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges 4” Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, (2) 10’x9’ (3) 12’x12’ PermaStalls w/aluminum framed sliding doors, aluminum & stainless steel lockset, 4’x3’ double glazed vinyl window w/screen, 18” eave raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/self-closing stall fronts & 2”x6” tongue & groove walls, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/ & gable overhangs, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent, bird blocking at both gables. hinges & stainless steel lockset, 3’ poly eavelight, (2) 12”x12” gable vents. self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent.

14,298

$

13,271

$

191mo.

$

DELUXE TRUE GAMBREL 30’ x 28’ x 12’

45,959

$

$

21,818

42,289

$

HIGH BAY GARAGE 14’ x 30’ x 16’ with (2) 30’ x 12’ x 9’ WINGS

Washington #TOWNCPF099LT

Concrete Included!

Advertise with us!

4” Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, (1)

$

15,699

$

226mo.

$

29,393

$

Over

$ 26,721 385mo. 85 percent

$

Facebook.com/PermaBilt

800-824-9552

1375085

288mo.

$

4” Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, 10’x14’ & (1) 10’x8’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt 10’x11’ raised panel steel overhead door, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/ door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 3’x3’ double glazed vinyl self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, (2) 12”x18” gable vents. window w/screen, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent, (2) 12”x12” gable vents.

17,105 609mo. PermaBilt.com

$

19,986

$

Here’s a great idea!

GARAGE & RV CARPORT 24’ x 28’ x 12’

4” Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, 10’x10’ aluminum framed cross-hatch split sliding door, 30’x28’ 50# loft w/staircase, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, (3) 3’x3’ double glazed cross-hatch vinyl windows w/screens, 18” gable overhangs, (2) 8’ roof prows, 24”x24” cupola w/weathervane, bird blocking at both gables.

SOUND

of our

Buildings Built: 19,838 community Square Feet: 21,150,131 As ofnewspaper 7/11/2015

readers check the Financing based on 12% interest, all payments based on 10 years (unless otherwise noted), O.A.C.. Actual rate may vary. Prices do not include permit costs or sales tax & are based on a flat, level, accessible building site w/less than 1’ of classified ads fill, w/85 MPH Wind Exposure “B”, 25# snow load, for non commercial usage & do not include prior sales & may be affected by county codes and/or travel considerations. Drawings for illustration purposes only. Ad prices expire 9/7/15.

Expand your market

1.800.388.2527

299mo.

$

Concrete Included!

Classifieds@soundpublishing.com

SOUNDCLASSIFIEDS.COM

20,799

$

22,654

Concrete Included!

check the SOUNDCLASSIFIEDS.COM classified ads

classifieds

$

advertise in the classifieds today!

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KITSAPWEEKLY

FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015

BAINBRIDGE ISLAND

NORTH KITSAP

11950 Venice Loop NE $399,000

SUN 2-4

861 NW Finn Hill Road $279,000

8741 Woodbank Drive NE $539,000

SUN 1-4

Classic cottage close to Battle Point Park. Sited on a quiet country lane near beach access. Charming interior has fir floors, beamed ceilings & propane stove. French doors to sunny deck & backyard. Listing includes separate 1/4-acre lot. MLS #782828. Carleen Gosney, 206/909-2042, CarleenGosney.com. Windermere Real Estate/BI, Inc.

Great opportunity with lots of potential! Charming 1935, 2-bedroom cottage with partial bay views, on a sunny, .89-acre parcel. Also included, a ready-to-go rental—600 sq. ft. manufactured home with individual septic & power. MLS #823586. Diane Sugden, 206/355-9179, DianeSugden.com. Windermere Real Estate/BI, Inc.

13965 Hidden Heights Lane NE $610,000 Sun 1-4

Delightful farmhouse on 2.6 acres in a serene PNW setting with abundant sunlight! Country style kitchen with both indoor & outdoor eating space. With a master suite on the main level and two matching bedrooms on 2nd floor. Theres a formal sitting room at the entrance and large bonus room off kitchen, perfect for entertaining. Basement ideal for home office. Hosted by Mike and Robin Ballou. 206-7159980 or 206-715-9960. johnlscott.com/54326

14235 Sunrise Drive NE $625,000

SUN 1-4

Just Listed! Classic NW shingled home is just right— not too big and not too small on a shy acre. Deep, covered front porch, rear deck for dining al fresco & entertaining. Great floor plan with 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths and 3rd floor bonus space. MLS #838491. Sarah Sydor, 206/683-4526, BainbridgeAgent.com. Windermere Real Estate/BI, Inc.

5578 Lynwood Center Rd NE $648,000

SUN 1-4

Just Listed! Charming saltbox house on acreage! Newly remodeled offering 4 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, and wonderful gathering rooms. New paint, carpet, countertops and decks. Two-car garage and separate shop. Great package! MLS #836441. Ty Evans, 206/795-0202, tyevans@windermere.com. Windermere Real Estate/BI, Inc.

9225 Cedar St NE, Bainbridge Island $695,000 SUN 1-4

Private retreat in a storybook setting w/lush gardens & waterfall, yet just minutes to the Seattle ferry and downtown. This open concept three bedroom rambler features cathedral ceilings, a large formal dining area & generous bonus room above the garage. French doors open to a large deck overlooking the back garden w/quaint gazebo & garden shed. There are two bedrooms & full bath at one side of the house w/master suite on the other. This is a very special home with exceptional features. MLS #838783, Listed by Paul Holzman 206.856.2691 and Mudge Mair 206.276.8139, Realogics Sotheby’s International Realty.

10768 Manitou Park Boulevard $1,450,000 SUN 1-4

Just Listed! Amazing views of Mt. Rainier and downtown Seattle from this beautifully-appointed, high-bank waterfront custom home. Dramatic vaulted ceilings, fabulous kitchen, great Rolling Bay location and no-bank beach just around the corner! MLS #839847. Bill Hunt & Mark Wilson, 206/300-4889, HuntWilson.com. Windermere Real Estate/BI, Inc.

SAT 1-3

Well kept one owner home on large lot walking distance to Walmart and College Market Place. Home features spacious living room as well as downstairs rec. room both with fireplaces. There is also a 13 x 18 unfinished shop in basement plus a 8 x 12 fruit rm. or wine cellar. This property is inside the urban growth boundary of Poulsbo but not annexed. Seller completing a boundary line adjustment and new survey. Seller also owns 2 adjacent lots that could be available but not currently listed. MLS #832045 Steve Smaaladen 360-710-8800. Windermere Real Estate/West Sound, Inc.

12325 Brigantine Ct., Kingston $358,000

SAT 1-4

A home enjoying passive/solar energy efficiency and great views of the sound all on almost three quarter acre lot. Quiet waterfront lane only 2.5 miles to town and ferry. Master on main level, open concept living, 3 bdrm septic allows for expansion. Beach access for strolling, kayaking and great crabbing. MLS #838456. Barb Huget 360-6206445. Windermere Real Estate/West Sound Inc.

21740 NW Monterey Lp, Poulsbo $385,000 SAT 1-4

Beautiful, move-in ready, craftsman home. Open floor plan features stunning hrdwd floors, gas fireplace, lux kitchen & SS appliances. Huge master inclds 5-piece ensuite. Spacious loft can be converted to 4th bdrm. All bedrooms incld walk-ins. Mud rm w/ built-ins. Convenient upstairs laundry. Fully fenced, landscaped yard, backs to green belt. Too many upgrades to list. This quiet neighborhood is only blocks from Vinland Elementary. Minutes to downtown Poulsbo, area bases, hwy & Seattle ferry. MLS# 830084. Ida Bear 206-992-2327. Windermere Real Estate/West Sound Inc.

9020 NE Country Woods Lane, Kingston $395,000 SAT 1-4

Private Country Living! Garden, play or relax to your heart’s delight on this 5 acre retreat with its own pond, trails and fabulous garden area with fruit trees. This well maintained home has 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, plenty of upstairs and downstairs living - is filled with light - has a 20KW “automatic whole-house generator” plus 2 free standing wood stoves and a partially fenced yard. It’s an easy commute to the ferries, Kingston, Poulsbo, the Bases and any amenities you might need! #835841. Mary Richards 360-509-3609. Windermere Real Estate/West Sound Inc.

12301 Olive Drive $450,000

SUN 11-2

Strength. Functionality. Beauty. This craftsmaninspired home boasts sweeping views, quality finishes & skillful design. Jatoba hardwood floors & a gourmet kitchen grace an open concept main flr, crowned w an artisan’s staircase. The sunlit main also includes a luxe mstr w gas fireplace. Entertain on the deck & relax to the cadence of crossing ferries from its hot tub. Downstairs offers a kitchenette, guest rm & soundproof rec rm. Enjoy gardening & orchard in the fenced back yd. Minutes to town! #832264 Lorna Muller 360-620-3842 or Dave Muller 360-620-4299. Windermere Real Estate/West Sound, Inc.

24681 Big Valley Rd NE, Poulsbo $469,000 SUN 1-4

A whimsical & inviting farmhouse on coveted Big Valley Rd! 2.3 secluded acres w/lush gardens, lawns, pond & cabin. Light-filled living & family rooms grace the main floor w/fireplace. French doors to expansive wrap around patios w/west facing views ideal for outdoor dining & entertaining. A bright kitchen w/eating island & dining areas, vintage style & large windows let the views in. All 3 bedrooms up incl. large mstr suite w/walk-in closet + 4th finished room! Refinished hardwoods, new carpet! #835702. Julie Bray-Larsen 360-300-7001. Windermere Real Estate/West Sound Inc.

PAGE 15

NORTH KITSAP

BREMERTON

22841 Singingwood Place NE, Kingston $699,000 SUN 1-4

2005 Nipsic Avenue $270,000

SUN 12-3

6084 Kingfisher Court $365,000

SUN 12-2

Single-level Cape Cod-style home on the 14th fairway of White Horse Golf Course. Perfect flow of space with formal and casual living areas. Fine finishes, cook’s kitchen, sumptuous master suite. Expansive patio, landscaped grounds. MLS #755811. Terry Klein, 206/949-3360, TerryKlein. com. Windermere Real Estate/BI, Inc. Barb Huget, 360/620-6445, bhuget@windermere.com. Windermere Real Estate/West Sound, Inc.

11091 NE West Kingston Road $725,000 FRI 1-4, SAT 11-1, SUN 12-2

Once-in-a-lifetime opportunity!! Lovingly caredfor beachfront home on .96 acres, zoned Urban Low (5-9 du/ac) provides 115 ft. of low-bank bulkheaded waterfront on sought-after Apple Tree Cove. Spacious tri-level home offers spectacular water & Mt. Rainier views from nearly every room & flexible living spaces that will provide comfort & convenience for you and your guests. Enjoy concerts in the park, Kingston Farmers Market, the library, & the new Village Green Community Center. MLS #838336 Alma Hammon 360-5095218. Windermere Real Estate/West Sound, Inc.

15809 Virginia Point Rd NE, Poulsbo $1,125,000 SAT 1-4

Classic waterfront home situated on over 150 ft of west-facing Liberty Bay shoreline. This immaculate custom built home welcomes you into its warmth and charm with hardwood floors, floor to ceiling rock fireplace with propane insert, built-in bookcases from floor to ceiling, fine custom millwork, quartz countertops, maple cabinets, 6-burner Viking stove, and radiant flrs throughout. Master on the main with cherry cabinets in bath, dual sinks, and huge walk-in closet. Life is better on the Bay! #832567. Catherine Jones 360-4345598. Windermere Real Estate/West Sound Inc.

CENTRAL KITSAP 8401 Willowberry Avenue NW $330,000

SAT 1-3

Corner lot in one of the newest Silverdale communities. The main-floor great room, adjacent to the master suite, is finished with real hardwood floors and expands upwards with vaulted ceilings. Kitchen features stainless appliances, uba tuba granite countertops, walk-in pantry and a generous island with more counter space than you’ll ever need. Lower level includes guest bedrooms and a 2nd living space accented with a natural gas fireplace. Master bath is tiled and includes walk-in closet. MLS#832667. Steve Derrig 360-710-8086. Windermere Real Estate /West Sound Inc.

8046 Wenatchee Place NW $468,500

SUN 1-4

Beautiful Chaffey home in the desirable Newberry Woods development. Fabulous kitchen with a large island, Butlers Pantry, soaring ceilings and formal/informal dining. Features 4 roomy bdrms, office/den on the main floor, family room and Lrg rec room. Walk-in closets in 3 of 4 bdrms. You’ll be delighted with the gracious master suite and beautiful master bath with two large walk-in closets. Deck and patio for entertaining and a large, flat, fenced in spacious yard backing up to greenbelt/Trail. #835591. Jim Robb 206-915-7622. Windermere Real Estate/West Sound Inc.

Located in vibrant Manette, view of Olympic and Downtown. 3 bedrooms of the main floor with an unfinished basement ready to expand. From the PV Solar (installed 2013) panels to the high efficient mini-split ductless heat pump/Air conditioning unit to the Heat Pump electric water heater & Triple Pane windows, this home will have you saying “WOW, where did our heating & electric bills go?!?” Detached two car garage/shop. mature drought tolerant plants fruit plants, fruit trees & gardens. MLS#838400. Dino Davis 360-850-8566. Windermere Real Estate /West Sound Inc.

Very comfortable large one story rambler in Dockside with view of the Olympic Mountains & Kitsap Lake. This beautiful home features nearly 2,000 sq.ft. with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, dining room & family room with gas log fireplace. Bright kitchen with breakfast nook and an oversized 2 car garage. MLS#779878. Phillip Scheer 360-620-5726. Windermere Real Estate /West Sound Inc.

6092 Osprey Circle $525,000

SUN 2-4

Stunning craftsman style 4 bedroom home in the desirable community of Kitsap Lake! Panoramic view of Kitsap Lake and Olympic Mountains! Beautiful summer sunsets! Like new built in 2002! Spacious living with 4,202 sq.ft. Custom kitchen with stainless appliances, cherry cabinets, new cherry hardwood floors. Great room with vaulted ceiling and cozy fireplace! MLS#831293. Glenn Morrison, 360-437-6212. Windermere Real Estate /West Sound Inc.

PORT ORCHARD 6389 Clover Valley Road SE $325,000

SUN 1-4

4418 Riflebird Place SW $345,000

SAT 1-4

Enchanting gentleman’s farm beckons the gardener, artist or possible small business owner. Level 1.55 acres meticulously maintained and upgraded. Gorgeous kitchen, new baths, newer roof, floor coverings & designer paint. Stay cozy by the wood burning stove and enjoy the efficiency of the ductless heat pump system. Includes detached garage/shop, carport, greenhouses, barn & art studio. Relax on the patio and enjoy the pleasures of the small wild life and lovely landscape. Paradise found! MLS #764082 Chris Todd 360-509-6319 or Sue Tyson 360-509-0905. Windermere Real Estate /West Sound Inc.

Gorgeous 3,004 sq.ft. 5 bedroom, 3 bath home built in 2011 Ridge at McCormick Woods Div 3. This home features 9’ ceilings, large Living Room with cozy gas fireplace, open & light kitchen, dining room, pantry, full bath & and a bedroom on the main floor. Upstairs has a large multi-use loft/office & spacious laundry room. Large master bedroom & bath along with 2 other bedrooms and a full bath. Natural gas furnace, fully fenced level back yard & 2 car garage all on a premium lot on a dead end street. MLS#828170. Jeanette Paulus 360-2864321. Windermere Real Estate /West Sound Inc.

Call one of your Sound Publishing newspapers to submit your Open House Listing: BAINBRIDGE REVIEW 206 842-6613 • NORTH KITSAP HERALD 360 779-4464 • CENTRAL KITSAP REPORTER 360 308-9161 BREMERTON PATRIOT 360 308-9161 • PORT ORCHARD INDEPENDENT 360 876-4414 • KITSAP CLASSIFIEDS 1-800-388-2527


KITSAPWEEKLY

PAGE 16

FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, 2015

PORT ORCHARD VISIT US AT BRUCETITUSFORD.COM

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USED 2011 HONDA RIDGELINE RTL CREW CAB V-6 CYL

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2014 FORD FUSION SE I-4 CYL

$35,481

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