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Tuesday

Limousine fire probed

Morning fog followed by sun breaks A8

California officials investigate the deadly tragedy A3

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS May 7, 2013 | 75¢

Port Townsend-Jefferson County’s Daily Newspaper

Paddleboarder recounts rescuing three near park BY CHARLIE BERMANT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT TOWNSEND — A paddleboarder who shuttled three people to shore Sunday said Monday he could understand how they could drift into Admiralty Inlet outside Fort Worden State Park. “The water looks deceptively calm, but there is a current that you feel when you are out there,” said Brian Kienle, 42, of Port Townsend. East Jefferson Fire-Rescue identified the three who were rescued as Lauren Dicksion, 11, Madison Carlson, 10, and William Brown, 43. Kienle, the family services and community manager for Habitat for

Humanity of East Jefferson County, was modest about the rescue, saying Monday he “didn’t think it was that big a deal.” Kienle was on his paddleboard — a long surfboard propelled by a Kienle swimming motion if kneeling or a pole if standing — at about 11:30 a.m. when he saw three people a few hundred yards away who seemed to be in trouble. “They were on inner tubes and were paddling, but they didn’t seem to be getting anywhere,” Kienle said.

Chandlery’s ‘old tech’ is in demand

“I paddled over to them and asked them if they needed help, and they said yes.”

Paddleboard shuttle Kienle placed one of the girls on the front end of his 11-foot paddleboard and took her to shore while the man and the other girl floated on the inner tubes. He paddled back out, put the second girl on the board and towed the man, he said. “You usually paddle standing up, but I was paddling on my knees because I didn’t want to flip over and throw her into the water,” Kienle said. TURN

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Pluck the Money Tree TAKE A LOOK at Page B10 today. This week’s Money Tree is ripe with exclusive discounts — 35 percent off! — from North Olympic Peninsula businesses. It’s easy and fun. ✔ Check the Money Tree for the bargain you want. ✔ Phone the PDN’s Port Angeles office at 360-4177684 and use your credit card to claim your purchase. We’ll mail the certificate to be redeemed to you . . . at no extra cost. ✔ Or if you’re in the neighborhood this week, drop by b the th PDN’s PDN’ N Port P t Angeles office at 305 W. First St. to pick up your certificate. (It’s not available at our Port Townsend office.) But don’t wait: The items are sold on a first-claimed basis. Turn to Page B10 now to pick a bargain or two off the Money Tree. Peninsula Daily News

RESCUE/A5

He refuses to be sealed off Aptly named mammal a ‘Star’ attraction in PT returned to the Adams Street beach and was resting under a deck. PORT TOWNSEND — McLean cordoned off the A juvenile elephant seal area with yellow tape to that arrived on a Port give the seal some space, Townsend beach Friday and within an hour of the continued to draw crowds tape’s installation, the seal Monday. crawled out under it onto The seal, about 5 feet the beach and back into long and probably a male, the water for a dip. crawled on the beach at the “He may be moving end of Adams Street. around because he wants He remained at that to get away from people,” or CHARLIE BERMANT (2)/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS location until Sunday to keep cool, she said. Above, the juvenile elephant seal dubbed Star morning, when he moved ducks under caution tape that was put up to keep to another beach south of Guard duty people from bothering him on a Port Townsend Union Wharf. beach. Below, he takes a dip in the harbor. The seal, which is Volunteers will watch undergoing an annual the area to discourage peomolt, has become a bona ple from getting too close, fide tourist attraction. McLean said. “It’s rare that a seal is “Ideally, we’d like people in a place that is viewable to stay 100 yards away, by the public, giving people she said. “But that’s not the opportunity to see practical here. something really special,” “We hope people get the said Chrissy McLean, the message to stay far away Port Townsend Marine Sci- from him, and make sure ence Center’s marine protheir dogs are leashed gram coordinator. while in the area,” McLean The seal was dubbed said. Star by 11-year-old Ella ________ Ashford of Port Townsend, who spent Friday answerJefferson County Editor ing questions about seals Charlie Bermant can be reached and their habits. at 360-385-2335 or at cbermant By Monday, the seal had @peninsuladailynews.com. BY CHARLIE BERMANT

BY CHARLIE BERMANT

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT TOWNSEND — Two-hundred-year-old technology manufactured by the Chandlery of the Northwest Maritime Center is in demand now, said the center’s executive director Monday. The first orders for the Chandlery’s “Townsend Blocks,” heavyduty pulleys that are a key part of wooden sailboat construction, were filled in March. There is a possibility of an order for 500 of the pulleys, Jake Beattie which would be Northwest Maritime Center a major order executive director for the company, Jake Beattie told about 60 people at the Jefferson County Chamber of Commerce luncheon. “With this kind of product, we can become a kind of an 18th-century Boeing,” Beattie said. New-old technology is only part of what the Northwest Maritime Center center at 431 Water St., in Port Townsend has to offer, Beattie said. It provides the stage for learning about maritime trades and activities, and Port Townsend residents are the players, he said. “At one point, the facility was the goal, and we weren’t sure how we were going to use it,” he said. TURN

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BEATTIE/A5

Hadlock motorcyclist ‘serious’ after fatal collision motorcycles that led to three fatalities last weekend, said Trooper Russ Winger, State Patrol spokesman. Traffic on U.S. Highway 101 was blocked for more than seven hours after the 3:25 p.m. Sunday BY CHARLIE BERMANT wreck about 5 miles south of QuilPENINSULA DAILY NEWS cene that left one motorcyclist QUILCENE — Investigations dead and hospitalized another. were continuing Monday into the Nicholas Montague, a 26-yearcauses of two wrecks involving old Lacey man, was pronounced

Two cycles crash in Sunday wreck, killing Lacey man

dead at the scene. Rodney T. Sutherland, 45, of Port Hadlock was airlifted to Harborview Medical Center in Seattle. On Monday, he was listed in serious condition and was in intensive care at the hospital. Montague had been headed north toward Quilcene when his 2006 Suzuki motorcycle crossed the center line as he approached a right curve and collided with

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Sutherland’s 2012 Harley Davidson, which was traveling south, the State Patrol said. Traffic was reopened in both directions at about 10:30 p.m., the state Department of Transportation said. The investigation was expected to take several days to complete, Winger said. The wreck was the second in the area involving motorcycles

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that claimed lives last weekend.

Saturday fatalities Michael Hanson, 48, of Graham and his passenger, Connie Shook, 50, of Spanaway were pronounced dead after a 12:05 p.m. Saturday collision with a car on U.S. Highway 101 north of Shelton. TURN

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FATAL/A5

INSIDE TODAY’S PENINSULA DAILY NEWS 97th year, 109th issue — 2 sections, 18 pages

BUSINESS CLASSIFIED COMICS COMMENTARY/LETTERS DEAR ABBY HOROSCOPE MOVIES NATION PENINSULA POLL

B4 B6 B5 A7 B5 B5 A4 A3 A2

PUZZLES/GAMES SPORTS WEATHER WORLD

B7 B1 A8 A3


A2

UpFront

TUESDAY, MAY 7, 2013

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Tundra

The Samurai of Puzzles

By Chad Carpenter

Copyright © 2013, Michael Mepham Editorial Services

www.peninsuladailynews.com This is a QR (Quick Response) code taking the user to the North Olympic Peninsula’s No. 1 website* — peninsuladailynews.com. The QR code can be scanned with a smartphone or tablet equipped with an app available for free from numerous sources. QR codes appearing in news articles or advertisements in the PDN can instantly direct the smartphone user to additional information on the web.

Newsmakers Celebrity scoop ■ By The Associated Press

*Source: Quantcast Inc.

PORT ANGELES main office: 305 W. First St., P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362 General information: 360-452-2345 Toll-free from Jefferson County and West End: 800-826-7714 Fax: 360-417-3521 Lobby hours: 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday through Friday ■ See Commentary page for names, telephone numbers and email addresses of key executives and contact people. SEQUIM news office: 360-681-2390 147-B W. Washington St. Sequim, WA 98382 JEFFERSON COUNTY news office: 360-385-2335 1939 E. Sims Way Port Townsend, WA 98368

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Newsroom, sports CONTACTS! To report news: 360-417-3531, or call one of our local offices: Sequim, 360-681-2390; Jefferson County/Port Townsend, 360-385-2335; West End/Forks, 800-826-7714 Sports desk/reporting a sports score: 360-417-3525 Letters to Editor: 360-417-3527 Club news, “Seen Around” items, subjects not listed above: 360-417-3527 To purchase PDN photos: www.peninsuladailynews.com, click on “Photo Gallery.” Permission to reprint or reuse articles: 360-417-3530 To locate a recent article: 360-417-3527

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS (ISSN 1050-7000, USPS No. 438.580), continuing the Port Angeles Evening News (founded April 10, 1916) and The Daily News, is a locally operated member of Black Press Group Ltd./Sound Publishing Inc., published each morning Sunday through Friday at 305 W. First St., Port Angeles, WA 98362. POSTMASTER: Periodicals postage paid at Port Angeles, WA. Send address changes to Circulation Department, Peninsula Daily News, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. Contents copyright © 2013, Peninsula Daily News MEMBER

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THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

From left, John Paul Jones, Robert Plant, Jimmy Page and Jason Bonham, members of the rock group Led Zeppelin, arrive at an event in October in New York City. Bonham is the son of late Zeppelin drummer, John Bonham.

Clinton fails at reuniting Led Zeppelin IT’S A DIPLOMATIC failure at the highest level: Bill Clinton couldn’t get Led Zeppelin to reunite. The CBS “60 Minutes Overtime” webcast reported Monday that the former president was Clinton enlisted to ask the British rock gods to get back together last year for the superstorm Sandy benefit concert in New York

City. He asked; they said no. David Saltzman of the Robin Hood Foundation said he and film executive Harvey Weinstein flew to Washington to ask Clinton to make the plea. Led Zeppelin’s surviving members Robert Plant, John Paul Jones and Jimmy Page were in Washington just before the Sandy concert for the Kennedy Center Honors. Led Zeppelin last played publicly at a one-night reunion in London in 2007.

The cable network aimed at young male viewers said Monday it will begin airing the “bad boys” and girls in September. “Cops,” which follows officers on nighttime patrol, was novel for television when it began airing in March 1989 — back when “reality TV” wasn’t even a television genre. For many years, it was paired on Fox’s Saturdaynight lineup with “America’s Most Wanted,” which left the network in 2011 and shifted to the Lifetime cable network. ‘Cops’ to move The move wasn’t really The Saturday night tele- a surprise, since Fox ordered fewer episodes this vision fixture “Cops” is season and frequently preleaving Fox after 25 years empted the show for sports to move to the Spike netevents. work.

SUNDAY’S QUESTION: Now that it’s legal in Washington, what’s your favorite nickname for marijuana? Weed

18.4%

Pot Grass

41.5% 3.3%

Dope

9.5%

Mary Jane

3.6%

Bud

3.2%

Ganja

4.0%

Cannabis 2.6% Other

13.9%

Total votes cast: 756 Vote on today’s question at www.peninsuladailynews.com NOTE: The Peninsula Poll is unscientific and reflects the opinions of only those peninsuladailynews.com users who chose to participate. The results cannot be assumed to represent the opinions of all users or the public as a whole.

Passings By The Associated Press

GIULIO ANDREOTTI, 94, one of Italy’s most important postwar figures who helped draft the country’s constitution after World War II, served seven times as premier and spent 60 years in Parliament, died Monday after an extended period of poor health that included a hospitalization for a heart ailment. The Christian Democrat who was friends with popes and cardinals was also a controverMr. Andreotti sial figure in 1995 who survived corruption scandals and allegations of aiding the Mafia. Mr. Andreotti was accused of exchanging a “kiss of honor” with the mob’s longtime No. 1 boss and was indicted in what

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS PENINSULA POLL

was called “the trial of the century” in Palermo. He eventually was cleared, but his legacy was forever marred. Still clinging to his last official title, senator-for-life, Mr. Andreotti grew more stooped with age, and infirmity kept him from what few official duties remained, such as opening the inaugural session of the new Senate in March, a privilege reserved for the eldest-serving member that fell this time to the next-inline. Mr. Andreotti, a key player in the Christian Democratic Party that dominated politics for nearly half a century, helped bring prosperity to what was once one of Europe’s poorest countries.

“Rocky III” and “Scarface,” has died. His daughter, Michelle, told the Los Mr. Machado Angeles in 1977 Times that Mr. Machado died Saturday from complications of pneumonia at a Los Angeles convalescent facility. KCBS-TV said Mr. Machado was of Chinese and Portuguese descent and was L.A.’s first AsianAmerican newscaster. Over a decades-long career, he was a newsman, producer, TV show host and soccer commentator. He worked at KCBS-TV, its predecessor and at what is now KCAL________ TV. He also played a newsMARIO MACHADO, 78, a Los Angeles television man in TV shows and movies, including the “Robocop” news anchor in the 1960s films, “Oh, God!” and “Scarand 1970s who also appeared in movies such as face.”

Setting it Straight Corrections and clarifications The Peninsula Daily News strives at all times for accuracy and fairness in articles, headlines and photographs. To correct an error or to clarify a news story, phone Executive Editor Rex Wilson at 360-4173530 or email rex.wilson@peninsuladailynews.com.

Peninsula Lookback From the pages of the PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

DUE TO TECHNICAL issues, “Peninsula Lookback” for today, May 7, is unavailable.

Seen Around Peninsula snapshots

Laugh Lines

FEELING SLEEPY? THERE’S a nap for that. AS SEEN FROM Your Monologue Agnew at 8 o’clock recently: 18 bald eagles soaring in the wind over the waters of Lottery the Strait of Juan de Fuca . . . LAST NIGHT’S LOTTERY results are available WANTED! “Seen Around” on a timely basis by phonitems. Send them to PDN News Desk, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles ing, toll-free, 800-545-7510 or on the Internet at www. WA 98362; fax 360-417-3521; or walottery.com/Winning email news@peninsuladailynews. Numbers. com.

Looking Back From the files of The Associated Press

TODAY IS TUESDAY, May 7, the 127th day of 2013. There are 238 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: ■ On May 7, 1763, Pontiac, chief of the Ottawa Indians, attempted to lead a sneak attack on British-held Fort Detroit but was foiled because the British had been tipped off in advance. The Ottawa Indians and other tribes then launched an all-out war with the British that came to be known as Pontiac’s War. On this date: ■ In 1789, the first inaugural ball was held in New York in honor of President George Washington and his wife, Martha. ■ In 1824, Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 in D minor, Op. 125, had its premiere in Vienna. ■ In 1825, composer Antonio Salieri died in Vienna. ■ In 1833, composer Johannes Brahms was born in Hamburg,

Germany. ■ In 1840, composer Peter Ilyich Tchaikovsky was born in Votkinsk, Russia. ■ In 1915, nearly 1,200 people died when a German torpedo sank the British liner RMS Lusitania off the Irish coast. ■ In 1942, U.S. Army Gen. Jonathan Wainwright went on a Manila radio station to announce the Allied surrender of the Philippines to Japanese forces during World War II. ■ In 1945, Germany signed an unconditional surrender at Allied headquarters in Rheims, France, ending its role in World War II. ■ In 1954, the 55-day Battle of Dien Bien Phu in Vietnam ended with Vietnamese insurgents overrunning French forces. ■ In 1963, the United States launched the Telstar 2 communications satellite. ■ In 1975, President Gerald R. Ford formally declared an end to

the “Vietnam era.” In Ho Chi Minh City — formerly Saigon — the Viet Cong celebrated its takeover. ■ In 1992, the latest addition to America’s space shuttle fleet, Endeavour, went on its first flight. A 203-year-old proposed constitutional amendment barring Congress from giving itself a midterm pay raise received enough votes for ratification as Michigan became the 38th state to approve it. ■ Ten years ago: President George W. Bush ordered the lifting of sanctions against Iraq and called on members of the U.N. Security Council to do the same. The White House announced President Bush had chosen New Mexico oilman Colin R. McMillan to be secretary of the Navy and Air Force Secretary James Roche to replace the dismissed secretary of the Army, Thomas White. However, McMillan died in an apparent sui-

cide in July 2003, while Roche’s nomination languished in Congress before being withdrawn in March 2004. ■ Five years ago: President George W. Bush, addressing the Council of Americas, said Cuba’s post-Fidel Castro leadership had made only “empty gestures at reform” as he rejected calls for easing U.S. restrictions on the communist island. Dmitry Medvedev was sworn in as Russia’s president. ■ One year ago: Education Secretary Arne Duncan broke ranks with the White House, stating his unequivocal support for same-sex marriage one day after Vice President Joe Biden suggested on NBC that he supported gay marriage as well. Vladimir Putin took the oath of office as Russia’s president in a brief but regal Kremlin ceremony.


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, May 7, 2013 PAGE

A3 Briefly: Nation FBI: Minn. raid disrupts local terrorism plot MINNEAPOLIS — The FBI said authorities disrupted “a localized terror attack” in its planning stages when they arrested a man in a western Minnesota mobile home that contained Molotov cocktails, suspected pipe bombs and firearms, the agency said Monday. Buford Rogers, 24, of Montevideo was arrested Friday and was charged with one count of being a felon in possession of a firearm. He remained in federal custody Monday, and it was not clear if he had an attorney. “The FBI believed there was a terror attack in its planning stages, and we believe there would have been a localized terror attack, and that’s why law enforcement moved quickly to execute the search warrant on Friday to arrest Mr. Rogers,” FBI spokesman Kyle Loven said Monday. Loven declined to elaborate about the location of the alleged target, other than to say it was believed to be in Montevideo, a city of about 5,000 people about 130 miles west of Minneapolis. He also declined to say whether Rogers was believed to be acting alone or as part of a group, or if other arrests were expected.

DUI arrest for bishop WORCESTER, Mass. — The leader of a Roman Catholic Dio-

cese in Massachusetts was arrested over the weekend on a drunken driving charge after an alleged hitand-run in Rhode Island. McManus Worcester Bishop Robert McManus, 61, was arrested Saturday night in Narragansett, R.I. The driver of the other vehicle reportedly called police, who arrested McManus at his nearby vacation home, police said. On Monday, McManus said he “made a terrible error in judgment” by driving after drinking wine at dinner. McManus was scheduled to be arraigned today in South Kingstown, R.I., on charges of drunken driving and leaving the scene of an accident. He was a bishop in Providence for five years before heading the Worcester Diocese in 2004.

Migraine drug warning WASHINGTON — U.S. health regulators are warning doctors and women of childbearing age that certain medications used to treat migraine headaches can decrease children’s intelligence if taken while their mothers are pregnant. The Food and Drug Administration said the drugs, including Depakote and Depacon, that contain contain valproate sodium should never be taken by pregnant women. The Associated Press

Briefly: World 42 reportedly killed Sunday in Israeli strike BEIRUT — Israel’s weekend airstrike on a military complex near the Syrian capital of Damascus killed at least 42 Syrian soldiers, anti-regime activists said Monday, citing information from military hospitals. The Syrian government has not released a death toll, but Syrian state media have reported casualties in Sunday’s pre-dawn airstrike, Israel’s third into Syria this year. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said it was not clear how many soldiers were there at the time of the strike. Rami Abdel-Rahman, the head of the group, said his sources at Syrian military hospitals gave him information on 42 Syrian soldiers killed in the Israeli attack. Israel’s government has not formally confirmed involvement in strikes on Syria. Israel on Monday signaled a return to “business as usual,” with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu arriving in China for a scheduled visit.

Ex-Nazi, 93, arrested BERLIN — A 93-year-old man who was deported from the U.S. for lying about his Nazi past was arrested by German authorities Monday on allegations he served as an Auschwitz death camp guard.

Hans Lipschis was taken into custody after authorities concluded there was “compelling evidence” he was involved in crimes at Auschwitz while there from 1941 to 1945, Stuttgart prosecutor Claudia Krauth said. Lipschis has acknowledged being assigned to an SS guard unit at Auschwitz but maintains he only served as a cook. Krauth said, however, that a judge upheld her office’s request for an arrest warrant. Bringing formal charges, a process similar to a U.S. grand jury indictment, would take another two months, she said. In the meantime, Krauth said a doctor has confirmed Lipschis’ health is good enough for him to be kept in detention. Lipschis was deported from the U.S. in 1983 for lying about his Nazi past when he immigrated to Chicago in the 1950s.

Nigerian plane crash NIAMEY, Niger — An airport official in the capital of Niger said a military plane from Nigeria has crashed, killing the two people aboard. Chaibou Massalatchi, the head of Niamey’s airport, said the plane had taken off Monday to do a reconnaissance mission. The Nigerian military is taking part in the regional effort to support France’s operation in northern Mali. Nigerian Brig. Gen. Chris Olukolade said two pilots were killed when the Alpha jet fighter went down 37 miles west of Niamey. The Associated Press

Bomb suspect’s friend free on $100,000 bond Judge agrees flight risk slim THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WORCESTER, Mass. — A magistrate judge Monday OK’d the release of a friend of Boston Marathon bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev from federal custody while he awaits trial for allegedly lying to federal investigators probing the bombings. Robel Phillipos, 19, was charged last week with lying to investigators about visiting Tsarnaev’s college dorm room after the bombings. The University of Massachusetts Dartmouth student faces a maximum of eight years in prison if convicted. Prosecutors initially asked that Phillipos be held while he awaits trial, arguing that he posed a serious flight risk. But both sides said in the court motion filed Monday they agreed to allow Phillipos to be released on $100,000 bond, provided he be confined to home and wear an electronic monitoring bracelet. Magistrate Judge Marianne Bowler agreed to the strict house arrest Monday afternoon. She told Phillipos he was allowed to leave the house only for meetings with his lawyers or true emergencies. A crowd of supporters, including Phillipos’ relatives, friends and grade-school principal, showed up for the detention hearing. It was not immediately clear when Phillipos would be released. Meanwhile, a funeral director trying to find a cemetery to take the body of Tsarnaev’s older

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A courtroom sketch shows Robel Phillipos’ Boston appearance last week. brother and alleged accomplice, Tamerlan, pledged to ask the city of Cambridge to allow him to be buried in a city-owned cemetery because the brothers lived in Cambridge for the past decade.

Interment request But Cambridge City Manager Robert Healy said he is urging Tsarnaev’s family not to make the request. “The difficult and stressful efforts of the citizens of the city of Cambridge to return to a peaceful life would be adversely impacted by the turmoil, protests and wide spread media presence at such an interment,” Healy said Sunday. Worcester funeral director Peter Stefan said he hasn’t been able to find a cemetery in Massachusetts willing to accept the

remains of Tamerlan, who was killed following a gunbattle with police four days after the bombings. He said if Cambridge turns him down, he will seek help from state officials. Stefan said Monday he does not think Russia will take the body. Phillipos is accused of lying to investigators about visiting Dzhokhar Tsarnaev’s college dorm room April 18, three days after the bombings. Two other friends were charged with conspiring to obstruct justice by taking a backpack with fireworks and a laptop from Tsarnaev’s dorm room. All four had studied at UMass Dartmouth. Defense attorneys for Phillipos said their client had nothing to do with the deadly bombings and isn’t a flight risk. In letters filed with the motion, friends and family members urged the court to release Phillipos on bail, describing him as peaceful and nonviolent. “I was shocked and stunned when I heard the news of his arrest,” wrote Zewditu Alemu, his aunt. “I do not believe that my beloved Robel crosses the line intentionally to support or assist such a horrendous act.” Phillipos was majoring in marketing with a minor in sociology at UMass Dartmouth and expected to graduate in 2015. The Tsarnaev brothers are accused of carrying out the bombings using pressure cookers packed with explosives, nails, ball bearings and metal shards. The attack killed three people and injured more than 260 others. Dzhokhar Tsarnaev remains in a prison hospital in Boston.

Burned limo had 1 more passenger than allowed THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

REDWOOD CITY, Calif. — A stretch limousine that burst into flames on a San Francisco Bay bridge, killing five women inside, was carrying one too many passengers, investigators said Monday. The state Public Utilities Commission had authorized the vehicle to carry eight or fewer passengers, but it had nine on the night of the deadly fire, California Highway Patrol Capt. Mike Maskarich said. He did not comment on whether the overcrowding may have been a factor in the deaths.

Girls night out

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Lincoln Town Car was packed with young women celebrating a girls’ night out with a newlywed bride when it went up in flames Saturday night on the San Mateo-Hayward Bridge. The driver and four women were able to escape. The newlywed woman was among the dead. The driver, Orville Brown, said at first he misunderstood when one of the passengers knocked on the partition and complained about smelling smoke. With the music turned up, he initially thought the woman was

Quick Read

California state and local emergency personnel investigate the limousine fire scene Saturday in Foster City, Calif. asking if she could smoke. Seconds later, he said, the women knocked again, screaming, “Smoke, smoke!” and “Pull over,” said Brown, who helped four women escape through the partition. One woman ran to the door at the back of the limo, but by then it was engulfed in flames. The five dead were found huddled near the partition, apparently unable to squeeze through. They have not yet been identified.

Two survivors were hospitalized Monday in critical condition. Investigators were trying to determine whether any crime occurred. Relatives said one of the dead was Neriza Fojas, a 31-year-old registered nurse from Fresno who recently wed and was planning to travel to her native Philippines to hold another ceremony before family. Her friends in the limousine were fellow nurses.

. . . more news to start your day

West: California cities can ban pot shops, court says

Nation: JFK Library allowed to archive Hemingway trove

Nation: Billions of cicadas set to overrun East Coast

Nation: More Haitians go to Puerto Rico to emigrate

LOCAL GOVERNMENTS IN California have legal authority to ban storefront marijuana shops within their borders, California’s highest court ruled Monday. Nearly 17 years after voters legalized medical marijuana, the court ruled unanimously in a legal challenge to a ban the city of Riverside enacted in 2010, which declared storefront pot shops as public nuisances. Marijuana advocates have argued that allowing local government to bar dispensaries thwarts the intent of the state’s medical marijuana law to make the drug accessible to residents with doctor’s recommendations to use it.

A NEW PARTNERSHIP will allow U.S. scholars and the public to get a fuller view of the trove of books and records Ernest Hemingway left at his home in Cuba where he wrote some of his most famous works. Cuba and a U.S. foundation are working to preserve the novelist’s papers that have been kept at his home near Havana since he died in 1961. On Monday at the U.S. Capitol, U.S. Rep. James McGovern of Massachusetts and the Boston-based Finca Vigia Foundation announced the digitization of 2,000 Hemingway papers and materials. The digital copies will be sent to Boston’s John F. Kennedy Library.

ANY DAY NOW, billions of cicadas with bulging red eyes will crawl out of the earth after 17 years underground and overrun the East Coast. People from North Carolina to Connecticut will be outnumbered roughly 600-to-1. Maybe more. But at worst, the insects might damage a few saplings or young shrubs. Lots of people won’t ever see them. They’re looking for sex. And they’ve been waiting quite a long time. Since 1996, the 1-inch bugs have been a few feet underground, sucking on tree roots and biding their time. They emerge only when the ground temperature reaches precisely 64 degrees.

HAITIANS HAVE FLED their troubled country for years, attempting to reach the U.S. or other Caribbean islands by heading north across the open sea or trekking across the island of Hispaniola to scratch out a living in the Dominican Republic. But a newly popular route is taking migrants to a closer piece of the U.S. Hundreds of Haitian migrants have made their way to Puerto Rico in recent months. They’ve found that if they can make it to the U.S. territory without getting arrested, they can fly on to U.S. cities without having to show a passport, although some kind of identification, such as a driver’s license, is needed.


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PeninsulaNorthwest

TUESDAY, MAY 7, 2013

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Call for art for center’s Webster’s Woods May 26 is deadline for proposals

the week of June 16 in time for the June 23 opening celebration. They will remain in the park until June 2014, when artists may either remove them or donate them to the Port Angeles Fine Arts Center.

BY DIANE URBANI DE LA PAZ

People’s choice

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Once the works are in the woods, art lovers will be encouraged to take part in the people’s choice balloting. Anderson said PAFAC. org, will be the place to vote; the winning artist will receive a $1,000 cash prize. Art Outside 2013 is funded by the fine arts center’s “New Artitude� benefit held in the fall, and by support from Green Crow and the Port Angeles Regional Chamber of Commerce, Anderson added. This year’s Art Outside opening will come on the heels of “Re Creation,� the center’s first community sculpture project. ________ Anderson and community education contractor Features Editor Diane Urbani Karen White introduced de la Paz can be reached at 360this project in a discussion 452-2345, ext. 5062, or at diane. at The Landing mall last urbani@peninsuladailynews.com.

PORT ANGELES — For the first time, visitors to Webster’s Woods, the 5-acre art park surrounding the Port Angeles Fine Arts Center, will have a chance to vote for their favorite new works of art. In the 14th annual Art Outside season, a fresh crop of sculptures will be added to the park this summer — a welcome party is set for June 23 — so artists are invited to send in their proposals now. Robin Anderson, executive director of the arts center, is urging sculptors to visit www.PAFAC.org, read the “Call to Artists� page and submit proposals before the May 26 deadline. Twelve artists will be selected to install a piece in

Vote for prize-winning mothers! THE ENTRIES ARE in, and voting is under way to determine the winners of prizes in the Peninsula Daily News’ online Mother’s Day Photo and Essay Contest. Simply go to www. peninsuladailynews. com, click on the button and make your choice for the photo and essay you like. The top three mothers who achieve the most votes will win prizes from these contest sponsors: Peaceful Kneads Massage, Elwha River Casino, Atma Massage, Extendicare, Port Angeles Anytime Fitness and Woodfire Grill. Voting concludes Friday at noon.

DIANE URBANI

Webster’s Woods; each will receive an $800 stipend. Art Outside, begun in summer 2000 by thendirector Jake Seniuk, is a wedding of art and nature. Sculptures, weavings and paintings dot the meadow,

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adorn the trees and follow the walking paths. So Webster’s Woods, open to the public daily from dawn until dusk, has become a haven for locals and visitors alike, as well as a place where artists col-

laborate with the natural world. “It’s wonderful exposure,� Anderson said. “Jake has really built the reputation of the park.� The 12 selected works of art will be installed during

Drug Take Back event nets more than 130 pounds PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

took in about 25 pounds of unwanted or unused drugs during the event, said Kay Pownall, administrative supervisor and property and evidence technician for the Port Townsend Police Department. Borte said the federal Drug Enforcement Administration, which sponsors the national drug take-back effort each year, has ruled that drugs no longer can be taken back to pharmacies.

Law enforcement agencies across the North Olympic Peninsula collected more than 130 pounds of expired, unused and unwanted over-the-counter and prescription drugs during the annual Drug-Take Back Day last month. Drugs were brought in April 27 for disposal. The Port Angeles Police Department and Clallam County Sheriff’s Office collected 64.6 pounds of drugs at the Clallam County Continuing collection Courthouse at 223 E. First The Clallam County St., Port Angeles. Sheriff’s Office continues to accept unused medications Sequim and PT between 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 The Sequim Police Depart- p.m. Mondays through Friment estimated between 40 days, Borte said. The office is located on and 45 pounds of unwanted drugs were collected at the the main floor of the ClalSequim police offices, 609 W. lam County Courthouse. Unwanted drugs also Washington St. Port Townsend police can be taken to the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office at 81 Elkins Road, Port Hadlock. The Peninsula’s other law enforcement agencies also “Pain & Gain� (R) will take in drugs five days a week during business hours. ■The Rose Theatre, The take-back program Port Townsend (360is free and does not require 385-1089) identification. “The Company You Keep� (R) Nationally, Americans “The Sapphires� (PG-13) turned in more than 2 million pounds of prescription pills ■Uptown Theatre, Port over the past three years at Townsend (360-3855,200 sites operated by the 3883) DEA and state and local law enforcement agencies. “Iron Man 3� (PG-13)

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Webster’s Woods in Port Angeles, home to sculptures such as “Pi a la Mode� by Micajah Bienvenu, is the setting for the 14th annual “Art Outside� season this summer. Proposals are being accepted now from artists who want to add their creations to the woods surrounding the Port Angeles Fine Arts Center.

month, and are now planning a public design workshop at the fine arts center at 1 p.m. Saturday, June 1, and construction of the sculpture, on the green in front of the center on Lauridsen Boulevard, June 12-15. “That will be a fun way to launch a summer of outdoor sculptures,� Anderson said of the free community project. “We’ll also have our first summer camp; there are a lot of outdoor things going on,� she added. The center plans “Eco-tivities� day camps for 7- to 12-year-olds from June 24-28, July 8-12 and Aug. 12-16. For information about the summer camps, the community sculpture project and other activities at the center, see PAFAC.org, phone 360-457-3532 or visit the center’s gallery, 1203 E. Lauridsen Blvd., between 11 a.m. and 5 p.m. Thursday through Sunday.

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Alex Tornala, 8, front, and Kate Powers, 13, perform with the Young Fiddlers group of youth musicians at the merchant’s street fair of the Sequim Irrigation Festival on Saturday on Washington Street in downtown Sequim.

Streamkeepers to collect insects for Quileute tribe BY ROB OLLIKAINEN PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — Streamkeepers, Clallam County’s volunteer stream monitoring program, will sample bugs in the Quillayute River basin if county commissioners approve an interlocal agreement with the Quileute tribe next week. “The tribe has asked for our help in collecting bugs,� Ed Chadd, Streamkeepers

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coordinator, told the three county commissioners at their Monday work session. Streamkeepers’ “intrepid bug sorting team� will help process the samples, which will save time and lab costs, Chadd said. “We’re happy about this because currently we don’t have funding available to do our own bug sampling,� he added. “They’ve got a fairly ambitious plan to cover a lot of sites, both this year and next year.� The tribe is using a grant from the federal Environmental Protection Agency to sample benthic macroinvertebrate, or stream bugs, at up to 15 sites. The bugs are important players in the food chain and help scientists assess water quality. Under the teams of the interlocal agreement, the tribe will pay the county $6,300 for bug collection and sampling through Sept. 30. A similar interlocal agreement will likely come forward in 2014. “It’s great you’re getting outside funding,� Commissioner Mike Doherty told Chadd.

Streamkeepers has more than 100 volunteers. It recently resurrected monitoring of the Dungeness River and its neighboring streams to identify the sources of pollution. Samples are tested for nutrients, bacteria, temperature, dissolved oxygen, pH, conductivity, salinity and turbidity. Streamkeepers will hold an introductory training course for new volunteers June 11 in the Clallam County Courthouse EOC training room.

Land for 101 widening Meanwhile, commissioners today will consider three land purchase agreements for the widening of Old Olympic Highway between Gunn Road and McDonald Creek. The segment is a continuation of the county’s multiyear effort to widen the major collector to 40 feet. Construction of the $1.26 million segment is planned for early next spring. “We’ve passed the halfway mark on the right of way process,� Assistant County Engineer Joe Donisi said.

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Sequestration may delay Quillayute dredging Holdup may hurt fishing industry, Canoe Journey BY PAUL GOTTLIEB PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

LAPUSH — A delay of at least two years in dredging a channel at this remote coastal reservation could restrict access to Quillayute Harbor for the $4 million Quileute fishing industry and for participants in the 2013 Tribal Canoe Journey, according to the tribe’s executive director and the Corps of Engineers. Sediment has been scooped from a channel leading into Quillayute Harbor every other year to ensure safe haven for the Quileute tribe’s small but economically important fishing fleet and U.S. Coast Guard Station Quillayute River. The dredging project, which costs between $1 million and $1.5 million, was in the 2013 federal budget until President Barack Obama’s sequestrationrelated budget deal with Congress killed and buried it. Blame timing, said the Quileute tribe’s new executive director, John Miller said last week. Miller, the former director of Clallam County’s Department of Community Development, said that the dredging, overseen by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, is funded only for odd-numbered years. So the channel was dredged in 2011, left untouched in 2012, and was due for dredging again in 2013. Now, it won’t be happening. “The continuing [budget] resolution with sequestration will not fund anything that wasn’t in the 2012 budget for 2013,� Miller said. The next dredging of the channel is now scheduled for 2015 — if it’s funded.

“As [the channel] gets silted in, there may become areas that at low tide would not be accessible by boat.� JOHN MILLER executive director, Quillayute tribe “[The dredging delay] could restrict the ability of tribal members and other people to get boats in and out of the harbor,� he said. “We are hoping the marina will be usable.� The Quileute Marina can accommodate about two dozen boats. “That will be restricted because of the siltation that’s occurring,� Miller said. “It won’t be able to accommodate as many boats.� It also could inhibit harbor use by some support boats that will accompany pullers in the 2013 Tribal Canoe Journey when they stop in LaPush this summer. “We’re not really sure where they’ll go,� Miller said. “We’ll have to work with other tribes to work that out.�

LONNIE ARCHIBALD/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

A fishing boat enters the mouth of the Quillayute River with James Island is in the background. A delay in dredging around the area may adversely affect the fishing industry, the Canoe Journey and a U.S. Coast Guard station.

areas that at low tide would not be accessible by boat,� Miller said. While the dredging project has in the past been funded, it was still subject to public comment and review under the National Environmental Policy Act, the Endangered Species Act and the Clean Water Act. The Corps of Engineers’ public notice of public comBoat basin ment gave an idea of how The channel to be important the dredging dredged leads to the boat project is to the tribe and basin that encompasses the the Coast Guard. tribe’s Quileute Marina, which is also home to the Harbor of refuge rescue boats of the Coast “The project provides a Guard Station and a m a r i n e - s p i l l - r e s p o n s e harbor of refuge and has trailer with material avail- the only Coast Guard search and rescue station able to combat oil spills. The station is named for along 100 miles of coastline the waterway that empties between Grays Harbor and Neah Bay,� according to the into the ocean there. “As [the channel] gets notice. “The harbor and marina silted in, there may become

at [the] Quileute tribal reservation offer a livelihood for approximately 325 tribal members and 50 non-tribal citizens including Coast Guard personnel. “The primary commercial activities are fishing and fish processing, which generate approximately $4 million in annual income.� The dredging project, authorized by the federal Rivers and Harbors Act of 1930, ensures an entrance channel 10 feet deep and 75 feet wide. Work was to include digging up 75,000 to 100,000 cubic yards from the entrance channel and the boat basin. The material was to be deposited mostly on the ocean side of the spit to replenish it and Rialto Beach. Corps of Engineers spokesman Bill Dowell said

Friday the Corps would monitor the safety of access to the harbor. “Facilities up and down the coast are in the same situation,� Dowell said, adding that other Corps projects have suffered from the timing constraints of the continuing budget resolution, too. “I can’t speculate on whether or not any monies will get funneled to them.� “That’s not our decision.�

First they heard

“As far as we foresee, none of this will affect any of the Coast Guard’s mission,� Akiyama said. U.S. Rep. Derek Kilmer of Port Angeles, whose 6th Congressional District constituency includes Clallam and Jefferson counties, said in an email Monday that the cancelled dredging project is a victim of “another damaging ripple effect� of across-the-board budget cuts. “I’m reaching out to the Army Corps of Engineers, the Coast Guard, the Quileute nation and other members of Congress to find a solution to this problem and to find a way to replace these across-theboard cuts altogether.�

Coast Guard spokesman Jordan Akiyama said Friday that reporter’s query about elimination of the dredging project was the first the Coast Guard had heard of it. ________ The Coast Guard has Senior Staff Writer Paul Gottlieb rescue boats able to dock in can be reached at 360-452-2345, shallow water less than 10 ext. 5060, or at paul.gottlieb@ feet deep, he said. peninsuladailynews.com.

Fatal: Illegal lane travel Beattie: A boat ‘CoLab’ CONTINUED FROM A1 witness — Jim Watson of Brinnon — said that A silver Nissan Murano Sutherland was conscious driven by Leonard Vohs of before he was transported Burns, Ore., was heading to Seattle. north 4 miles south of the Watson was traveling Jefferson County line when south toward Brinnon but he crossed the center line was on the north side of the and collided with Hanson’s wreck so he was unable to 2006 Harley Davidson get home. motorcycle, the State patrol said. Traffic piled up Both motorcycle riders Traffic piled up quickly were ejected, the State after the wreck, he said. Patrol said. There were about 100 Vohs suffered minor injuries and was not taken cars on either side of the to a hospital, the State site, with people heading north to Poulsbo and south Patrol said. The cause of the wreck to Hoodsport who could not was improper lane travel, pass, Watson said. Several people turned the State Patrol said, adding that a charge against around and said that they Vohs is being investigated. would take the long way After Sunday’s wreck, a through Bremerton to reach

their destinations, said Watson, who got a lift home and returned after 10 p.m. for his car. Winger said speed and conditions would be taken into consideration in the State Patrol’s final report on Sunday’s wreck. All drivers and passengers in the two wrecks were wearing helmets and seat belts as required, the State Patrol said. The vehicles in the Sunday wreck were completely destroyed, while those in the Saturday wreck had reportable damage, the State Patrol said.

________ Jefferson County Editor Charlie Bermant can be reached at 360385-2335 or at cbermant@ peninsuladailynews.com.

Rescue: An alternative CONTINUED FROM A1 freighter had just passed, and he wanted to take advantage of its wake. Kienle, who has lived in Port Townsend The three were examined on the scene at about 12:15 p.m. and were determined for about two years, previously was a windto be unharmed, said Bill Beezley, spokes- surfer but learned paddleboarding “as a low-wind alternative.� man for the fire department. ________ Beezley did not know where the people live. Jefferson County Editor Charlie Bermant can be Kienle had ventured out into Admiralty reached at 360-385-2335 or at cbermant@peninsula Inlet at that particular time because a dailynews.com.

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“This is both revolutionary and obvious.� Beattie said the center will rent a sailboat to anyone who can prove knowledge of how to sail, making it unnecessary to own a boat to enjoy the water. And young people who want to learn how to sail can do so, essentially for free, he said. “Last year, we were able to fulfill 100 percent of our scholarship requests so if kids can’t pay for lessons, we can still get them out on the water.�

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CONTINUED FROM A1 ing it to the new Port Townsend venture that pro“The community made vides workspace and conthis possible, and now we nectivity for entrepreneurs. Beattie said he is most want to use the facility to help people in their busi- excited about the center’s nesses, to make them suc- education potential, which includes a partnership with cessful. “We are not an education the Seattle-based Crawford School that or an economic develop- Nautical ment agency, although we expands its training and course offerings to the maritouch both realms.� Beattie said the mari- time center’s Port Townsend time center is working to campus. develop partnerships. “We don’t have a lot of Partners with schools good news ourselves,� he Another partnership said. with the Port Townsend “We are here to support School System infuses marother people’s good news. itime instruction and proWhen they are successful, vides a unique opportunity, we are successful.� Beattie said. The center includes a “There is nothing like boatbuilding shop, a pilot this anywhere in the world, house that simulates train- where a maritime curricuing on a variety of vessels lum is being taught in a and a chandlery that sells K-12 setting,� he said. and distributes hard-to-find “People learn more when tools and supplies to boat- the material is woven ers around the world. together in a cohesive strucBeattie characterized ture in a way that is linked the facility as “sort of a to their community,� CoLab for boats,� compar- Beattie said.


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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Contest seeks area’s biggest, best liars Organizers to accept only 10 tellers BY DIANE URBANI

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People of Clallam County. Only about 10 tellers will be accepted, since the program must stay under two hours. The Story People are hosting the Liars’ Contest for the second consecutive year — and they know, as Shakespeare said, that “brevity is the soul of wit.”

PAZ

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — The lies will come thick and fast. And the juiciest ones will win their tellers some used trophies. That’s the truth about the second annual Liars’ Contest. Also true: Now is the time to enter, even if the event won’t happen Tall tales judged until 7 p.m. June 7. Each tall-tale teller will be The contest is first-come, firstserved, said Pat Ferris, an orga- judged on creativity, quality of nizer and member of the Story delivery, stage presence and audi-

ence response, Ferris explained. Bob Grattan, owner of the Bushwhacker in Port Angeles, and Josephine Pedersen, the Story People’s founding mother, Ferris will serve as judges of the lie-off, which will be open to the public at the Sons of Norway Hall, 131 W. Fifth St. Admission to the Liars’ Contest will be a $10 donation, since the event is a fundraiser for the 19th Forest Storytelling Festival to come to Peninsula College on

Oct. 18-20. The Story People, a nonprofit organization, brings storytellers from across the nation to the festival each year. At the inaugural Liars’ Contest last year, Josh McLean of Port Angeles took the top prize with his tale of leaving a backpack on a mountaintop — and then having it returned to him by a gracious monster. The second-place winner, Bob Nuffer of Sequim, delivered a whopper about mosquitoes growing larger and larger until they lifted a man and hauled him away. Then there was the third-place

Defense: Soldier in killings abnormalities in his brain the worst instances of soldier-on-soldier violence in the Iraq war and raised questions about the mental health problems for soldiers caused by repeated tours of duty. Russell, who is from Sherman, Texas, is being held at Joint Base LewisMcChord, about 40 miles south of Seattle. A hearing on possible charges was held in August 2009 at Fort Leavenworth, Kan.

BY MIKE BAKER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

JOINT BASE LEWISMCCHORD — Defense lawyers Monday tried to introduce evidence that an Army sergeant charged with the premeditated killing of five fellow service members in Iraq may have had brain abnormalities. A military judge heard testimony from an expert who said Sgt. John Russell had “significant abnormalities” in his brain structure and function. Dr. Ruben Gur said the abnormalities indicate Russell could have had difficulty regulating emotions, but experts called by the government suggested Russell’s brain is normal. Capt. Durward Johnson, an Army prosecutor, said the brain examinations cited by the defense weren’t pertinent to the case because they were conducted nearly four years after the killings, and the results were compared to the brains of younger people who weren’t on medication. “It doesn’t fit,” Johnson said. The judge, Col. David

Depression, PTSD Sgt. John Russell On trial for five murders Conn, did not immediately rule whether the testing would be allowed in the court-martial. Russell already has pleaded guilty to the 2009 killings but does not agree they were premeditated. Prosecutors are trying to prove that Russell plotted the shootings in advance. The previous plea agreement means Russell will avoid the death sentence. His maximum sentence would be a life term. The shooting was one of

Two evaluations presented during that hearing said Russell suffered from severe depression with psychotic features and chronic post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD. A March 2011 evaluation said the major depression with psychotic features was in partial remission. Russell was nearing the end of his third tour when his behavior changed, members of his unit testified in 2009. They said he became more distant in the days before the May 11, 2009, attack, and that he seemed paranoid that his unit was

trying to end his career. On May 8, Russell sought help at a combat stress clinic at Camp Stryker, where his unit was located. On May 10, Russell was referred to the Camp Liberty clinic, where he received counseling and prescription medication. Witnesses said they saw Russell the following day crying and talking about hurting himself. He went back to the Camp Liberty clinic, where a doctor told him he needed to get help or he would hurt himself. Russell tried to surrender to military police to lock him up so he wouldn’t hurt himself or others, witnesses said. Military prosecutors said Russell left the clinic and later returned with a rifle he took from his unit headquarters and began firing. The shooting killed Navy Cmdr. Charles Springle of North Carolina; Pfc. Michael Edward Yates Jr. of Maryland; Dr. Matthew Houseal of Texas; Sgt. Christian Bueno-Galdos of New Jersey; and Spc. Jacob Barton of Missouri.

Gregoire’s pension near $160,000 a year THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ing in state government before being elected. “I’m one who frankly believes that everybody should Gregoire be treated the same. So I was surprised,” Gregoire said of learning about the special benefits around the time she became governor in 2005.

OLYMPIA — Former Gov. Chris Gregoire receives a pension of $159,608, the most of any retiree from state government. She benefits from an old rule that gave elected officials a special deal on retirement, but she was eligible because she began working in state government a long time ago. Gregoire served two terms as governor and three terms as attorney general, plus 20 years work- Closed in 1977

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AGNEW — Reservations are required by this Saturday for State Liquor Control Board Communications Director Brian Smith’s presentation of “Rules for Marijuana Sales” planned Saturday, May 18. Smith also will discuss progress made on the implementation of Initiative 502 at the annual meeting of the League of Women Voters of Clallam County at the Olympic Unitarian Universalist Fellowship Church, 73 Howe Road, The meeting begins at 11 a.m. followed by lunch, catered by Sweet Beginnings of Sequim, at noon. Smith will speak at 12:45 p.m. Tickets are $16 and can be purchased at the League of Women Voters website at www.lwvcla.org. Passage of I-502 established precedent for growing, processing, retailing and possessing marijuana legally in the state.

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Discussion topics at the event will include “Spring Mushrooms” and “Mountain Morel Foray.” For more information, visit olymushrooms.org.

Drawing sessions PORT ANGELES — Live drawing sessions with nude models are held at every third Wednesday of each month at 7 p.m. at Studio Bob, 118 ½ E. Front St. The sessions are open to the public, and art students younger than 18 must be accompanied by an adult. Doors open at 7 p.m. and are locked at 7:30 p.m. with sessions running until about 10 p.m. Tables and chairs are provided, but attendees must provide all supplies including easels. For more information, phone 360-775-4154.

Anti-GMO group

PORT ANGELES — The initial meeting of the Port Angeles GMO Group will be held at the Port Angeles Library, 2210 S. Peabody St., from 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. The meeting is designed ‘The Sapphires’ film to identify volunteers interested in supporting public PORT TOWNSEND — education on Initiative 522 “The Sapphires,” the story of an Australian aboriginal before the November election. singing group on a USO This initiative would tour of Vietnam, is the subject of tonight’s First Tues- require labeling of foods containing genetically modday Film Salon. The Port Townsend Film ified organisms, or GMOs. The GMO process and Institute invites moviegorelated health conseers to stay after the 7:20 quences will be discussed. p.m. screening at the Rose For more information, Theatre, 235 Taylor St., for phone Linda Springob at conversation about “The 360-461-0222. Sapphires,” Motown, Vietnam and the USO. For more details, phone Contra dance set the Port Townsend Film PORT TOWNSEND — Institute at 360-379-1333 Jeanie Murphy will call the or visit www.PTFilmFest. dances and the Wharf Rats com. will provide the music at

Mushroom meeting GARDINER — The Olympic Peninsula Mycological Society will meet at the Gardiner Community Center, 980 Old Gardiner Road, from 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Wednesday. The meeting will be preceded by a mushroom ID class from 6 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.

the Second Saturday Contra Dance at Quimper Grange, 1219 Corona St., on Saturday. The dance begins at 7:30 p.m. and ends at about 10:30 p.m. Cost is $6 for adults, $3 for ages 3-18 and free for those 3 and younger. Visit ptcommunitydance. blogspot.com. Peninsula Daily News

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Nelsen, legal and legislative-services manager at the Department of Retirement Systems. Elected officials did have more taken out of their paychecks over their careers — 7.5 percent of pay to other workers’ 6 percent. But that 25 percent increase in what employees paid into the system was dwarfed by a 50 percent increase in what the state paid. Six-figure pensions are rare in Washington’s state and local governments. Of nearly 140,000 retirees, 209 have a payout above $100,000, Nelsen said. Just 11 of them — none from state agencies — have benefits higher than Gregoire’s.

________ Features Editor Diane Urbani de la Paz can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 5062, or at diane.urbani@peninsuladaily news.com.

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Smoothing Treatment

Lawmakers closed the special plan for longtime retirees in 1977, but lawmakers thought it would have been legally questionable to change benefits for employees, such as Gregoire, already in the plan.

“To me it’s never been about [a] pension. . . . To me, it’s always been about service and not about money,” she said. In the old pension plan, known as Plan 1 of the Public Employees’ Retirement System, 30 years of service was the upper limit for boosting benefits. But that cap doesn’t apply to time in elected office. So Gregoire’s 40 years of public service are all counted toward her benefit. Another difference: Most members of the group receive a payout of 2 percent of their final pay for every year they worked. The formula for elected officials uses 3 percent of pay for every year they are in political office. “It’s one of the reasons why they closed the plan back in ’77,” said Dave

tale, Brian Pettyjohn’s yarn about a boy living with a screw in his navel. “The top three winners get downright incredible recycled trophies,” said Ferris, adding that she and the Story People find the trophies at Goodwill. To enter the Liars’ Contest or find out more, phone Ferris at 360-504-2143 or email Liarcontest@gmail.com.


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, May 7, 2013 PAGE

A7

Logger saved partner 60 years ago WHEN YOU GO to work today, chances are you will return home tonight unscathed. The possibility that you will be injured or killed is, in most cases, the furthest thing from your mind. But if you work in the timber industry, even if you know what you are doing, the possibility of an accident is always just a moment away, and although safety on the job has gotten better, too many wonderful people still have lost their lives. On the morning of May 1, 1943, Simon Erickson of Forks and his partner, Louis Johnson of Port Angeles, set out to do their jobs as timber fallers for the Ozette Timber Company. Erickson was born in Sweden in 1891 and was the youngest of eight children. He had come to the United States as a teenager, and prior to his arrival in Forks, around 1933, he had worked awhile in Katalla, Alaska, for the railroad, and then in North Bend as a logger. On that spring morning in May, 52-year-old Erickson and 56-year-old Johnson were falling a big cedar tree at the timber company camp near Tyee. As the pair prepared to fall the tree, a limb shook loose from a hemlock tree nearby and fell toward the men. Erickson saw the limb and yelled to his partner to watch out.

WEST END NEIGHBOR The limb hit Erickson, in Baron the right shoulder, severing an artery. He died instantly. Sylvia Erickson Jones, 95, of Bellingham remembers her Uncle Simon as “the most kind, wonderful man you could ever meet. He was good to the core.” And she has always heard that her uncle had sacrificed his life that day to save his partner. Had the time it took to warn Johnson cost Erickson his life? It seems that it did. In 1920, the Washington Safety Board issued a statement that logging was more deadly than war. It wasn’t until 1932 that logging fatalities were lower than 100 for the year. After World War II, the state Legislature allocated money for more safety programs. Regardless of new safety measures, it’s the nature of the business, the remoteness of the job site, the type of weather and how far it is to the nearest health care facility that factor into what happens when someone is injured in the woods — and if

Christi

‘The Logger’ statue they survive. The Forks Loggers Memorial honors those who have lost their lives working in the timber industry as well as those who spent a lifetime working in one of the most dangerous professions. The memorial is next to the Forks Visitor’s Center and the Forks Timber Museum, 1421 S. Forks Ave. Dedicated on Memorial Day, May 25, 1992, it contains the names of about 600 deceased timber workers. Current chairwoman Jo Marie Miller said the names of those who lost their lives or worked in the timber industry in the area are eligible to be added to the memorial at any time. The cost is $15 per name. It pays for the individual’s nameplate and the memorial’s upkeep. The information about the person is archived at the

Peninsula Voices Morse Creek water I read the April 30 article, “Water Supply Safety Questioned. Elwha Sediment A Concern In PA” (PDN, April 30). Thank you for doing this. Could you find out if the former city water intake at Morse Creek Dam could be used, if things came to that? I have been told that the dam is still there. However, I would won-

der if the pipeline to the city is still in good enough repair to be used if an emergency situation develops. As the city grew, Morse Creek could not provide enough water. That is why they had to move to the Elwha and dig a Ranney well, etc. As a small child, I spent many happy summers down at the Morse Creek Dam. My grandfather was

caretaker of the Morse Creek Dam during World War II and for three years afterward. I am saying this to identify myself, and for you to see why I would have an interest in this situation. Iris Heston, Port Angeles We asked Port Angeles Public Works & Utilities Director Glenn Cutler for a response. Here it is: The Morse Creek diver-

OUR

SYLVIA ERICKSON JONES PHOTO

Simon Erickson, left, with an unidentified man in front of the iconic “Big Log,” which was placed in downtown Forks in the early 1940s shortly before Erickson died. Forks Timber Museum. Nomination forms are available at the Forks Visitor’s Center, West End Motors at 192681 U.S. Highway 101 and Jerry’s Rentals, 1051 S. Forks Ave., in Forks. “The Logger,” a 700-pound, 12-foot statue, stands at the Loggers Memorial. It was created by Dennis Chastain, He worked on it for more than a year.

Christi Baron is a longtime West End resident and Forks High School alumna who is an administrative assistant at Forks City Hall. Phone her at 360-374-5412, ext. 236, or 360-374-2244 with items for the column. Or email her at hbaron@centurytel.net. West End Neighbor appears on the PDN’s commentary page every other Tuesday.

READERS’ LETTERS, FAXES AND EMAIL

sion structure is still operational. The city can use the facility for its small hydroelectric facility, and the Clallam County Public Utility District utilizes it for drinking water. The city stopped utilizing Morse Creek for its water supply in the mid1970s. The demand for water exceeded what could be withdrawn from Morse Creek.

Also, water withdrawal has been restricted on Morse Creek during certain times of the year to ensure sufficient water remains for fish habitat. Major portions of the transmission line from the diversion structure to town are no longer operational. In the mid 1970s, the city started withdrawing water adjacent to the Elwha River with a Ranney well. The system has served

the city well in the past, and plans are to utilize it in the future. The city continues to treat Elwha River water and distributes potable water that meets all federal and state drinking water requirements. For more information on the city’s water quality, go to http://tinyurl.com/ bvt8xfy. Or write to me at publicworks@cityofpa.us to receive an electronic copy.

Hot air joke? Congress and helium WE HAVE NOT been paying nearly enough attention to helium legislation. Seriously. We’ve been complaining about Gail the way ConCollins gress fails at everything except scheduling vacations. So it seems only fair to salute the Responsible Helium Administration and Stewardship Act. The way things are going, it could be the most significant piece of legislation to make it into law this year. The issue is our helium stockpile, which is scheduled to go out of business. The House approved a bipartisan bill to save the program just before the members — yes! — left town for vacation. The Senate seems inclined to go along, unless, of course, Ted Cruz decides it’s a United Nations plot. The House debate took two days, which some people felt was way more than enough time, given the fact that the final vote was 394 to 1.

The lone “nay” came from Rep. Linda Sanchez of California, who accidentally pressed the wrong button. Democrats complained that the House could have taken care of helium in an hour, if the Republicans hadn’t been afraid of discussing anything else. It’s been a tough stretch for Republican leaders, who had set aside several days to debate a plan to improve the Obama health care act, before the rankand-file rejected the idea on the grounds that it might improve the Obama health care act. So, helium. “I’m pleased to support this bill, which shows that this Tea Party Congress will make the tough choice to keep children’s birthday parties on schedule and give industries that rely on helium the lift that they deserve,” sniped Rep. Hank Johnson of Georgia. The second most popular theme for speeches, which Johnson ignored, was: Look, helium is not a joke. “Despite what many think, helium is not just used for party balloons,” said Rep. Doc Hastings of Washington, the Republican who brought the bill to the House floor. Actually, if you’d heard the entire debate you would have

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been so impressed with helium that you would be wondering whether it should be wasted on balloons at all. It’s used in MRI machines, scientific research, fiber optics, aerospace technology. And it’s not all that easy to come by, being the product of slow radioactive decay deep in the earth. “It’s liquid down to absolute zero. You can pour it on MRI magnets. It’ll cool those superconductive magnets down. There’s nothing else like it,” said Rep. Rush Holt of New Jersey, a physicist who has very strong feelings about helium. The United States began stockpiling helium after World War I because Congress was worried about catching up with the Germans in the race to build a fleet of dirigibles. Miraculously, despite the Pentagon’s affection for continuing to build things that have no earthly use in modern warfare, the government eventually cut back on the blimp program. But it kept the stockpile going at a helium reserve near Amarillo, Texas. In 1996, during the Newt Gingrich era, Congress voted to go out of the helium business and let private enterprise take over as soon as the reserve paid off the money the government

had sunk into it. Hasn’t quite worked out. The debt is almost paid off, but the magic of the marketplace hasn’t kicked in. If the reserve closes now, the country loses 40 percent of its helium supply. So, last week, the House voted to extend the program. “Many people don’t believe that the federal government should be in the helium business, and I would agree,” said Hastings, as he pushed the bill to keep the government in the helium business. There are two ways to look at this story. One is that it’s about the impossibility of ever actually stopping any government program. Former Rep. Barney Frank, who said in 1996 that if Congress could not manage to get rid of the helium reserve “then we cannot undo anything,” hasn’t changed his mind. “Everybody is against waste but strongly defends this or that particular piece,” Frank said in a phone interview. He’s right. I have fond memories of listening to protests after Congress managed, with great effort, to end a totally useless subsidy on mohair. Most of the howls came from

NEWS DEPARTMENT Main office: 305 W. First St., P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362 ■ LEAH LEACH, managing editor/news, 360-417-3531 lleach@peninsuladailynews.com ■ MARGARET MCKENZIE, news editor; 360-452-2345, ext. 5064 mmckenzie@peninsuladailynews.com ■ BRAD LABRIE, sports editor; 360-417-3525; blabrie@peninsuladailynews.com ■ DIANE URBANI DE LA PAZ, features editor; 360-452-2345, ext. 5062 durbanidelapaz@peninsuladailynews.com ■ General news information: 360-417-3527 From Jefferson County and West End, 800-826-7714, ext. 5250 Email: news@peninsuladailynews.com News fax: 360-417-3521 ■ Sequim office: 147-B W. Washington St., 360-681-2390 JOE SMILLIE, 360-681-2390, ext. 5052, jsmillie@peninsuladailynews.com ■ Port Townsend office: 1939 E. Sims Way., 360-385-2335 CHARLIE BERMANT, 360-385-2335, ext. 5550, cbermant@peninsuladailynews.com

lawmakers from Texas, land of many mohair goats. “I have a mohair sweater! It’s my favorite one!” cried Republican Lamar Smith. The subsidy came creeping back a few years later. But there’s another possible moral. The helium program is great; it provided the country with a crucial product that business wasn’t prepared to produce. It spurred economic growth and scientific research and made enough profit to pay the taxpayers back. Maybe the only mistake was trying to pull the plug in the first place. “The federal government going into helium in the 1920s I think was a fine thing,” said Holt. He looks upon the current bill not as a temporary fix but as “a validation” of government’s role in looking after things that the private sector is reluctant or afraid to take on. The helium reserve, by the way, is still going to run dry in five or 10 years. Maybe private enterprise will step up to the plate. But if not, somebody’s going to have to organize one hell of a balloon recycling program.

________ Gail Collins is a columnist for The New York Times.

HAVE YOUR SAY ■ REX WILSON, executive editor, 360-417-3530 We encourage (1) letters to the editor of 250 words or fewer from readers on subjects of local interest, and (2) “Point of View” and “Teen Point of View” guest opinion columns of no more than 550 words that focus on local community lifestyle issues. Please — send us only one letter or column per month. Letters and guest columns published become the property of Peninsula Daily News, and it reserves the right to reject, condense or edit for clarity or when information stated as fact cannot be substantiated. Letters published in other newspapers, anonymous letters, personal attacks, letters advocating boycotts, letters to other people, mass mailings and commercial appeals are not published. Include your name, street address and — for verification purposes — day and evening telephone numbers. Email to letters@ peninsuladailynews.com, fax to 360-417-3521, or mail to Letters to the Editor, Peninsula Daily News, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. Sunday RANTS & RAVES 24-hour hotline: 360-417-3506


A8

WeatherWatch

TUESDAY, MAY 7, 2013 Neah Bay 55/46

Bellingham B elli el e lin n 69/51

Olympic Peninsula TODAY

Forks 67/47

➥

Port Townsend 61/48

A.M. Port Angeles FOG 64/49 Olympics Freeze level: 12,500 ft.

Yesterday

Sequim 63/49

PA

Port Ludlow 68/49

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

TC H

Statistics for the 48-hour period ending at noon yesterday. Hi Lo Rain YTD Port Angeles 77 47 0.00 6.53 Forks 88 49 0.00 47.45 Seattle 84 53 0.00 13.60 Sequim 78 53 0.00 4.02 Hoquiam 87 49 0.00 29.08 Victoria 73 46 0.00 10.80 Port Townsend 80 45 0.00* 7.93

Forecast highs for Tuesday, May 7

Billings 77° | 48°

Y FO G

Last

New

First

➥

★

★

Denver 66° | 41°

Chicago 68° | 46°

Los Angeles 70° | 57°

Atlanta 72° | 48°

El Paso 84° | 57° Houston 88° | 64°

Full

WEDNESDAY

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

Low 49 Clouds among the stars

62/47 Sun, clouds and warm day

Marine Weather

64/47 Sun drenches the day

66/47 Sun heats up the day

66/47 Another sun-filled day

Washington TODAY

Strait of Juan de Fuca: W wind 10 to 20 kt. Wind waves 1 to 3 ft. Areas of morning fog. Tonight, W wind 15 to 25 kt. Wind waves 2 to 4 ft.

Miami 86° | 68°

Fronts

CANADA

Seattle 79° | 57°

Ocean: SW wind 10 to 20 kt. Wind waves 1 to 3 ft. NW swell 5 ft at 8 seconds. Areas of fog.

Olympia 75° | 48°

Spokane 82° | 50°

Tacoma 75° | 57° Yakima 90° | 57°

Astoria 64° | 48°

ORE.

Tides

TODAY High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht 11:57 a.m. 7.0’ 5:49 a.m. -0.1’ 11:45 p.m. 8.6’ 5:41 p.m. 1.8’

LaPush

May 31 May 9

Sunset today Sunrise tomorrow Moonrise tomorrow Moonset today

Š 2013 Wunderground.com

TOMORROW High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht 6:31 a.m. -0.6’ 12:44 p.m. 7.0’ 6:23 p.m. 2.1’

Albany, N.Y. Albuquerque Amarillo Anchorage Asheville Atlanta Atlantic City Austin Baltimore Billings Birmingham Bismarck Boise Boston Brownsville Buffalo

Hi 74 72 71 46 51 67 56 77 62 68 59 64 78 53 85 78

8:36 p.m. 5:43 a.m. 5:01 a.m. 6:34 p.m.

Lo Prc Otlk 42 Clr 58 Cldy 43 Cldy 33 Cldy 48 2.72 Rain 44 .39 Rain 40 Cldy 45 Cldy 47 Cldy 40 Clr 47 .11 Rain 30 PCldy 50 PCldy 43 Clr 60 Clr 52 Clr

THURSDAY High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht 12:20 a.m. 8.6’ 7:10 a.m. -0.9’ 1:27 p.m. 7.1’ 7:02 p.m. 2.3’

Port Angeles

1:13 a.m. 6.7’ 3:11 p.m. 6.0’

8:10 a.m. 0.5’ 7:59 p.m. 4.1’

1:39 a.m. 6.6’ 4:00 p.m. 6.4’

8:40 a.m. -0.2’ 8:46 p.m. 4.7’

2:04 a.m. 6.5’ 4:45 p.m. 6.7’

Port Townsend

2:50 a.m. 8.3’ 4:48 p.m. 7.4’

9:23 a.m. 0.5’ 9:12 p.m. 4.6’

3:16 a.m. 8.1’ 5:37 p.m. 7.9’

9:53 a.m. -0.2’ 9:59 p.m. 5.2’

3:41 a.m. 8.0’ 10:23 a.m. -0.6’ 6:22 p.m. 8.3’ 10:45 p.m. 5.6’

1:56 a.m. 7.5’ 3:54 p.m. 6.7’

8:45 a.m. 0.5’ 8:34 p.m. 4.1’

2:22 a.m. 7.3’ 4:43 p.m. 7.1’

9:15 a.m. -0.2’ 9:21 p.m. 4.7’

2:47 a.m. 7.2’ 9:45 a.m. 5:28 p.m. 7.5’ 10:07 p.m.

Dungeness Bay*

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

Warm Stationary

Pressure Low

High

May 17 May 24

Nation/World

Victoria 72° | 52°

New York 73° | 52°

Detroit 72° | 52°

Washington D.C. 64° | 54°

Cartography by Keith Thorpe / Š Peninsula Daily News

★

Cloudy

TEMPERATURE EXTREMES for the contiguous United States:

Cold

TONIGHT

Pt. Cloudy

Minneapolis 81° | 50°

San Francisco 66° | 54°

Almanac

Brinnon 74/48

Sunny

Seattle 79° | 57°

*Reading taken in Nordland

Aberdeen 61/48

The Lower 48:

NationalTODAY forecast Nation

9:10 a.m. -0.5’ 9:32 p.m. 5.0’

-0.5 5.0’

-10s

Burlington, Vt. 81 Casper 63 Charleston, S.C. 73 Charleston, W.Va. 74 Charlotte, N.C. 58 Cheyenne 54 Chicago 69 Cincinnati 56 Cleveland 74 Columbia, S.C. 66 Columbus, Ohio 73 Concord, N.H. 70 Dallas-Ft Worth 70 Dayton 63 Denver 59 Des Moines 62 Detroit 73 Duluth 49 El Paso 84 Evansville 61 Fairbanks 40 Fargo 51 Flagstaff 63 Grand Rapids 75 Great Falls 68 Greensboro, N.C. 55 Hartford Spgfld 72 Helena 68 Honolulu 75 Houston 73 Indianapolis 59 Jackson, Miss. 59 Jacksonville 77 Juneau 50 Kansas City 56 Key West 77 Las Vegas 81 Little Rock 65

-0s

0s

10s

20s 30s 40s

50s 60s

70s

80s

90s 100s 110s

Cartography Š Weather Underground / The Associated Press

51 29 56 56 56 32 53 52 53 57 57 30 48 55 35 47 48 34 63 52 18 46 33 48 35 54 43 40 68 49 53 48 52 41 51 71 62 53

1.28 .01 2.12 2.56 2.07

.03

.18

.19 .07 .13

.01

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

Los Angeles Louisville Lubbock Memphis Miami Beach Midland-Odessa Milwaukee Mpls-St Paul Nashville New Orleans New York City Norfolk, Va. North Platte Oklahoma City Omaha Orlando Pendleton Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, Maine Portland, Ore. Providence Raleigh-Durham Rapid City Reno Richmond Sacramento St Louis St Petersburg Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco San Juan, P.R. Santa Fe St Ste Marie Shreveport

67 56 71 62 83 77 60 67 61 66 64 57 65 63 54 79 79 65 93 74 56 85 62 60 62 69 63 75 62 75 78 81 65 70 90 68 74 67

57 52 47 53 64 56 46 46 53 50 46 53 33 44 48 61 45 45 71 47 35 53 45 56 29 51 54 57 54 69 60 52 60 59 77 52 37 48

.22 .20 .03

.01

.03 .01 .15

.09 .23

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

â– 97 at Maricopa, Ariz. â– 23 at Stanley, Idaho

GLOSSARY of abbreviations used on this page: Clr clear, sunny; PCldy partly cloudy; Cldy cloudy; Sh showers; Ts thunderstorms; Prc precipitation; Otlk outlook; M data missing; Ht tidal height; YTD year to date; kt knots ft or ’ feet

Sioux Falls Syracuse Tampa Topeka Tucson Tulsa Washington, D.C. Wichita Wilkes-Barre Wilmington, Del.

50 77 77 56 90 60 64 63 74 65

45 44 66 51 63 44 52 42 39 45

.07

Cldy Clr PCldy .01 PCldy .01 Clr PCldy Cldy .01 PCldy Clr Cldy

________ Auckland Baghdad Beijing Berlin Brussels Cairo Calgary Guadalajara Hong Kong Jerusalem Johannesburg Kabul London Mexico City Montreal Moscow New Delhi Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome Sydney Tokyo Toronto Vancouver

Hi Lo 65 57 84 68 84 63 71 58 68 53 93 67 61 40 91 51 80 74 81 59 65 46 77 53 73 52 84 56 82 52 66 47 108 80 72 57 81 67 67 56 72 56 70 53 74 53 71 52

Otlk Cldy Ts Clr Sh Rain Clr PCldy Clr Cldy Clr Clr Clr PCldy Clr Clr Clr Clr PCldy Clr Rain Clr Clr Clr Clr

PREMIER HEATING DEALER ON THE PENINSULA Proudly Serving Clallam & Jefferson Counties for 16 Years

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Reg

ROYAL/ MED/BLACK 1 only ............. $2595 ROYAL/ MED/SAND 2 only................ $2595 ROYAL/ LRG/BLACK 1 only ............... $2695 ROYAL/ LRG/CHOCOLATE 4 only .. $2695 ROYAL/ LRG/SAND 1 only ................. $2695 WING/ BLACK 1 only ........................... $2395 WING/ CHOCOLATE 2 only ............... $2395 WING/ SAND 1 only ............................. $2395 WING/ STONE 2 only ........................... $2395 WING/ WINE 2 only .............................. $2395

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1995 1995 $ 1995 $ 1995 $ 1995 $ $

Sale

Reg

EAGLE/ BLACK 1 only ......................... $2495 EAGLE/ CHOCOLATE 2 only ............. $2495 EAGLE/ NEW WINERED 2 only ........ $2495 EAGLE/ OXFORD BLUE 1 only.......... $2495 EAGLE/ SAND 2 only ........................... $2495 EAGLE/ STONE 1 only ......................... $2495 OXFORD/ MED/ GRAPHITE 1 only . $2295 JAZZ/ LRG/ BLACK 1 only .................. $4495 SPACE CHAIR/ ESPRESSO 1 only .... $4295 CONSUL/ MOCHA 1 only ............... $1595

2095 2095 $ 2095 $ 2095 $ 2095 $ 2095 $ $

1495 2495 $ 2495 $ 695 $ $

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, May 7, 2013 SECTION

CLASSIFIEDS, COMICS, BUSINESS In this section

B Preps

Riders to open district action PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

TACOMA — The Port Angeles baseball team tries to continue its season today in a loser-out West Central District 2A playoff game at Franklin Pierce High School in Tacoma. The Roughriders, 10-8 overall and the Olympic League’s No. 4 seed, will take on South Puget Sound/Seamount No. 5 seed Lindbergh of Renton, which finished 12-6 overall and in third place in the Seamount League. The game starts at 5 p.m. The winner will advance to play South Puget Sound champion White River in a seeding game Wednesday at Franklin Pierce at 5 p.m. Wednesday’s winner advances to the district championship semifinals Saturday while the loser falls to the consolation bracket Saturday with a chance to battle for the fifth and sixth seeds to the state playoffs. The Riders are finishing the season strong, beating Kingston 5-3 in the final regular-season game before defeating Klahowya 4-3 on a walkoff hit by Michael Konopaski in a league seeding game last Wednesday. The only recent blip was a 4-1 loss to Olympic on Friday in another league seeding game, this time for the third and fourth seeds. The Lindbergh Eagles last were at state in 2011 when they went 1-1. The Riders have a shot at advancing in the district playoffs if they cut down on their errors, coach Chad Wagner said. “We can’t make mistakes, and we have to have timely hitting,” Wagner said after the Olympic loss Friday. “Playoff teams are going to be just as good as us, if not better, but if we execute and out-work our competition, we will win some games.”

Softball Port Townsend 10, Vashon Island 4 VASHON — The Redskins finished the season on a high note in a nonleague victory against fellow 1A school Vashon Island. It was only the second win of the season for Port Townsend, which has been struggling in the bigger 2A Olympic League, going 1-15 in league and 2-16 overall. But there’s a silver lining to this season as the Redskins have been much more competitive. “We have been hitting better than we have in years,” Port Townsend coach Heather Polizzi said. “I don’t remember us scoring this many runs in a season; in some games we scored eight, nine or 10 runs. “When we are on, we are a hitting machine. And up against 2A pitchers, I am so proud of our 1A softball team. We gave several teams a serious run, [such as] Olympic and Bremerton. “There is always next year.” Against Vashon on Friday, the Redskins exploded for 10 runs for the easy win. Rilke Rutenbeck went 3 for 4 with a double while Gen Polizzi was 2 for 2 with a double and Mia Henderson also was a perfect 2 for 2. Megan Lee went 2 for 4. Gen Polizzi started the game on the mound, striking out four and walking four in five innings while Lee threw the final two innings, walking three.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Toronto’s Emilio Bonifacio steals second base as Seattle shortstop Robert Andino is late on the tag during the second inning of their game in Toronto on Sunday. The Mariners lost by eight runs but that didn’t ruin their good mood of winning their third series in a row.

Sense of accomplishment M’s land in Pittsburgh with an upbeat mood BY RYAN DIVISH MCCLATCHY NEWS SERVICE

TORONTO — Both were losses in which the Mariners allowed 10 runs, starter Joe Saunders looked dismal on the mound and winning was unlikely from about the fourth inning on. But the mood after those two blowout losses couldn’t have been more different. The Mariners slogged their way through a 10-3 loss April 24 to the Houston Astros at Minute Maid Park. Saunders was roughed up for eight runs on 11 hits in five innings. It was the last game of an awful 1-5 trip to Texas that included the Mariners’ second series loss to the Astros this season. The team had an 8-15 record and was playing deplorable baseball. Seattle manager Eric Wedge had seen enough and let his

PLAYING

team have it in a closed-door postgame meeting. Fast forward to Sunday, when the Mariners looked sluggish in a 10-2 loss to the Toronto Blue Jays at the Rogers Centre. Saunders again was shaky, allowing seven runs and nine hits in five innings. The Mariners were limited to three hits against former teammate Brandon Morrow.

No anger at loss But there was no postgame meeting. There was no frustration or anger. Why? Well, the Mariners had taken two of three from the Blue Jays for their third series win in a row. They have won seven of their past 10 games and look like a much better team. “We feel good about ourselves,” Kyle Seager said. “Obviously [Sunday} was a tough one.

But winning two before then is a good thing. “We have a lot of confidence, and Next Game we are playing with a Today lot of confi- vs. Pirates dence right at Pittsburgh now.” Time: 4 p.m. E v e n On TV: ROOT Saunders found positives after the outing. “Our confidence level is high,” Saunders said. “You aren’t going to win every game, and you are going to have games like this. “But it’s how we bounce back. And I think we’ve shown we can do that.”

day, both PDT. They then get Thursday off before opening a three-game home series Friday against the Oakland A’s. Wednesday’s game could be tough because of the early hour the Mariners need to get going.

Oddities

No matter how many baseball games you watch, you always can see things you’ve never seen before. Take Sunday, for instance. Jesus Montero reached first on an infield single. That in itself seems improbable. The lumbering catcher, who has foot speed only a tortoise could love, was credited with the feat in the fifth inning. With runners on first and second and no outs, Montero hit a rocket ground ball to third. Getting up early Blue Jays third baseman Mark DeRosa made a diving The Mariners will have two stop, got up and fired to second days off this week sandwiched to get the force. around a two-game stay in PittsBut Dustin Ackley beat the burgh starting today. throw. They play at 4 p.m. today and again at 9:30 a.m. on WednesTURN TO M’S/B3

ROUNDBALL

Track and Field McMullin sets Sequim school record POULSBO — Sequim senior Jasmine McMullin did more than set a meet record at the Olympic League championships at North Kitsap High School on Saturday. McMullin was named the female field event athlete of the meet after she exploded to a meet record distance of 36 feet, 4.5 inches while winning the triple jump event. TURN

TO

PREPS/B3

DAVE LOGAN/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Hayden Gunderson of the Port Angeles junior varsity team drives through Kentlake Chaos in the MayDay Roundball Tournament at Port Angeles High School. Derek Schumacher (31) of Port Angeles watches the action. Chaos won 60-53 and went on to take second while Port Angeles tied for third place. See results on Page B2.


B2

SportsRecreation

TUESDAY, MAY 7, 2013

Today’s

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Latest sports headlines can be found at www. peninsuladailynews.com.

Scoreboard Calendar

Go to “Nation/World” and click on “AP Sports”

AREA SPORTS SHOT

Today Baseball: Port Angeles vs. Lindbergh in West Central District playoffs, loser-out, at Franklin Pierce High School in Tacoma, 5 p.m. Softball: Quilcene at Lake Quinault, 3:30 p.m.

Wednesday Softball: Olympic League Tournament, site: TBD, 4 p.m. Boys Golf: Port Townsend at Klahowya, 3 p.m. Track and Field: Chimacum Nisqually League Championships, at Eatonville High School, 3:30 p.m.

Thursday Softball: Forks at Hoquiam (DH), 3 p.m.; Chimacum at North Kitsap, CANCELED. Boys Golf: Chimacum at 1A Sub-District, Gold Mountain Golf Course (Bremerton), TBA.

Area Sports BMX Racing

1 2 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 4 5 1 2 3 1 2 3 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 2 3 4 1 2 3 1 2 3 4 5

Port Angeles BMX Track Sunday 36 Riders 9 Motos 3 Year Old Strider Dominik “Dominator” Johnson TT Connary 36-40 Cruiser Jon Lindberg Lawrence Moroles Scott Gulisao Mariah “The Wind” Fortman 5 & Under Novice Jaron Tolliver Jason Williams Cameron Colfax Kyah Weiss Dion Johnson 7 Novice Cody Amsdill Heidi Williams Weston Owen 7 Intermediate L.J. Vail Taylee Rome “Smash” Cash Coleman 9 Intermediate Toppy Robideau Zach Gavin Taylor “Chew-Toy” Coleman Josh Gavin Lightening Luke Gavin James Hampton Aydan Vail 10 Novice Jaxon Bourm Blake Williams Cholena Morrison Hailey Labrec 10 Intermediate Aydon Weiss Moose Johnson Bodi Sanderson 15 Intermediate Greg Faris Trenton Owen Johntay Tolliver Austin Washke Michael Emery

Youth Basketball Port Angeles Parks and Recreation MayDay Roundball Tournament Final Standings Boys 5th Grade Division 1. Washington Warriors (Tacoma), 2. Mount Vernon, 3. tie, Port Angeles, 3. tie, Kentlake, 5. Ulin Concrete Pumping (Sequim), 6. Beebe Trucking (Forks). Championship Game: Warriors 49, Mount Vernon 46. Boys 6th Grade Division 1. Washington Warriors, 2. Kentlake, 3. Port Angeles, 4. Forks. Championship Game: Washington Warriors 38, Kentlake 34. Boys 7th Grade Division 1. North Kitsap Bulldogs, 2. Kentlake, 3. Port Angeles, 4. Bremerton Wildcats. Championship Game: North Kitsap Bulldogs 43, Kentlake 42. Boys 8th Grade Division 1. Washington Warriors, 2. Courtenay Yetis (Courtenay, British Columbia), 3. West Side Hoops, 3. Kingston Tropics, 5. Kentlake Chaos, 6. Port Angeles. Championship Game: Warriors 51, Yetis 41. Boys Junior Varsity Division 1. Hoop Dreams (Puyallup), 2. Kentlake Chaos, 3. tie, Port Angeles, 3. tie, Courtenay Yetis, 5. Bremerton Wildcats, 6. Clallam Bay. Championship Game: Hoop Dreams 52, Kentlake Chaos 31. Girls 7th Grade Division 1. North Kitsap Heat, 2. Sound Basketball (Olympia), 3. Chehalis Bearcats, 4. Sequim, 5. Port Angeles. Championship Game: North Kitsap Heat 41, Sound Basketball 38. Girls Varsity Division 1.Runnin’ Rebels (Portland,Ore.), 2. Port Angeles, 3. A.W.E. (Arlington). Championship Game: Runnin’ Rebels 68, Port Angeles 58.

Baseball American League Texas Oakland Seattle Los Angeles Houston Boston New York Baltimore Tampa Bay

West Division W L 20 11 18 14 15 18 11 20 8 24 East Division W L 20 11 18 12 19 13 14 16

Pct GB .645 — .563 2½ .455 6 .355 9 .250 12½ Pct GB .645 — .600 1½ .594 1½ .467 5½

JEFFREY PITMAN

PERFECT

SEASON

Sequim Fire, a boys 12U soccer team that’s sponsored by Pacific Primary Care, went undefeated (6-0-0) in this year’s Sequim Junior Soccer spring league. The league plays games at the new Albert Haller fields, and typically includes teams from Sequim, Port Angeles and Jefferson County. Fire team members include, back row from left, Joshua Holloway, Raymond Lam, Connor Lamb, Timothy Gaskill, Mike McAleer and Jason Hall. Bottom row from left, head coach Carl Weber, Qi Ridle, Aidan Vincent, Sean Weber, Tane Ridle, Zen Graham, Ryan Tolberd and assistant coach Justin Ridle. Not pictured, Adam (Max) Wisner.

Toronto

11 21 Central Division W L Detroit 19 11 Kansas City 17 11 Cleveland 14 14 Minnesota 13 14 Chicago 13 17

.344 9½ Pct GB .633 — .607 1 .500 4 .481 4½ .433 6

Sunday’s Games Minnesota 4, Cleveland 2 Oakland 5, N.Y. Yankees 4 Toronto 10, Seattle 2 Kansas City 6, Chicago White Sox 5, 10 innings Texas 4, Boston 3 Baltimore 8, L.A. Angels 4 Detroit 9, Houston 0 Tampa Bay 8, Colorado 3 Monday’s Games Chicago White Sox 2, Kansas City 1, 11 innings Oakland at Cleveland, late Minnesota at Boston, late Toronto at Tampa Bay, late Texas at Chicago Cubs, late Today’s Games Detroit (Ani.Sanchez 3-2) at Washington (Zimmermann 5-1), 4:05 p.m. Kansas City (E.Santana 3-1) at Baltimore (W.Chen 2-3), 4:05 p.m. Oakland (Milone 3-3) at Cleveland (McAllister 2-3), 4:05 p.m. Seattle (Harang 1-3) at Pittsburgh (Ja. McDonald 2-2), 4:05 p.m. Chicago White Sox (H.Santiago 1-1) at N.Y. Mets (Harvey 4-0), 4:10 p.m. Minnesota (Diamond 2-2) at Boston (Dempster 2-2), 4:10 p.m. Toronto (Happ 2-2) at Tampa Bay (Ro.Hernandez 1-4), 4:10 p.m. L.A. Angels (C.Wilson 3-0) at Houston (Lyles 0-0), 5:10 p.m. Texas (Grimm 2-1) at Milwaukee (W.Peralta 2-2), 5:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Kuroda 4-1) at Colorado (J.De La Rosa 2-3), 5:40 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Seattle at Pittsburgh, 9:35 a.m. Detroit at Washington, 4:05 p.m. Kansas City at Baltimore, 4:05 p.m. Oakland at Cleveland, 4:05 p.m. Chicago White Sox at N.Y. Mets, 4:10 p.m. Minnesota at Boston, 4:10 p.m. Toronto at Tampa Bay, 4:10 p.m. L.A. Angels at Houston, 5:10 p.m. Texas at Milwaukee, 5:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Colorado, 5:40 p.m.

National League West Division W L San Francisco 19 12 Colorado 18 13 Arizona 16 15 Los Angeles 13 17 San Diego 13 18 East Division W L Atlanta 18 12 Washington 17 15 Philadelphia 14 18 New York 12 16 Miami 10 22 Central Division W L St. Louis 20 11 Cincinnati 18 14 Pittsburgh 17 14 Milwaukee 14 16 Chicago 11 20 Sunday’s Games Atlanta 9, N.Y. Mets 4 Washington 6, Pittsburgh 2 St. Louis 10, Milwaukee 1 Cincinnati 7, Chicago Cubs 4 Miami 14, Philadelphia 2 San Diego 5, Arizona 1 Tampa Bay 8, Colorado 3 San Francisco 4, L.A. Dodgers 3 Monday’s Games Atlanta at Cincinnati, late Texas at Chicago Cubs, late

Pct GB .613 — .581 1 .516 3 .433 5½ .419 6 Pct GB .600 — .531 2 .438 5 .429 5 .313 9 Pct GB .645 — .563 2½ .548 3 .467 5½ .355 9

Arizona at L.A. Dodgers, late Miami at San Diego, late Philadelphia at San Francisco, late Today’s Games Detroit (Ani.Sanchez 3-2) at Washington (Zimmermann 5-1), 4:05 p.m. Seattle (Harang 1-3) at Pittsburgh (Ja. McDonald 2-2), 4:05 p.m. Atlanta (Medlen 1-4) at Cincinnati (H.Bailey 1-3), 4:10 p.m. Chicago White Sox (H.Santiago 1-1) at N.Y. Mets (Harvey 4-0), 4:10 p.m. St. Louis (Lynn 5-0) at Chicago Cubs (Wood 2-2), 5:05 p.m. Texas (Grimm 2-1) at Milwaukee (W.Peralta 2-2), 5:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Kuroda 4-1) at Colorado (J.De La Rosa 2-3), 5:40 p.m. Arizona (McCarthy 0-3) at L.A. Dodgers (Beckett 0-4), 7:10 p.m. Miami (Sanabia 2-4) at San Diego (Stults 2-2), 7:10 p.m. Philadelphia (K.Kendrick 3-1) at San Francisco (Lincecum 2-1), 7:15 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Atlanta at Cincinnati, 9:35 a.m. Seattle at Pittsburgh, 9:35 a.m. St. Louis at Chicago Cubs, 11:20 a.m. Miami at San Diego, 12:40 p.m. Philadelphia at San Francisco, 12:45 p.m. Detroit at Washington, 4:05 p.m. Chicago White Sox at N.Y. Mets, 4:10 p.m. Texas at Milwaukee, 5:10 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Colorado, 5:40 p.m. Arizona at L.A. Dodgers, 7:10 p.m.

Basketball NBA Playoffs (x-if necessary) (Best-of-7) CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS EASTERN CONFERENCE Miami vs. Chicago Monday: Chicago at Miami, late Wednesday: Chicago at Miami, 4 p.m. Friday: Miami at Chicago, 5 p.m. Monday, May 13: Miami at Chicago, 4 p.m. x-Wednesday, May 15: Chicago at Miami, TBA x-Friday, May 17: Miami at Chicago, TBA x-Sunday, May 19: Chicago at Miami, TBA Indiana 1, New York 0 Sunday: Indiana 102, New York 95 Today: Indiana at New York, 4 p.m. Saturday, May 11: New York at Indiana, 5 p.m. Tuesday, May 14: New York at Indiana, TBA x-Thursday, May 16: Indiana at New York, 5 p.m. x-Saturday, May 18: New York at Indiana, TBA x-Monday, May 20 Indiana at New York, 5 p.m. WESTERN CONFERENCE San Antonio vs. Golden State Monday: Golden State at San Antonio, late Wednesday: Golden St. at San Antonio, 6:30 p.m. Friday, May 10: San Antonio at Golden State, 7:30 p.m. Sunday, May 12 San Antonio at Golden State, 12:30 p.m. x-Tuesday, May 14: Golden State at San Antonio, 6:30 p.m. x-Thursday, May 16: San Antonio at Golden State, TBA x-Sunday, May 19: Golden State at San Antonio, TBA Oklahoma City 1, Memphis 0 Sunday: Oklahoma City 93, Memphis 91 Today: Memphis at Oklahoma City, 6:30 p.m. Saturday, May 11: Oklahoma City at Memphis, 2 p.m. Monday, May 13: Oklahoma City at Memphis, 6:30 p.m. x-Wednesday, May 15: Memphis at Oklahoma City, TBA x-Friday, May 17: Oklahoma City at Memphis, TBA x-Sunday, May 19: Memphis at Oklahoma City, TBA

SPORTS ON TV

Today 11:30 a.m. (27) ESPN2 Soccer EPL, West Brom vs. Manchester City, Site: Etihad Stadium - Manchester, England (Live) 4 p.m. (2) CBUT (24) CNBC Hockey NHL, Montréal Canadiens vs. Ottawa Senators, Stanley Cup Playoffs, Eastern Conference Quarterfinals, Game 4, Site: Scotiabank Place - Ottawa (Live) 4 p.m. (25) ROOT Baseball MLB, Seattle Mariners vs. Pittsburgh Pirates, Site: PNC Park - Pittsburgh (Live) 4 p.m. (31) TNT Basketball NBA, Indiana Pacers at New York Knicks, Playoffs, semifinals (Live) 5 p.m. WGN Baseball MLB, St. Louis Cardinals vs. Chicago Cubs, Site: Wrigley Field - Chicago (Live) 6:30 p.m. (2) CBUT Hockey NHL, Chicago Blackhawks vs. Minnesota Wild, Stanley Cup Playoffs, Western Conference Quarterfinals, Game 4, Site: Xcel Energy Center - St. Paul, Minn. (Live) 6:30 p.m. (31) TNT Basketball NBA, Memphis Grizzlies at Oklahoma City Thunder, Playoffs, semifinals (Live) 7 p.m. (24) CNBC Hockey NHL, Vancouver Canucks vs. San Jose Sharks, Stanley Cup Playoffs, Western Conference Quarterfinals, Game 4, Site: HP Pavillion - San Jose, Calif. (Live)

Hockey NHL Playoffs FIRST ROUND (Best-of-7) (x-if necessary) EASTERN CONFERENCE Pittsburgh 2, N.Y. Islanders 1 Wednesday, May 1: Pittsburgh 5, N.Y. Islanders 0 Friday, May 3: N.Y. Islanders 4, Pittsburgh 3 Sunday: Pittsburgh 5, N.Y. Islanders 4, OT Today: Pittsburgh at N.Y. Islanders, 4 p.m. Thursday, May 9: N.Y. Islanders at Pittsburgh, 4 p.m. x-Saturday, May 11: Pittsburgh at N.Y. Islanders, TBD x-Sunday, May 12: N.Y. Islanders at Pittsburgh, TBD Ottawa 2, Montreal 1 Thursday, May 2: Ottawa 4, Montreal 2 Friday, May 3: Mo ntreal 3, Ottawa 1 Sunday: Ottawa 6, Montreal 1 Today: Montreal at Ottawa, 4 p.m. Thursday, May 9: Ottawa at Montreal, 4 p.m. x-Saturday, May 11: Montreal at Ottawa, TBD x-Sunday, May 12: Ottawa at Montreal, TBD Washington 2, N.Y. Rangers 0 Thursday, May 2: Washington 3, N.Y. Rangers 1 Saturday, May 4: Washington 1, N.Y. Rangers 0, OT Monday: Washington at N.Y. Rangers, late Wednesday: Washington at N.Y. Rangers, 4:30 p.m. x-Friday, May 10: N.Y. Rangers at Washington, 4:30 p.m. x-Sunday, May 12: Washington at N.Y. Rangers, TBD x-Monday, May 13: N.Y. Rangers at Washington, TBD Boston 1, Toronto 1 Wednesday, May 1: Boston 4, Toronto 1 Saturday, May 4: Toronto 4, Boston 2 Monday: Boston at Toronto, late Wednesday: Boston at Toronto, 4 p.m. Friday, May 10: Toronto at Boston, 4 p.m. x-Sunday, May 12: Boston at Toronto, TBD x-Monday, May 13: Toronto at Boston, TBD WESTERN CONFERENCE Chicago 2, Minnesota 1 Tuesday, April 30: Chicago 2, Minnesota 1, OT Friday, May 3: Chicago 5, Minnesota 2 Sunday: Minnesota 3, Chicago 2, OT Today: Chicago at Minnesota, 6:30 p.m. Thursday, May 9: Minnesota at Chicago, TBD x-Saturday, May 11: Chicago at Minnesota, TBD x-Sunday, May 12: Minnesota at Chicago, TBD Anaheim 2, Detroit 1 Tuesday, April 30: Anaheim 3, Detroit 1 Thursday, May 2: Detroit 5, Anaheim 4, OT Saturday, May 4: Anaheim 4, Detroit 0 Monday: Anaheim at Detroit, late Wednesday: Detroit at Anaheim, 7 p.m. x-Friday, May 10: Anaheim at Detroit, TBD x-Sunday, May 12: Detroit at Anaheim, TBD San Jose 3, Vancouver 0 Wednesday, May 1: San Jose 3, Vancouver 1 Friday, May 3: San Jose 3, Vancouver 2, OT Sunday: San Jose 5, Vancouver 2 Today: Vancouver at San Jose, 7 p.m. x-Thursday, May 9: San Jose at Vancouver, 7 p.m. x-Saturday, May 11: Vancouver at San Jose, TBD x-Monday, May 13: San Jose at Vancouver, TBD St. Louis 2, Los Angeles 1 Tuesday, April 30: St. Louis 2, Los Angeles 1, OT Thursday, May 2: St. Louis 2, Los Angeles 1 Saturday, May 4: Los Angeles 1, St. Louis 0 Monday: St. Louis at Los Angeles, late Wednesday: Los Angeles at St. Louis, TBD x-Friday, May 10: St. Louis at Los Angeles, TBD x-Monday, May 13: Los Angeles at St. Louis, TBD

Transactions BASEBALL American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES — Assigned RHP Zach Clark to Bowie (EL).

BOSTON RED SOX — Placed RHP Andrew Bailey on the 15-day DL. Reinstated LHP Craig Breslow from the 15-day DL. CLEVELAND INDIANS — Sent OF Michael Bourn to Columbus (IL) for a rehab assignment. HOUSTON ASTROS — Designated OFs Rick Ankiel and Fernando Martinez for assignment. Reinstated OF J.D. Martinez from the 15-day DL. Selected the contract of OF Trevor Crowe from Oklahoma City (PCL). Recalled INF/OF Jimmy Paredes from Oklahoma City. Optioned INF Brandon Laird to Oklahoma City. NEW YORK YANKEES — Assigned RHP Cody Eppley outright to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL). National League ATLANTA BRAVES — Reinstated C Brian McCann from the 15-day DL. Optioned SS Tyler Pastornicky to Gwinnett (IL). CHICAGO CUBS — Designated RHP Kameron Loe for assignment. Optioned OF Dave Sappelt to Iowa (PCL). Selected the contract of OF Ryan Sweeney from Iowa. Recalled RHP Rafael Dolis from Iowa. PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES — Agreed to terms with LHP Greg Smith on a minor league contract. ST. LOUIS CARDINALS — Optioned OF Jermaine Curtis to Memphis (PCL). SAN DIEGO PADRES — Placed LHP Clayton Richard on the 15-day DL. Reinstated RHP Tyson Ross from the 15-day DL. WASHINGTON NATIONALS — Retained physical therapist Angela Gordon. American Association GARY SOUTHSHORE RAILCATS — Signed 1B Steve Liddle. Traded RHP Aaron Wilkerson to Fort Worth for future considerations. Can-Am League ROCKLAND BOULDERS — Signed OF Jerod Edmondson, INFs Matt Nandin and John Welch, RHP Mike Zenko and LHP Evan Stermer.

BASKETBALL National Basketball Association NBA — Fined Chicago G Marco Belinelli $15,000 for making an obscene gesture during Saturday’s game.

FOOTBALL National Football League JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS — Signed RB De’Leon Eskridge and DE J.D. Griggs. Waived LB Greg Jones and RB Richard Murphy. MINNESOTA VIKINGS — Released P Chris Kluwe and WR Nicholas Edwards. Signed OT Brandon Keith and WR Adam Thielen. NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS — Released RB Quentin Hines and LB Ian Sluss. PITTSBURGH STEELERS — Announced the retirement of special assistant Joe Greene. Signed OT Guy Whimper and LB Terence Garvin. Released C Ivory Wade and DT Anthony Rashad White. SAN DIEGO CHARGERS — Named JoJo Wooden director of player personnel and Kevin Kelly director of college scouting. SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS — Signed G Adam Snyder to a two-year contract. Named Ronald Curry assistant offensive coach. TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS — Signed DT Andre Neblett, WRs Jheranie Boyd and Chris Denton, OT Jace Daniels and LB Ka’lial Glaud. Waived DT Richard Clebert, WR D.J. Monroe and RB Akeem Shavers. Terminated the contractws of G Roger Allen and DE George Selvie.

HOCKEY National Hockey League EDMONTON OILERS — Reassigned D Nathan Deck from Oklahoma City (AHL) to Stockton (ECHL). LOS ANGELES KINGS — Recalled G Martin Jones and G Jean-Francois Berube from Ontario (ECHL) MINNESOTA WILD — Recalled D Matt Dumba and F Carson McMillan from Houston (AHL). TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING — Signed D Radko Gudas to a three-year contract.


SportsRecreation

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

TUESDAY, MAY 7, 2013

B3

Youth Sports PA Power puts on quite the powerful show PORT ANGELES — It was a dominating display by the Port Angeles Power 12U softball team as it beat previously undefeated Tranco Transmission 13-6 with all but one of the Port Angeles Power girls reaching base at least once. Standouts for PA Power were Emily Boyd with her third triple of the season and Aspen Millet with a fine pitching performance. The highlight for Tranco Transmission was the performance of Krysten McGuffy, who had a triple and did a good job of pitching in long relief.

Blake holds off Swain’s PORT ANGELES — Blake Tile & Stone beat Swain’s General Store 13-9 in North Olympic Junior Babe Ruth action at Volunteer Field on Saturday. Blake evened its record at 2-2. In the bottom of the third inning with the score tied at 1-1, Blake scored nine runs followed by two runs in the fourth and one more in the sixth for a comfortable 12-4 lead. But in top of of the seventh, Swain’s sent 10 batters to the plate, scoring five runs on four hits and a couple walks. The bases were still loaded when the final out was made. Triston Buttler pitched four complete innings to earn the win while Isaiah Hylton pitched the final three innings and batted 3 for 4 with a triple.

Teammates Adam Iseri Fujii went 2 for 3 with two doubles and Bailey Towne was also 2 for 3. Top hitters for Swain’s were Danny Barber, Jordan Bruch and Devin Wahlsten, all going 2 for 4 while Brady Cottrell-Harris got on base three times and scored three runs.

Frame & Eye perfect PORT ANGELES — The Frame & Eye Clinic trimmed Laurel Dental Clinic 9-7 to remain perfect on the year in North Olympic AAA baseball action. Frame now is 4-0 while Laurel is 1-2 in competition. Frame was ahead 6-0 before Laurel scored four runs in the bottom of the third. Both teams scored one run in

the fourth and two in the fifth as Frame maintained its two-run advantage. Max Larsen was 2 for 3 with two RBI while Ryan Eichberg batted 2 for 2 with two RBI and Ezra Northern was 2 for 2 and an RBI. Teva Freitas pitched the first three innings for Frame and picked up the win with nine strikeouts and three walks. He gave up five hits. Teejay Johnson threw the final two innings, fanning four and walking just one while giving up two hits.

Swain’s has no-hitter PORT ANGELES — Swain’s General Store took care of Forks First Federal by the score of 11-1 behind the combined no-hitter from Kellen Landry and Jordan

Bruch. Landry also contributed at the plate with three hits, including a home run and a triple. Dan Barber added two hits with a double. Jace Levine played solid defense behind the pitchers.

Rainbow in a sweep PORT ANGELES — Rainbow Sweepers swept aside Puget Sound Transfter 7-1 in Single A Cal Ripken baseball action. Tyler Hunter was a perfect 3 for 3 with an inside-the-park home run while Hank Rygaard went 2 for 3 with a double for Rainbow. This was the first game of the season for both teams. Rainbow Sweepers also played phenomenal defense. Peninsula Daily News

A-Rod on field for 1st time since surgery THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

TAMPA, Fla. — Alex Rodriguez is back on the field for the first time since surgery on his left hip almost four months ago. He joined a group of injured New York Yankees starters Monday at the team’s minor league complex. The 37-year-old third baseman ran, played catch and hit off a tee. Rodriguez said it’s “like being 8 years old again when I first grabbed a bat.� He added it’s “pretty exciting� and he’s “really looking forward to getting back.� Rodriguez had surgery Jan. 16 and could return to the Yankees after the AllStar break. A surgeon repaired a torn labrum and impingement in the operation in New York. “It feels good to be back out in uniform,� Rodriguez said. “It’s been a rough stretch with the rehab, obviously. It’s small bites at a time.� Rodriguez is currently taking part in a 30-day rehab schedule setup by his doctors and team officials. “We’re taking it four weeks at a time,� Rodriguez said. “Today is one of 30.� The upbeat A-Rod signed autographs and took photos with around 40 fans waiting for him outside the player’s parking lot. Fans driving by stopped their car near the complex driveway and jumped out to have photos taken. “I have a lot of unfin-

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

New York Yankees third baseman Alex Rodriguez, right, signs autographs for fans after reporting to the Yankees’ Minor League complex for rehabilitation Monday in Tampa, Fla. Rodriguez is getting back on the field for the first time since surgery on his left hip almost four months ago. ished business,� said Rodriguez, who struggled offensively late last season. “I’m really looking forward to getting back on the field close to 100 percent and being who I am.� Outfielder Curtis Granderson (broken right forearm), first baseman Mark Teixeira (right wrist), corner infielder Kevin Youkilis (lumbar spine sprain), and catcher Francisco Cervelli

(broken hand) are also rehabbing injuries in Florida. “It’s great seeing him,� Teixeira said. “He’s just happy to be back, doing some baseball activities. He’s got a big smile on his face right now, which is great.� Shortstop Derek Jeter is also on the disabled list with a broken ankle, and is not expected back until

after the All-Star break. “We always talk about injuries are a part of the game, but this is crazy� Rodriguez said. “I’ve never seen anything like it. But I’ve got to tell you, the way those guys are playing up there, the job the front office has done putting these guys together at the last minute, hats off to everyone.� The Miami New Times

reported this year that Rodriguez bought human growth hormone and other performance-enhancing substances in recent years from Biogenesis of America LLC, a now-closed clinic in Coral Cables, near the three-time AL MVP’s offseason home. Rodriguez has denied the allegations. “I can only control what I can control,� Rodriguez

said. “I’m really focusing on all the great things that have happened in the game. I’m really focused on getting healthy, and just getting back and helping the Yankees win a championship.� A 14-time All-Star, Rodriguez had right hip surgery on March 9, 2009, and returned that May 8. He is due $114 million over the next five years as part of his $275 million, 10-year contract. Jeter found out he fractured his left ankle for a second time in six months on April 18. At that time the Yankees said the team captain should be able to resume his rehabilitation when the new crack heals in about four to eight weeks. Out since injuring his wrist with the U.S. on March 5 before the World Baseball Classic, Teixeira took batting practice in an indoor cage and hopes to start on-field BP in the next few days. “I’m very, very happy with where I am right now,� Teixeira said. Granderson, who broke the arm Feb. 24 in his first at-bat of spring training when he was hit by a pitch from Toronto’s J.A. Happ, is playing in extended spring training games and expected to rejoin the team this month. Youkilis is eligible to come off the 15-day disabled list on May 13. Cervelli broken his hand April 26 and is expected to miss at least six weeks.

James wins MVP, one vote shy of unanimously THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

MIAMI — LeBron James was at his best this season, and the voters tasked with selecting the NBA’s Most Valuable Player took notice. Every voter except one, that is. The NBA still does not have a unanimous MVP, though no one has come closer than James did this season. The Miami Heat star

was presented with the Maurice Podoloff Trophy for the fourth time in his career on Sunday after collecting 120 of the 121 first-place votes, with Carmelo Anthony of the New York Knicks picking up the lone remaining top choice. “It was probably a writer out of New York that didn’t give me that vote,� James said. “And we know the his-

tory between the Heat and the Knicks, so I get it.� A panel of 120 sports writers and broadcasters cast ballots in the NBA MVP voting, with a combined online fan vote also being taken into account. Shaquille O’Neal got every first-place vote but one in the 1999-2000 season, when one person cast his ballot for Allen Iverson — who finished seventh

that year. This season, Kevin Durant of the Oklahoma City Thunder finished second, well ahead of Anthony, who was third and didn’t even appear on nine of the ballots cast. James was the only player listed on all 121 ballots; Durant was omitted from two, according to the results released by the NBA.

M’s: Rumbling toward first taught to do. DeRosa and first baseman Edwin Encarnacion both converged on the popup. Encarnacion called off DeRosa for the play. But as he was making the catch, he tripped over

first of those answers became known Friday, the other on Sunday, and even as he was on the dais to pick up the award the now-fourtime MVP quickly started steering all of his attention back to the goal of helping the Heat win a second straight title.

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the pitcher’s mound and fell face-first in the dirt. The ball bounced high in the air. Morales, to his credit, kept running, and he made it to second base for a double despite the ball going no more than 65 feet from the plate.

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CONTINUED FROM B1 rys Morales, who likely would be the slowest player Montero still was rum- on any team that didn’t bling toward first base, but have Montero on it, manthe official scorer, who sees aged to notch an infield the Mariners once a season, double. generously ruled that MonInfield double? tero would have been safe Yes, in the eighth inning, on a throw from DeRosa Morales hit a towering and called it an infield hit. infield popup. The ball was Yet that wasn’t the odd- directly above the pitcher’s est play. mound. Morrow got out of Designated hitter Kend- the way, just as he was

“I’ll take that vote,� Anthony said, adding that James was a deserving winner. For months, there really had only been two questions about this season’s MVP race: When will James get the award, and would the results be unanimous? The

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McMullin’s mark in the triple jump also is a new school record, eclipsing the old mark set by Haleigh Harrison in 2011 of 34-10.5.

At the league meet, McMullin also was runnerup in long jump with a leap of 16-04.75, and was a member of Sequim’s fifthplace 4x400 and seventhplace 4x100 relay teams.


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, May 7, 2013 PAGE

B4

To Jewell, Interior job is one more peak to scale Former REI chief adjusts to capital THE NEW YORK TIMES

SHENANDOAH NATIONAL PARK, Va. — Sally Jewell bounded up a granite boulder near the peak of Old Rag Mountain and turned back to her hiking companion, who was staring up at the smooth rock that offered no obvious hand — or footholds. “Trust your feet,� she said. That mountaineer’s mantra has carried Jewell through a varied career as petroleum engineer, banker and retail executive. On April 12, she was sworn in as the 51st secretary of the interior. Jewell, 57, who has climbed Mount Rainier seven times, said she is happiest on the steepest part of the learning curve. Until President Obama tapped her to succeed Ken Salazar, Jewell was chief executive of REI — Recreational Equipment Inc. — in Seattle. She has never held elective office, though she has served as a member of the board of trustees of the University of Washington. Like many successful corporate titans who have come to Washington, D.C., she will learn that running a business is not necessarily adequate training for a top government post. She noted, for example, that no rational business executive would cut an operating budget across the board, as the federal budget process known as the sequester requires. And she said that no matter how determined she is to spend her time promoting outdoor recreation, events can rudely intrude. “Things happen. Earthquakes happen. Natural disasters happen. The American West is a tinderbox right now,� she said. Jewell underwent weeks of briefings for what turned out to be a rela-

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Interior Secretary Sally Jewell in Loxahatchee, Fla., on May 1. tively mild Senate confirmation hearing. The toughest questions from Republicans concerned her role on the board of the National Parks Conservation Association, a mainly volunteer group that advocates for parks and park employees. Senators glossed over the major missions of the Interior Department, including supervising oil drilling on public lands and waters, protecting endangered species, managing public lands, coping with climate change and coordinating federal relations with hundreds of American Indian tribes.

$11 billion budget She professed not to be overawed by taking charge of an agency with an $11 billion budget, 70,000 employees and stewardship of 20 percent of the territory of the United States. “Well, I’m not scared of it,� she said at the peak of the 3,291-foot Old Rag. Jewell was born in England and came to the U.S. at the age of 3. She said her father, Peter Roffey, an anesthesiologist, had moved the family because he was uncomfortable with

England’s ossified class system. He died in 2003. Her mother, Anne, who died in 2011, was a nurse practitioner. Jewell met future husband, Warren, a computer consultant, at the UW, where both studied engineering. Their children — Peter, 29, a pediatric intensive-care nurse, and Anne, 27, a revenue agent with the federal government — both live in Seattle. Jewell first attempted Mount Rainier at age 15 and was turned back by snow but summited the next year. She climbed Mount Kilimanjaro with Peter on his 16th birthday. She took Anne to Switzerland on her 16th birthday to climb Mont Blanc, but her daughter demurred. Jewell hired a guide and climbed the mountain on her own. In 2011, she joined an expedition to Antarctica to climb Mount Vinson, at 16,050 feet the highest point on that continent. Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Mountlake Terrace, has known and hiked with Jewell for more than 20 years. She said the capital is very different from the outdoor and corporate worlds Jewell has conquered. “She has seen success in several industries — oil and gas, banking and then shifted to REI and made it all the way up the food chain there,� Cantwell said. “But this is a different animal. My advice was, ‘If a member calls you, call back the same day.’ “The way it works here,� Cantwell said, “is if you show respect, you’ll get respect back.� Jewell already had a taste of how humbling the nation’s capital can be. When she opened an account at a bank branch near her new home in D.C., the clerk asked where she was employed. “The Interior Department,� Jewell replied. “What’s your position there?� the clerk asked. “Secretary,� Jewell answered. The clerk just nodded.

$ Briefly . . . AARP to give seminar in PA next week

Real-time stock quotations at peninsuladailynews.com

PORT ANGELES — The AARP will present a free seminar, “Strengthening Your Financial Future,� at the Vern Burton Community Center, 308 E. Fourth St., from 9:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Wednesday, May 15. Join AARP and financial planning experts to learn how to spend less, save more and get ahead. Attendees will be shown how to map out a retirement savings plan. Participants will receive free educational materials. A lunch will be served, and registration is required. To RSVP, phone 877-926-8300. percent over 2011. It was the second-highPORT ANGELES — est total ever, second only Northwest Massage’s to 2007 when casinos took Nutrition Therapy Practi- in $37.5 billion before the tioner Autumn Smith has Great Recession hit. new business hours “By almost all meaSmith is available from sures, our industry is 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mondays expanding and growing, and from 10 a.m. to which is good news for 1:30 p.m. Tuesdays our employees and the through Fridays. communities where they Northwest Massage is live and work,� said Frank at 620 E. Front St. Fahrenkopf, the associaFor more information, tion’s president. phone 360-417-6851.

New business hours

Casino revenue up

Gold and silver

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — Things are looking up for most of the nation’s commercial casinos. According to the annual survey of casinos by the American Gaming Association, U.S. nontribal casinos took in $37.3 billion from gamblers last year, an increase of 4.8

Gold futures for June delivery rose $3.80, or 0.3 percent, to settle at $1,468 an ounce on Monday. Silver for July delivery fell 6 cents, or 0.3 percent, to end at $23.96 an ounce. Peninsula Daily News and The Associated Press

In honor of

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Fun ’n’ Advice

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Dilbert

Pickles

Garfield

Momma

DEAR ABBY: I’m responding to your request for comments about the letter from “Happily Single” and whether a divorce would be the first course of action upon winning the lottery. In a community-property state, a divorce after winning wouldn’t legally protect you from having to share the spoils with your soon-to-be (and now probably bitter) ex-spouse. My husband and I have talked at length about what we’d do if either of us won the Powerball jackpots, and no, divorce was not on the list. We’d start by consulting a lawyer/ financial planner to find a way to protect our privacy before claiming the money. I suspect the comments from “Happily’s” co-workers are evidence that unhappily marrieds group together — or enjoy complaining about their spouses. Either way, it’s sad. Studies show that complaining about a spouse significantly decreases one’s satisfaction in a relationship. While we all “vent” from time to time, if talking divorce is your first response to a jackpot win, then you’re in the wrong relationship. In It for the Long Haul

by Lynn Johnston

by Brian Crane

Frank & Ernest

by Bob and Tom Thaves

Van Buren

buying a bigger, better house. I’m not saying it’s right, but it happens. Cindy in Arlington, Va.

Dear Abby: If I won the lottery, the first thing I’d do is get married. We’re waiting so we can afford the nice wedding we both want. Stephanie in Saugus, Calif. Dear Abby: I’ve been married for 40 years. If I won, I would not divorce. There’s no way I’d want to give him half the money. I would stay married so I could have control over the money he spent. It would make up for all the years that he would pinch my pennies and make me squeeze a nickel till the buffalo pooped. Wishful in Ohio Dear Abby: If I were to win the lottery, I would trade all of it just to have one more hug and one more night talking with my wife, who died 16 years ago. Our children were young when she died, and I have tried my best to raise them to be good adults. But my heart still aches over losing her to cancer. I believe all widows and widowers would agree with me on this. Trent in Oklahoma

The Last Word in Astrology ❘

by Pat Brady and Don Wimmer

ZITS ❘ by Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

Dennis the Menace

Abigail

Dear Abby: I am a lottery winner, and I feel blessed and proud that I can take care of my wife the way she deserves. Within two minutes of my win, I was on the phone with her, telling her to quit her stressful job. We now have a wonderful life, with more than we ever Dear Abby: “When” we win, my hoped for. husband and I plan on going into a Satisfied self-made “witness protection proin the Sunshine State gram” to hide from the long-lost relatives. But we will absolutely do it Dear Abby: I’m single, but that together. letter didn’t surprise me. I think a Hoping in Georgia lot of people feel they must be mar_________ ried by a certain age, so they end up “settling.” Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, Read some of the crazy lottery also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was winner stories posted online, and founded by her mother, the late Pauline Philyou’ll see people trade in their lips. Letters can be mailed to Dear Abby, P.O. spouses because they feel they can Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069 or via do better or “move up,” kind of like email by logging onto www.dearabby.com.

by Mell Lazarus

Rose is Rose

DEAR ABBY

Dear In It: I hit the jackpot with the huge response I received about that letter. And the majority of readers said they would not divorce:

by Jim Davis

B5

Readers share lottery win plans

by Scott Adams

For Better or For Worse

TUESDAY, MAY 7, 2013

by Hank Ketcham

Doonesbury

by Garry Trudeau

by Eugenia Last

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Check out your options and consider your motives. Don’t let anyone coerce you into something you don’t care to do. Stick to your game plan and rely on past experience when it comes time to make a decision. Make a personal change. 3 stars

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Move forward with your eyes wide open. Not everyone will be on your side. Prepare to make last-minute adjustments. Don’t let anyone take advantage of you. A change of scenery or networking and making new connections will pay off. 5 stars

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Do something exciting. Socializing will result in new friendships and a greater interest in changing the way you live. Express your needs and you will receive a good response. Indecision will stand in the way of a great opportunity. 5 stars

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Hone your skills and discuss your plans. Communication will bring you a step closer to your goals. Tighten up your connection with someone who has something to contribute. An unexpected offer must not lead you astray. 3 stars

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): You’ve got what it takes to accomplish whatever you set out to do. Present, promote or just enjoy a moment with someone special. Your ideas will be well received and a partnership will prove beneficial. Put time aside for a little romance. 3 stars

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Spend time with the people you are close to and you will feel good about your life. Don’t make unnecessary changes. Security is your best friend, and upsetting what you’ve worked so hard to obtain must be avoided. 2 stars

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Don’t spend what you don’t have. An impulsive purchase will lead to financial stress. Pick and choose what you decide to do based on how much it costs. Budgeting now will make your life easier in the future. Protect your assets. 4 stars

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): If you have to spend money, invest in your talents or your home. Making a residential move or changing the way you live will be beneficial. A creative hobby can bring in extra cash. Find a way to explore new avenues. 3 stars

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Consider your strong points and find a way to utilize them fully. Job hunting or finding a way to make extra cash using your skills will bring good results. Expanding your friendships or getting involved in a new pastime will lead to prospects. 4 stars

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Taking care of younger or older family members will help improve your relationship. Getting involved in causes you believe in will bring you closer to people who share your interests and will also greatly enhance your life. 2 stars

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You’ll be drawn to unusual pastimes. Find out as much as you can about the people you are dealing with. Knowledge will be the key to getting what you want. A new direction will bring all sorts of exciting new opportunities. 3 stars

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Elaborate on an idea you have. Share your thoughts with someone you consider to be creative. Collaboration will bring you closer to a goal you’ve been trying to achieve for some time. There is money to be made. Negotiate and sign contracts. 3 stars

The Family Circus

by Bil and Jeff Keane


Classified

B6 TUESDAY, MAY 7, 2013

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Peninsula MARKETPLACE Reach The North Olympic Peninsula & The World

NOON E N I L D A E D on’t Miss It! D

IN PRINT & ONLINE

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5 PIECE office desk set. light oak desk set with separate oak filing cabinet see photos$350/obo. David, c: (707)490-7259 Port Townsend BAKERY-CAFE Meals, Prep Cashier/Barista Exp. A+, PT-FT Olympic Bagel 802 E. 1st. St., P.A. BARTENDER and Dishwasher. Apply in person. 115 E. Railroad Ave. CAREGIVERS All shifts. Apply in person at Prairie Springs, 680 W. Prairie, Sequim.

3010 Announcements

CHEV: ‘76 pickup. 1 ton dually, no bed, ‘454’, 4 MISC: Utility trailer, 4x8, speed, runs/drives good. $500. Gas rototiller, 5 $750. (360)457-4383. hp, $85. Briggs & Stratton pressure washer, Do you need a place to $90. (360)683-4038. live and income. Live-in companion for mobile MOWER: 52” town bealert 90 yr. old woman. h i n d , S w i s h e r b ra n d , Private adjacent quar- ver y heavy duty, new ters, board/salar y for $ 2 , 3 9 5 . L i k e n e w . part-time care, including $1,795. (360)683-7568. cooking, light cleaning, Quilcene area. Zero tol- O/B: YAMAHA 6 hp long erance, no smoking, ref- shaft, fuel tank, hose, erence. Will consider excellent shape. $650. pets. (360)765-0705. (360)385-7728 ESTATE Sale in Sequim. Saturday, May 11th from 9 to 5 - Entire household including furniture, kitchen items, tools etc. 554 Elk Hor n Loop, Sequim, 98382 House is going on the market soon and we need to clean everything out! One day only, come by and check it out.

Peninsula Classified 360-452-8435

4070 Business Opportunities

ADOPT: A loving professional couple, stayhome mom, gracious home in horse country awaits baby. Expenses paid. 1800-775-4013. Mary & Larry

FEISTY SENIOR LADY Now that spring is here, are you looking for a new relationship with a senior lady? I’m looking for a gentleman, 70+. Mail response to: Peninsula Daily News PDN#659/Lady Port Angeles, WA 98362

3020 Found FOUND: Keys. 8th and L i n c o l n , P. A . C a l l t o identify. (360)928-3732.

JUAREZ & SON’S HANDY M A N S E R V I C E S . Quality work at a reasonable price. Can handle a wide array of problems projects. Like home maintenance, cleaning, clean up, yard maintenance, and etc. Give us a call office 452-4939 or cell 460-8248.

THE BLACKBIRD COFFEEHOUSE **FOR SALE** Great price, Thriving & Profitable.Contact Adam for details: 360-224-9436; blackbirdcoffee@ gmail.com

4026 Employment General

OlyPets In-Home Pet Care offers a convenient alternative to kenneling your pets and leaving your home unattended. Call (360)565-5251 for your complimentar y “ M e e t ‘ n G r e e t .” O r visit www.OlyPets.com P.A.: 1 Br., office, carpor t, view, clean and quiet, W/S inc. $675. (360)452-6611

P.A.: 2 Br., 1 ba, car- RIDING MOWER: por t, lg. deck, laundry Craftsman 17 hp, 42” cut, like new. $950/obo. room. $600, 1st, last. 360-504-5664. (360)457-0181 Peninsula Daily News Circulation Dept. Has a motor route available in Port Ludlow. The route has 180 subscribers, takes approximately 4 hours to deliver daily and is 90 miles long. Papers are picked up in Discovery Bay at 1 0 : 3 0 p. m . D e l i ve r y deadline is 6:30 a.m. Mon.-Fri. and 7:30 a.m. on Sundays. Route pays approximately $275 per week, no collecting. Call Dave Smith at 1-800-826-7714 Ext. 53-6050

RV SITE: Near busline and casino. $375 mo. internet, utilities. 681-0748 SEQUIM: 2 Br. duplex, d e n , 2 b a , W / D, n o smoke, pets neg., 1 yr. $900. 452-4701. SINK: Double stainless sink, 32” x 22” x 8”, moen faucet, new disposal. $125/obo. 379-1804. T R AC TO R : 9 N , r u n s very good, low hrs. on total engine rebuild. Asking $2,495. (360)683-7568

TRAILER: ‘90 27’ Hi-Lo. G o o d s h a p e. $ 3 , 0 0 0 / PUPPIES: Golden Re- obo. (360)683-8059. trievers, 12 wks., lower price. $600. (360)912-2227 PURE Bred Lab Puppies for sale. Born 317-2013. 1st shots included. Already eating regular food. Ready to find new loving homes. 1 yellow male, 1 yell o w fe m a l e , 1 b l a c k male, 2 black females. $450. call (360)808-0880

TRAVEL TRAILER: 17’, ‘05 Casita, Spirit Deluxe. $14,000. (360)808-0809. WANTED: Gently used Kagen water alkalizer. (360)298-0737

4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4026 Employment General General General Biologist, Shellfish Ja m e s t ow n S ’ K l a l l a m Tr i b e s e e k s f i s h e r i e s professional to manage, monitor, evaluate & report shellfish activities. Perform interagency liaison work, field operations, vessel care, tech s u p p o r t fo r e n h a n c e ment and aquaculture projects, supervise program monitors, dive program. Require BS in biological science with emphasis on shellfish or marine, 2 yrs marine research/mgmt exp, driver’s license, insurance, good communication skills, work with minimal supervision. Prefer MS, scuba cer t, boat handling, knowledge of Tribal fisheries, strong database skills. Indian preference. Apply: http:// jamestowntribe. iapplicants.com Kelly: (360)681-4641. Open until filled.

AIDES/RNA OR CNA Best wages, bonuses. FOUND: Keys, Sunday, Wright’s. 457-9236. M ay 5 , A p p r ox . 1 9 0 0 block of W. 4th, call to BAKERY-CAFE identify. (360)670-2496. Meals, Prep Cashier/Barista Exp. A+, PT-FT B R E A K FA S T / S AU T E 3023 Lost Olympic Bagel COOK & DISHWASH802 E. 1st. St., P.A. ER/PREP. Point Hudson L O S T : C a t . F e m a l e , BARTENDER and Dish- Cafe looking for a great Tabby, white chest and washer. Apply in person. c o o k ! Q u a l i t y, d e pendability very imporpaws, near Lincoln Park/ 115 E. Railroad Ave. tant. Per manent posiFairmount area, P.A. tion. Also need (360)452-2267 BED & BREAKFAST dish/prep. Por t TownForks, WA. Seeking enLOST: Cat. White send (360)379-0592. spayed female, with gray ergetic mgmt. couple to Siamese markings, Tay- live on-site. Compensation incl. salar y, 3 Br. E M P L OY M E N T O p lor Cutoff Rd., Sequim. home, and utilities. Daily portunity. Is Title Es(360)582-0907 operation of 7+ room crow experience part L O S T : C e l l p h o n e . inn, computer skills, hos- of who you are? If so, AT&T, May 6th in Se- pitality experience re- Clallam Title has emquired, flexibility, imme- ployment opportunities quim. (360)683-4029. diate start. New email: for you. This may be lynneeskis@gmail.com your chance to be part Visit our website at of the best rated team www.peninsula Dental sterilization techdailynews.com on the Olympic Peninnician wanted. Or email us at s u l a . B r i n g by yo u r Peninsula Daily News classified@ current resume to Loni PDN#658/Dental peninsula in our Port Angeles ofPort Angeles, WA 98362 dailynews.com fice.

Career Opportunities HOUSEKEEPERS Detail oriented. Wage based directly on quality of work, with bonus oppor tunities m a y t o p $ 1 1 h o u r. Must be hard working & responsible. LAUNDRY Available immediately. Must be hard working & responsible. Laundr y exper ience preferred but not required. FRONT DESK Available immediately. Must be hard working and reliable, office & sales experience preferred. Wage DOE. GROUNDSPERSON Highly motivated, reliable, responsible.

DIRECT Care Specialist: Are you enthusiastic, caring and driven to help others? Creative Living Ser vices is hir ing FT overnights and PT employees who are dedicated, hardworking people to support adults with disabilities in their homes and community for a supportive Living Provider in your area. Training is provided. Apply online at www.res care.com/careers.php Questions? Call Lesly @ 360-379-5718 EOE M/F/D/V Do you need a place to live and income. Live-in companion for mobile alert 90 yr. old woman. Private adjacent quarters, board/salar y for part-time care, including cooking, light cleaning, Quilcene area. Zero tolerance, no smoking, refe r e n c e. W i l l c o n s i d e r pets. (360)765-0705.

Entry Level Production Jobs

Prior Sawmill/Planer experience a plus but not required. Excellent wage and benefits. Apply in person at Interfor 143 Sitkum Sol Duc Rd. CAREGIVERS Forks. All shifts. Apply in perEEO/Drug Free son at Prairie Springs, Workplace Employer 680 W. Prairie, Sequim. Apply in person at 140 Del Guzzi Dr. Port Angeles. No calls please.

MEDICAL Assistant, Planned Parenthood of the Great Northwest, Pt. Angeles, PT, Exp pref, HCA-E req’d, EOE, Apply at www.ppgnw.org/jobs

INSURANCE AGENT Local family insurance agency looking for energetic, motivated person seeking long term CSR position; will train and license. Solid verbal, writing & computer skills a must. Salary, benefits, DOE. Send resume to Peninsula Daily News PDN#655/Agent Port Angeles, WA 98362

TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD: CALL: 452-8435 TOLL FREE: 1-800-826-7714 FAX: 417-3507 VISIT: WWW.PENINSULADAILYNEWS.COM OR

E-MAIL:

Jefferson County Public Utility District #1 has an opening for a Systems O p e ra t o r / S C A DA / G I S Mapping person. Please see full job description and application information at www.jeffpud.org. Applicants must submit a standard PUD application form, resume, 3 references and cover letter by M ay 1 0 , 2 0 1 3 , t o kstreett@jeffpud.org or mail to Jefferson County PUD #1, PO Box 929, Po r t H a d l o c k 9 8 3 3 9 Attn. Kevin Streett.

CLASSIFIED@PENINSULADAILYNEWS.COM

Jefferson County Public Utility District #1 is seeking a Store Keeper. This position will be working in the operations department, providing warehousing duties, including filing construction work order material requests, receiving material back from job sties, and receiving mater ial from suppliers. This position will work with the line c r e w. K n o w l e d g e o f electrical utility material i s h e l p f u l bu t n o t r e quired. Successful cand i d a t e s m u s t h ave a CDL, Flaggers card, Forklift certification, and First Aid card or the ability to obtain within 6 months. Please see full job description and application information at www.jeffpud.org. Applicants must submit a standard PUD application form, resume, 3 references and cover letter by M ay 1 0 , 2 0 1 3 , t o kstreett@jeffpud.org or mail to Jefferson County PUD #1, PO Box 929, Po r t H a d l o c k 9 8 3 3 9 Attn. Kevin Streett.

4026 Employment 4026 Employment 4080 Employment General General Wanted

DEADLINES: Noon the weekday before publication. ADDRESS/HOURS: 305 West First Street/P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles, WA 98362. Open 8 a.m.-5 p.m. weekdays CORRECTIONS AND CANCELLATIONS: Corrections--the newspaper accepts responsibility for errors only on the first day of publication. Please read your ad carefully and report any errors promptly. Cancellations--Please keep your cancellation number. Billing adjustments cannot be made without it.

THE HOH TRIBE PART-TIME AVAIL. has the following M-F., Age is no limit, job openings simple lamp repair, color finishing, packing fixHUMAN RESOURCE tures. Start $10/hr., exMANAGER pandable. Drug screen. Full-time position and (360)379-9030. must have a Bachelor’s Peninsula Daily News degree in Business or Circulation Dept. Human Resources from H a s a m o t o r r o u t e an accredited university available in Port Ludlow. or institution. The route has 180 subscribers, takes approxi- HATCHERY MANAGER mately 4 hours to deliver Full-time position, must daily and is 90 miles have a High School Dilong. Papers are picked ploma, Associate or BS up in Discovery Bay at in Fisheries, Aquaculture 1 0 : 3 0 p . m . D e l i v e r y or related field desirable deadline is 6:30 a.m. and two years of experiMon.-Fri. and 7:30 a.m. ence in Hatchery manon Sundays. Route pays agement position or four approximately $275 per y e a r s i n a H a t c h e r y week, no collecting. Technician position. Call Dave Smith at 1-800-826-7714 GIS SPECIALIST Ext. 53-6050 Full-time position, must have a BS Degree in Geographic Information Systems or a related field. Also three years’ experience and training in GIS. Cartography or geospatial engineering is required. KWA HOMECARE Permanent and On-call Part/full-time Caregivers. positions available now For a complete job deBenefits, Flexible Hours. at Clallam Bay scription and application Call P.A. (360)452-2129 Corrections Center you can contact Kristina Sequim (360)582-1647 Currie at the Hoh Tribe; P.T. (360)344-3497 Correctional Officer 1 kristinac@ Pay starts at $16.48 hohtribe-nsn.org hourly, plus full benefits. or 360-374-6502. You Closes 05/28/13. can also visit our webLumber Grader site hohtribe-nsn.org Opening Apply on-line: All positions close May www.careers.wa.gov. 23, 2013 or until filled. - Minimum 1 year certiFor further information fied in dimension lumber please call Laura preferably by WWPA at (360)963-3208. EOE. - Proven visual grading RECREATION skills COUNSELOR - Exper ience wor king Needed for Parks and within line grade reader Rec Summer Day Camp. Experience with Excellent wage and kids preferred. Pick up benefits pkg. application at the Vern Bur ton Gym. Deadline Apply in person: 143 Sitkum Sol Duc Rd., for applications is May The Quileute Tribe has a Fo r k s , WA 9 8 3 3 1 o r 10, 2013. For more info job opening for a Consend resume to: PO Box call (360)417-4523. troller for our accounting 2299 Forks, WA 98331 depar tment and Busior fax: 360-374-4331. ness Coordinator for our CLASSIFIED Equal Opportunity Health Clinic. Please viscan help with all Employer t our website at your advertising iwww.quileutenation.org MEDICAL FRONT needs: for a complete job deOFFICE scription and job applicaPart time. Medical exp. tion. Or you may call Buying preferred. Send resume 360-374-4366. Both poSelling Peninsula Daily News sitions close May 10, PDN#657/Front Office Hiring 2013 or until filled. Port Angeles, WA 98362 Trading

On-site Caretaker/ Groundskeeper 2 Br. home with reduced HOUSEKEEPER Starting at $9.50/hr., ap- rent in exchange for full ply in person at Tides grounds maintenance. Inn, 1807 Water St., Port Some equipment provided. Submit application to Townsend. Properties by Landmark, www.peninsula Inc. 330 E. 1st Street, dailynews.com Suite 1, P.A.

Call today!

4080 Employment Wanted

360-452-8435 1-800-826-7714

ADEPT YARD CARE Weeding, mowing, etc. (360)452-2034

www.peninsula dailynews.com

RUSSELL ANYTHING Call today 775-4570.

5000900

2127 Driftwood Place: 3 br.,2 bath, all appliances included+ w/d. Built in surround sound, French doors t o s l a t e p a t i o, b i g backyard, shed, double attatched garage, fireplace, crown molding. Great cul de sac neighborhood! Call Ta m m y n o w ! (360)457-9511 or 461-9066!

B R E A K FA S T / S AU T E COOK & DISHWASHER/PREP. Point Hudson Cafe looking for a great c o o k ! Q u a l i t y, d e pendability very important. Per manent position. Also need dish/prep. Por t Townsend (360)379-0592.

4026 Employment General

Experienced Caretaker Seeks long term house sitting or property caretaking position on the Olympic Peninsula. Just ending 10+ yrs. at current caretaking assignment in Sequim. Excellent references. (360)683-5385

JUAREZ & SON’S HANDY M A N S E R V I C E S . Quality work at a reasonable price. Can handle a wide array of problems projects. Like home maintenance, cleaning, clean up, yard maintenance, and etc. Give us a call office 452-4939 or cell 460-8248.

Kelly’s House Cleaning. N e e d h e l p w i t h yo u r house cleaning? Call me or send an email, I can do weekly, bi-weekly, or monthly maintenance of your house. My name is Kelly, I am licensed and have been cleaning h o u s e s fo r 3 + ye a r s. 360-440-3118 or email kellydakota1@ gmail.com

MATH Tutoring I tutor grade school to college math. I tutor at my home office in Sequim. Please Contact Danielle Math Solutions 360-477-1573 mathsolutions db@gmail.com, http://mathsolution sdb.weebly.com MOWING, PRUNING, BARKING Honest and dependable. (360)582-7142

Mowing, trimming, mulch and more! Call Ground Control Lawn Care for honest, dependable lawn care at your home or business. Ground Control Lawn Care 360797-5782 OlyPets In-Home Pet Care offers a convenient alternative to kenneling your pets and leaving your home unattended. Call (360)565-5251 for yo u r c o m p l i m e n t a r y “ M e e t ‘ n G r e e t .” O r visit www.OlyPets.com

91190150

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Classified

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

DOWN 1 “Tarzan” characters 2 “__ we forget”

By DAVID OUELLET HOW TO PLAY: All the words listed below appear in the puzzle –– horizontally, vertically, diagonally, even backward. Find them and CIRCLE THEIR LETTERS ONLY. DO NOT CIRCLE THE WORD. The leftover letters spell the Wonderword. DANIEL DAY-LEWIS WINS THIRD OSCAR Solution: 8 letters

R E C I P I E N T R O P H Y E By Jack McInturff

Monday’s Puzzle Solved

N U B H C R O L I N C O L N M

A L N E I P C E L E B R I T Y

© 2013 Universal Uclick

N V E T C S B B U T C H E R L

O S I I I C T L J B O X E R E

R S G E R N A O O S T A R S F

www.wonderword.com

SMALL Excavation and Tractor Work. Call Joe at (360)460-7220 YO U N G c o u p l e e a r l y s i x t i e s . a va i l a b l e fo r spring cleanup, weeding, trimming, mulching, moss removal, complete garden restoration and misc. yard care. Excellent references. (360)457-1213

9912 Open Houses OPEN HOUSE: Sequim fo r s a l e by ow n e r. A view with beautiful 3 Br., 2 ba home. Every Thurs. 6-7 p.m., Every Sun. 2-3 p.m. 781 N. Kendall Rd. $200,000. 683-1943..

105 Homes for Sale Clallam County

BEAUTIFUL FAIRWAY HOME This 4 br., 2.5 bath custom built home has ever ything. Huge windows that look out to the 11th fairway of the SunLand Golf Course from a great room with wet bar, a gourmet kitchen with two walk-in pantries, and a master suite on the ground floor. $385,000. ML#270754/471200 Roland Miller (360)461-4116 TOWN & COUNTRY BEAUTIFULLY MAINTAINED Open floor plan 3 Br., 2 bath, formal dinning off the kitchen. A separate media room and den / office. The master bedroom has a walk in closet, double sink in bathroom then off the master bedroom exits onto your private deck and hot tub. The home was built in 2003 on a 1/2 acre close to town in a cul de sac. Great neighborhood with mature landscaping with a underground sprinkling system. MLS#270093. $329,000. Mike Fuller: 477-9189 Blue Sky Real Estate Sequim - 360-477-9189

14TH FAIRWAY OF SUNLAND All living space on main floor, 3 br., with den, at 3,020 sf, lower level with multi-pur pose room, large workshop and golf cart garage $379,000 ML#270840/476295 Deb Kahle CHERRY HILL (360)683-6880 CHARMER! WINDERMERE You’ll love this charming SUNLAND 3 br., 2 bath home in desirable Cherry Hill. Remodeled kitchen with breakfast nook, Corian countertops, new flooring, oak cabinets and black appliances. Main bathroom features new vanity with granite count e r t o p a n d t i l e f l o o r. 2127 Driftwood Place: Southern exposure en3 br.,2 bath, all appli- closed front porch. Livances included+ w/d. ing room with surround B u i l t i n s u r r o u n d sound and rock wall with sound, French doors wood stove. Formal dint o s l a t e p a t i o, b i g ing room, office and mabackyard, shed, dou- hogany hot tub room. ble attatched garage, Plenty of parking, spafireplace, crown mold- cious deck, lovely landing. Great cul de sac scaping and pond. neighborhood! Call $189,900 Ta m m y n o w ! MLS#270653 (360)457-9511 or TERRY NESKE 461-9066! (360)457-0456 WINDERMERE BEAUTIFUL CITY LOT PORT ANGELES Nearly the last view lot o n W. 4 t h S t . i n PA . COMMERICAIL Close to waterfront so ZONING! you can hear the waves. This .57 acre property is Spectacular strait view. zoned for a community Gentle slope toward b e a u t i f u l wa t e r v i ew, shopping district which oversized city lot easy to allows many uses! 3 tax build on. Easy access - parcels, high visibility, utilities in at street or al- access from hwy 101 ley. Located in a fine es- and City water and sewtablished area, across er are just a few of the from Crown Park, close benefits. 964 sf house has 2 br., 1 bath and a to walking trails. den. $69,950 MLS#261167 $110,000. Jean Kimi (360)683-4844 360-461-9788 Windermere JACE The Real Estate Real Estate Company Sequim East

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G N I H S I F L L U Y R R E G 5/7

Bars, Blake, Blood, Bounty, Boxer, British, Butcher, Camping, Cashel, Cecil, Celebrity, Father, Fishing, Flute, Foot, Gabriel, Gandhi, Gangs, Gerry, Health, History, Hunting, Jill, Juliet, Leads, Lincoln, London, Magic, Maxo, My Left, Name, Nanou, Nine, Notable, Poet, Rebecca Miller, Recipient, Romeo, Ronan, Room, Stars, Three, Training, Trophy, View Yesterday’s Answer: Stand-up THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

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

ADOVI ©2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

SHACO (c)2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

32 Stands up to 34 Competent 35 Cradle-to-grave stretches 38 Billiards bounce 40 Doctor’s advice 41 Uses a mouse wheel 43 Poe’s “The __ and the Pendulum” 45 Amtrak speedster

5/7/13

46 Pierre’s school 47 Isle off Tuscany 48 Cambodia neighbor 49 Revise copy 50 “Joy of Cooking” writer Rombauer 51 Study all night 52 Suffix with buck 53 Emperor after Claudius I 54 Show fatigue

TEBNIT

GEEREM

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

Print your answer here: Yesterday’s

COUNTRYSIDE RETREAT WITH VIEW! A N W c o n t e m p o r a r y, salt water view home in t h e Fr e s h w a t e r B a y area. This custom built home has privacy, spacious layout, fruit trees and, did I mention view? Loaded with extra features including an extra building site ready for development. $422,500. MLS#270570. Dan Gase (360)808-7053 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY Elegance and Fine Craftsmanship make this one of the finest homes in Sunland. Gourmet kitchen with high quality stainless steel appliances, quartz counter tops, cherr y cabinets and a propane stove . Beautiful hardwood floors, Bose Surround Sound and a library with a fully customized built in office. Expansive Trex deck. $309,900. Jim Hardie U-$ave Real Estate 775-7146 HILLSIDE HIDE-A-WAY This cabin has lots of possibilities - create a fun getaway or use as a shop and build your home on this 3.74 acres with power, a well & septic already installed. $99,000. ML#264158. Kathy Brown (360)417-2785 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY HUGE PRICE REDUCTION Move in ready bright and cheerful home in Mains Far m with lots of upd a t e s. S u n ny k i t c h e n with island is open to eating nook and family room. beautiful landscaped front and back yard with sprinklers and irrigation water on 1/3 acre. spacious deck to enjoy the outdoors. large storage shed. $205,000. MLS#264298. SHERYL or CATHY (360)683-4844 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East MERRILL ESTATES Located on 3.65 private, partially wooded acres with mountain & partial water views, this 3 br., 3 bath, 2,256 sf home was custom built for the sellers in 1997. Oversize attached garage, fenced garden and orchard! $315,000. ML#270602. Mark N. McHugh REAL ESTATE 683-0660 P.A.: 3 Br., 2 ba triple wide manufacture home, 2,300 sf, 4.8 acres, lg. covered decks, paved road. $187,500. (760)702-7721

MOUNTAIN VIEW HOME 1,670 sf 3 Br., 2 bath, with 320 sf sunroom,updated flooring, fixtures and appliances, 2 car attached garage and detached shop, green house and fenced back yard,nice deck with hot tub. $259,000 ML#270881/477784 Patty Terhune (360)912-1530 WINDERMERE SUNLAND MOVE IN READY! Enjoy views of the straits and Olympic Mountain range. Retreat to the privacy of this beautiful l a n d s c a p e d b a ck ya r d and listen to the soothing sounds of the fountain while relaxing in the spa-tub. 3 bdrm, 2 Bath, laundry room, hardwood floors in the living area and kitchen, 2 car detached garage. $243,000 MLS#270850/476875 Helga Filler (360)461-0538 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES

PROFESSIONAL OFFICE CONDO UNITS That’s right, two office condominium units available at Parkridge Center. Easy access for your clients at the Race and 8th Street intersection. Selection includes 1,376 SF former medical clinic space for $139,900 (MLS#270157) and an 855 SF office offered for $112,900 (MLS#270774) Dan Gase (360)808-7053 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY THE WOW FACTOR PLUS! If you are considering a custom home with over 3,500 SF on 10+ acres with a big shop and super water view then you simply need to call me on this property. Quality construction loaded with many extra features that will tempt you yell out “wow!” $549,500. MLS#264604. Dan Gase (360)808-7053 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY

TIME TO INVEST IN LAND! 0.61 acre mountain view lot, view ridge drive – east of P.A., excellent neighborhood, power, water, and sewer in at the road, unobstructed mountain views, desirable area of nice homes. MLS#264462. $59,000. Team Thomsen NEW CONSTRUCTION (360)808-0979 + WATER VIEW! COLDWELL BANKER Designed by Lindberg, UPTOWN REALTY this quality built home sits on a large lot in area VALLEY, SALT WATER of newer homes. 3 br., 2 bath, 1,744 sf, with great AND MOUTAIN VIEWS room, eating bar & laun- Quality construction, 3 b r. , 3 b a t h , 3 - c a r a t dry room. $234,500. ML#264196. t a c h e d g a r a g e a n d 1,320 sf RV barn/workCHUCK TURNER shop, 6.18 acres, mar452-3333 k e t a b l e t i m b e r, n e w PORT ANGELES granite, tile, windows, REALTY lighting, born in 1989, Pr iced for quick sale! 2,362 sf, tile roof, beautiR a r e Po r t A n g e l e s 4 ful landscaping, paved plex with excellent rental circular driveway. h i s t o r y a t $ 6 5 0 p e r $419,000. ML#270667. Team Thomsen month per unit, and cen(360)808-0979 trally located. Coin operCOLDWELL BANKER ated laundry on site for UPTOWN REALTY additional income. Each unit has assigned covered parking space and Place your ad on street parking, and with the only assigned indoor storage DAILY area. Unit A features a Classified fire place. MLS#270376. $279,000. Section on the Brooke Nelson Peninsula! (360)417-2812 COLDWELL BANKER PENINSULA UPTOWN REALTY MOVE in ready! Located at 1715 South E Street, Port Angeles. B u i l t i n 1 9 9 4 , 3 b r, 1.75 baths, 1088 sf. Easy care yard, central location, lots of updates. OPEN HOUSE MAY 11TH 10am-3pm $164,900. Call 4779256 or 461-3544.

PLACE YOUR AD ONLINE With our new Classified Wizard you can see your ad before it prints! www.peninsula dailynews.com

CLA$$IFIED 360-452-8435 or 1-800-826-8435 peninsula dailynews.com

Why Not Have It All... 3 B r. , 3 b a t h , o p e n concept split level h o m e w i t h v i ew s o f discover y bay and straits from both levels. Many upgrades: new master bath, hardwood and tile floors; 2 year old roof, fireplace and wood stove; oversized master suite with hot tub on deck; covered patio area off formal dining room; large family room; newly landscaped, fully fenced, back yard; raised garden beds; dog kennel. $327,000.00 20 Conifer Court Sequim, WA 98382 (Diamond Point) 360-670-5336 or 360-775-0314

311 For Sale Manufactured Homes SEQUIM: ‘78 single wide mobile home, 55+ park, 2 Br., 2 bath, garage with spare room, large covered deck. $29,500/ obo. (360)385-4882. SEQUIM: Excellent, 1,700+ sf triple-wide in Parkwood, fenced back yard, deck. $89,500. (360)797-1094

505 Rental Houses Clallam County 2 Br., 1.75 ba mobile on 9 ac. Full grounds-keeping duties required for reduced rent. Some equipment provided. Submit application at Properties by Landmark, Inc., 330 E. 1st Street, Suite 1, P.A. 2 Br., 2 ba, completely furnished, Sequim Bay waterfront retreat, with hot and spa tubs, gourmet kitchen, fireplace, wide screen and more. $1,500. (360)808-5522. DISCO BAY: Waterfront, newly renovated 3 Br., 2 ba, 20 min. to Seq./P.T. $900. (360)460-2330. JAMES & ASSOCIATES INC. Property Mgmt. (360)417-2810 HOUSES/APT IN P.A. A Studio Util Incl.....$500 A 2 br 1 ba..............$550 H 1 br 1 ba..............$650 A 2 br 1.5 ba ............$695 H 2 br 1 ba..............$750 A 3 br 1.5 ba...........$875 H 3 br 2 ba..............$990 SEQUIM A 2 br 2 ba..............$825 A 2 br 2 ba..............$875 H 2 br 1ba.............$1000 Complete List at: 11 Caroline St P.A.: 2 Br., 1 ba, carpor t, lg. deck, laundry room. $600, 1st, last. (360)457-0181

(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: ICING IGLOO BEWARE SWITCH Answer: He practiced the trumpet for weeks before his band tryout, but on the big day he — BLEW IT

4080 Employment 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale 505 Rental Houses Clallam County Wanted Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County Clallam County SCUBA DIVER FOR HIRE Call 681-4429

H L O R C M N R W A B N G A M A R I ‫ ګ‬ O Y ‫ ګ‬ O D ‫ ګ‬ M N ‫ ګ‬ H T B O T R

Jumble puzzle magazines available at pennydellpuzzles.com/jumblemags

3 Colorado’s __ Verde National Park 4 Toon fry cook in The Krusty Krab restaurant 5 “Just go along with what I said” 6 WWII investment 7 “When in __ ...” 8 River projects 9 Walk drunkenly 10 Come into one’s own 11 Hawaii’s most populous island 12 Stubble spot 13 Yankee slugger, familiarly 21 Bridget Jones’s book 22 Was on the ballot 25 __ fright 26 Cultivates 27 Thing of the past 28 Soap Box Derby city 29 Ask for Friskies, maybe 30 Accelerate, as an engine 31 Licorice-flavored seed

5/7/13

H E A L T H B E E L B A T O N

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ACROSS 1 Help for the poor 5 Buffalo bunches 10 Florida resort, familiarly 14 Quick look 15 German sub 16 Cowardly Lion actor 17 Old Sinclair Oil rival 18 “Throw __ From the Train” 19 Soap Box Derby state 20 Defend a position 23 Bind with a band 24 Pinup’s leg 25 Water under the bridge 28 One in a church chorus? 30 Brit. fliers 33 Walk-off home run, often 35 Horne of jazz 36 Metallic mixture 37 Homie 38 Honda compact 39 Fast-talking 40 Explodes with rage 42 PC panic button 43 Rounded hammer end 44 Filled flapjack-like food 45 Assist 46 Bow-toting deity 47 With “The,” PBS show for kids, and a hint to the ends of 20-, 33and 40-Across 55 Put in cargo 56 Swashbuckler Flynn 57 Space 58 Prepare, as rice 59 Petty 60 Swed. neighbor 61 “The Thin Man” terrier 62 Tones down 63 Before long

TUESDAY, MAY 7, 2013 B7

P.A.: Clean, cozy, close. 2 Br., 1 bath, fenced yard, garage. Excellent refs., no smoke. $800. (360)452-1043

665 Rental Duplex/Multiplexes CENTRAL P.A.: 2 Br., 2 bath. Fireplace, garage. W / D. N o s m o k i n g o r pets. $800. 460-8797.

P.A.: 1 Br., office, carP.A.: Cute, clean, 4 br, por t, view, clean and 1.5 bath, garage, fence. quiet, W/S inc. $675. $1,100. (360)452-6144. (360)452-6611 Properties by Landmark. portangeleslandmark.com

6045 Farm Fencing & Equipment DR Scout 7 HP Field and Brush Mower : 3 Forward speeds, Reverse; 23 inch cutting deck; Purchased new i n 2 0 0 6 ; To t a l R u n hours just 37 hours; Includes Maint. Kit, Maint. meter, and Tool kit. $900. 681-5039.

SEQUIM: 2 Br. duplex, d e n , 2 b a , W / D, n o smoke, pets neg., 1 yr. TRACTOR: ‘52 Ferguson. 6-way back blade, SEQUIM: 2 Br., 1 bath, $900. 452-4701. scraper box, and ripper W/D, no smoking/pets. o o t h , g o o d r u n n e r. $700 first/dep. 460-4294 671 Mobile Home t$2,500. (360)710-4966. Spaces for Rent SEQUIM: 3 Br., 2 ba, close to town. $1,200 MOBILE home or travel 6050 Firearms & mo. (360)808-7778. trailer space. East P.A. Ammunition SEQUIM: 3 Br., 2 bath $320 mo. 360-452-7582. condo, 1,378 sf., bright AK-47: $1,200. end unit in adult comm. (360)457-3645 (Sherwood Village), wa- 683 Rooms to Rent Roomshares GUN CABINET: Handter, trash, lawn care incl. crafted, 13 long gun ca$950. (360)461-5649. RO O M M AT E n e e d e d : p a c i t y a n d s p a c e fo r SEQUIM: Lovely 4 Br., P r i v a t e r o o m / b a t h , s e v e r a l h a n d g u n s , 1.5 bath, storage, totally cable, lights, inter net. mounted on large drawn e w i n s i d e , n o $450. (360)504-2305. er and cabinet unit. pets/smoke. $1,300 f/l/d. $200. (360)683-1532. SEQUIM: 1 fur nished (360)683-2426 room in lg. 2 Br. apt., 6055 Firewood, separate bath. $380 520 Rental Houses mo., $350 dep., share Fuel & Stoves Jefferson County electric. 417-9478. susanunpc@gmail.com FIRE LOGS BRINNON: 2 Br. mobile Dump truck load. $300 home, quiet setting, near 1163 Commercial plus gas. (360)732-4328 senior center. $350 mo. Rentals (360)796-4270 FIREWOOD: $165. (360)670-9316 CARLSBORG: Rental 605 Apartments with fenced equip. yard FIREWOOD: $179 delivClallam County ered Sequim-P.A. True in indust. park. 2,880 sf., cord. 3 cord special for $1700. Or, 936 sf., $700. B R I N N O N : C a b i n fo r $499. Credit card ac(360)683-4231 rent. 2 Br.,1 bath, newly cepted. 360-582-7910. PROPERTIES BY remodeled. $550, f/l/d. www.portangeles LANDMARK (360)796-4237 firewood.com 452-1326 CENTRAL P.A.: Clean, 6075 Heavy quiet, 2 Br., excellent SEQUIM: Office/retail r e fe r e n c e s r e q u i r e d . space 850 sf. $800 mo. Equipment (360)460-5467 $700. (360)452-3540. SEMI END-DUMP COLLEGE AREA P.A. 2 Br, W/D, fireplace. $600, 6005 Antiques & TRAILER: 30’. Electric tar p system, excellent $600 dep., pets upon Collectibles condition. $7,500. approval. 452-3423. (360)417-0153 ARMOIRE: Antique FIRST MONTH FREE 1880s Eastlake oak, EVERGREEN 6080 Home big, excellent condition COURT APTS Furnishings original finish, shelved 360-452-6996 2 and 3 Br. apts avail. interior, appraised at $685-$760. Some re- $950, sell $700/obo. BED: Twin box spring, mattress, frame. $175. strictions apply. Call to- For further information (360)582-3811 (360) 457-6410 day to schedule a tour of your new home. DESK: Roll top teak desk. Granite top. $500. 6010 Appliances 928-3178 leave msg. Managed by Sparrow, Inc. P.A.: 1 Br. lg. apt., water view, quiet, clean. $615 mo. (206)200-7244

UPRIGHT FREEZERS 1 upright freezer at 21 cubic feet, $299. 1 upright freezer at 16 cubic feet, $199. Will deliver. PA: 1 Br., no pets/smok- Call Gary: (360)385-1653 or ing, $600. (360)390-8334 (360)457-1695 P.A.: Nice 2 Br., 1 bath, W/D. $725. (360)808-4972 Properties by Landmark. portangeleslandmark.com

SEE THE MOST CURRENT REAL ESTATE LISTINGS: www.peninsula dailynews.com

6042 Exercise Equipment

MISC: La-z-boy recliners, 2, $75 each. China hutch, 44” x 74” x 16”, $325. Glider chair, $28. Green rug, 5’ x 8’, $30. (360)683-1006

6100 Misc. Merchandise

3 ” N ova M e m o r y G e l Foam mattress toppers. All sizes, pr iced $60MISC: Home gym, Nor- $105. 253-355-6765. dic-Flex, Ultralift Training Gym. Programs for fit- 5 PIECE office desk set. ness for Golds, charts, light oak desk set with and etc, $350. Treadmill, separate oak filing cabiHealthRider Softstrider, n e t s e e p h o t o s Model #DRTL25061, 19” $350/obo. David, c: (707)490-7259 x 55” walking area, Port Townsend $250. (360)379-9300.


Classified

B8 TUESDAY, MAY 7, 2013

9820 Motorhomes PRICED TO GO! 1990 Fleetwood 34’ motorhome. Good condition, low milage, nonsmoker, 454 Chev with B a n k s Po w e r Pa ck , Onan generator. Steal at $6,700. See at 1638 W 12th. (360)452-9611. BACKGAMMON SET DESK: Solid mahogany Aries leather backgam- desk, nice, 46” x 36” x mon set and case, very 18”. $175. old. $90. 681-0528. (360)452-9146 BARBIE JEEP: Fisher Pr ice, with radio and charger. $125. (360)582-7855

DISHES: Noritaki, Early Spring, #2362, 12 complete settings, 9 hostess set. $150. 928-9705.

LUGGAGE: 30” ReVo RV A/C: Duo-therm RV S p i n n e r, b e i g e, n ew, air conditioner. $200. used once, was $120. (360)683-2914 Asking $60. 809-0697. RV WASTE TOTE: RV LUGGAGE: New, large sewer waste tote, 10 gal, Samsonite, wheels, and new in box. $50. pull-up handle. $185. (360)504-2374 (360)202-0928 SADDLE: English sadMASSAGE TABLE d l e, fo r wa r d s e a t , w. With carrying case, head girth. $100. support. $75. 477-3834. (360)797-3362

BASEBALL CARDS DRILL: Milwaukee 100 cards at $2.00 per 2 4 0 4 - 1 . 2 5 ” d r i l l , w i t h card, old and new. Quickchange. $200. (603)380-0131 (206)941-6617 MATTRESS: Posturepedic. $75. BASKETBALL CARDS EXERCISE BIKE (360)683-8791. 100 cards at $2.00 per Schwinn Airdyne, like card, old and new. new. $75. 452-7967. MEDICINE CABINET (603)380-0131 Custom maple medicine FLY VEST: Cabela MasBA S S G U I TA R : W i t h er Guide fly vest, excel- cabinet, outside mount, 3’ x 4’. $75. 452-9146. amp, fender. $125. lent cond. $40/obo. (360)808-2010 (360)452-8953 M I S C : W a l k e r, $ 1 5 . BED: Full size bed, with FREE: Hide-a-bed, long Crutches (3 sets), $5 per frame, boxspring, sheets sofa, foot stool, creden- set. (360)452-9685. included. $100. za, coffee table. MOTOR: Electric trolling (360)582-7855 (360)928-3447 motor. Comes with large crab pot, ropes, bait box. BIKE: Lady’s SpecialFREE: Washer, dr yer, $140. (360)681-8761. i z e d S h i m a n o, s m a l l large desk, TV with frame, 21 speed. $90. VCR/DVD, fax machine, NEBULIZER: By Respri(985)290-5769 BBQ. 928-3447. ronics, portable. $75. (360)928-0236. BIKE RACK: Baja 2-3 FREEZER: GE, 11.6 cubike tr unk rack, used NOOK COLOR: Tablet bic feet, 3 shelves, basonce, excellent condiereader, with case. $75. kets in the bottom. $60. tion. $50. 683-6148. (360)681-8597 (360)460-2260 BOAT: South Fork ponO R G AN: Gulbransen toon boat, with oars, FREEZER: G.E., 14 cu- 400 Series elec. organ, bic feet, upright, excelpump, and vest. $200. l e n t c o n d . $ 1 9 5 . magic touch, bench. (360)460-6503 $25. (360)452-3535. (360)809-0697. BOOKS: 20 Star Trek PELLET GUN: CrossF RO G S : J ewe l r y ( 2 ) , novels dated 1984-1995, k e y c h a i n / w a t c h ( 1 ) , man .22 cal. pistol. $35. no two alike! $10 for all. (360)457-4383 misc. (2). All for $150. (360)457-6343 (360)681-2968 P E T B E D : 4 2 ” l a r g e, BOOKS: Harr y Potter round bed, polyester fillhardcover books 1-7. GARBAGE DISPOSAL ing, Costco brand. $25. 3/4 hp Kitchenaid. $40. $69 set. (360)775-0855. (360)457-6431 (360)683-2386 BREAD MACHINE: OsP L A N ER: Ryobi 10” GARDEN SEAT: New in ter. $24. (360)452-4342. p l a n e r, ex t r a bl a d e s. box. $45. Evenings, $135. (206)941-6617. CAMERA: Minolta 201. (360)683-0917 $90. (360)457-7112. POOL CUE: With case. GOLF CLUB: and cart, $35/obo. (360)452-8953. CANOE: 17’ fiberglass excellent cond. $40/obo. sailing canoe, get it out (360)681-0668 POSTER: Skagit Tulip of my yard, STAT! $150. Festival, 1991. $25. GOLF CLUBS: Full set, (360)912-2608 (360)681-7579 cart. $$150. CARDS: 5000 baseball (360)385-7728 PRINTER: HP Officejet and other sports cards, 6500 wireless print80s-90s. $35. GOLF CLUBS: Ladies er/scanner. $35. (360)461-0082 and mens. $75 per set. (360)457-7112 (360)477-3834 CARGO PLATFORM QUILTING FRAME 60” x 22” fits 2 “receiv- GUITAR: Acoustic, elec- Wooden, Ulmer brand. er.” $40. (360)301-4156. tric. $60. (360)457-4383. $150. (360)683-5233. CARPET: Flecked beige H E A D B OA R D : B o o k c o l o r, 1 0 . 5 ’ x 1 3 . 5 ’ . case headboard, walnut, $200. (360)461-0321. fits queen. $25/obo. (360)681-0668 C A R P E T: W i t h p a d , nice, used, beige. One HOUSEKEEPER for $75, one for $100. Starting at $9.50/hr., ap(360)452-0556 ply in person at Tides C A R P E T : w i t h p a d , Inn, 1807 Water St., Port nice, used, beige. Two Townsend.

S A D D L E PA D : B i l l y cook wester n saddle pad. $30. (360)797-3362 S C A L E : Tr i p l e - b e a m balance scale, with weights, like new. $45. (360)457-1626 SHELVING UNIT: 4 bottom doors, oak finish, nice. $150. (360)808-6456 SHOES: Mens, 8.5, brown. $10. (360)457-5790 S I G N : L a r g e, c a r ve d redwood, “Granite Chief Ski Repair” from Lake Tahoe. $95. 457-1645. SINK: Kitchen sink, double stainless steel, with faucet. $35. (360)683-2386 SMOOTHIE MAKER New, Pro 600, sells for $50. Asking $30. (360)928-0236. STAMP: 1968 Montana waterfowl stamp pr int mint and signed stamps. $200. (360)681-2968. STEAM TABLE: Countertop steam table, 14” x 22”. $145. (206)941-6617 STOCK TANK: Rubbermaid stock tank, 50 gal., clean. $60. (360)504-2374 SWIVEL ROCKER New, ear th tone, ver y comfortable, not recliner. $125. (360)775-2288. THE MITFORD BOOKS 9 copies. $35. (360)457-6756

TIRE CHANGE: Manual RIMS: (4) Toyota truck t i r e c h a n g e. 1 3 ” - 1 6 ” . rims and tires, 265-75- $25. (360)683-2914. R16. $110. (360)683-7899 TOOLBOX: Big, fiberRING: Brass, mens ring, glass, locks, for full-size truck. $75. with coin setting. $50. (360)452-9685 (360)385-5932 RING: Mens, silver, Lar- TOOL BOX: For truck, c o e Tu r q u o i s e r i n g . a l u m i n u m , d i a m o n d PLAT 16” x 28” x 56”. $150. (360)385-5932. $200. (360)301-4156. ROCKER: Bentwood, in TV: RCA 25” TV, with great shape. $50. r e m o t e a n d o w n e r ’s (360)457-3843 manual. $20. (360)683-8657 ROCKER: Bentwood rocker, very good shape. TYPEWRITER: Canon $75/obo. (360)565-0392. S-58 with stand and covROCKER: Glider rocker, er. $25. (360)452-6374 foot stool. $75/obo. VASES: Mother’s Day (360)565-0392 flower vases (2), differROCKING CHAIR ent styles. $5. Bentwood, rattan seat (360)797-1179 and back. $65. W H E E L C H A I R : N ew. (360)775-0855 $100. (360)808-6456. RUGS: Area 8’ x 10’, and 4’ x 32”, flowered, W I N C H : B o a t t r a i l e r winch, 2 speed, Fulton # multiple colors. $150. 590. $25. 452-5652. (360)640-0556

small bedrooms, $50. IRRIGATION PUMPS Hallway, $25. 640-0556. ( 2 ) i r r i g a t i o n p u m p s, 110 and 220. $100 ea. CEILING LIGHTS (360)683-7899 (4) 14” flush mount Hampton Bay, bisque JAZZ CD: Miles Davis, rim. $20. (360)683-2639. Kind of Blue. $8. (360)457-5790 CHAIRS: (2) solid oak captain’s chairs, carved J E W E L RY B OX : M a backs. $100 for the pair. hogany and brass (360)670-9522. apothacary-style jewelry CHAIRS: (4) solid oak box. $29. 457-1645. captain’s chairs, paid $220 each. Asking $200 LAMP SHADE: Tiffanystyle, with glass for retotal. (360)670-9522. pair. $50. (360)683-9295 COWBOY HAT: Beige with red trim. $15. LANTERN: Coleman (360)683-9295 lantern, single mantle, CRADLE SWING: Fis- hard case, like new. $35. (360)457-1626 cher Price. $70. WORD PROCESSOR RUGS: area r ug, 8’ x (360)808-2010 LIGHT BOX: For trac- 10’, 4’ 32”, flowered, Brother WP 76D, with n ew d i s k s, c a r t r i d g e, CRYSTAL OWL: Swed- ing, 17” x 17”. $15. multiple colors. $150. (360)681-0528 manual. $20. 683-8657. ish. $10. (360)797-1179. (360)452-0556

E E E A D S FFRRE Monday and Tuesdays ADS 6100 Misc. Merchandise C A N O P Y: W h i t e, f i t s standard fords, ‘99 and n e w e r, r e a r d o o r / l i f t hatch, tinted sliding windows, raised roof, excellent condition. $1,000/obo. (360)640-4326 (360)640-0535 FREE: Spruce sawdust, clean, good for gardens, mulch and animals stalls. (360)417-0232. L O O M : N o r wo o d . 5 0 ” Like new. $900/obo. (360)681-0814 MISC: 4 Toyota pickup wheels/tires, 75 R126, $375. Electric dog fence, $50. Treadmill, $125. 5 white used vinyl windows, $25 ea. 2 metal dog cages, $40/$60. 57 18” round cement pavers, 52 cinder blocks, $140 all. Antique tractor rake, $300. Antique wagon, metal wheels, $300. (360)683-1851.

MISC: Riding Mower, John Deere Select ser i e s X 3 0 0 , l i k e n e w, used 30 hours, cost $ 3 , 6 0 0 , W i l l s e l l fo r $2,500. Scanoe, Old Town, 13’, with paddles, $600. (360)797-1771.

• No Pets, Livestock, Garage Sales or Firewood 6100 Misc. Merchandise

NO PHONE CALLS

6135 Yard & Garden

9820 Motorhomes

AIR CONDITIONER POOL TABLE: Regula- RIDING MOWER: tion size, slate top, cues, Craftsman 17 hp, 42” Easy mount, dual therm, RV air conditioner, good balls, fairly new felt. cut, like new. $950/obo. condition. $375. $575. (360)460-5511. 360-504-5664. (360)683-2914 POWER CHAIR: Used, ROTOTILLER: CraftsInvacare Pronto. $500/ man 7 hp heavy duty 17” obo. (360)504-2710. r e a r - t i n e d r o t o t i l l e r. Tines are dual rotating, WANTED: Gently used with forward and reverse Kagen water alkalizer. transport gears, weight(360)298-0737 e d fo r b a l a n c e , ve r y good shape with extra shear pins. Well priced M OTO R H O M E : 1 9 8 9 6115 Sporting at $425. (360)683-7643. Fleetwood Limited 37J. Goods new 460 Ford Banks exT R AC TO R : 9 N , r u n s haust system, HYD levGOLF CART: ‘08 Club very good, low hrs. on eling jacks, 2 tvs, nonCar. 48 volt high speed total engine rebuild. Ask- smoker, 5.5 Onan genmotor, full enclosure, ing $2,495. erator, driver and pasbag and club cover, club senger side doors, oak (360)683-7568 and ball washer, cooler, cabinets, corian countermany other extras, seller tops, hardwood floors. is original owner, excel- 8142 Garage Sales $20,000. lent condition. (360)417-0619 Sequim $4,250. (360)504-2581.

6140 Wanted & Trades BOOKS WANTED! We love books, we’ll buy yours. 457-9789.

W A N T E D : Yo u r o l d knives. I buy and collect knives, 1 or a whole collection. I will be visiting relatives next week in Port Angeles. Give me a MISC: Square bar height call if you would like to table and 4 chairs, $200/ sell. Rick (503)476-7046 obo. Total Gym, $200/ obo. 5’ sofa table, $30. WANT TO RENT: Spot (360)452-6702 to live, with some privacy, plus country setting, MISC: Thule utility rack, handyman looking for brand new, $400. Lum- older dwelling or place b e r ra ck fo r f u l l s i ze for RV. Need 400 sf +/truck, $300. 4’ claw foot outbuilding for storage/ tub with feet, $350. An- workshop. Pets. tique 1913 Kohler and (360)670-5467 Campbell upright grand piano, $2,200. Aluminum 22’x20” wide construc6135 Yard & tion plank, $500. Garden (360)460-6954 MOWER: 52” town beh i n d , S w i s h e r b ra n d , ver y heavy duty, new $ 2 , 3 9 5 . L i ke n ew. $1,795. (360)683-7568.

9832 Tents & Travel Trailers 7x16 Interstate Cargo / Utility Trailer 2008 Black $3800 Excellent condition, less than 300 miles on it! Call 360-928-0214 CAMPER TRAILER: ‘80 Holiday Rambler, Presidential 28’. New fridge and furnace. $3,500. (360)928-9436 CHALET: 2012 Arrowhead Folding Camper. Single owner, immaculate condition, stored in g a ra g e o n j a ck s S e e f e a t u r e s a t http://www.chaletrv.com/ folding-trailers/. Takes approximately three minute set up or take down. Many extras including 11,000 BTU ducted air air-conditioner/heat pump. $12,000. Call (360)681-5033 for appointment.

BAYLINER: 1987 Capri 1750. GM 4 Cyl 3.0L engine with OMC stern drive. Runs great! Electronic ignition, Dual batteries, Hummingbird 587ci Fishfinder with GPS. More info on PDN online. $3,800/obo. (360)460-0460

S C O OT E R : V K - E 5 0 0 electric, 48V/15AM, lithium battery, almost new, less than 20 mi., top speed 35 mpg, 30 mi. on 1 charge, paid $1,450. B E L L B OY : ‘ 6 4 1 8 ’ $600/obo. 504-2113. Classic. Very good condition, Volvo I/O, 7.5 hp YAMAHA: ‘72 Enduro Johnson kicker, fullc an- 100LT2. Ready to ride, vas, new EZ Load trailer, 3K original miles. $750/ new tires, 2 downr ig- obo.(360)683-0146. g e r s , l o t s o f ex t r a s . YAMAHA: ‘74 DT360. $2,600. (360)417-1001. 4k original miles, runs BELLBOY: ‘78 24’ 20 g o o d , a m a z i n g c o n d . KT Cruiser, 80 gal. fuel, $2,500/obo. 452-7253. 30 gal. water, 1,750 watt i nve r t e r, 1 2 0 V s h o r e YAMAHA: ‘79 XS 1100. power, 4 batteries, mi- 35K, fairing, saddle bags crowave, refr igerator, excellent cond. $2,750/ new depth finder, com- obo. (360)808-1922 or pass, GPS, VHF, din- (360)681-3023 after 6. ette, new galley, new Wallas ceramic diesel stove/heater, auto level9805 ATVs ing trim tabs, enclosed head, trailer with new disc brakes, wheels and HONDA: TRX200 4WD ATV. $600. tires. $8,000/obo. (360)477-6547 (360)683-9645 CHRIS CRAFT: 26’ Cavalier with trailer, 350 MerCruiser inboard, Bow Thr uster, radar, GPS, sounder, toilet with Electro Scan. $14,995. (360)775-0054

TRAVEL TRAILER: 17’, ‘05 Casita, Spirit Deluxe. LONESTAR: 17’, 100 hp $14,000. (360)808-0809. Johnson motor, 9.5 kicker, motor in great shape, g a l va n i ze d E Z - l o a d e r 9802 5th Wheels t r a i l e r, d e p t h f i n d e r, $2,500. (360)928-9436.

5TH WHEEL: $13,750 /obo cash only, must sell. ‘01 Corsair 32’ Lots of extras, lamin a t e w o o d f l o o r, 2 slideouts, clean, comfor table, queen bed, central vac & more! Come see in Sekiu. Text/call 582-7130. 5TH WHEEL: 26’ Alpenlite. New fridge/freezer, toilet, A/C, micro, dual batteries and propane tank, nice stereo, queen air adustable bed, awning, all in good condition, clean and ready to go. $3,850/obo. Leave message at (360)452-4790.

9742 Tires & Wheels

BRAND NEW WHEELS S t i l l i n b ox ! M i ckey Thomson Classic II, black, 16x8 with bolt pattern 8x6.5. Didn’t fit our Toyota 4-Runner and don’t want to pay the restock fee. $550/obo (360)460-1301

9180 Automobiles Classics & Collect.

APRILIA: Scarabeo motorcycle/scooter 2009. This is a pristine motorcycle with less then 1000 miles on it! Hardly used! NOT A SR. S C O OT E R ! 5 0 0 C C s Needs a battery charge. $3600/obo. (360)808-6160 BMW: ‘74 R75/6. Airhead Boxer, excellent condition, 29K mi., new powder coat, shocks, always garaged. $3,500/ obo. (360)912-2679. GOLDWING: ‘90 1500. Runs great, well maintained. $3,000. (360)461-2619 HARLEY Davidson: ‘97 1200 Spor t. Red and Black, 15K miles, new tires and battery, custom painted tank, extra tank, 4 extra seats, lots of chrome, blinkers integral in mirrors, detachable sissy bar, custom fender, 2 into 1 exhaust, adjustable shocks. Have or iginal par ts too. $4,250. (360)460-7893

MERCEDES: ‘97 SL320. Both tops, gold/tan. $10,500. (360)683-7420.

MERCURY ‘98 GRAND BMW: ‘84 325E. 90% reMARQUIS LS SEDAN stored. $4,800. 4.6L V8, automatic, alloy (360)460-2931 wheels, keyless entr y, BUICK: ‘01 Regal Tour- p owe r w i n d ow s, d o o r ing. 107+K mi. $3,000/ l o ck s, m i r r o r s, p owe r l e a t h e r s e a t s, c r u i s e obo. (702)366-4727. control, tilt, air conditionBUICK: ‘99 Park Ave- ing, cassette stereo, innue. 64k miles, 1 owner, formation center, dual dealer maintained, good f r o n t a i r b a g s . O n l y condition, loaded, 30+ 98,000 original miles! highway mpg. $1,000 full Well maintained local tune up done less than trade-in! Plush leather 800 miles ago. Needs seating! Priced to sell fast! Stop by Gray Monothing. $5,500. firm tors today! (360)477-6218 $2,495 GRAY MOTORS CARS: VW ‘64 Bug, 457-4901 $3,950. Eagle ‘95 Talon graymotors.com TSI, $1,000. 477-3495.

C H RY S L E R : ‘ 0 3 P T C r u i s e r. 1 1 5 k m i l e s , Shar p and well maintained. $4,250. (360)796-4270 CHRYSLER: 2002 LTD PT Cruiser. 78k miles New battery. Black with c h r o m e t r i m , ex t r a s . Moonroof, great stereo and a gas to drive. too much fun in the sun! One owner who loved it! $5500/obo. (360)808-6160 DATSUN: ‘64 Fairlady convertible. Mechanic’s spec. $1,500. 452-6524.

AMC: Rare 1970 AMX PONTOON BOAT: 10’ 2-seater, 390 V/8, 4 spd, ODC 1018, white water 95% original. $18,000. and still water, oars and (360)928-9477 wheel mount. $295/obo. (360)912-1759 CHEV: ‘56 Belair. 6 cyl., auto, 4 door, paint, inSEA RAY: ‘74 24’ HT terior, chrome, re-done Cruiser. Reconditioned/ to stock, California car, e q u i p p e d fo r o c e a n / 2nd owner, always garrough weather fishing/ aged. $21,000. cruising with ALL NEW (360)683-7789 equipment and features: repowered w/ Merc Hori- C H E V: ‘ 7 9 C o r ve t t e . zon Engine/Bravo-3 (du- L82, runs great, lots of al prop), stern drive (117 new parts! $6,000/obo. hrs.), complete Garmin (360)457-6540 electronics, reinforced stern, full canvas, downriggers, circ water heating, Yamaha 9.9 kicker, EZ Load trailer, w/disk brakes (1,200 mi.), electric winch. Other extras, $52,000 invested. Sacrifice for $18,500. (360)681-5070

9817 Motorcycles

9292 Automobiles Others

& Parts

TOYOTA PARTS: Parts from Toyota ‘07 Tundra. White 6.5’ Leer canopy, sliding front and side windows, interior light; plastic 6.5’ bed liner; aluminum front skid plate. $1,200/obo. (360)460-1870

O/B: YAMAHA 6 hp long shaft, fuel tank, hose, excellent shape. $650. (360)385-7728

SILVERLINE: ‘72 18’ I/O Tri-Hull on ‘05 Roadrunner trailer. Needs work, m a ny ex t ra s, $ 1 , 5 0 0 / obo. (360)457-1672 or 5TH WHEEL: ‘89 Prowl- (360)912-1642. er Lynx 215. New raised SLICKCRAFT: 1976 23’ a x l e s, 1 2 0 vo l t r e fe r, inboard/outboard. 302 great shape, fully engine, boat and trailer. equipped, comes with $5,200. (360)457-8190. hitch. Reduced $2,750. (360)460-6248, eves.

S T U D E BA K E R : 1 9 5 0 S t a r l i g h t C o u p. C o m plete restoration, black cherry color, runs good, looks excellent. $11,000. (360)683-8810

CHEV ‘06 COBALT LT COUPE O n l y 6 9 , 0 0 0 m i l e s, 4 cyl., 5 speed, A/C, tilt w h e e l , c r u i s e, p owe r windows, locks and mirrors, AM/FM/CD, power sunroof, rear spoiler, c o l d a i r i n t a ke, a l l oy wheels, remote entr y and more! VIN#757903 Expires 05/11/13 $7,995 Dave Barnier Auto Sales *We Finance In House* 452-6599 QUAD: 90 cc Eton. 2 davebarnier.com s t r o ke, l i ke n ew. R e 2946 Hwy 101 E. PA duced $1,300. 452-3213 C H RY S L E R : ‘ 0 2 P T LTD. Silver. 93K. 9740 Auto Service Cruiser $4,500/obo. 457-0238.

MISC: Crab pot puller, $400. 9.9 Yamaha O/B, $ 4 5 0 . K a y a k t r a i l e r, $150. (360)457-6409.

5TH WHEEL: 26’. Reasonalble cond. $1,900/ obo. (360)461-0701 or 461-0423 or 928-2867

MERCEDES: ‘85 SL380. HONDA: ‘94 Accord LX. Both tops, excellent con- R u n s a f t e r f u e l f i l t e r fixed. $1,000/obo. dition. $10,000/obo. (360)477-9082 (360)460-6764

L I N C O L N : ‘ 8 8 To w n C a r. C o z y 2 0 M P G . Runs great. Good body and interior with some rust spots. Good tires. Brakes redone. All accessories work, includHONDA: ‘80 CB-900C. S i l ve r. $ 1 , 0 0 0 / o b o o r V W : 1 9 7 3 B e e t l e . i n g A / C, 1 3 0 k m i l e s. $1,500 or best offer. Call t r a d e fo r g u n s / s m a l l $2,500/obo. (360)683-1683 (360)477-3725 truck. (360)460-3756.

BAYLINER: ‘85 Trophy. 22’, 2010 175 hp Suzuki, 2010 EZ Load trailer, new fuel tank, new steering, GPS/Garman/ F i s h F i n d e r . $12,000/obo. 928-3081.

JET SKI: Kawasaki STX 12F, 3 seater, ‘06, excellent condition, trailer. $6,800. (360)460-2689.

5TH WHEEL: ‘00 35’ Alfa Ideal. 3 slides, with awnings, 2 a/c, excellent cond., must see! $20,000/obo. (360)683-2529

HONDA: 2003 VT750 A c e D e l u xe C r u i s e r. Showroom Condition Must see. Lots of Chrome, Many Extras. Will not find another bike like this. Never left out,never dropped. 10,387 Low Miles $4,500. (360)477-6968.

BAYLINER: 27’ Bucca- HONDA: ‘85 Goldwing neer 3500 obo or trade A s p e n c a d e . 1 2 0 0 c c , for ‘land yacht’ +6’ head- black/chrome, exc. cond. room; 8HP Mercury $3,500/obo. 417-0153. longshaft recently serviced: runs great!’ Main+jib sail; small rowing skiff. Many extras Call Rob to see (360)390-8497

DEATH TAKES OWNER OF FISHING BOAT 20 ft. Robolo Boat,Center Counsel, with 4 stroke 115 Yamaha Motor, has 400 hrs. on it. Electronics, trailer, (gal i va n i z e d ) d u a l a xe l , KOMFORT: 17L “Lite” many extras. By appointTravel Trailer. Immacu- ment. $22,000. (360)417-0277 l a t e R e f e r, 4 - b u r n e r s t ove, t u b / s h owe r. EASTERN: ‘11 18’ cen$4,500. (360)477-0321. ter console, premium TRAILER: 20’ Prowler. boat, like new, completeBeen garaged until the l y e q u i p p e d , 5 0 h p last 2 yrs., looks like new Yamaha, under 50 hrs. b o t h i n s i d e a n d o u t , in warranty, Load-r ite would consider pickup galv. trailer, many exas part trade. 102 Slab t ra s, D ow n e a s t s t y l e. See easternboats.com Camp Rd., Sequim. $1,500/obo. 477-6098 or $26,500. (360)477-6059 (360)582-7811. G L A S P LY : 2 6 ’ c a b i n TRAILER: ‘90 27’ Hi-Lo. cr uiser, flying br idge, G o o d s h a p e. $ 3 , 0 0 0 / single Cummins diesel engine, low hours, radar, obo. (360)683-8059. VHF radio, CB, depth/ f i s h f i n d e r , d i n g h y, downriggers, 16’x32’ boathouse. $27,500. (360)457-0684

KOMFORT: 1997 23F 5th Wheel. Great condition, New tires, water pump (2012) 2 skylights 2 t w i n b e d s, Aw n i n g , Purchase option of deluxe hitch, Chev PU tailgate, 1000 Trails Membership, Por table grey MOTOR HOME: 2001 water tank. $6,000. 36’ Southwind Limited (360)683-4552 Edition. Very good condition. 16k mi., 2 slides, new levelers, rear came- 9808 Campers & ra, drivers side door, lots Canopies of storage inside and out. Many extras. Non- CAMPER: ‘11 10’ Alassmokers. $40,000. kan cab-over. Original 7035 General Pets (360)683-5359 owner, excellent cond. $9,000. (360)452-8968. MOTORHOME: ‘84 32’ PUPPIES: Golden Re- S p o r t c o a c h I I I . C h ev PACKAGE: ‘85 Dodge trievers, 12 wks., lower ‘454’ eng., rear dbl. bed, 350 and 11.5’ self conprice. $600. full bath, new convection tained camper. (360)912-2227 m i c r o, n ew f r i d g e / i c e $1,900. (360)457-1153. maker, wood cabinets, runs well, clean. PURE Bred Lab Pup9829 RV Spaces/ $8,700. (360)683-1851. pies for sale. Born 3Storage 17-2013. 1st shots in- MOTORHOME: Dodge cluded. Already eating ‘76 Class C. 26’, good regular food. Ready to c o n d . , n ew t i r e s, l ow RV SITE: Near busline find new loving homes. miles, nonsmoker, in PA. and casino. $375 mo. internet, utilities. 681-0748 1 yellow male, 1 yel- $5,000 firm. 460-7442. l o w fe m a l e , 1 b l a c k male, 2 black females. SEQUIM AREA: Full Place your ad at $450. call hookup, TV, internet. peninsula (360)808-0880 $350. (360)460-5435. dailynews.com ESTATE Sale in Sequim. Saturday, May 11th from 9 to 5 - Entire household including furniture, kitchen items, tools etc. 554 Elk Hor n Loop, Sequim, 98382 House is going on the market soon and we need to clean everything out! One day only, come by and check it out.

BAYLINER: 17’, 70 hp Yamaha, needs some engine work but runs. $1,850. (360)460-9365.

Automobiles 9292 Automobiles 9817 Motorcycles 9180 Classics & Collect. Others

FORD ‘07 FOCUS SE 2 DOOR Hatchback, 4 cyl, 5 speed, A/C, tilt wheel, cruise, power windows, locks, and mirrors, AM/FM/CD, power sunroof, rear spoiler, alloy wheels, remote entr y and more! VIN#104646 Expires 05/11/13 $6,995 Dave Barnier Auto Sales *We Finance In House* 452-6599 davebarnier.com 2946 Hwy 101 E. PA

SATURN: ‘07 Aura. Low mi. $8,000. (360)796-4762 SCION: ‘08 XB. 40k, excellent. $13,500. (360)928-3669

SUBARU ‘97 LEGACY OUTBACK AWD WAGON 133k orig mi! 2.5L flat 4 c y l , a u t o, l o a d e d ! 2 tone red/gold ext in good shape! Black leather int in good cond! JVC CD, A/C, dual airbags, cruise, tilt, roof rack, alloy wheels with 80% rubber! 2 owner! Nice little Subie @ our No Haggle price of only $4,995! Carpenter Auto Center 681-5090

TOYOTA : ‘ 0 1 S o l a r a . Auto, 2 door, loaded. $4,300/obo. 461-5193.

TOYOTA : ‘ 0 4 C o r o l l a CE. White, auto, air, CD, 80K, nice, safe, reliable. $7,500. (360)670-3437.

TOYOTA ‘05 CAMRY SOLARA SE V6, 2 door coupe, previously owned by top notch high performance engine technician who would not allow the car to leave the garage on rainy days. This car is mechanically perfect, expensive upgrade tire and wheel package, low miles. Sharpest, tightest Solara I have ever seen. $10,900 Preview at: heckmanmotors.com Heckman Motors 111 E. Front, P.A. (360)912-3583

TOYOTA : ‘ 9 9 C a m r y XLE. Great shape, all options, 4 cyl. auto OD. $4,250. (360)460-1207. VW: ‘66 Bug. Excellent shape. $5,000. (360)457-7022

VW: ‘72 Super Beetle. Great shape. $2,600. (360)809-3656

F O R D : 1 9 9 0 Ta u r u s . Runs and drives excel- VW: ‘74 Classic conlent,V6. $600. 683-7173. ver tible Super Beetle. $9,500/obo. Call after 6 FORD: ‘90 Taurus Wag- p.m. (360)460-2644. on. Runs fine, body OK, has some issues. 9434 Pickup Trucks $850. (360)457-4399. FORD 92 LX CONVERTIBLE V8, this mustang is in g r e a t c o n d i t i o n , n ew convertible top, this little pony really turns heads! $4,950. heckmanmotors.com Heckman Motors 111 E. Front, P.A. (360)912-3583

Others

CHEV: ‘76 pickup. 1 ton dually, no bed, ‘454’, 4 speed, runs/drives good. $750. (360)457-4383.

C H E V: ‘ 9 5 3 5 0 0 H D. 8’x15’ wood deck, 84,760 mi., GTX 10-30 every 3,000 mi., original owner. $8,500. (360)301-0050

HONDA: ‘06 Accord LX. V6, 49K. orig. owner, re- FORD: ‘93 F-150 pickup. 130,000 on odometer, cent maint. $12,500. 4WD, Canopy available. (360)417-8859 See at Strait Alignment H O N DA : ‘ 0 6 E l e m e n t Brakes, 102 S. Alber t, E X . AW D, 8 6 k m i l e s, P. A . d u r i n g bu s i n e s s Ve r y g o o d c o n d i t i o n . hours, 8-5 weekdays. $11,700. (360)417-9401. $4,000. (360)457-9393.

RUN A FREE AD FOR ITEMS PRICED $200 AND UNDER s 2 ADS PER HOUSEHOLD PER s Bargain Box Ads will run as WEEK space permits Mondays & s Private parties only Tuesdays s 4 lines, 2 days s No firewood or lumber s No pets or livestock s No Garage Sales

Ad 1

Ad 2

Name Address Phone No.

Mail to:

Bring your ads to:

Peninsula Daily News Peninsula Daily News PO Box 1330 305 West 1st St., Port Angeles Port Angeles, WA 98362 NO PHONE CALLS or FAX to: (360) 417-3507

Email: classified@peninsuladailynews.com

3A181257

MISC: Utility trailer, 4x8, $500. Gas rototiller, 5 hp, $85. Briggs & Stratton pressure washer, $90. (360)683-4038.

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

5A246724

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

Trade for camper van. ‘81 Midas 21’ MH, self c o n t a i n e d , n ew t i r e s, brakes, carb., top condition, 13 mpg at 55-60. $4,100. (360)452-2677.

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

S D A E E E R E F FR

E E R F

For items $200 and under

RV: 3 8 ’ RV a n d To w C a r. 2 0 0 1 N ew m a r Mountainaire and a 2009 Honda CRV tow car offered together or separa t e l y. T h e R V h a s 61,400 miles on a gas driven Trident V10 with a Banks system added. The interior is dark cherr y wood with corian counter tops. The RV is in very good condition. We just returned from a trip to Arizona which was trouble free. The CRV tow car is in excellent condition with 47,000 miles. Asking $40,000 for the RV and $20,000 for the CRV or $58,000 together. Please call Bill or Kathy at (360)582-0452 to see the vehicles.

9050 Marine Miscellaneous

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS


Classified

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

9434 Pickup Trucks 9434 Pickup Trucks 9434 Pickup Trucks 9434 Pickup Trucks 9434 Pickup Trucks Others Others Others Others Others DODGE ‘03 DAKOTA EXTENDED CAB 2WD 4.7L V8, automatic, allow wheels, new tires, tow package, power windows, door locks, mirrors, crusie control, tilt, air conditioning, CD Stereo, Information center, dual front airbags. Kelley Blue Book Value of $10,463! Spar kling clean inside and out! All the right options! Priced to sell fast! Stop by Gray Motors today to save big bucks on your next truck! $7,995 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com

DODGE: ‘99 Ram 4X4 Flatbed tr uck. Low miles, recent oil change, transmission flush and filter changes. 3/4 ton 360 engine. call 461-4151. Photos available by request. Price reduced to $3500/obo.

DODGE ‘05 RAM 2500 CREW CAB SHORT BED SLT 4X4 5.9L Cummins HO 24V Turbo-Diesel, automatic, 17� alloy wheels, tow package, trailer brake controller, spray-in bedliner, diamond-plate toolbox/auxiliary fuel tank, Buckstop bumper, keyless entr y, power windows, door locks, mirrors, and drivers seat, cruise control, tilt, air conditioning, CD stereo, information center, dual f r o n t a i r b a g s . Ke l l e y Blue Book value of $32,649! Immaculate condition inside and out! Loaded with options! Red and ready! This truck stands up tall! A real head-turner! Priced to sell! Stop by Gray Motors today! $27,995 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com NISSAN: ‘11 Frontier, King Cab. 2WD, 6’ bed, 22,620 mi, bedliner, bed c a p, Ke l l y B l u e B o o k without liner or cap is $ 1 8 , 4 8 1 . W i l l s e l l fo r $18,000. (360)452-6600. FORD: ‘88 3/4 ton. Runs good. $1,000. (360)775-9669

FORD: ‘98 F150. Rims, tinted, black, extended cab. Quick sale. $2,775. (360)460-0518

TUESDAY, MAY 7, 2013 B9

9556 SUVs Others

9556 SUVs Others

9556 SUVs Others

9730 Vans & Minivans Others

JEEP ‘02 LIBERTY LIMITED 4X4 113k orig mi! 3.7L V6, auto. White ext in great cond! Charcoal cloth int in great cond! Pw, Pdl, Pm, Kenwood Excelon CD w/ aux, cruise, tilt, A/C, pri glass, roof rack, alloy wheels. Very nice little Jeep @ our No Haggle price of only $6,995! Carpenter Auto Center 681-5090

FORD: ‘91 Van. Wheelchair lift, 97k miles, engine purrs. $3,800. (360)681-5383

GMC: ‘98 Jimmy (Blazer). Low mi. on new motor, clean, runs great, all extras. 1st $2,900 takes it. (360)452-6611.

HUMMER ‘07 H2 SUV Luxury pkg., chrome appearance pkg., navigation system, entertainment pkg., leather, moon roof, 3rd row seat, Bose premium sound system, tow pkg., 17� premium wheels and tires. And that’s just the start, too many options to list, excellent condition inside FORD: ‘97 Expedition and out. Price to sell at XLT. 4x4, 3rd row seat. $25,490 $2,790. (360)461-2145. Preview at: heckmanmotors.com FORD ‘97 EXPLORER Heckman Motors XLT 4X4 111 E. Front, P.A. 4.0L V6, auto. Dk met (360)912-3583 green ext in great shape! JEEP ‘01 CHEROKEE Gray cloth int in good CLASSIC SPORT 4X4 cond! Pw, Pdl, Pm, Cassette Stereo, A/C, dual 4.0L I6, auto! White ext airbags, cruise, tilt, pri i n gr e a t s h a p e ! G ray glass, roof rack, alloy cloth int in excel cond! wheels, 2 owner! Clean Pwr windows, Pwr locks, little Explorer @ our No Pwr mirrors, Cassette stereo, cruise, tilt, A/C, Haggle price of only Spotless 2 owner Car$2,995! Carpenter Auto Center fa x ! ! L o c a l l y o w n e d ! Real clean square body 681-5090 Jeep @ our No Haggle GMC: ‘90 Jimmy.Rebuilt. price of only Call for details. $2,500. $5,995! (360)452-6649 Carpenter Auto Center 681-5090 GMC: ‘93 Yukon. 4WD, 2 d r. , 1 5 8 k m i , r u n s S AT U R N : ‘ 0 3 V u e . AWD. New trans and CD great. $2,500. 683-7173. player, clean 4 cyl. 2.2L GMC: ‘96 Yukon. 4x4, 4 engine, 114K, seats 5, door auto, 109K. $3,300/ family car, kids grown. obo. (360)582-0373. $4,950. (360)461-7566.

WINDOW WASHING TREE SERVICE

LAWN CARE

EXCAVATING/SEPTIC

REPAIR/REMODEL

TREE SERVICE

Larry’s Home Maintenance

GEORGE E. DICKINSON

Columbus Construction

FORD ‘00 F-150 EXTRA CAB 4X4 Four opening doors, V8, auto, XLT package, A/C, tilt wheel, cruise, power windows, locks and mirrors, AM/FM/CD, alloy w h e e l s, t u b e r u n n i n g boards, tow package, matching canopy, only 92k miles!. VIN#A47992 Expires 05/11/13 $8,995 Dave Barnier Auto Sales *We Finance In House* 452-6599 davebarnier.com 2946 Hwy 101 E. PA FORD ‘09 F150 KING RANCH 4X4 SUPER CREW This truck literally has it all! Full luxur y power, power moonroof, heated and cooled leather captains chairs, navigation system, SYNC voice activated communications and entertainment system. KING RANCH! Awesome truck! Priced right at $30,900 Preview at: heckmanmotors.com Heckman Motors 111 E. Front, P.A. (360)912-3583

FORD ‘07 RANGER SUPER CAB 4X4 4.0L V6, Automatic, alloy wheels, good tires, bedliner, tow ball, rear sliding window, 4 opening d o o r s, v i ny l f l o o r i n g , cruise control, tilt, air conditioning, MP3/CD/ stereo with AUX Input, dual front airbags. Kelley B l u e B o o k Va l u e o f $17,113! Only one previous owner! Clean Carfax! Sparkling clean inside and out! This truck is a looker! Stop by Gray Motors today to save big bucks on your next truck! $14,995 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com

TOYOTA: ‘05 Tacoma. 90K miles, 4X4. 2005 Toyota Tacoma. Great tr uck, just over 90k miles. Small Lift. Ride and dr ives perfect. $15,500/obo. Call Ryan (425)422-6678 this truck is located in Sequim.

TOYOTA: ‘05 Tacoma. TRD, double cab, 4WD, FORD: ‘94 F150 XLT. 98K mi., V6. $15,900. (360)460-6308 Low mi., 4x4, runs good, looks good. $4,500. (360)452-6758 9556 SUVs FORD: ‘94 Ranger XLT. Runs GREAT, 4.0 V6, automatic with overdrive, custom wheels, AM/FM, cruise control, tilt wheel. ext cab with two rear side seats, slider window in rear, 226,000 miles $2,700 or trade for travel trailer 18-25’ in good wo r k i n g o r d e r. L e ave message (360)452-2970

Others

C H E V : ‘ 0 1 B l a z e r. 4WD, power windows, white, good cond. $2,900. (360)460-8155

FORD: ‘93 Explorer XLT. 4x4 auto, dark green, tan interior, looks great, runs great, 116K orig. mi., new front suspens i o n , n ew t ra n s, n ew brakes/wheel bearings, new head gaskets/timing chain, new rocker arms/ push rods, new radiator. $4,900. (360)457-3744.

JEEP ‘03 GRAND CHEROKEE LOREDO 4X4 6 cyl, auto, fully loaded, very nice local trade in, runs great, very clean inside and out, super buy at $7,900 Preview at: heckmanmotors.com Heckman Motors 111 E. Front, P.A. (360)912-3583 LINCOLN: ‘04 Navigat o r. 9 5 k , AW D, 4 X 4 , leather, seats 7 comfortably, good family vehicle, new compressor and tabs, 6 disc changer and Bose sound syster m, ver y reliable. $12,000/obo. (360)460-5421

HONDA ‘04 ODDESY EX-L MINIVAN V6, auto, dual A/C and heat, tilt wheel, cruise, power windows, locks and mirrors, dual power heated seats, dual power sliding side doors, leather interior, 7 passenger seating, 4 wheel ABS and electronic traction control, AM/FM/CD stacker, rear entertainment center with DVD player, roof rack, pricacy glass, alloy wheels, remote entr y and more! O n e we e k s p e c i a l a t only $9,995. VIN#065204 Expires 05/11/13 $9,995 Dave Barnier Auto Sales *We Finance In House* 452-6599 davebarnier.com 2946 Hwy 101 E. PA ISUZU: ‘00 16’ van. Diesel engine, 179,166 mi., runs great, auto tail lift. $7,000. Call Cookie at (360)385-6898, lv msg.

33688614

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B10

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

TUESDAY, MAY 7, 2013

THE MONEY TREE

SALES START AT 8 A.M. PURCHASE BY PHONE OR AT THE PENINSULA DAILY NEWS TUESDAY, MAY 7TH PORT ANGELES OFFICE AT THROUGH 4 P.M. TH 305 W. FIRST STREET. WEDNESDAY, MAY 8

$10 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER DRINK & FOOD ITEMS ONLY ONLY 4 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

YOUR PRICE $6.50

NO LIMIT PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON

360-417-8828 or Cell: 360-808-6412 $10 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER TOWARDS PERMS, ALL OVER COLOR AND FOIL HIGHLIGHTS OR LOWLIGHTS

ONLY 4 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

YOUR PRICE $6.50 NO LIMIT PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON

22 Mill Rd., Sequim

360-461-9404 222 N. Lincoln Ste.#1 Port Angeles

360-452-6148 $10 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER LIMIT 1 PER TABLE DINE-IN ONLY MIN. $20 ORDER

Voted Best Pizza on The Peninsula!

YOUR PRICE $42.25

LIMIT 1 PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON

$10 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER

YOUR PRICE $6.50

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LIMIT 1 PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON

704 Marine Drive, Port Angeles

360-417-6961 $10 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER

Open 7 Days a Week! Lunch & Dinner 636 E. Front Street Port Angeles, WA

360-452-3928 $10 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER

WE DELIVER! ONLY 10 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

ONLY 4 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

ONLY 5 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

YOUR PRICE $6.50

YOUR PRICE $6.50

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NO LIMIT PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON

1-HOUR MASSAGE INCLUDING HOT STONES AND AROMA THERAPY NEW CLIENTS ONLY

$12.25 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER POOL ENTRY PASSES VALID THRU 6/20/13

ONLY 4 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

ONLY 10 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

YOUR PRICE $42.25

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LIMIT 1 PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON

LIMIT 2 PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON

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(360) 452-8434 $10 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER TOWARDS FOOD/BEVERAGE

NO LIMIT PER CUSTOMER NOT A COUPON

360-452-6545

360-452-0400

929 W. 8th St., Port Angeles

$10 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER

NOT GOOD WITH OTHER OFFERS, EXCLUDES ALCOHOL.

(360) 417-0700

$30 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER

8th & Laurel St. Port Angeles

360-457-5858 $45 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER BOWLING PACKAGE

TOWARDS THE PURCHASE OF A TICKET WITH DUNGENESS BUS LINES

1 LANE. INCLUDES 2 HOURS OF BOWLING FOR UP TO 6 PEOPLE PER LANE AND A 16” PEPPERONI OR HAWAIIAN PIZZA. PRICE INCLUDES SHOE RENT. ADDITIONAL CHARGE FOR SPECIAL ORDER PIZZA. CALL TO RESERVE SPACE

106 North Lincoln Port Angeles

360-565-0200 $60 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER

EXCLUDES ALCOHOL

TOWARD 1 HOUR RELAXING MASSAGE

ONLY 5 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

ONLY 4 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

YOUR PRICE $6.50

NO LIMIT PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON

111 E Front St. Port Angeles, WA Great Food! Great Wines! Great Times!

TOWARDS OUR MADE-TO-ORDER, FRESH BREAKFAST, LUNCH & DINNER MENU ITEMS!

LIMIT 2 PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON

FOR BREAKFAST OR LUNCH MIN. $15 ORDER

Check out our Daily Specials!

113 Del Guzzi Dr. Port Angeles

$10 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER

CHECK OUT OUR DAILY SPECIALS! ONLY 4 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

1123 E. First St. Port Angeles

360-457-5056

TOWARDS AGE DEFYING PEEL ONLY 4 VOUCHER AVAIL.

$10 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER

12076 Sol Duc Hot Springs Rd.

Best Mexican Food Clallam County

Member of American Academy of Micropigmentation

$65 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER

Now Accepting Visa/Mastercard

$65

PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER

1st Place

TonniPetty AIIC Master Instructor

www.timelessbeautys.com

1921 W. Hwy 101, Port Angeles

ONLY 2 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

Permanent Cosmetics

360-477-6607

417-7684

Peaceful Kneads

Timeless Beautys

Washington State Licensed

Call in with your credit card and we will send your promotional voucher by mail!

13723238

125 W. First St., Port Angeles

360-452-3999

WE WILL MAIL!

Cash, check or credit cards accepted. Promotional vouchers expire 60 days after purchase date. Promotional voucher purchases are non-refundable. These are special LIMITED AVAILABILITY Promotional vouchers offered by PENINSULA DAILY NEWS and participating merchants. State sales tax, if applicable, is payable to merchant on full retail value of purchase. To check promotional voucher availability, phone 417-7684.

Gordon by Design 336 E. 8th St. Port Angeles

PURCHASE BY PHONE35771874

$ $$ $ $ $$

Heated and Enclosed for year round comfort

360-775-2288

YOUR PRICE $39.00

NO LIMIT PER CUSTOMER.

NOT A COUPON

715 East First Street Port Angeles

360-452-9715

$100 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER

$25 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER

TOWARD ANY CRUISE

5 TANS IN HIGHPRESSURE BED

ONLY 4 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

ONLY 4 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

ONLY 4 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

ONLY 3 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

ONLY 3 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

ONLY 4 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

YOUR PRICE $6.50

YOUR PRICE $6.50

YOUR PRICE $19.50

YOUR PRICE $29.25

YOUR PRICE $65.00

YOUR PRICE $16.25

LIMIT 2 PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON

LIMIT 1 PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON

Smuggler’s Landing Northwest Seafood & Casual Dining 115 E. Railroad Ave., Port Angeles

50530 Hwy 112 Joyce, WA

360-452-9292 $10 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER 1 PER TABLE ONLY 2 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

YOUR PRICE $6.50

LIMIT 1 PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON

360-928-0141 $10 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER MINIMUM OF $15 PURCHASE PER COUPON

YOUR PRICE $6.50 I PER CUSTOMER PER GROUP AND/OR TRANSACTION

NOT A COUPON

452-1443 $108 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER

125 W. First St., Port Angeles

360-417-8828 $10 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER

2 ADULT GUIDED RAFTING TRIP

TOWARDS A CHEMICAL SERVICE.

ONLY 2 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

ONLY 4 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

YOUR PRICE $70.20

NO LIMIT PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON

YOUR PRICE $6.50 NO LIMIT PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON

NO LIMIT PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON

LIMIT 1 PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON

112 West Front St., Port Angeles

360-457-4150 $20 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER

~Since 1996~

Fresh, Local, Italian 360-457-5442 118 E. First St. Port Angeles, WA Dinner Served at 4pm daily

$10 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER 1 PER TABLE

ONLY 2 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

Jane by Design 123 Lake Aldwell Rd., Port Angeles

LIMIT 1 PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON

ONLY 4 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

YOUR PRICE $13.00

LIMIT 1 PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON

Since 1975

200 W. First Street Port Angeles Downtown

360-452-7175 $20 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER

ONLY 4 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

YOUR PRICE $6.50

NO LIMIT PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON

HAIR SYSTEMS WEST 1006 W. 12th St. Port Angeles (on the corner of 12th & C St.)

360-452-1550 $20 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER

LIMIT 2 PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON

1210-B E. Front St. Port Angeles 114 S. Lincoln St. Port Angeles, WA

360-452-1118 $55 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER

360-452-4222 $10 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER

TOWARDS 1 MONTH MEMBERSHIP (30 DAYS)

ONE VOUCHER PER ORDER

ONLY 4 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

ONLY 4 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

YOUR PRICE $35.75

YOUR PRICE $6.50

NO LIMIT PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON

Sequim

Electrolysis 565 Eureka Way

360-808-6005 $48 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER TOWARDS 1/2 HOUR TREATMENT

LIMIT 2 PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON

The Two of Us First Street Barber and Tanning 127 E. First St. Ste. 2E Port Angeles

360-452-1741 $10 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER

MUST BE REDEEMED IN FULL AT TIME OF PURCHASE

TOWARDS ANY COLOR SERVICE WITH BRENDA ELOFSON

NEW CLIENTS ONLY

TOWARDS HAIRCUT W/ SCALP MASSAGE / OR PERM / OR TANNING PACKAGE NEW CLIENTS ONLY

ONLY 6 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

ONLY 4 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

ONLY 4 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

YOUR PRICE $13.00

YOUR PRICE $31.20

ONLY 4 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

YOUR PRICE $13.00

LIMIT 1 PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON

NO LIMIT PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON

LIMIT 1 PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON

YOUR PRICE $6.50

LIMIT 1 PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON


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