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Tuesday

Derby doles out dough

Here comes more sun across Peninsula A8

Sekiu resort awards $1,000 for top halibut B1

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS June 4, 2013 | 75¢

Port Townsend-Jefferson County’s Daily Newspaper

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 t cost. t redeemed to you . . . att no extra ✔ Or if you’re in the neighborhood this week, drop by the PDN’s Port 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 firstclaimed basis. Turn to Page B10 now to pick a bargain or two off the Money Tree. Peninsula Daily News

State taking comments on PT paper mill permit section manager Garin Schrieve. “We normally would not schedule a public hearing for this kind of permit renewal, but everything that the mill does is a matter of public interest.” The permit is designed to protect water quality by controlling how much BY CHARLIE BERMANT pollution can be discharged into an PENINSULA DAILY NEWS open waterway, in this case, Port PORT TOWNSEND — The state Townsend Bay. Department of Ecology will take public comments about the renewal of a waste- Industrial discharge water permit for the Port Townsend National Pollutant Discharge ElimiPaper Corp. at a meeting tonight. The meeting begins at 6:30 p.m. at nation System permits are required for the Elks Lodge, 555 Otto St., and is part industrial facilities that discharge of the comment process that ends wastewater to a bay or a river, according to an Ecology fact sheet. June 21. Schrieve said the permits are issued “This hearing is to discuss the regular reissuance of a permit,” said Ecology for five years, but the Port Townsend

Hearing tonight on wastewater

mill’s last permit was issued in 2004 and expired in 2009. A labor backlog in Ecology caused the delay, Schrieve said. Permits that are not addressed in a timely manner by Ecology stay in place until a new permit is granted or denied. According to an Ecology fact sheet, there are several “significant” changes since the last permit was issued, including a new pH limit for the sanitary treatment plant, a compliance schedule for removal of sludge buildup from the treatment pond and development of a stormwater pollution prevention plan. The new permit also requires a treatment-efficiency study of the treatment pond with a specific requirement to address minimization of odors from the pond. TURN TO PERMIT/A5

State may Program is first lady-approved bill firm for bridge fixes Trucking company could be on hook for millions BY JERRY CORNFIELD THE [EVERETT] DAILY HERALD

OLYMPIA — A Canadian trucking company might be on the hook for payments to repair the Interstate 5 bridge that collapsed into the Skagit River. State transportation officials are prepared to seek millions from the firm whose truck was carrying the oversized load that struck a bridge crossbeam and sent the span toppling. But they said they are planning to wait until the

National Transportation Safety Board finishes its investigation of the May 23 incident from which three people survived after the cars in which they were traveling plummeted 50 feet into the chilly water.

Proof of negligence The state won’t make any move to recover damages from Mullen Trucking Co. or its insurers unless a federal probe finds negligence played a part. TURN

TO

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Quilcene kindergartners participating in the Jefferson County Farm to School Coalition program are, from left, Walter Beck, Tutlalee Wines, Abigail Ward, Katie Brown, Dakota Schryver and Aiden Carlile.

Michelle Obama takes note of Farm to School Coalition BY CHARLIE BERMANT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT TOWNSEND — First lady Michelle Obama has taken note of a local school-based agricultural program and plans to send a letter of support that will be read at a fundraiser this week, according to the program’s director. “This is really exciting,” said Candice Cosler, who teaches an active gardening class to 500 kids in three schools through the Jefferson County Farm to School Coalition. “Her office contacted us on Friday and told us to expect the letter in time for the fundraiser.” The Jefferson County Farm to

School Coalition’s fundraising dinner will be 5 p.m. Sunday at Fort Worden Commons. Tickets are $125. Cosler doesn’t know exactly how Obama heard of the program but Obama said “she hears about things from a lot of places.” This is the first fundraiser for the 4-year-old program, which operates on funding from schools and grants in order to establish small gardens that are maintained by students and used as a teaching facility. “Our lessons are heavily science-

based and are built around what is going on in the garden at the time,” Cosler said. “If a particular plant is in season, we talk about what it is and how it came to the area.” Cosler has operated gardens at Grant Street Elementary School and Quilcene School for several years, and added a garden at Chimacum School in 2012. The gardens operate between May and November, and are maintained by staff during summer months. The items planted are harvested in the spring and fall, and include chard, lettuce, kale, carrots, potatoes, raspberries and herbs. TURN

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SAY

WHAT?

Some graffiti that was left over the weekend at Chimacum High School was unintentionally humorous. See story, Page A5

FARM/A5

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INSIDE TODAY’S PENINSULA DAILY NEWS 97th year, 133rd issue — 2 sections, 18 pages

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UpFront

TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 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. *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

Newsmakers Celebrity scoop ■ By The Associated Press

Jolie’s appearance is first since disclosure BRAD PITT AND Angelina Jolie stepped out together Sunday at the London premiere of zombie thriller “World War Z” — Jolie’s first public appearance since announcing last month that she had undergone a double mastectomy. Jolie told reporters she felt great and had “been very happy to see the discussion about women’s health expanded” by her announcement. Jolie, 37, revealed last month in an op-ed piece for The New York Times that she had had her breasts removed after discovering she has an inherited genetic mutation that puts her at high risk of breast and ovarian cancer. Jolie’s mother, Marcheline Bertrand, died of ovarian cancer, and the actress’ aunt died of breast cancer last month. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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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

Kim, Kanye reveal it’s a girl

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS PENINSULA POLL

Angeline Jolie and Brad Pitt appear Sunday at the London premiere of Pitt’s new movie, “World War Z.”

Kanye West and Kim Kardashian are expecting a daughter. The big reveal of the baby’s sex came want a girl?” She said that that’s what Sunday night on Kardashian’s E! reality show, “Keeping Up With the Kardashians.” Kanye wanted, as well. Kardashian is due to give birth to the Kardashian said she was excited to be having a girl and added, “Who doesn’t couple’s first child sometime this summer.

SUNDAY’S QUESTION: What’s the weight of the biggest fish you ever caught? Under 10 pounds

Passings By The Associated Press

FRANK LAUTENBERG, 89, the oldest member of the U.S. Senate and the last World War II veteran serving in it, has died. His office said that the millionaire New Jersey Democrat died early Monday at a New York hospital Sen. after suffer- Lautenberg ing complications from viral pneumonia. Sen. Lautenberg announced in February that he would not seek a sixth term. He had health problems and had missed several Senate votes in the first months of the year. Republican N.J. Gov. Chris Christie will appoint a successor. Sen. Lautenberg was a staunch gun-control advocate and frequent critic of the tobacco industry, and he fought for greater government spending on transportation and the environment. He wrote the laws banning smoking on domestic airline flights and setting the national minimum drinking age of 21. “Frank was a passionate public servant who was not afraid to fight and vote for what he believed in. He loved the Senate,” said Washington U.S. Sen. Patty Murray, D-Bothell. “He retired once, but service called him back, and until the very end of his life, Frank made the trip from New Jersey to D.C. to fight for the issues he believed in and the people he represented. He gave everything he had to public service.” Born in urban Paterson, N.J., the son of Polish and

Russian Jewish immigrants, Sen. Lautenberg never forgot his roots. He often recounted what government did for him — and what it could have done to help his widowed mother as she struggled to pay his father’s medical bills. He was educated at Nutley High School and served in the Army Signal Corps during World War II. With the help of the G.I. Bill, he received an undergraduate degree in economics from Columbia University in New York City.

________ LELAND COBAIN, 89, who supported his legendary grandson, Kurt, in life and in the aftermath of the rock star’s suicide, died Wednesday at Grays Harbor Community Hospital in Aberdeen. The former fireman had been ill for about two years, his family told The Daily World of Aberdeen. The grandfather of the Nirvana front man took young Kurt in when the boy moved out of his mother’s home after his parents divorced. When strangers come to town looking for some con-

Laugh Lines

nection to Kurt, his grandfather was willing to help them make it, answering their quesMr. Cobain tions. “They want to know stuff they can’t get from books,” he told a Daily World reporter for a 2007 story. Mr. Cobain, a lifelong Montesano resident, kept the hundreds, if not thousands of letters received from fans and answered many of them.

21.0%

10-20 pounds

14.2%

21-30 pounds

13.6%

31-50 pounds 51-75 pounds Above 76 pounds I don’t fish

12.6% 5.4% 12.9% 20.3%

Total votes cast: 744 Vote on today’s question at www.peninsuladailynews.com NOTE: The Peninsula Poll is unscientific and reflects the opinions of only those peninsuladailynews.com users who chose to participate. The results cannot be assumed to represent the opinions of all users or the public as a whole.

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

Peninsula Lookback From the pages of the PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

1938 (75 years ago) The largest high school senior class ever to graduate on the North Olympic Peninsula received its diplomas from Roosevelt High School [Port Angeles]. A total of 156 students graduated at commencement exercises in the Masonic Temple on Lincoln Street. One of the graduation week highlights: An open house in a six-room residence constructed by the high school’s buildingtrades class. A.L. Chapman, instructor, said the house is on Ninth Street between Cherry Street and the Valley Creek gulch. The class totaled 20 boys. The house is not completely finished, Chapman said.

WASHINGTON STATE’S LEGALIZATION of the recreational use of marijuana is predicted to result in a surge of “pot tourism.” People will come for the weekend to smoke pot — and the next thing they know, it’s 30 years later 1963 (50 years ago) they’re still here, working in a carbon-neutral coffeeThe former Camp shop. Hayden west of Port AngeYour Monologue les has been chosen by the

state as one of four civil defense emergency operations centers statewide. The center will be a join state-Clallam County operation paid with state and federal funds. The purpose is to disperse government command in case of a statewide emergency. A World War II-era bunker in the county’s recreation area near Tongue Point will be outfitted with extensive communications equipment, plotting boards and office furnishings, said E.M. Llewellyn, state civil defense director. Other emergency-center locations are at Fort Columbia at the mouth of the Columbia River, in Olympia capital and in the Spokane area.

1988 (25 years ago) The Sequim School District is beefing up its involvement in helping to combat drug and alcohol abuse.

As a result of Superintendent Ken Anderson’s recommendations and a new drug and alcohol policy accepted by the School Board, the district will take a more active role in identifying and working with affected students. Anderson’s recommendation was based on information from a committee of staff and community members that studied the issue for the past year.

Seen Around Peninsula snapshots

ABOUT 30 MOTORCYCLISTS gather at a Port Angeles service station on sunny Sunday morning, organizing their ride through the West End . . . WANTED! “Seen Around” items. Send them to PDN News Desk, P.O. Box 1330, Port Angeles WA 98362; fax 360-417-3521; or email news@peninsuladailynews. com.

Looking Back From the files of The Associated Press

TODAY IS TUESDAY, June 4, the 155th day of 2013. There are 210 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: ■ On June 4, 1913, British suffragist Emily Davison was struck and mortally injured after moving into the path of a horse during the running of the Epsom Derby; her exact motives remain unclear. On this date: ■ In 1783, the Montgolfier brothers first publicly demonstrated their hot-air balloon, which did not carry any passengers, over Annonay, France. ■ In 1812, the Louisiana Territory was renamed the Missouri Territory.

The U.S. House of Representatives approved a declaration of war against Britain. ■ In 1892, the Sierra Club was incorporated in San Francisco. ■ In 1919, Congress approved the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, guaranteeing citizens the right to vote regardless of their gender, and sent it to the states for ratification. ■ In 1939, the German ocean liner St. Louis, carrying more than 900 Jewish refugees from Germany, was turned away from the Florida coast by U.S. officials. ■ In 1940, during World War II, the Allied military evacuation of more than 338,000 troops from Dunkirk, France, ended.

■ In 1942, the World War II Battle of Midway began, resulting in a decisive American victory against Japan and marking the turning point of the war in the Pacific. ■ In 1943, the president of Argentina, Ramon Castillo, was overthrown in a military coup. ■ In 1954, French Premier Joseph Laniel and Vietnamese Premier Buu Loc signed treaties in Paris according “complete independence” to Vietnam. ■ In 1972, a jury in San Jose, Calif., acquitted radical activist Angela Davis of murder and kidnapping for her alleged connection to a deadly courthouse shootout in Marin County in 1970.

■ In 1998, a federal judge sentenced Terry Nichols to life in prison for his role in the Oklahoma City bombing. ■ Ten years ago: President George W. Bush held landmark meetings with the Israeli and Palestinian prime ministers, hoping to advance a Middle East peace plan after winning new support from top Arab leaders. ■ Five years ago: Barack Obama, having clinched the Democratic presidential nomination, picked Caroline Kennedy to help him choose a running mate. ■ One year ago: Al-Qaida’s second-in-command, Abu Yahya alLibi, was killed in a U.S. drone strike in North Waziristan, Pakistan.


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, June 4, 2013 P A G E

A3 Briefly: Nation Court-martial over WikiLeaks starts in Md. FORT MEADE, Md. — Pfc. Bradley Manning went on trial Monday for leaking hundreds of thousands of classified documents to the anti-secrecy website WikiLeaks, including sensitive information prosecutors said fell into enemy hands. Manning, a 25-year-old former intelligence analyst from Oklahoma, has admitted to giving troves of information to WikiLeaks, Manning but military prosecutors want to prove Manning he aided the enemy, which carries a potential life sentence. “This is a case of about what happens when arrogance meets access to sensitive information,” Capt. Joe Morrow said in his opening statement. Defense attorney David Coombs said Manning leaked material he believed could make the world a better place, mentioning an unclassified video of a 2007 U.S. Apache helicopter attack that killed civilians. “He believed this information showed how we value human life. He was troubled by that. He believed that if the American public saw it, they too would be troubled,” Coombs said. In his dress blue uniform and wire-rimmed eye glasses, the slightly built Manning followed a slide show of the prosecutor’s hourlong opening statement. He chose to have his courtmartial heard by a judge instead of a jury.

Storms head to sea PORTLAND, Maine — The remnants of a violent storm that claimed 13 lives in Oklahoma moved out to sea Monday. The National Weather Service said Sunday’s storms sheared off utility poles in parts of northern New England, dropped hail in New York state and caused a tornado to touch down in South Carolina. On Monday, the storm was blowing out to sea with only isolated thunderstorms and localized heavy rain in some areas as a cold front began moving in and clearing the region. “The risk of severe weather has pretty much disappeared on the East Coast,” said Bruce Terry, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service. At the peak of the storm, more than 40,000 homes and businesses were without power in Vermont, New Hampshire and Maine.

Obama signs medal bill WASHINGTON — The White House says President Barack Obama has signed a bill making it a crime to lie about receiving a military medal. The Stolen Valor Act cleared both chambers of Congress last month. The White House said Obama signed it Monday. The measure revives a law the Supreme Court struck down in 2006. The court said lying about getting a medal is protected by the First Amendment. The new law makes it a crime to lie about being decorated with the intent to profit personally or financially. That could include those who claim medals in order to receive veterans benefits, land a government contract or get a job. Violators could face up to a year in prison. The Associated Press

Court OKs swabbing DNA from arrestees Dissenters: A slippery slope THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — A sharply divided Supreme Court on Monday said police can routinely take DNA from people they arrest, equating a DNA cheek swab to other common jailhouse procedures like fingerprinting. “Taking and analyzing a cheek swab of the arrestee DNA is, like fingerprinting and photographing, a legitimate police booking procedure that is reasonable under the Fourth Amendment,” Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote for the court’s five-justice majority. But the four dissenting justices said that the court was allowing a major change in police powers.

“Make no DNA swabs after arrests. But a Maryland court was one of the mistake about first to say that it was illegal for it: Because of that state to take Alonzo King’s today’s decision, DNA without approval from a your DNA can judge, saying King had “a suffibe taken and ciently weighty and reasonable entered into a expectation of privacy against national datawarrantless, suspicionless base if you are searches” under the Fourth ever arrested, Scalia Amendment. rightly or But the high court’s decision wrongly, and for whatever reason,” conservative Justice Antonin reverses that ruling and reinScalia said in a sharp dissent that states King’s rape conviction, which came after police took his he read aloud in the courtroom. DNA during an unrelated arrest. Kennedy wrote the decision, An alarming precedent? and was joined by Chief Justice “This will solve some extra John Roberts and Justices Samcrimes, to be sure. But so would uel Alito, Clarence Thomas and taking your DNA when you fly on Stephen Breyer. Scalia was joined an airplane — surely the TSA in his dissent by Justices Ruth must know the ‘identity’ of the fly- Bader Ginsburg, Sonia Sotomayor ing public. For that matter, so and Elena Kagan. would taking your children’s DNA The American Civil Liberties when they start public school.” Union said the court’s ruling creTwenty-eight states and the ated “a gaping new exception to federal government now take the Fourth Amendment.”

Briefly: World Fire at Chinese poultry plant kills 119 people BEIJING — A fire at a poultry plant in northeastern China trapped workers inside a cluttered slaughterhouse, killing at least 119 in one of China’s worst industrial disasters in years. Several dozen others were hurt in Monday’s blaze in Jilin province’s Mishazi township, which appeared to have been sparked by three early morning explosions, the official Xinhua News Agency said. The provincial fire department attributed the blasts to an ammonia leak. The chemical is kept pressurized in cooling systems at meat-processing plants. The death toll was the highest since a September 2008 mining cave-in that claimed 281 lives.

300 wounded trapped BEIRUT — At least 300 seriously wounded residents of an embattled Syrian town near Lebanon need to be evacuated for medical treatment, a doctor told The Associated Press on Monday, as fighting in Qusair raged a third straight week. Kasem Alzein, who coordi-

nates treatment in makeshift hospitals in Qusair, said the wounded are being treated in private homes after the town’s main hospital was destroyed during fighting between the Syrian army — backed by Lebanese Hezbollah guerrillas — and rebels fighting President Bashar Assad’s regime. Speaking via Skype, Alzein pleaded for help, saying evacuation efforts had failed after a convoy was attacked last week.

Bombs kill 9 children KABUL, Afghanistan — A suicide bomber targeting a U.S. military delegation outside a government office in eastern Afghanistan killed 12 people on Monday, including nine schoolchildren who were walking nearby and two international service members, officials said. The attack comes as the Taliban and other militants step up bombings and raids on police posts nationwide in a major test of the ability of Afghan soldiers and police to hold their ground. The bomber on a motorcycle reportedly detonated his explosives in Samkani district as American forces passed — and just as a local school had let pupils, who were between 10 and 16 years old, out for the day. The Associated Press

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

TURKEY

PROTESTS SPREAD TO

ANKARA

Rioters clash with police in Ankara, the Turkish capital, on Monday, as Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan again dismissed the protests as organized by extremists. The once-peaceful demonstrations against the government’s plans to rip out trees in Istanbul’s landmark Taksim Square turned violent when authorities moved in, and protests quickly spread across the country.

Ford recalling 465,000 cars over concern about fuel leak THE NEW YORK TIMES

DETROIT — About 465,000 2013 Fords are being recalled worldwide because of concern about fuel leaks, the automaker has told the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. Ford says the Explorer, Taurus, Flex, Fusion and police models — the Interceptor Utility and Interceptor Sedan — are included in the recall, as are the Lincoln MKS, MKT and MKZ. According to the report, a fuel delivery module could leak, resulting in a gasoline odor and possible fuel spills, said Ford spokes-

Quick Read

woman Kelli Felker, adding that the automaker does not know of any fires related to the defect. The action covers about 390,000 vehicles in the United States; 23,000 in Canada; 7,600 in Mexico and about 46,000 outside North America.

600 warranty claims Ford learned of the problem after receiving about 600 warranty claims, Felker said. Ford told NHTSA that it began investigating the problem in October after it received reports of two fuel leaks.

But it was not until this spring, that the company could be sure of the cause of the defect after warranty claims were filed in March. In Ford’s report to the safety agency, it described the recall as voluntary. Once a manufacturer is aware of a safety defect, however, it must inform the agency within five business days of its plan for a recall or face a civil fine. Last month, Ford recalled about 3,000 2012 Taurus and Lincoln MKS models and 2013 Ford Explorers, telling the agency the vehicles might have a “marginally sealed seam” on the gas tanks.

. . . more news to start your day

West: Rangers seeking teen swept over waterfall

West: California wildfire containment at 40 percent

Nation: Boston fire chief resigns over critical letter

World: Arms Trade Treaty signed by 60-plus nations

YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK rangers are searching for a 19-year-old Sacramento man visiting with a church group who was swept over a waterfall while swimming in the Merced River. Park spokeswoman Kari Cobb said Aleh Kalman has been missing since witnesses reported seeing him get pulled to the edge of 594-foot Nevada Fall on Saturday afternoon. A search team assisted by a California Highway Patrol helicopter spent Saturday and Sunday looking for him. Cobb said the river’s current was moving quickly when Kalman disappeared. The trail below has been closed while the search continues.

FIREFIGHTERS WORKING IN darkness doubled containment of a massive wildfire north of Los Angeles to 40 percent overnight, as cool, moist air moved in Monday. The fire expanded to more than 46 square miles but moved out of rugged mountains of the Angeles National Forest and onto the floor of the high desert Antelope Valley. “The fire moved into an area where vegetation changed from real dense to real sparse,” said U.S. Forest Service spokesman Matt Corelli. “We were able to engage it (at) 1- to 2-foot flame lengths versus 30-foot flame lengths,” he added.

BOSTON’S FIRE CHIEF announced his resignation Monday, saying public criticism from his deputies for the way he responded to the marathon bombings has made it impossible for him to do his job. Chief Steve Abraira said in a letter that his resignation is effective Friday. Thirteen deputies complained to Mayor Tom Menino in a letter in April that Abraira’s failure to take command of the bombing scene was indefensible and part of a pattern of shirking leadership. “You can unequivocally consider this letter a vote of no confidence in Chief Abraira,” said the letter.

MORE THAN 60 countries signed the landmark treaty regulating the multibillion-dollar global arms trade Monday, and the United States announced it will sign soon, giving a strong kickoff to the first major international campaign to stem the illicit trade in weapons that fuel conflicts and extremists. The announcement by Secretary of State John Kerry that the U.S. will sign is critical, but the treaty’s ultimate strength rests on support by all major arms exporters and importers. The treaty was approved April 2 by the General Assembly, but Russia, China, India and Egypt abstained and have not indicated if they will sign it.


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PeninsulaNorthwest

TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 2013 — (J)

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

State budget passes legal deadline MCCLATCHY NEWS SERVICE

OLYMPIA — Lawmakers have skittered past their June 1 legal deadline for approving a state government operations budget for the next two years. And Gov. Jay Inslee’s budget staff has begun looking at options for running agencies if the political stalemate at the Capitol continues much later. July 1 is the start of a new budget year. Most state agencies — from Social and Health Ser-

vices assistance to prisons — can’t spend money after that date without a budget. Today marks the 23rd day of a 30-day special session that ends next Tuesday. The top issue dividing negotiators since they began a regular session in January has been the Republican-led Senate’s opposition to taxes and the Democratcontrolled House and Inslee wanting more than $1 billion in new revenue for public schools and social services.

There was a glimmer of movement Friday when the Senate Ways and Means Committee approved an estate tax bill that would keep the state from losing $160 million in tax receipts over the next two years due to a court ruling.

One piece among dozens But the Republican approach cuts new holes in the state estate tax after 2015 and is only one piece among dozens that need to

be resolved if lawmakers are going to get done on time. “I’m not sure passing June 1 is especially legally significant other than the fact it means we are getting awfully close to June 11,� state budget director David Schumacher said late Friday. The state Treasurer’s Office has decided to postpone a bond sale amid the uncertainty. Treasurer Jim McIntire is making plans to set up payment for July bond debt in late June in case lawmakers fail to pass a bud-

get in time. Schumacher said he is not yet worried about missing the July 1 target for a budget. But he can’t rule out the worstcase scenario of some kind of government shutdown. “I can imagine by the middle of June if it doesn’t look like we are on a path to get [done], we will have to give state agencies guidance where to go [and] how to start thinking about this,’’ Schumacher said.

Clallam commissioners get ecosystem briefing BY ROB OLLIKAINEN

Marine and Nearshore Protection and Restoration grant program. Clallam County is providing geographic information system, or GIS, data and will use the results of the study in its state-mandated Shoreline Master Program update. Batker said ecosystem services valuation is being used more and more to make decisions about scarce resources. The economic analysis is about halfway finished, Batker said. The final results of the entire study will be presented in public workshops at the end of the year, Coastal Watershed Institute Executive Director Anne Shaffer said. State Department of Ecology officials will gather light detection and ranging, or LIDAR, images of the bluffs of the central Strait of Juan de Fuca. The state Department of Natural Resources will use that information to survey bluff regression.

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — Clallam County has somewhere between $12 billion and $45 billion worth of non-tangible ecosystem services, a economic consultant told the three county commissioners Monday. Ecosystem services include such aspects as flood protection, recreational value, aesthetic value, storm prevention, waste treatment, climate stability, water filtration and other natural systems. “We don’t have an appraisal value for that,� said Dave Batker, chief economist and executive director of Earth Economics, a Tacoma-based nonprofit.

‘Rough appraisal’ “That’s what we’re trying to do, just a rough appraisal value. We’re not saying this is the exact dollar value. “In fact, we look at a low value and a high value for these systems.� The ecosystem services analysis is part of a broader effort to study marine bluff erosion between Port Angeles and Sequim. The Port Angeles-based Coastal Watershed Institute received a $320,000 grant from the Environmental Protection Agency last year to study the bluffs under a Puget Sound

‘Do things better’ The economic valuation is intended to “help Clallam County do things better,� Batker said, by contributing to economic development and environmental quality. Earth Economics has worked extensively around the Pacific Northwest, the Mississippi River delta and

Long Island, N.Y. It is dedicated to “researching and applying economic solutions of tomorrow, today,� according to its website. Batker said there are consequences of losing ecosystem services. “You lose natural flood protection, you get a flood district,� he said. “You pave everything over and you lose that natural conveyance of storm water, you get a stormwater district. The Green River Valley [in Kent] has 16 stormwater districts now, and they’re going to have more stormwater districts.�

East Coast example Batker used an example from Hurricane Sandy in which New Jersey ended up with a $2.6 billion bill to repair its damaged water infrastructure. In contrast, the New York area had virtually no damage in a water system that originates from the Catskill Mountains. “One water supply system was resilient to that huge storm,� he said. “They were wise in setting up a water infrastructure that fed into the natural system, and they’ve saved a huge amount of money.� Batker said the Federal Emergency Management Agency, or FEMA, has adopted the ecosystem services valuation concept, and

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ers do not yet have a formal estimate of construction cost. “What we do have is a beautiful 5.8-acre piece of property that will allow us to build a beautiful new center,� Smith said. The land is just off the Olympic Discovery Trail near Washington Street and Simdars Road. Architect Roy Hellwig has drawn up the early plans which were displayed at Friday’s gala. Hellwig has done prior work with the Jamestown S’Klallam tribe and Peninsula College, Smith said. The gala featured a video fly-through of the design. Hellwig’s plans for a two-story building include a gymnasium with an upper walking track, a cafe, locker room, arts facilities, a computer lab and a music room. The current senior center at 921 E. Hammond St. is a former warehouse. Smith said the Sequim Senior Activity Center has around 1,600 members, with nearly 300 using the center weekly. For more information phone 360-683-6806 or visit www.sequimseniorcenter. org.

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BLYN –– Sequim’s Senior Activity Center got an estimated $18,000 closer to a new building after 125 people attended a gala auction at 7 Cedars Casino. “It was a great time. We had a lot of great support from a lot people,� said Michael Smith, executive director of the senior center. Volunteers were still tallying the total Monday afternoon, but Smith said preliminary estimates of the auction and ticket sales Friday night were near a net amount of $18,000. Under the guidance of auctioneer Corinne Fiske from Northwest Benefit Auctions, participants brought home several trips, including Harrison Hot Springs in British Columbia, Seaside, Ore., Silver Reef Casino plus a hot-air ________ balloon ride and more. Reporter Rob Ollikainen can be Cameron Cafe donated a reached at 360-452-2345, ext. year’s worth of pies, and 5072, or at rollikainen@peninsu- Domino’s Pizza added a ladailynews.com. year’s supply of pizza. Smith said the center is kicking off in earnest a three-year campaign to raise enough money to & thee begin construction. Designs are still preliminary, so Smith said organizSalon & Gifts G fts

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Clallam County Planning Manager Steve Gray said a major part of the study is to understand of how bluffs are regressing between the Elwha and Dungeness drift cells. A drift cell is the area where sediment transport occurs. Batker said Clallam County is “one of the most nearshore-dependent counties in the nation� because of its importance to property values and fisheries production. Batker said the ecosystem valuation study is “not about a blue or a red perspective.� “This is actually pragmatic economics,� Batker said. “It’s performancebased. That is what we’re interested in. Performancebased economics. “Does this provide value? Can you measure it? If you can, we need to incorporate it as we look at things.�

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Michael Smith, left, director of the Sequim Activity Senior Center, shows off an auction item to Sequim Police Chief Bill Dickinson at the gala fundraiser auction at 7 Cedars Casino.

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the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is considering it. He added that the economic study will put Clallam County in a better position to receive federal disaster assistance. “Clallam County will be one of about six counties in the United States that we’re working with that will have numbers,� he said. “If you have a disaster, you can use the numbers straight out of this report. So this is immediately useful to Clallam County.�


PeninsulaNorthwest

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

(J) — TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 2013

A5

Bridge: Trucking firm cooperating with probe CONTINUED FROM A1 “We need to have proof of driver negligence,� said Department of Transportation spokesman Travis Phelps. “They are hopefully going to help us reconstruct what happened that night.� The department didn’t wait long to raise the issue with Mullen. Transportation officials contacted the firm the day after the collapse to “say we are looking at the possibility of liability,� Phelps said. Ed Scherbinski, vice president of the Albertabased trucking firm, confirmed that the heads-up came in a phone call May 24. NTSB officials are not saying how long it will take to complete the investigation but are aiming to release a preliminary report before the end of June. The State Patrol, which

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A dented corner is visible on the casing on a truck parked south of the highway bridge that collapsed into the Skagit River on May 24. also is doing an investigation, has said the truck driver would have been responsible for confirming that the truck could safely cross the bridge, which has carried traffic since 1955. “We want to find out

what happened. If there is something we did wrong, we want to find out,� Scherbinski said, adding the company is cooperating fully with the investigation. The state is spending $10 million this month to

clear away mangled girders and sunken slabs of concrete and install a four-lane temporary bridge. That is the amount of the contract with Atkinson Construction and covers payments to Acrow Bridge

for the span that could be open by mid-month. At least $5 million more will be needed for a permanent four-lane section to be put in place this fall. The federal government is expected to cover all of the cost of the cleanup and temporary bridge and 90 percent of the bill for a permanent replacement span. Under state law, the state can file a civil action to recoup money from a third party for damages to any state highway, bridge or transportation structure. The law also allows seeking money to cover the cost of installing cameras, signals and other changes to help detour traffic. On Sunday, a temporary traffic signal was installed at the intersection of Fir Island Road and Pioneer Highway near Conway in Skagit County after a State

Patrol motorcycle trooper died in a collision near there. If there is negligence found, Washington state, which is self-insured, would first try to collect from the trucking company’s insurance provider.

Could make a claim If that didn’t fully cover the damages, the state could also make a claim against the assets of the company. It is unclear if the state can recoup money paid by the federal government. The Transportation Department has been collecting damages in this manner for years from people who wreck guard rails, knock over light poles and crunch into other stateowned facilities. In 2012, the state recovered a total of $5.33 million, Phelps said.

Permit: Mill CONTINUED FROM A1 ronmental Council, the Olympic Forest Coalition Schrieve said the regu- and the World Temperate lations are to prevent an Rainforest Network — excess of organic matter urges the requirement of from tree waste from going an environmental impact into the waterway. statement prior to conSuch an excess can struction of the expanded decrease the water’s oxy- facility that burns wood gen content and harm the waste to create electricity. fish population, he said. The permit covers all Different permit the wastewater discharges from the mill, and its proThe National Pollutant posed cogeneration project Discharge Elimination would have minimal System permit discussed impacts to the wastewater tonight is not related to treatment system, accord- the inert-landfill permit ing to Ecology, which that is under dispute would require a dry scrub- between the mill and the ber system to reduce the Jefferson County Health solids entering the treat- Department. ment pond. That will be addressed The Port Townsend Aug. 20-21 in Ecology’s mill’s $55 million, Tumwater office. 24-megawatt biomass Comments about the cogeneration expansion National Pollutant Disoriginally was expected to charge Elimination Sysbe put into operation last tem permit can be submitmonth, but work on the ted by email to PTPC.comfacility has been delayed ments@ecy.wa.gov or by until 2014 or 2015, the mail to Stephanie Ogle, company said after a Dec. Washington Department 10 state Court of Appeals of Ecology, P.O. Box 47600, ruling that sends a suit filed by five environmental Olympia, WA 98504-7600.

CHARLIE BERMANT/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Chimacum High School student Cara Pace walks past graffiti that was left over the weekend, presumably by a member of the senior class whose spelling skills leave something to be desired.

_________ groups to the state Supreme Court. Jefferson County Editor CharThe suit — filed by PT lie Bermant can be reached at Airwatchers, No Biomass 360-385-2335 or at cbermant@ Burn, the Olympic Envi- peninsuladailynews.com.

Were teenage pranksters Farm: Benefit having a ‘senor’ moment? CONTINUED FROM A1

efit, an amount that represents about 20 percent of the program’s total budget. The money will be used to support existing programs and expand to new ones such as a garden in Brinnon, she said.

BY CHARLIE BERMANT PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Cosler said that students are exposed to foods they may not have not eaten, and said they especially like chard and kale. “We teach the kids about everything in the garden and it’s like a treaLocally grown sure hunt,� she said. The benefit dinner will ‘Feel empowered’ feature locally grown and “They feel empowered raised foods and drink and if the are eating food they will be prepared by local have grown, and become a chefs. There is also an auclot more adventurous in their food choices learn tion that includes a chance about nutritional value of to bid for a one week stay these foods and are then in a condo in Cabo San willing to taste them when Lucas and a week in Park they show up on the school City, Utah, among other items. lunch menu. “ For more information Cosler said some kids eat two meals a day at — or to reserve a seat, school, and the nutritional become a sponsor or make value of school meals has a donation — see www. fallen due to budget cuts. jcfarm2school.org, call “It’s not the schools’ 360-385-4313 or write fault. It’s the way the sys- coslercs@gmail.com. Discover Pass requiretem has evolved,� Cosler ments are waived for the said. “They only receive $1 event. ________ per meal per student and have limited food storage Jefferson County Editor Charspace.� lie Bermant can be reached at Cosler hopes to raise 360-385-2335 or cbermant@ about $20,000 at the ben- peninsuladailynews.com.

CHIMACUM — High school seniors often attempt to spice up the week before graduation with memorable pranks. But the one played on Chimacum High School over the weekend is one that everyone involved probably will like to forget. On Monday, school personnel arrived to find two representations of the word “senior� spray-painted on the sidewalks. Both were misspelled. One outside the front office read “senor power,� while another behind the school was only one word: “seinor.� “I think they were probably in a hurry, since they didn’t want to be seen outside the front of the school spray painting the sidewalk,� said Principal Whitney Meissner.

The guilty party still was at large Monday morning. If the graffiti artist or artists are apprehended, they will be forced to put in “community service� time equivalent to the effort required to clean up the vandalism, Meissner said. “We want to make sure the punishment fits the act,� Meissner said. “We had some kids Saran-wrap a lot of the

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crime, it would jeopardize the student’s graduation. Many of the pranks are benign: Last year, seniors filled Kane’s office with black-and-white balloons. Kane said that he hadn’t seen any pranks this year, “but they usually happen around Wednesday.� Chimacum’s graduation begins at 1 p.m. Saturday, while Port Townsend’s ceremony is at 7 p.m. Friday. Both ceremonies take place at McCurdy Pavilion at Fort Worden State Park.

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“But it doesn’t reflect very well on the educational system.� Meissner posted a picture of the misspelling on her Facebook page, where reactions included speculation that the culprit was a fourth-grader out to make the seniors look stupid, and a suggestion for the culprit to face a one-word spelling test before receiving a diploma.

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PeninsulaNorthwest

TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 2013

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Briefly . . . Sheriff named Snohomish County exec EVERETT — The Snohomish County Council named Sheriff John Lovick as the new county executive to fill the term of Aaron Reardon, who resigned Friday. Lovick was sworn in Monday morning. Reardon left office in the middle of his third term after being investigated for the possible misuse of county funds. He has not been charged. Lovick immediately resigned as sheriff. Undersheriff Tom Davis is the acting sheriff. The county council has 60 days to appoint a sheriff to serve until the fall 2014 election. Lovick is a former Washington State Patrol sergeant who was elected sheriff in 2007. He also served five years on the Mill Creek City Council and nine years in the Legislature. He plans to run for election for a full term as county executive who oversees more than 2,600 employees and an operating budget of more than $200 million. Snohomish is the third-largest county in Washington with more than 700,000 people.

Bunco benefit set SEQUIM — A bunco game fundraiser will be held at St. Luke’s Episcopal Church, 525 N. Fifth Ave., from 6:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. Thursday. Sponsored by the Sequim Guild to benefit Seattle Children’s Hospital, the event will help pay for medical costs for children of families in need. A donation of $10 is requested. Desserts will be provided by Sequim Guild members. Prizes will be given for the game, and a silent auction with more than 25 items, many of them Father’s Day gifts, has been prepared by guild members. For more information, email snowrider391@embarqmail.com or phone 360-797-7105.

Plant clinics set FORKS — The Clallam and Jefferson County Master Gardeners will hold Plant Clinics at Forks Outfitters, 950 S. Forks Ave., on Saturday and again on July 13, Aug. 10 and Sept. 14. Gardeners are encouraged to bring in plant and insect samples for ID or problem diagnosis plus gardening advice. The event will start at noon with a presentation on a garden topic that is relevant to the season, and the clinic will be open from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. for questions and inquiries. Saturday’s presentation is “Everything you Need to Know About Repairing Your Garden Soil for the Summer.” For more information, phone the Washington State University Clallam County Extension office at 360-417-2279.

Builders group moves SEQUIM — The North Peninsula Building Association has

relocated to 350 W. Washington St., in Sequim. A ribbon-cutting and open house to celebrate the new office will be held from 4:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. Friday. The Sequim-Dungeness Valley Chamber of Commerce will hold the ribbon-cutting at 4:30 p.m. Food and beverages will be served. The event will be held during Sequim’s First Friday Artwalk.

Wine-dinner slated PORT ANGELES — The Olympic Peninsula Enological Society will present a six-course dinner at Kokopelli Grill, 203 E. Front St., beginning at 4:30 p.m. on Father’s Day, June 16. Each course will be paired with a fine wine, beginning with a Spanish Cava. The price is $58 per member and $65 for guests. Space is limited to 34 people. For tickets, send a check to OPES, P.O. Box 4081, Sequim, WA 98382 before Sunday. For more information, phone Randy Riggins at 360-457-8596.

Stories and songs PORT TOWNSEND — The Mythsinger Foundation will present “First Friday Storynight” at Better Living Through Coffee, 100 Tyler St., from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Friday. The event will feature stories and songs from two Port Townsend musicians, Michael Townsend and Ahmad Baabahar. There also will be opportunities for audience members to share myths and stories during an “open mic” period. Suggested donation is $10, although organizers said nobody will be turned away. “We delve into the deep rich connection between song and story, reminding us of the time when a song was a story and a story was a song, and the differences between the two were as fine and thin as the strings of the old minstrel’s harp,” said host Brian Rohr. Rohr said Storynight aims “to explore the art and ritual of the oral tradition: sharing the old myths, folk tales, and fairy tales along with more modern stories and personal sharings.” First Friday Storynight is supported by the Port Townsend Arts Commission. For more information, phone 360-531-2535 or visit www. brianrohr.com.

‘Bon Jovi’ deleted SPOKANE — Spokane Veterans Memorial Arena has ended a temporary namechange to the “Bon Jovi Veterans Memorial Arena.” The arena had changed the name to promote an Oct. 6 Bon Jovi concert, but veterans’ groups protested the move as disrespectful. General Manager Matt Gibson told KHQ-TV that the temporary renaming was meant to be a fun marketing ploy but it backfired. Peninsula Daily News and The Associated Press

ARWYN RICE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

LET’S

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Bright sunny skies bring out children and their parents to Hollywood Beach in Port Angeles on Monday to celebrate the change from the gray, drizzly weather of recent days. Beachgoers and others across the North Olympic Peninsula have reason for continued celebration: Mostly sunny and dry weather are forecast for most of the week. Weather Watch/A8

Unveiling of 2013 edition of Tidepools set Wednesday PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

PORT ANGELES — The release of the 49th edition of Tidepools, Peninsula College’s art, literature and music magazine, will be celebrated Wednesday during a special Foothills Writers Series program set for 12:35 p.m. in Maier Performance Hall on the college campus, 1502 E. Lauridsen Blvd. The issue-release party, part of the college’s annual Spring Arts Week celebrating student achievement and success, will be followed by two other celebratory events. All are free, and community members are invited. The final two events are: ■ Award ceremony: 7 p.m. Friday, June 14 in the Raymond Carver Room of the Port Angeles Library, 2210 S. Peabody St. It is

co-sponsored by Port Book and News bookshop. ■ Reading: Northwind Arts Center, 2409 Jefferson St., at 7 p.m. Thursday, July 11. Peninsula College’s Associated Student Council and the Peninsula Daily News sponsor the magazine, which is open to professional and amateur poets, prose writers, musicians, photographers and other visual artists who live on the North Olympic Peninsula. Prizes were awarded by judges in 11 different categories, including Adult Prose, Poetry, Fine Art and Photography; Peninsula College Student Fine Art, Photography and Writing; Youth Writing and Youth Art ages 0-9, 10-13, 14-17; and Music. All other work that appears in the magazine was selected by Tidepools students and staff

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, June 4, 2013 PAGE

A7

Neighbor dog makes self at home MOST OF US have neighbors and most of us have neighbor dogs. It’s not uncommon to hear about trouble with neighbor dogs barking, doing things in and to other neighbors’ yards and getting in neighbors’ garbage. I, too, have neighbor dogs, and I also have had some bad experiences. But for me and one of my neighbor dogs, we eventually became what you might call close friends. But it didn’t start out that way. Kona was born in 2000. He was one of the most beautiful chocolate Labrador retrievers I have ever seen. He lived with my neighbors Ken and Darlene Olson, but he actually was their son Ken Jr.’s dog. It was around 2004 that I received a Canada goose in a divorce settlement — not my divorce but that of another couple who decided that my home was the perfect place for the goose to go. I had room for him to roam and a pond, since neither of the divorcing parties was moving to goose-friendly residences. They did ask for visitation

WEST END NEIGHBOR privileges that I granted, Baron thinking that they’d never visit that goose. But they did — on separate occasions, of course. They told me that the goose at a certain time of year became infatuated with small cars, foreign and domestic. Previously on one of those smitten occasions, he had been run over by the object of his desire. He survived but was left with a messed-up wing, so his flying days were over. They neglected to inform me of his bad attitude. The first time I remember Kona at my house, the dog was leaving my yard, pulling the goose by his good wing. I could not believe it because my Labs were scared to death of the goose. Kona’s casual approach must have taken the goose by surprise.

Christi

Needless to say, we weren’t too happy with the neighbor dog, and I hoped I didn’t see him again. Time went by, and Kona began crossing my property occasionally. He would sometimes take a dip in the pond. That freaked out the ducks but never bothered them permanently. (By this time the goose was gone, a victim of his car obsession, much to everyone’s relief.) Kona would disappear into the woods, or I would see him coming from the woods. It turned out that he was taking a shortcut through my property from the Olsons’ house to Ken Jr.’s home, or the other way around. At some point, he began leading a triple life: my place became a B&B — bed and biscuit — for him. Sometimes on his trips, he would stop over, have a bite to eat and spend the night. One day my husband mentioned: “Do you think we should tell the Olsons that he is staying over?” I informed both families, and for several years Kona became a regular house guest.

Peninsula Voices Sequim’s needs Sequim has a functioning City Hall and police station [“Sequim to Discuss Design of City Hall,” PDN, June 3]. I fail to see how spending $15 million and selling $12.5 million in bonds, putting the city heavily into debt, will improve the lives of its residents one bit. How much time does the average person spend at City Hall or the police station? Not much. Spending all this money will only improve working conditions for very few city employees and, of course, give our mayor and city manager fancy new offices and the town council new meeting rooms. This is not an essential or vital project considering that the city has been functioning very well without it for many years. Money would be better spent on repaving the many roads in need of repair or on improving our parks by adding some tennis and handball courts or other

amenities our residents could enjoy. Over the years, the city has been steadily raising the water and sewer fees and the sales tax. The permit costs for building a new home have also increased dramatically as well as other fees, and this has been without the city carrying a large debt load. This trend will only continue, and we will be the ones paying for it as always. It’s our money that will be paying for this new City Hall for many years to come, and we don’t need it. It would be prudent in these uncertain economic times to keep what we have, stay out of debt and only use public funds on essential projects that benefit the community as a whole. May 31] has ignited interPeter Ignatjev, est in the problem and posSequim sible solutions. The number of signers Scotch broom [on my online petition] grew from 30 on May 30 to 259 The excellent article on by 10:30 a.m. June 3. my fight against scotch Allison Halpern of the broom [“Not So Mellow state Noxious Weed Control About the Yellow,” PDN,

said, “I hate to mention this but I haven’t seen Kona. Maybe you should call somebody.” I said I was thinking the same thing. Then he said: “Maybe I don’t want to know.” Kona was diagnosed with cancer, and his family made the tough decision. On Sunday, I took Kona’s bowl off the deck. After the goose incident, he was the perfect neighbor dog. Well, except for the time he pooped in my carport. I know Kona didn’t mean it. Real friends overlook stuff like that. CHRISTI BARON/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

________

Kona at the Baron B&B — bed and biscuit — during one of his visits.

Christi Baron is a longtime West End resident and Forks High School alumna who is an Last year, we adopted an older administrative assistant at Forks City Hall. dog. Phone her at 360-374-5412, No matter how much coaxing ext. 236, or 360-374-2244 with after that, Kona would not come items for the column. in our house again. Or email her at hbaron@ He still stopped by to get a centurytel.net. bite to eat — he never refused a West End Neighbor appears meal — but he would then go on on the PDN’s Commentary page his way, getting older but still every other Tuesday. looking good. Her next column will appear A few weeks ago, my husband June 18.

OUR READERS’ LETTERS, FAXES

Board says it’s too costly to mandate removal in Western Washington. This is a cop out. It seems the board has given up on Western Washington and is saying it’s just our bad luck. However, if we don’t pay

AND EMAIL

now, we will pay later — but we will pay, either in fees or taxes or in the loss of agriculture and pasture lands and the beauty of our forests. It is also not a property rights issue: If the weed is not removed from one per-

son’s property, it spreads to someone else’s property. We may need to accommodate large-property owners to some degree if the cost to remove the weed is prohibitive for them, but I have little sympathy for those who allow the weed to spread wildly on their property. Pulled brooms should be replaced with native plants where appropriate. Some have made good suggestions for removing the weed: Use jail inmates and those sentenced to community service, enlist service organizations (e.g., Boy Scouts) and hold a “Scotch Broom Day (or Week)” for volunteers, maybe on Earth Day. I still believe we cannot depend on these efforts alone, and that a state mandatory-control designation is needed. David Tonkin, Port Townsend Tonkin’s petition can be viewed at http://tinyurl. com/broomscotch.

A way to slow suicides: ban bottles BY EZEKIEL J. EMANUEL EVERY YEAR ABOUT a million Americans attempt suicide. More than 38,000 succeed. In addition, each year there are around 33,000 unintentional deaths by poisonings. Taken together, that’s more than twice the number of people Emanuel who die annually in car accidents. The tragedy is that while motor-vehicle deaths have been dropping, suicides and poisonings from medications have been steadily rising since 1999. About half of suicides are committed with firearms, and nearly 20 percent by poisoning.

A good way to kill yourself is by overdosing on Tylenol or other pills. About 90 percent of the deaths from unintentional poisonings occur because of drugs, and not because of things like household cleaners or bleach. There is a simple way to make medication less accessible for those who would deliberately or accidentally overdose — and that is packaging. We need to make it harder to buy pills in bottles of 50 or 100 that can be easily dumped out and swallowed. We should not be selling big bottles of Tylenol and other drugs that are typically implicated in overdoses, like prescription painkillers and Valium-type drugs, called benzodiazepines. Pills should be packaged in blister packs of 16 or 25. Anyone who wanted 50 would

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS JOHN C. BREWER PUBLISHER AND EDITOR 360-417-3500

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have to buy numerous blister packages and sit down and push out the pills one by one. Turns out you really, really have to want to commit suicide to push out 50 pills. And most people are not that committed. Sound ridiculous? Consider some data. In September 1998, Britain changed the packaging for paracetamol, the active ingredient in Tylenol, to require blister packs for packages of 16 pills when sold over the counter in places like convenience stores, and for packages of 32 pills in pharmacies. The result: A study by Oxford University researchers showed that over the subsequent 11 or so years, suicide deaths from Tylenol overdoses declined by 43 percent, and a similar decline was found in accidental deaths from medication poisonings.

In addition, there was a 61 percent reduction in liver transplants attributed to Tylenol toxicities. (Although it was a long and detailed study, some studies got a different result. One in Ireland, for example, found no reduction in overdoses.) Not only can blister packs reduce suicide attempts by adults, but also poisonings of children. After the Food and Drug Administration required blister packaging for iron pills, which cause poisoning death in young children, the number of ironingestion calls to poison control centers in the country dropped by about 33 percent and the number of deaths went almost to zero. Why haven’t we seen more blister packages?

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

One reason is money. Manufacturers would have to redesign packaging, and the blister packaging would cost more compared with loose pills in a bottle. The other main reason is that some consumers — notably people with arthritis — might find it challenging to open the packages. But considering the tens of thousands of deaths and emergency room visits, these reasons seem a bit feeble. The packaging should be changed.

________ Ezekiel J. “Zeke” Emanuel is a bioethicist and fellow at the nonprofit bioethics research institute The Hastings Center. His essay first appeared in 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, JUNE 4, 2013

National TODAY forecast Nation

Yesterday

Neah Bay 63/49

Bellingham B elli el e lin 72/51

Olympic Peninsula TODAY Port Townsend 66/50

Port Angeles 67/50

Forks 71/49

➥

Olympics Freezing level: 11,000 ft.

Sequim 68/51

Port Ludlow 67/52

Forecast highs for Tuesday, June 4

Statistics for the 24-hour period ending at noon yesterday. Hi Lo Rain YTD Port Angeles 66 46 0.00 9.50 Forks 68 54 0.00 53.99 Seattle 69 52 0.02 15.48 Sequim 71 48 0.00 5.12 Hoquiam 63 53 0.01 31.71 Victoria 66 51 0.00 12.95 Port Townsend 67 44 0.00 9.71

Last

New

First

Sunny

Billings 59° | 45°

San Francisco 64° | 52°

Denver 79° | 55°

Los Angeles 70° | 59° El Paso 100° | 68° Houston 95° | 73°

Full

Chicago 64° | 50°

➥

★

WEDNESDAY

THURSDAY

FRIDAY

SATURDAY

Atlanta 88° | 64°

Miami 82° | 77°

Fronts

Jun 29

Jun 8

65/50 Loads of sunshine

Marine Weather

Sunset today Sunrise tomorrow 64/50 66/51 Some sun amid Sun and clouds Moonrise tomorrow the clouds for weekend Moonset today

65/49 Some clouds, but warmer

Washington TODAY

Strait of Juan de Fuca: W wind to 10 kt. Wind waves 1 ft or less. Tonight: W wind 10 to 20 kt. Wind waves 1 to 3 ft. Ocean: WNW wind 5 to 14 kt. WNW swell 3 to 4 ft at 7 seconds. Wind waves 1 to 2 ft. Tonight: WNW wind 11 to 13 kt. Mostly cloudy. W swell 4 ft. Wind waves 1 to 2 ft.

CANADA Victoria 70° | 48° Seattle 70° | 52° Olympia 82° | 46°

Spokane 75° | 46°

Tacoma 81° | 48° Yakima 84° | 52°

Astoria 77° | 48°

ORE.

Tides LaPush

TODAY High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht 10:48 a.m. 5.9’ 4:40 a.m. 0.2’ 10:29 p.m. 8.3’ 4:19 p.m. 2.3’

Š 2013 Wunderground.com

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

Lo Prc Otlk 62 .12 Cldy 64 Clr 61 Clr 49 .35 Cldy 64 .67 Cldy 69 .33 Cldy 68 .52 Rain 61 .01 Clr 68 .45 Rain 50 .09 Rain 69 Cldy 46 Rain 49 Clr 65 .10 Rain 72 Clr 47 PCldy

TOMORROW High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht 11:44 a.m. 6.2’ 5:29 a.m. -0.4’ 11:10 p.m. 8.4’ 5:09 p.m. 2.6’

THURSDAY High Tide Ht Low Tide Ht 12:33 p.m. 6.4’ 6:11 a.m. -0.8’ 11:49 p.m. 8.4’ 5:54 p.m. 2.7’

Port Angeles

2:28 p.m. 5.6’

7:15 a.m. 0.2’ 6:40 p.m. 4.8’

12:12 a.m. 6.6’ 3:21 p.m. 6.2’

7:47 a.m. -0.4’ 7:39 p.m. 5.3’

12:42 a.m. 6.5’ 4:05 p.m. 6.6’

8:17 a.m. -0.7’ 8:31 p.m. 5.6’

Port Townsend

1:18 a.m. 8.3’ 4:05 p.m. 6.9’

8:28 a.m. 0.2’ 7:53 p.m. 5.3’

1:49 a.m. 8.2’ 4:58 p.m. 7.6’

9:00 a.m. -0.4’ 8:52 p.m. 5.9’

2:19 a.m. 8.0’ 5:42 p.m. 8.1’

9:30 a.m. -0.8’ 9:44 p.m. 6.2’

Dungeness Bay* 12:24 a.m. 7.5’ 3:11 p.m. 6.2’

7:50 a.m. 0.2’ 7:15 p.m. 4.8’

12:55 a.m. 7.4’ 4:04 p.m. 6.8’

8:22 a.m. -0.4’ 8:14 p.m. 5.3’

1:25 a.m. 7.2’ 4:48 p.m. 7.3’

8:52 a.m. -0.7’ 9:06 p.m. 5.6’

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

-10s

9:09 p.m. 5:15 a.m. 3:35 a.m. 5:30 p.m.

Nation/World Hi 87 86 83 56 72 85 86 87 85 76 85 67 78 88 94 72

Warm Stationary

Pressure Low

High

Jun 16 Jun 23

★

Low 50 Stargazing among clouds

New York 75° | 55°

Detroit 70° | 52°

Washington D.C. 79° | 63°

Cold

★

Cloudy

Minneapolis 64° | 55°

Cartography by Keith Thorpe / Š Peninsula Daily News

TONIGHT

Pt. Cloudy

The Lower 48:

Seattle 70° | 52°

Almanac

Brinnon 77/52

Aberdeen 70/50

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

-0s

0s

10s

20s 30s 40s

50s 60s

70s

80s 90s 100s 110s

Cartography Š Weather Underground / The Associated Press

Burlington, Vt. 88 Casper 84 Charleston, S.C. 87 Charleston, W.Va. 72 Charlotte, N.C. 84 Cheyenne 76 Chicago 54 Cincinnati 79 Cleveland 77 Columbia, S.C. 91 Columbus, Ohio 77 Concord, N.H. 93 Dallas-Ft Worth 83 Dayton 75 Denver 84 Des Moines 67 Detroit 74 Duluth 66 El Paso 96 Evansville 75 Fairbanks 80 Fargo 66 Flagstaff 82 Grand Rapids 59 Great Falls 64 Greensboro, N.C. 85 Hartford Spgfld 87 Helena 64 Honolulu 84 Houston 86 Indianapolis 71 Jackson, Miss. 84 Jacksonville 85 Juneau 56 Kansas City 65 Key West 84 Las Vegas 105 Little Rock 81

TEMPERATURE EXTREMES for the contiguous United States: â– 114 at Ocotillo Wells, Calif. â– 25 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

67 42 Cldy 76 63 Rain Sioux Falls 62 .10 Cldy Los Angeles 80 62 PCldy Syracuse 84 52 .01 Cldy 53 Clr Louisville Lubbock 87 65 .07 PCldy 75 .04 Rain Tampa 88 77 .04 Rain 81 62 Clr Topeka 64 .09 Cldy Memphis 69 49 PCldy 88 75 Rain Tucson 67 2.36 Rain Miami Beach 107 76 Clr PCldy Tulsa 46 PCldy Midland-Odessa 90 70 71 52 PCldy 56 41 Clr Washington, D.C. 86 69 .54 Rain 43 .01 Clr Milwaukee 67 51 PCldy Wichita 56 PCldy Mpls-St Paul 73 53 PCldy 80 60 PCldy Wilkes-Barre 54 Cldy Nashville 82 66 Cldy 83 73 .57 PCldy Wilmington, Del. 88 69 .24 Rain 73 .28 Rain New Orleans 88 69 1.00 Rain 59 PCldy New York City ________ 89 74 Rain 63 1.10 Cldy Norfolk, Va. 73 53 PCldy 62 PCldy North Platte Hi Lo Otlk PCldy 51 PCldy Oklahoma City 75 56 58 47 Rain/Wind 69 50 PCldy Auckland 56 Clr Omaha Baghdad 102 72 Clr 93 74 1.05 Rain 47 PCldy Orlando 94 73 Cldy 75 47 Clr Beijing 46 Clr Pendleton 65 45 PCldy 88 70 .52 Rain Berlin 37 Clr Philadelphia 67 46 PCldy 109 81 Clr Brussels 65 Clr Phoenix 91 67 Clr 80 59 Cldy Cairo 57 Cldy Pittsburgh Calgary 67 42 PCldy 55 Cldy Portland, Maine 79 61 .60 Rain Guadalajara 93 62 PCldy 72 51 PCldy 45 Cldy Portland, Ore. 86 82 Ts 87 64 .46 Rain Hong Kong 42 Clr Providence 87 59 Clr 41 Clr Raleigh-Durham 87 71 .22 Rain Jerusalem 69 49 Clr 73 49 Cldy Johannesburg 44 .85 Rain Rapid City 90 64 Clr 91 57 Clr Kabul 67 .68 Rain Reno London 69 45 Clr Richmond 90 69 .31 Rain 66 1.21 Rain 84 56 Ts 97 58 Clr Mexico City 44 .40 Rain Sacramento 67 43 PCldy 69 58 Cldy Montreal 75 PCldy St Louis 80 59 Clr 87 77 Rain Moscow 68 .98 PCldy St Petersburg 107 90 Haze 93 56 PCldy New Delhi 48 PCldy Salt Lake City 65 51 PCldy 89 66 .03 Clr Paris 71 .01 PCldy San Antonio Ts 66 64 Cldy Rio de Janeiro 77 64 72 .02 Rain San Diego 69 57 PCldy 65 51 Cldy Rome 38 Cldy San Francisco 70 55 Cldy PCldy Sydney 46 Clr San Juan, P.R. 88 76 85 57 PCldy Tokyo 79 66 PCldy 77 .62 Rain Santa Fe 48 37 PCldy Toronto 81 Clr St Ste Marie 69 50 PCldy 83 65 .09 PCldy Vancouver 59 Clr Shreveport 71 55 Clr

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PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, June 4, 2013 SECTION

CLASSIFIEDS, COMICS, BUSINESS In this section

B College Football

Pac-12 to limit contact BY JANIE MCCAULEY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

SAN FRANCISCO — In an effort to cut down on concussions, head trauma and other injuries, the Pac12 Conference is establishing a league-wide policy to limit the amount of contact made during football practices beginning this season. Commissioner Larry Scott said Monday that the conference will limit hits to numbers “less than what the NCAA permits,” while many of the schools already have their own “self-imposed limits.” Now, there will be an across-theboard rule in an effort to decrease head trauma and other injuries. “In our discussions it became clear this is a topic our coaches are focused on,” Scott said. “There is a high degree of awareness about it and a deep commitment to it. It was a high priority.” Details of how the conference will monitor each school’s hits and contact are still being worked out. Scott expects everything to be in place by late July. The Pac-12 CEO Group, made up of school presidents, agreed on the plan during weekend meetings in Park City, Utah, as part of the conference’s new comprehensive “student-athlete health initiative” developed to improve the health and safety of the league’s 7,000 studentathletes. The meeting also included athletic directors and other representatives from the 12 schools. There have been some 200 research projects by the conference schools related to the subject of health and safety for student-athletes, Scott said.

Less than NCAA permits “The first step here is we’re going to be codifying new Pac-12 policies on hits and contact in practice that are less than what the NCAA permits,” Scott said. “We have studied and discussed with our coaches what progress the NFL has made in terms of looking at what happens in practice and reducing the cumulative impact and cumulative hits that occur in practice, and trying to apply policies that are appropriate for college.” During nine months of study of the NFL’s efforts to decrease concussions, and input from doctors and athletic trainers, the Pac-12 decided — based on Scott’s recommendation — to move forward with a plan of its own that fits into the “teaching” approach of college football and its NCAA-mandated 20-hour week rule. After “lessons learned” last season, the Pac-12 also is working to restructure its leadership for men’s basketball officiating. Scott said the conference is thinking broadly rather than focusing on having just one person in charge. He expects to announce more within the next couple of weeks. During the Pac-12 tournament, the conference learned that former officiating coordinator Ed Rush had offered bounties — $5,000 or a trip to Mexico — for any official who disciplined Arizona coach Sean Miller.

Rush resigns While Rush has said he wasn’t serious and was “jokingly” trying to “lighten the mood” in the locker room, he resigned April 4. “I’m completely looking forward, not in the rearview mirror,” Scott said, ready to move past the public scrutiny of the officiating program. Findings of an independent review by Indianapolis-based law firm Ice Miller LLP confirmed the conference’s handling of the situation this spring. “The report speaks for itself,” Scott said. “It was my hope and expectation that that allows everyone to turn a chapter and put the issues that happened in Las Vegas behind us and allows us to start fresh. Ed Rush resigned and we’re going to have new leadership and a new structural element to our program going forward.” TURN

TO

PAC-12/B3

Wilder opens season 1-3 Wagner, who also is the head Port Angeles High School baseball coach, said. “Being able to have only three practices, we will get better and our kids will start to understand the game more. “Baseball IQ is low for some Opens with victory of our kids, and as talented as PENINSULA DAILY NEWS Wilder, with only three they may be, [and because of] practices under its belt and the better competition we will PORT ANGELES — new coach Chad Wagner at the play this summer, we need to Wilder Baseball, an elite helm, beat Pac Tech 6-3 in Sat- be talented and smart in the Senior Babe Ruth program, urday’s first game, but lost the game of baseball.” opened the 2013 season 1-3 second 3-0 to split the first Wilder did start the sumafter winning the first game doubleheader. mer season on a high note, but dropping the next three Pac Tech took control Sunhowever, as it scored six runs to Pacific Tech this past weekday, beating Wilder 10-1 and on six hits and had just one end. 6-4. error to Pac Tech’s three runs Wilder and Pac Tech — a Senior American Legion team on three hits and five errors in “We have a lot to learn,”

Pacific Tech beats area elite squad

and a member of the Lower Columbia Baseball Club of the Kelso-Longview area — played doubleheaders Saturday and Sunday at Civic Field.

Saturday’s first game. Mike Dean threw five good innings for Wilder, giving up just three earned runs on three hits while striking out four and walking two to get the win. Brady Konopaski earned the save by throwing two innings in relief. Brady Konopaski was 2 for 4 with a run scored while Larsson Chapman was 1 for 3 with two RBI. In the nightcap, though, Wilder was shut out while being held to four hits in the 3-0 loss. TURN

TO

WILDER/B3

130 pounds wins at Sekiu Port Orchard angler claims first at Olson’s Resort derby PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

SEKIU — The winning flattie weighed in at more than 130 pounds at the Olson’s Resort Halibut Derby held last weekend in marine area 5, the Sekiu and Clallam Bay area. Port Orchard’s John Gragg landed a 131.7-pound monster to win the halibut portion of the derby and earn $1,000. The derby, held Friday and Saturday, gave prizes to the top three halibut and the best three bottom fish other than halibut. There were 157 entries. Runner-up in the halibut category was Seth Davis of Gig Harbor, who hooked a 113pound flattie for $500. Third place went to Rick Freiboth of Port Orchard, who brought in an 85.2-pound fish for $250. Clallam Bay’s Adam Campbell took first in bottom fish with one 15.1 pounds for the $150 prize while second place went to Josh Harris of Tacoma, who hauled in one 9.3 pounds for $75. Dom Rippo of Lynnwood also caught a 9.3-pound bottom fish for third place and $40. Harris was awarded second place because he caught his fish earlier in the derby before Rippo did. There was a good turnout for the derby and the weather was perfect, Linda Dillard of Olson’s Resort said. It was mostly sunny with calm seas both days.

an Riper’s Resort, Olson’s Resort and the Sekiu-Clallam Bay Chamber of Commerce are sponsoring the one-day Last Chance Halibut Derby on Saturday.

V

All ticket holders were treated to a free lunch at Olson’s Resort on Saturday afternoon. “Everyone really enjoyed the lunch, and the derby,” Dillard said. Olson’s Resort was the main sponsor of the two-day event, while other sponsors were Forks Outfitters and Jerry’s Small Engines Rentals, Sales and Services of Forks. There will be one final halibut derby this year, and that is scheduled in Sekiu on Saturday, which happens to be the final day anyone can fish for halibut in the area. Van Riper’s Resort, Olson’s Resort and the Sekiu-Clallam Bay Chamber of Commerce are sponsoring the one-day Last Chance Halibut Derby. Tickets are only $15 and can be bought at any Sekiu resort. First prize is $10 per pound for the winner, which would be $1,000 for a fish 100 pounds, or LINDA DILLARD $1,500 for a 150-pound monster. The prize is $400 for second John Gragg of Port Orchard hooked this winner at Olson’s Resort Halibut Derby. It weighs 131.7 pounds. place.

Djokovic, Nadal close to meeting Showdown in semis possible BY HOWARD FENDRICH THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

PARIS — Less than 48 hours after learning of the death of his childhood coach, Novak Djokovic was on court at the French Open, determined to complete a career Grand Slam in honor of the woman he likened to a “second mother.” Still grieving, Djokovic began shakily Monday. Six of the match’s first seven unforced errors were his. After one poor exchange, he chucked his racket hard enough to break it. He dropped a set for the only time in four matches so far. After recovering quickly to dispatch 16th-seeded Philipp Kohlschreiber of Germany 4-6, 6-3, 6-4, 6-4 and reach the quarterfinals at a 16th consecutive major tournament, Djokovic spoke from the heart about the passing of Jelena Gencic, who was 76. “It hasn’t been easy, but this is life. You know, life gives you things but also takes away close people,” Djokovic said. “We were very close throughout my whole life, and she taught me a lot of things that are part of me, part of my character.” Gencic connected with a

French Open 6-year-old Novak at a tennis camp, then worked with him for five years. “I feel even more responsible now to go all the way in this tournament,” said the No. 1-ranked Djokovic, who owns six Grand Slam titles but none from Roland Garros. “I want to do it for her.” Nemesis Rafael nadal is lurking in the semifinals for Djokovic. Djokovic will need to beat three more opponents to accomplish that, starting with 12thseeded Tommy Haas, who at 35 became the oldest French Open quarterfinalist since 1971 by eliminating Mikhail Youzhny 6-1, 6-1, 6-3 in less than 1½ hours. By the second set, Youzhny was so out of sorts he destroyed a racket by slamming it nine times against his sideline seat. Haas is a four-time Grand Slam semifinalist who climbed to No. 2 in the rankings at age 24. But recent times have been difficult because of serious injuries and operations, including to his right shoulder and hip, and he missed more than a full season. “Who would have thought two years ago I’d be in this position today?” Haas asked. “I

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Serbia’s Novak Djokovic reacts after defeating Germany’s Philipp Kohlschreiber at the French Open on Monday at Roland Garros stadium. wouldn’t have.” He’s certainly persistent. The 12 French Open appearances it took Haas to reach his first quarterfinal in Paris is a record. And he needed 13 match points in the third round to get past John Isner in five sets. “It’s easy sometimes to throw the white towel and say, ‘I’m done. I have achieved a lot of things. I don’t really have to worry so much financially and I can live a good life.’ “But at the same time,” Haas

explained, “maybe there was something in me still that said, ‘You know what? I can maybe still do something.’” If Djokovic can get past Haas, he’ll find a familiar foe in the semifinals: seven-time French Open champion Rafael Nadal, who played his first relatively routine opening set of the tournament and put together a 6-4, 6-1, 6-3 victory over No. 13 Kei Nishikori of Japan. TURN

TO

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SportsRecreation

TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 2013

Today’s

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

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

Scoreboard Area Sports

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

AREA SPORTS SHOT

Adult Softball Port Angeles Parks and Recreation 38th annual Smoked Salmon Tournament Final Standings “Endangered Species” Round 1. Cafe New Day Redbirds: MVP, Mike Peterson; All-Stars, Jon D’Amore, Brian Turner, Tony Busch 2. Moose Lodge Bulls: All-Stars, Mike Hazelett, Troy Pearce, Jeff Wilcox 3. tie, Elwha River Casino: All-Stars, John Frazier, Pat Woolman 3. tie, Next Door Gastropub: All-Stars, Travis Weitz, J.R.Flores 5. tie, All Weather Heating & Cooling 5. tie, Antiques (Victoria, British Columbia) “Spawned Out” Round 1. Elwha Braves 2. G-Loomis 3. Skagit Pigs (Mount Vernon) 3. Coo Coo Nest Sportsmanship Award: Victoria Antiques Championship Game: Café New Day 12, Moose Lodge Bulls 6.

Preps Year-End Honors Port Townsend High School Awards Banquet Awards and Recognition Lifetime Achievement Awards - Louie Johnson and Jim Guthrie Female Athlete of the Year - Kaila Olin Male Athlete of the Year - Xavier Frank Female Activity Leader of the Year - Allison Tuuri Male Activity Leader of the Year - Nick Silberman Female Advisor of the Year - Tanya Rublaitus Male Advisor of the Year - Russell Clark Girls Team Coach of the Year - Colin Foden, soccer Boys Team Coach of the Year - Jeni Little, cross country Visit History Award - Sarah Tucker

Today 5 p.m. (26) ESPN Softball NCAA, Division I Tournament, World Series, Site: ASA Hall of Fame Stadium Oklahoma City, Okla. (Live) 7 p.m. (25) ROOT Baseball MLB, Chicago White Sox vs. Seattle Mariners, Site: Safeco Field - Seattle (Live) 7 p.m. WGN Baseball MLB, Chicago Cubs vs. Los Angeles Angels, Site: Angel Stadium - Anaheim, Calif. (Live) 5 a.m. (27) ESPN2 Tennis ITF, French Open, Men’s & Women’s Quarterfinals, Site: Stade Roland Garros - Paris (Live)

Sunday, May 26: Miami 114, Indiana 96 Tuesday, May 28: Indiana 99, Miami 92 Thursday, May 30: Miami 90, Indiana 79 Saturday: Indiana 91, Miami 77 Monday: Indiana at Miami, late WESTERN CONFERENCE San Antonio 4, Memphis 0 Sunday, May 19: San Antonio 105, Memphis 83 Tuesday, May 21: San Antonio 93, Memphis 89, OT Saturday, May 25: San Antonio 104, Memphis 93, OT Monday, May 27: San Antonio 93, Memphis 86

BMX Racing Port Angeles BMX Track Sunday Striders 4 & Under 1. Luci Barton 2. Dominik Johnson 3. TT Connary 9 Girls 1. Taylor Tolliver 2. Taylor “Chew Toy” Coleman 3. Taylee Rome 36-40 Cruiser 1. Zachary Slota 2. Ryan Gentry 3. Scott Gulisao 4. Maddie The Moocher Cooke 5 & Under Novice 1. Cameron Colfax 2. Jason Williams 3. Carson Waddell 4. Dion Johnson 5. Caitlin Humphries 6 Novice 1. Cody Amsdil 2. Weston Owens 3. Ryan Albin 8 Novice 1. Heidi Williams 2. Harmony Colfax 3. Cholena Morrison 4. Titus Ruiz 5. Mark Keend 10 Novice 1. Jaxon Bourm (New Intermediate) 2. Jason Allen 3. Blake Williams 4. Bodi Sanderson 5. Amber Johnson 6 Intermediate 1. Kaiden Charles 2. Jesse Vail 3. Cash Coleman 4. Jaron Tolliver 8 Intermediate 1. Toppy Robideau 2. Oscar Ruiz 3. Joseph Ritchie 4. James Hampton 10 Intermediate 1. Maddie The Moocher Cooke 2. Noah Gentry 3. Zach Gavin 4. Moose Johnson 5. Aydan Vail 14 Intermediate 1. Joshua Sutton 2. Phillip Sutton 3. Michael Emery 19-27 Intermediate 1. Greg Faris 2. Trenton Owen 3. Laura Cooke 4. Johntay Tolliver 5. Kortney Beutler

SPORTS ON TV

Hockey NHL Playoffs KEITH THORPE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

DRY

ROWING

Rowing instructor Linda Allen, front, shows the proper method for pulling a paddle to rowing students, from left, Mike Hawaka, Thomas Show, 11, and Chris Shaw, all of Port Angeles, during “Learn to Row” Day at the boat house on Ediz Hook in Port Angeles recently. The event was a recruitment effort by the Olympic Peninsula Rowing Association to introduce community members to the basics of rowing and water safety.

Yearbook Award - Ranada Walcome Interact Award - Britta Janssen Drama Award - Emily Huntingford and Rosie Lambert Sailing Award - Darby Flanagan Mountain Bike Team Award - (Killer Whales) Whole Team and Cassie Ross Building Futures Award - All Senior Mentors: Xavier Frank, Vairea Houston, Britta Janssen, Andrew McNamara, Madison Pruitt, Michael Shively, Nick Silberman, Kevin Webber, Jasmine Zavalza

Baseball American League West Division W L Texas 35 21 Oakland 34 24 Los Angeles 25 32 Seattle 24 33 Houston 20 37 East Division W L Boston 35 23 Baltimore 32 25 New York 31 25 Tampa Bay 31 25 Toronto 24 33 Central Division W L Detroit 30 25 Cleveland 30 26 Minnesota 25 29 Chicago 24 30 Kansas City 23 31

Pct .625 .586 .439 .421 .351

GB — 2 10½ 11½ 15½

Pct GB .603 — .561 2½ .554 3 .554 3 .421 10½ Pct GB .545 — .536 ½ .463 4½ .444 5½ .426 6½

Sunday’s Games Tampa Bay 11, Cleveland 3 Baltimore 4, Detroit 2 Minnesota 10, Seattle 0 Texas 3, Kansas City 1 Houston 5, L.A. Angels 4 Oakland 2, Chicago White Sox 0 Boston 3, N.Y. Yankees 0, 6 innings Toronto 7, San Diego 4, 11 innings Monday’s Games Cleveland at N.Y. Yankees, late Oakland at Milwaukee, late Houston at L.A. Angels, late Chicago White Sox at Seattle, late Today’s Games Cleveland (Kazmir 3-2) at N.Y. Yankees

(D.Phelps 3-3), 4:05 p.m. Tampa Bay (M.Moore 8-0) at Detroit (Ani. Sanchez 5-5), 4:08 p.m. Texas (Grimm 5-3) at Boston (Dempster 2-6), 4:10 p.m. Baltimore (Tillman 4-2) at Houston (Harrell 4-6), 5:10 p.m. Minnesota (Deduno 1-1) at Kansas City (Mendoza 1-2), 5:10 p.m. Oakland (Griffin 5-4) at Milwaukee (Lohse 1-6), 5:10 p.m. Chicago Cubs (Feldman 5-4) at L.A. Angels (Weaver 1-1), 7:05 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Peavy 6-3) at Seattle (F.Hernandez 6-4), 7:10 p.m. Toronto (Jo.Johnson 0-1) at San Francisco (Lincecum 3-5), 7:15 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Cleveland at N.Y. Yankees, 10:05 a.m. Oakland at Milwaukee, 11:10 a.m. Chicago White Sox at Seattle, 12:40 p.m. Toronto at San Francisco, 12:45 p.m. Chicago Cubs at L.A. Angels, 4:05 p.m. Tampa Bay at Detroit, 4:08 p.m. Texas at Boston, 4:10 p.m. Baltimore at Houston, 5:10 p.m. Minnesota at Kansas City, 5:10 p.m.

National League West Division W L Arizona 32 24 Colorado 30 27 San Francisco 30 27 San Diego 26 30 Los Angeles 23 32 East Division W L Atlanta 34 22 Washington 28 29 Philadelphia 27 30 New York 22 32 Miami 16 41 Central Division W L St. Louis 37 19 Cincinnati 35 22 Pittsburgh 35 22 Chicago 23 32 Milwaukee 21 34

Pct .571 .526 .526 .464 .418

GB — 2½ 2½ 6 8½

Pct .607 .491 .474 .407 .281

GB — 6½ 7½ 11 18½

Pct .661 .614 .614 .418 .382

GB — 2½ 2½ 13½ 15½

Sunday’s Games Miami 11, N.Y. Mets 6 Pittsburgh 5, Cincinnati 4, 11 innings

Philadelphia 7, Milwaukee 5 Atlanta 6, Washington 3 San Francisco 4, St. Louis 2 Arizona 8, Chicago Cubs 4 Colorado 7, L.A. Dodgers 2 Toronto 7, San Diego 4, 11 innings Monday’s Games Miami at Philadelphia, late Colorado at Cincinnati, late Pittsburgh at Atlanta, late Oakland at Milwaukee, late Arizona at St. Louis, late San Diego at L.A. Dodgers, late Today’s Games Miami (Nolasco 3-6) at Philadelphia (Pettibone 3-1), 4:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets (Hefner 1-5) at Washington (Zimmermann 8-3), 4:05 p.m. Colorado (Nicasio 4-2) at Cincinnati (H.Bailey 3-4), 4:10 p.m. Pittsburgh (Locke 5-1) at Atlanta (Minor 7-2), 4:10 p.m. Oakland (Griffin 5-4) at Milwaukee (Lohse 1-6), 5:10 p.m. Arizona (Skaggs 1-0) at St. Louis (Wacha 0-0), 5:15 p.m. Chicago Cubs (Feldman 5-4) at L.A. Angels (Weaver 1-1), 7:05 p.m. San Diego (Richard 1-5) at L.A. Dodgers (Lilly 0-2), 7:10 p.m. Toronto (Jo.Johnson 0-1) at San Francisco (Lincecum 3-5), 7:15 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Pittsburgh at Atlanta, 9:10 a.m. Miami at Philadelphia, 10:05 a.m. Oakland at Milwaukee, 11:10 a.m. Toronto at San Francisco, 12:45 p.m. Chicago Cubs at L.A. Angels, 4:05 p.m. N.Y. Mets at Washington, 4:05 p.m. Colorado at Cincinnati, 4:10 p.m. Arizona at St. Louis, 5:15 p.m. San Diego at L.A. Dodgers, 7:10 p.m.

Basketball NBA Playoffs CONFERENCE FINALS (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) EASTERN CONFERENCE Miami 3, Indiana 3 Wednesday, May 22: Miami 103, Indiana 102, OT Friday, May 24: Indiana 97, Miami 93

CONFERENCE FINALS (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) EASTERN CONFERENCE Boston 1, Pittsburgh 0 Saturday: Boston 3, Pittsburgh 0 Monday: Boston at Pittsburgh, late Wednesday: Pittsburgh at Boston, 5 p.m. Friday: Pittsburgh at Boston, 5 p.m. x-Sunday: Boston at Pittsburgh, 5 p.m. x-Tuesday, June 11: Pittsburgh at Boston, TBD x-Wednesday, June 12: Boston at Pittsburgh, TBD WESTERN CONFERENCE Chicago 2, Los Angeles 0 Saturday: Chicago 2, Los Angeles 1 Sunday: Chicago 4, Los Angeles 2 Today: Chicago at Los Angeles, 6 p.m. Thursday: Chicago at Los Angeles, 6 p.m. x-Saturday: Los Angeles at Chicago, 5 p.m. x-Monday, June 10: Chicago at Los Angeles, 6 p.m. x-Wednesday, June 12: Los Angeles at Chicago, TBD

Transactions BASEBALL American League CHICAGO WHITE SOX — Reinstated INF Gordon Beckham from the 15-day DL. Designated INF Tyler Greene for assignment. DETROIT TIGERS — Designated OF Quintin Berry for assignment. MINNESOTA TWINS — Designated LHP Tyler Robertson for assignment. Selected the contract of OF Clete Thomas from Rochester (IL). NEW YORK YANKEES — Reinstated LHP Andy Pettitte from the 15-day DL. Optioned OF Brennan Boesch to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL). TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Optioned RHP Mickey Storey to Buffalo (IL). National League ATLANTA BRAVES — Traded 3B Juan Francisco to Milwaukee for LHP Tom Keeling, and assigned Keeling to Mississippi (SL). LOS ANGELES DODGERS — Recalled OF Yasiel Puig from Chattanooga (SL). MIAMI MARLINS — Designated LHP Wade LeBlanc for assignment. Optioned OF Jordan Brown to New Orleans (PCL). Reinstated 1B Casey Kotchman from the 60-day DL. Recalled LHP Edgar Olmos from Jacksonville (SL). PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES — Activated OF Michael Young from the bereavement list. Sent INF Michael Martinez to Lehigh Valley (IL). PITTSBURGH PIRATES — Recalled RHP Jared Hughes from Indianapolis (IL). Selected the contract of RHP Ryan Reid from Indianapolis. Placed RHP Jeanmar Gomez on the 15-day DL and RHP Phil Irwin on the 60-day DL. Optioned OF Alex Presley to Indianapolis. American Association AMARILLO SOX — Released INF Joe Anthonsen. FARGO-MOORHEAD REDHAWKS — Released INF Jose G. Garcia. KANSAS CITY T-BONES — Released RHP Brian Murphy and LHP Devon Pearson. WINNIPEG GOLDEYES — Released RHP Wes Alsup. Can-Am League NEWARK BEARS — Signed C Manny Reyes.

Sooners make WCWS finals, beat Washington THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

OKLAHOMA CITY — For a year now, getting close to a national championship and then falling short has stuck with Keilani Ricketts and her Oklahoma teammates. After a season spent seeking redemption, that ultimate goal is finally within reach. Lauren Chamberlain and Keilani Ricketts homered, speedster Brianna Turang scored twice and the top-seeded Sooners beat Washington 6-2 on Sunday night to reach the finals of the Women’s College World Series for the second straight year. “We’ve been waiting for this moment for a whole year now, and it feels so great to be back,”

Turang said. Turang tripled to lead off the third inning and scored when Kaitlin Inglesby (23-9) threw her next pitch too high for catcher Shawna Wright to handle even after she stood up. Chamberlain hit her 29th home run two pitches later, and Ricketts tacked on a drive into the bleachers in right-center field to make it 3-0. Kylee Lahners broke up a nohit bid by Ricketts (34-1) by hitting the national player of the year’s first pitch of the fifth inning over the center-field fence. The 11th-seeded Huskies (4517) got to 4-2 on Shelby Pendley’s throwing error before Ricketts struck out Victoria Hayward and

Hooch Fagaly to end the rally. Georgia Casey chipped in two RBI — a run scoring single and a bases-loaded walk — for the Sooners (55-4), who opened the best-ofthree finals series Monday night against No. 7 seed Tennessee. “Words can’t express how excited we are to be here, although our actions may not look like it,” coach Patty Gasso said. “This is a very focused and determined team that had one goal, and that is to goal to get back and have a chance to win a national championship. “It is difficult to do, and it has been difficult this entire year.” The Sooners have been the nation’s top-ranked team since the first week of the regular sea-

son and have won five of their eight NCAA games because they were up by at least eight runs after five innings. Washington put up a little more fight. After Ricketts stomped out the fifth-inning rally, she gave up a single to Inglesby and walked Wright before getting Whitney Jones to ground out and end the sixth. Ricketts allowed just three hits while striking out 12. She walked two hitters and hit two more with pitches. Destinee Martinez tacked on a run-scoring groundout in the seventh for the Sooners. “They’re a very well-rounded team. They have a great offense

and they have pitching in the circle, too. It’s very tough to pitch to them,” Inglesby said. “I think they hit my mistakes really well and they put some great balls in play.” Oklahoma lost to Alabama in last year’s championship series, winning Game 1 and leading the third game before a rain delay. The Crimson Tide rallied to deny the Sooners their second national championship and first since 2000. “Right now, we’re a team that’s peaking,” Gasso said. “We’re playing very, very good softball all the way through the lineup. Everyone is contributing.”


SportsRecreation

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 2013

B3

Youth Sports Blake beats First Federal to win 4 of past 5 PORT ANGELES — Blake Tile & Stone, winners in four of their past five games, held off First Federal of Port angeles 8-6 to improve to 6-5 with one league game remaining in North Olympic Junior Babe Ruth baseball action. First Federal jump out to an early 6-2 lead before Blake scored five runs in the bottom of the third inning, taking a 7-6 lead. Blake added one more run in the bottom of the sixth inning, and then hung on for the 8-6 win. First Federal’s Daniel Williams was a perfect 3 for 3 with a walk while teammates Ricky Crawford and Blake Mann were both 2 for 4 each, and Ryan Rodocker was 1 for 4 and scored two runs. Rweha Munyagi was 2 for 4 with two runs scored for Blake Tile & Stone while teammates Adam Iseri Fujii was 2 for 3 with two runs scored, and Bailey Towne went 2 for 3, scoring a run. Bryce Lauderback had a single but drove in two runs in the crucial third inning. Eathen Boyer, who came on in relief of starting pitcher Kenny Anderson, pitched the final five innings to get the win.

Powering to two wins PORT ANGELES — Port Angeles Power defeated Boulevard Wellness twice recently in Babe Ruth softball action. Power won 7-4 on May 15, and again by the score of 11-6 on May 31. In the first game, it took eight innings to decide the outcome with some good pitching from both teams.

LONNIE ARCHIBALD/FOR PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Westport third baseman Travis Paynter looks to umpire Reece Hagen for the call after tagging out Forks Outfitters base-runner Ben Brock during Junior Babe Ruth action at Fred Orr Field in Beaver. Westport took both games of the doubleheader. Port Angeles Power’s Anna Williams came up with a two-run homer in the top of the sixth to keep Port Angeles alive. Then the Port Angeles girls scored three runs in the top of the eighth to end the game by a 7-4 score. In the second game, Port Angeles Power was on a roll, scoring early and often. There was great pitching by Power’s Aspen Millet and Anna Williams. The pitchers were complimented with hits by Maddy Dougherty, Elizabeth Groff, Alexis Dunn, Millet and another home run for Emily Boyd.

KONP shuts out ILWU PORT ANGELES — With

both teams missing their No. 1 pitchers and a number of other players, KONP and ILWU battled one another Saturday morning, with KONP coming out on top 11-0 in North Olympic Senior Softball play. KONP took advantage of some early walks, hit batters and a string of hits in the third to put 11 on the board. Brennan Gray and Ashley Adamire had two hits each for KONP, with Adamire hitting two doubles. KONP’s Taylor Galland scored twice. For ILWU, Haley Gray and Madeline Wenzl hit a double each. Hope Wegener went the distance in the pitching circle for

KONP. Dusti Lucas and Natalie Steinman shared duties for ILWU. Both teams will meet again with full strength squads later in the season.

Eagles beat Swain’s PORT ANGELES — Eagles recorded their second shutout in as many days with an 8-0 victory over Swain’s General Store on Saturday afternoon at Lincoln Park. For Eagles, Mathew Locke got his first start of the season and pitched three strong innings. He recorded two strikeouts. He also fielded four ground balls hit back to the pitcher, and threw to Seth Scofield at first base to

record the outs. Locke finished the game playing second base, and made the final out with excellent fielding of a line drive hit to his right. Milo Whitman pitched the last three innings for Eagles to preserve the shutout. He faced only 10 batters to record the needed nine outs. Whitman struck out four, and enjoyed excellent defense behind him. At the plate, Whitman had two singles and a double. Daniel Basden had a single, a triple and was walked. Seth Scofield had a double and a single, and reached on a fielder’s choice. Joel Wood had a single and was beaned twice. Other players with hits included Brody Merritt and Austin Cox. Isaiah Getchell played excellent defense in the outfield, and was able to track down a long fly ball. The teams will play the final game of the regular season Friday at 6 p.m. at Lincoln Park.

Local blanks Swain’s PORT ANGELES — Local 155 shut out Swain’s General Store 12-0 in North Olympic Junior Babe Ruth action Saturday at Volunteer Field. Local 155 rode a strong pitching performance by Cameron Burns, who threw four shutout innings, surrendering one hit and striking out six. Local scored one run in the first, three runs in the third, then exploded for eight runs in the fourth inning, putting Swain’s in the rearview mirror. Leading the attack at the plate for Local 155 was Austin Scarpa, who was 3 for 4. Also getting hits for Local were Josh Hendry, Mason Rood, Anders Chapman, Luke Angevine and Ian Miller. For Swain’s, Brady Harris was 2 for 3. Peninsula Daily News

Wilder: Plays Aberdeen next Pac-12: Meet CONTINUED FROM B1 Wilder had just one error again but Pac Tech recovered from its five errors in the first game to play perfect defense in the second contest, scoring three runs on four hits. Mike Konopaski threw a great six innings. “It is too bad we could not give him any run support,� Wagner said. Konopaski gave up two earned runs while striking out five, allowing just three hits and walking three. Kevin Herzog went 2 for 3 in the game for Wilder. Pac Tech had a field day

in Sunday’s first game, winning 10-1 on 15 hits while Wilder was held to four hits and the one run. Again, Wilder had just one error while Pac Tech committed three. Nick Johnston had a rough time on the mound in the first couple innings but then settled in. He threw five innings, giving up six earned runs with nine hits and three walks. “We did not play well at all in this game, and I believe it was nerves for some of the guys,� Wagner said. Marcus Konopaski batted 2 for 3 in the game.

Wilder played much better in the nightcap, losing by just two runs, 6-4. The North Olympic Peninsula team scored four runs on seven hits, and had two errors. Pac Tech, meanwhile, had the six runs on five hits with one error. Cody Russell threw 4 1/3 innings for Wilder, giving up five runs, just three of them earned, on five hits, two strikeouts and five walks. “Cody is a talented pitcher but we have to get him settled in and throwing more strikes,� Wagner said.

“His control was the issue today, and body language effected him also.� Kevin Herzog came in to throw the final 2 1/3 innings, giving up one unearned run. Brady Konopaski was 2 for 4 in the game while Marcus Konopaski went 2 for 4 with an RBI. Harry Goodrich was 1 for 2 with two RBI. Wilder next will host Aberdeen in two doubleheaders this coming Saturday and Sunday at Civic Field. The games start at 5 p.m. Saturday and noon Sunday.

CONTINUED FROM B1

“We’re projected to be

Scott fined Miller profitable in Year 1 of $25,000 for a rant — he was hit with a technical — the Pac-12 Networks and we’re projected to during and after the Wildcats’ two-point semifinal be profitable again loss to UCLA in the confernext year.â€? ence tournament. LARRY SCOTT The conference said Pac-12 commissioner Miller confronted an official on the floor among other inappropriate In other topics covered actions. in Scott’s conference call Now, Scott anticipates Monday, he said the Pac-12 seeing Miller and moving Networks would increase on. coverage of live events “It’s a fresh start, from from 550 to 750 in the secmy perspective, and I’m ond year with what Scott look forward to spending time with Sean before the called “an unprecedented season and making sure he number of Olympic events.â€? has a chance to engage “We’re projected to be with the new leadership of profitable in Year 1 of the our basketball officiating Pac-12 Networks and we’re program once that’s estabprojected to be profitable lished,â€? Scott said, “and I again next year. This is as Ahead 2-1, Nishikori broke in the next game, have no questions or conearned two break points helped by Nishikori’s three cerns about the great rela- successful of a sports network in its first year as tionship we’re going to with a forehand winner unforced errors. we’ve seen,â€? he said. “One bad game for me,â€? have going forward.â€? that had Nadal rolling his Nishikori said, “and he eyes. That, though, is when started playing well.â€? Nadal was in control the Nadal really got going. A short return set up a back- rest of the way on the day hand winner to erase one he turned 27. The crowd Law Enforcement OfďŹ cers, FireďŹ ghters, break point, and a 121 mph helped him celebrate by Emergency Medical Technicians, ace took of the other. Nadal singing “Happy Birthday.â€?

French: Nadal defending champ

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CONTINUED FROM B1 Richard Gasquet 6-7 (5), 4-6, 6-4, 7-5, 8-6. Gasquet tired as the Nadal, who beat Djokovic in last year’s final and is match stretched past four 56-1 in his French Open hours. Asked afterward career, declared: “I played where he felt pain, he much better today than the replied: “In the soul, for first three matches. No sure. A little bit in the leg, too. But more in the soul.� doubt about that.� Nadal began the first Consider that something of a warning for No. 9 Stan- round by losing the first set. islas Wawrinka, who was Did the same in the second trailing by two sets when he round. In the third, he was got into an extended and animated argument with taken to an opening tiethe chair umpire, demand- breaker. On Monday, Nishiing that a line judge be kori started well, winning each of the first five points replaced. Wawrinka slowly, that lasted at least 10 steadily turned the match strokes, no easy feat against around and edged No. 7 Nadal.


PENINSULA DAILY NEWS for Tuesday, June 4, 2013 PAGE

B4 $ Briefly . . .

Manufacturing activity contracts to 4-year low

Produce store Nash’s has new website

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — A measure of U.S. manufacturing fell in May to its lowest level since June 2009 as slumping overseas economies and weak business spending reduced new orders and production. The Institute for Supply Management said Monday that its index of manufacturing activity fell to 49 last month from 50.7 in April. That’s the lowest level in nearly four years and the first time the index has dipped below 50 since November. A reading under 50 indicates contraction. The ISM index had sunk during the recession to a low of 33.1 in December 2008. Since the recession ended, it peaked at 59.6 in February 2011. Monday’s report showed that a gauge of new orders fell to 48.8, the lowest in nearly a year. Manufacturing has struggled this year as weak economies abroad have slowed U.S. exports. U.S. businesses have also reduced their pace of investment in areas such as equipment and computer software.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Alex Stchekine assembles a bicycle at the Shinola facility in Detroit on April 10. Data from last month showed weak U.S. manufacturing activity. At the same time, consumers are holding back on spending on factory-made goods, possibly a result of higher Social Security taxes, which reduced most paychecks this year. Monday’s weak manufacturing reading suggests that the economy will slow in the April-June quarter from its 2.5 percent annual pace in the first three months of the year.

WE FIND MONEY OTHERS MISS. FREE SECOND LOOKÂŽ REVIEW 1

Housing doing better “The other 88 percent of the economy appears to be doing better, led by housing,� said Jim O’Sullivan, an economist at High Frequency Economics, a forecasting firm.

The ISM found that the furniture and wood products industries reported higher new orders, a sign they’re benefiting from rising home construction. The drop below 50 in the ISM index also may be temporary, economists said. “A jump in summer auto production should give manufacturing a decent domestic boost in coming months,� Ted Wieseman, an economist at Morgan Stanley, said in a note to clients. On Monday, auto companies reported healthy sales for May.

peninsuladailynews.com

SEQUIM — Nash’s Organic Produce has launched a new website at www.nashsorganic produce.com with extensive information about the farm’s history, details about production practices, and profiles of its field crew, farm store and farmers market staffers. The site also features a recipe blog, photo galleries and information about the full grocery Farm Store and its weekly specials. There also will be updates about events and classes at the Farm Store, and links to purchasing pork shares, Nash Bucks and Farm Shares online. Partners and collaborators also are highlighted. “We’ll add videos and other features as we go,� says Patty McManusHuber, the farm’s promotions coordinator. For information, phone 360-681-6274.

Smith graduated from the Nutritional Therapy Association in 2009. Northwest Massage is located at 620 E. Front St. For more information, phone 360-417-6851.

Changing hours

Gold and silver

PORT ANGELES -— Northwest Massage nutrition therapy practitioner Autumn Smith has changed her hours. Smith now is working from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mondays through Fridays. Services include nutritional counseling, detox programs and diet plans.

Gold futures for August delivery rose $18.90, or 1.4 percent, to settle at $1,411.90 an ounce Monday. Silver for July delivery rose 48 cents, or 2.2 percent to end at $22.72 an ounce. Peninsula Daily News and The Associated Press

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Many analysts expect the economy’s annual growth rate this quarter to be about 2 percent. The drop below 50 in the ISM’s index does not mean the overall economy is shrinking. Manufacturing represents just a small fraction of U.S. output.

Real-time stock quotations at


Fun ’n’ Advice

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Dilbert

by Scott Adams

For Better or For Worse

Pickles

DEAR ABBY: I would like to respond to “Solitary Woman in Ottawa, Canada,” the expectant mom who asked how she could raise her child to enjoy “periods of quiet, reflective fun by himself.” I have two children, ages 7 and 1. Like “Solitary,” I also enjoy time to myself, whether reading, writing or going for a hike. When my son was born, I felt it was important to give him confidence and the ability to be self-sufficient. Therefore, we have him help us with chores like grocery shopping and encourage him to make healthy, responsible choices. When he was 2 and stopped taking naps, we told him he had to have “quiet time.” As a result, our son is self-motivated, an avid reader and writer, and has an intellectual curiosity most adults don’t have. He is teaching himself cursive writing and is interested in learning a foreign language. We live in the Colorado Rockies, and getting rid of our TV set was one of the best things our family has ever done. Instead of tuning each other out, we enjoy conversation, creating and sharing our days together. I have never been happier. I am concerned for people who are afraid of silence. Dad Who Gets It

by Lynn Johnston

by Bob and Tom Thaves

DEAR ABBY Abigail Van Buren

Momma

Smart Mama In El Cajon, Calif. Dear Abby: According to a mother who published a book on the topic, when an infant cries, wait a few minutes and listen before reaching out. This gives the baby time to learn how he feels with himself, and to deal with it emotionally. After five minutes or so, if the baby has a real need, then you can reach for him. Doing it too quickly prevents this crucial process of learning to be with oneself. Another Solitary Canadian Dear Abby: As a teacher (now retired), I was always interested in personality types and how they affect learning and interaction with others. One way of dividing personality types is into introverts and extroverts. Introverts get their energy from quiet time alone; extroverts get energy from being with other people. This is an inborn trait that cannot really be taught, and there are varying degrees of the introvert/ extrovert characteristic along a continuum. Wise parents will learn their child’s personality traits and tailor their parenting to help him/her have the best learning situations possible. Mary In Texas

Dear Abby: Your advice to “Solitary Woman” was good but did not start soon enough. She should provide stimulating crib and playpen toys to teach her son at an early age that he can control some aspects of his environment. When my daughter was 7 weeks old, I attached a mobile to her bassinet. I wiggled it and watched her smile at the moving colored birds. When the movement stopped, she became frustrated and began to whimper and kick and flail her arms. The paper birds moved again. She lay still and watched them. When they stopped the second time, she didn’t whimper but just moved herself in the bassinet. She had learned

by Jim Davis

Rose is Rose

by Pat Brady and Don Wimmer

by Hank Ketcham

Doonesbury

by Garry Trudeau

by Eugenia Last

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Get involved in a new venture or consider forming a partnership with someone trying to achieve a similar goal. Make alterations that will suit your lifestyle and the direction you want to pursue. A mini-vacation will inspire new goals. 5 Stars

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): An open mind along with honest conversation will help you dodge a personal problem. Use your imagination and you will attract new friends who will inspire you to expand a moneymaking plan, idea or talent. 3 stars

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): You’ll pick up valuable information from someone you have recently reconnected with or at a conference or while traveling. A sociable attitude will bring you good fortune and an opportunity to offer your services in a most unusual way. Love is on the rise. 3 stars

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Don’t put up with excessive people. Call the shots and stick to what works best for you. Your strength and courage to follow your own path will attract someone special who wants to head in the same direction as you. Love is highlighted. 3 stars

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): A change at home may leave you worried about the future. Talks should be scheduled with anyone involved or influenced by the changes that occur. Accept the inevitable and you will find a suitable way to reach a positive solution. 5 stars

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Don’t let your job get you down. Concentrate on learning. Participation will be the key to meeting people and engaging in an adventure that will bring you experience knowledge and help you make better choices. A change will do you good. 3 stars

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Engage in something you find entertaining or that makes you feel good about who you are or what you are accomplishing. Self-improvement projects will pay off, and the compliments you receive will lead to greater confidence. 4 stars

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Study all the choices you have that can improve your life. Talk over plans with someone you respect and you’ll get a better sense of how you can accomplish your goals. Love is on the rise, and romance is in the stars. 3 stars

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Avoid overindulgent people and refrain from being excessive. It’s important to keep life simple and stick to what you know you can handle emotionally, physically and financially. Love is on the rise, and an unusual development is possible. 3 stars

CANCER (June 21-July 22): Use your imagination and you will dodge someone’s attempt to make you look bad. Focus on what needs to be done and finishing what you start. A creative plan can turn into an interesting way to make extra cash. 2 stars

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

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Don’t jump to conclusions. Putting pressure on loved ones will backfire. Work in conjunction with others and you will find a way to solve any personal problems you face. An honest assessment will help you make a wise decision. 3 stars

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Embrace a challenge and you could impress someone influential. Change things up a bit and surprise people with your diversity and ability to jump through hoops. Work in conjunction with people as energetic and dedicated as yourself, and progress will be made. 4 stars

ZITS ❘ by Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

Dennis the Menace

_________

The Last Word in Astrology ❘

by Mell Lazarus

she could control her environment. As a toddler, she could leave her playmates and pursue solitary activities in the quiet of her own room. I am convinced that her bassinet experience was the basis for learning to be happy by herself

and with herself.

Dear Dad: Thank you for your letter. I received many comments from people who identify strongly with “Solitary’s” point of view:

Garfield

B5

Teach kids early how to be alone

by Brian Crane

Frank & Ernest

TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 2013

The Family Circus

by Bil and Jeff Keane


Classified

B6 TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 2013

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

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ANTIQUE: Antique Oak English Wardrobe/Armoire, excellent condition. $495/obo. Call (360)582-9782 BUYING FIREARMS Any & All - Top $ Paid One or Entire Collection Including Estates Call (360)477-9659. LASALLE: 1938 472 Cad. with t400, disc brakes. Hot rod project. New glass, pr imered. $5,700/obo. (360)504-2583 MISC: Ashley bunk bed kit with mattresses, $300. Nice 8 pc living room set, $600. (360)461-6659

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CLASSIFIEDS!

MISC: Scanoe, with oars, excellent condition, $500. Canopy, black, fits Dodge Dakota pickup, $60. (360)683-0626. MUSTANG: 1991 h/b. 5.0 5-sp leather, PS, pb, pdl, CD 91k, new tires, rotors. $3,800. James, (360)504-2583 ROLLS ROYCE: 1970 Silver Shadow. Blue with red and tan leather. Always garaged. $7,500/obo. James, (360)504-2583

LONG DISTANCE No Problem! Peninsula Classified 1-800-826-7714

ROOMMATE WANTED To share expenses for very nice home west of P.A. on 10+ acres. $ 5 0 0 m o. , i n c l u d e s utilities, DirectTV. Must see. Call Lonnie after 5 p.m. (360)477-9066. YA M A H A D G X 6 2 0 Keyboard. Lightly used Por table Grand with 88 Full size Keys. Incl. stand, bench, AC a d a p t o r, fo o t sw i t c h FC5, music rest, accessor y CD-ROM, Owners Manual +more. $550 See online. (360)343-4052.

ADOPT ~ Art director & CARRIER ROUTE Global executive yearn AVAILABLE fo r p r e c i o u s b a by t o Peninsula Daily News LOVE, adore, devote our Circulation Dept. lives. Expenses paid. 1- Is looking for an individu800-844-1670 als interested in a Port Angeles area route. Interested parties must be 18 yrs. of age, have a 3020 Found valid Washington State Drivers License, proof of FOUND: Bike. Black, 20” insurance and reliable wheels, has decals, Port vehicle. Early morning Townsend. delivery Monday through (360)554-4505 Friday and Sunday. Fill F O U N D : C a t . L o n g - out application at 305 W. haired, orange and white First St., P.A. No phone adult, Mt. Angeles Rd. calls. and Scrivner. (360)457-8055 FOUND: Keyring. Many keys, Dodge door opener, Downtown Port Angeles. (360)452-8435. FOUND: Keyring. Two key s, D ow n t ow n Po r t Angeles. (360)452-8435. FOUND: Ring. McDonalds, Sequim. Call to identify. (360)460-4034.

3023 Lost L O S T : B l a ck R a b b i t . Medium sized, named “ S n i c k e r s ,” 3 r d a n d Cherry, P.A. 808-7060. LOST: Cat. Black, white bib, adult but small, 3rd and Spruce, Seq. (360)565-6942 L O S T: D i a p e r B a g . Brown with pink circles, P.A. area. 452-3595. LOST: Dog. Black/tan, famale, large, blue collar, very friendly, 5th and A St., P.A. (360)460-2285

CONCERNED Citizens is hiring for p.t. visitation monitors to work with children and families. Must pass a background clearance, and must have a HS diploma/GED. Exp. preferred but not required. Application at 805 E. 8th St., P.A. COOKS: Breakfast and Dinner. Must have experience. (360)808-6272 Employment Opportunity. Par t time office assistant in busy office. Computer skills in MS Word, Excel and Publisher. Experience p r e fe r r e d . M u s t b e able to pass an extensive back ground clearance, be reliable, confidential, profess i o n a l , a n d a n sw e r multi phone systems. Pick up application at Concer ned Citizens, 805 E. 8 th St. PA

L O S T: Wa l l e t . Z e b r a FINANCE MANAGER print, last seen on Mon- The Port of Port Angeles day at a cemeter y in is seeking qualified canP.A. (360)460-2233. didates for the position o f F i n a n c e M a n a g e r. 4026 Employment P r i m a r y f u n c t i o n s i n clude: monthly variance General reports & financial statement analysis; cash flow AUTO PARTS repor ts & monitoring COUNTERPERSON Quality worker needed. bank and investment acHS graduate min. Must counts; budget preparahave full knowledge of tion; project & financial auto systems and opera- analyses; capital & grant tions, heavy duty knowl- project tracking; acts as edge and shop skills a assistant treasurer & plus, computer skills, deputy port auditor; reability to learn and apply views payroll & accounts specific computer pro- payable & signs checks. grams pertaining to the Additional duties include: job, be able to follow di- r e c o n c i l i n g k e y a c rections, display a posi- counts, managing bad tive attitude and ability to debt accounts including be a team player, excel- seizure/auction of veslent communication skills sels; assisting with risk and ability to multi-task m a n a g e m e n t & i n s u is required, job can be ra n c e c l a i m s ; w r i t i n g f a s t p a c e d . W o r k i n g policies & procedures; weekends is required. p r i m a r y r e s o u r c e fo r Pa i d h o l i d ay s, s a l a r y Por t’s information sysDOE. Only qualified re- tems & technology consumes will be accepted. tracts. Assists the Director of Finance with other Mail to: tasks as assigned. ExPeninsula Daily News pert user in Excel with PDN#706/Auto strong financial analysis Port Angeles, WA 98362 skills, a BA/BS in acAUTO TECH: Well-es- counting, business or ret a bl i s h e d a u t o m o t i ve lated field & 5 to 8 years dr ivetrain repair shop of financial or accounting seeking full-time, experi- & management related enced auto tech. Salary work is preferred. Salary is DOE with an anticiDOE. (360)452-9644 or (360)477-1604, evening pated hir ing range of $65,000 to $80,000. ApC A R E G I V E R : P r i va t e plications & job descriphome, will train, health tions may be obtained at insurance and vacation the Por t Admin Office, pay, no exp. necessary. 338 West 1st St., Por t (360)912-4624 Angeles between 8am & 5pm M-F or online at C A R E G I V E R ( S ) : Fo r www.portofpa.com. Aptwo males, possible live- plications will be acceptin. (360)582-4660. e d u n t i l 5 p m Fr i d ay, Caregivers Home Care June 21st. Letters & reN o ex p e r i e n c e . Fr e e sumes without an applit r a i n i n g , c o m p e t i t i ve cation will not be acceptwages! Call 457-1644, e d . D r u g t e s t i n g i s required. 683-7377, 379-6659.

DUMP TRUCK DRIVER Truck and trailer. Avail. to work out of town, able to join Teamsters Union, min. 5 yrs. exp. (360)683-5447

HOUSEKEEPING/ LAUNDRY Part-time. $9.50 hr. Apply in person at All View Motel, 214 E. Lauridsen Blvd., P.A.

Fishing Alaska (Dutch Harbor*) Well respected fishing company with two H G vessels homeported in Seattle, headquartered in Kirkland, and primarily hailing from D u t c h H a r b o r, A K seeks hardworking dedicated positive attit u d e c r ew fo r w o r k aboard proven vessels at sea off the coast of Alaska (Bering Sea and Gulf of Alaska. Ports of call vary (Primarily Dutch Harbor*) Attend an Employment informational meeting for more information: Thursday June 6th 11 a.m. Oxford Suites - 9550 NW Silverdale Way, Silverdale, Returning military/veterans are encouraged to apply. Fishermen’s Finest - a team of excellence - our name says it all...

FORKLIFT OPERATOR • Min 2 yrs verifiable forklift operator experience • Experience operating 15,000 lb or larger forklifts • Prior lumber handling and truck loading exp preferred • Ability to understand and follow directions • Strong attention to detail • P r i o r s aw m i l l a n d kiln loading experience a plus! Excellent wage and benefits package. Shift work required. Complete application in person at Interfor; 243701 Hwy 101 W; Port Angeles, WA 98363 EOE/Drug-Free Workplace. HOUSEKEEPING AND YARD MAINTENACE Email resume to: info@johnwaynes waterfrontresort.com KWA HOMECARE Part/full-time Caregivers. Benefits, Flexible Hours. Call P.A. (360)452-2129 Sequim (360)582-1647 P.T. (360)344-3497 LEGAL ASSISTANT Part-time, at established Por t Angeles law firm. Requirements include general legal background, excellent written and verbal communication skills, strong organizational skills, familiarity with cour t and office procedures and working knowledge of Word, Outlook and Excel. Applicants must be detail oriented, have the ability to interface with clients and to prioritize and multi-task. Salary DOE. Please send resume to: Peninsula Daily News PDN#705/Legal Port Angeles, WA 98362 MEDICAL OFFICE LPN/MA, full-time, insuance benefits, back office/phlebotomy expereicne preferred. Resumes to: 814 S. Peabody St. Port Angeles, WA 98362 PAINT ROOM TECH Paint matching experience required. Apply in person at Baxter Automotive, 221 W. 1st St., P.A.

CHECK OUT OUR NEW CLASSIFIED WIZARD AT www.peninsula dailynews.com

POLICE, SHERIFF DEPUTY, CORRECTIONS AND DISPAT C H E R I m m e d Openings for law officers incl Police, Corrections, Deputy and 911 Dispatcher in the Pt. Angeles area! Testing will be June 15th in Pt Angeles for 175 departments inc: For ks Pt. Townsend Pt. Angeles Jefferson County,& Sequim. To apply visit: PublicSafetyTesting .com. 1-866-HIRE-911 PROFESSIONAL Administrative Position. Excellent, full time, career oppor tunity in fast-paced doctor’s off i c e. N o ex p e r i e n c e necessary (literacy required). A professional, upbeat, and friendly demeanor is a must! If interested, please email: Employment@Sequim Health.com or Fax: 360-681-7239.

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!

4080 Employment Wanted FIELD MOWING Free estimates (360)460-2855 GARDEN tilling, field mowing, Brush Hog, general tractor work. (360)477-1226 HOUSEKEEPING Housekeeper, fast and efficient, good rates, references upon request. A happy respectful person Blanca Sanchez: (360)643-1278 JOHN’S Lawns. Complete lawn care service, commercial and residential. Ser ving Por t Angeles and Sequim. Free Estimates. (360)460-6387 email: johnslawns@olypen.com JUAREZ & SON’S HANDYMAN SERVICES Quality work at a reasonable price. Can handle a wide array of problem 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

3 BR., 2 bath, propane fireplace, 1,600 sf on 1.07 acres, Mt. View, orchard, raised bed gardens, 2 car carport with attached 200 sf shop, detached 28’ X 36’ shop with loft, storage barn and more. For sale by Owner $250,000.00 11 Mapleton Way Pt. Angeles. By appointment only. (360)460-1235, Sheryl (360)460-3708, Kristi AFFORDABLE SEQUIM 2 Br., 2 bath, 1,184 sf home in great Sequim location. Clean and solid home on large lot with fenced back yard, atached 2 car garage, living room with wood stove, newer kitchen and bathroom flooring and roof is 2 years “new.” $149,900. Gail Sumpter: 477-9361 Ed Sumpter: 808-1712 Blue Sky Real Estate Sequim - 360-477-9189 CLALLAM BAY 24373 Hwy. 112, 3 Br., 2 ba mobile home, 1 , 4 4 2 s f, d e t a c h e d garage, lease option or cash discount, $ 3 , 0 0 0 d ow n , $ 8 2 1 per mo. $68,000. (803)354-5310

EXCELLENT NEIGHBORHOOD Salt Water View Home, 1,776 sf., 2 br., den, 2 bath, born in 2006, spacious master and bath with all the trimmings! METAL Detecting and 7 2 0 s f. f i n i s h e d g a r Treasure Hunting. Call a g e / w o r k s h o p , h e a t m e t o f i n d y o u r l o s t pump and freestanding rings, coins, or goods! wood stove, ver y ap(360)457-9178 pealing design/upscale appliances. MOWING, PRUNING, MLS#264546. $249,000. BARKING Team Thomsen Honest and dependable. (360)808-0979 (360)582-7142 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY OlyPets In-Home Pet GREAT AREA! Care offers a convenient alternative to ken- Beautiful 1.47 acre parneling your pets and c e l w i t h a 1 , 5 6 8 s f . leaving your home un- m a nu fa c t u r e d h o u s e, a t t e n d e d . C a l l 576 sf. detached garage ( 3 6 0 ) 5 6 5 - 5 2 5 1 f o r and 400 sf. workshop is yo u r c o m p l i m e n t a r y located near Robin Hill “ M e e t ‘ n G r e e t .” O r Park and the Discovery Trail! visit www.OlyPets.com ML#270906. $159,000. Kimi RETIRED general con360-461-9788 tractor available for consultation on home re- JACE The Real Estate Company modeling projects. Be your own general conINCREDIBLE tractor. Save your hardearned money. Let me WATERFRONT VALUE This no-bank waterfront help you! Call Jeff W. at home on Quilcene Bay, (360)477-9750 fe a t u r e s t h e d y n a m i c views of the Big QuilRUSSELL cene River delta, QuilANYTHING cene Bay and the OlymCall today 775-4570. pic Mountains. Enjoy SCUBA DIVER warm salt water swims, FOR HIRE endless bird watching Call 681-4429 and beautiful sunsets. Nearly an acre with over of saltwater front105 Homes for Sale 100’ age. 1130 E. Quilcene Clallam County Rd, Quilcene, WA. $199,999. MLS#361207. ELEGANT HOME AND Bruce Munn COTTAGE 360-301-4026 Pa n o r a m i c m o u n t a i n MUNN BRO’S views. Beautiful CraftsHOOD CANAL man style home built in PROPERTIES the heart of Blue Mt. Valley. Double sided floor to M O B I L E H o m e : ceiling fireplace, Traver- $1,000/obo. 720 sf. 2 Br. tine and marble floors. 3 1 full bath, with 2 pop bedrooms, 3 bath. Thea- outs. In, Ocean View, a ter room. Excellent barn 55+ mobile park in Pt. and out buildings. All this Angeles on a corner lot. plus 3 stall garage with Patio and small bedroom c h a r m i n g a d d i t i o n a l n e e d r e p a i r. I n q u i r e home above. Setting on a b o u t a p p l i a n c e s . 5 acres. Please call Bill at $499,000. MLS#263707. (360)582-0802 for more THELMA DURHAM information. (360)460-8222 Peninsula Classified WINDERMERE 360-452-8435 PORT ANGELES

INVEST IN A DUPLEX Ver y spacious duplex (1,320 sf in each unit) built on double city residential lots close to all amenities. Main level consists of living room, spacious kitchen with dining area, separate utility room and 1/2 bath. Bedrooms are upstairs with another full bathroom. MLS#271180. $199,950. JEAN (360)683-4844 Windermere Real Estate Sequim East MOTIVATED SELLER .57 acres is zoned for a community shopping district allowing many uses! 3 tax parcels, high visibility, access from hwy 101 and City water and sewer are just a few of the benefits. 964 sf house has 2 br, 1 bath + den. ML#270709. $99,900. Kimi 360-461-9788 JACE The Real Estate Company MOVE IN READY Remodeled and updated far mhouse with large master and master bath. Guest quarters with half bath above garage. Room in walkout basement for additional quarters. fenced and cross fenced acreage. Currently used for four horse s . Tw o b a r n s , f o u r stalls in one, hay storage in the second. New metal roof on older bar n. Over-active fruit trees with small creek on west side of property. $189,900. MLS#271045/484550 Doc Reiss (360)457-0456 WINDERMERE PORT ANGELES MUST SEE Updated vinyl windows and roof, electrical, flooring and appliances too, insulated detached metal shop, has 3 bays and car pit too! Detached 2 car garage with guest room (kitchen and bath), complete RV hookups. $318,000 ML#481458/270986 Team Schmidt (360)683-6880 WINDERMERE SUNLAND

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5000900

Employment 4026 Employment 3010 Announcements 4026 General General

4026 Employment 105 Homes for Sale 105 Homes for Sale General Clallam County Clallam County

105 Homes for Sale 505 Rental Houses 1163 Commercial Clallam County Clallam County Rentals SURPRISE, SURPRISE, SURPRISE T h a t ’s w h a t yo u ’ l l b e saying after you’ve seen this 1,770+ sf home with 3 br., 2 baths, 2 car garage and covered patio in a 55+ community. There has been over $30,000 in upgrades, including a heat pump, roof, floor cover ings, appliances and more. $75,000. ML#270836. Dave Ramey (360)417-2800 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY

P.A.: 2 Br., 1 ba, west SEQUIM: Office/retail s i d e, n e a r e l e m e n t r y space 850 sf. $800 mo. (360)460-5467 school, all new inside. $750. (360)452-8530.

View of a life time. Cozy fireplace and a m a z i n g v i ew. . . N o w that’s a perfect setup for this 1,450 sf. condo in Port Angeles. This open floor plan delivers 2 bedr o o m s, 2 b a t h r o o m s, spacious living room w i t h bu i l t - i n s h e l v i n g around the stone fireplace, convenient laundry, open kitchen with m a r bl e c o u n t e r t o p s. Perfect location, just a short walk to town. $285,000. MLS#271070. Jean Irvine (360)460-5601 COLDWELL BANKER UPTOWN REALTY

P.A.: Nice 2 Br., 1 ba with 1/2 basement. Utilities include washer, dryer, stove and fridge. H a r d wo o d f l o o r s a n d e l e c t r i c f i r e p l a c e. N o smoking, pet possible. Located r ight above downtown. $900. For details call Jon at (360)460-1071

P.A.: 4 br., 3 bath waterv i ew exe c u t i ve h o m e chef kitchen 2,850 sf. avail now w/d, double oven, side-by-side ref/frid. $1,500. (360)460-3032

ANTIQUE: Antique Oak English Wardrobe/Armoire, excellent condition. $495/obo. Call (360)582-9782

6035 Cemetery Plots

Properties by Landmark. portangeleslandmark.com SEQ: Acre with style. 1 B r. , c u t e / t i d y. $ 6 2 0 . Lovely 2 Br., 2 ba, $975. Lease. (360)504-2905.

WANTED: Mother of 2 teens seeking 3 br. in your home or separate dwelling. Hope to barter cooking, cleaning, yard 1037 W. 14th, P.A: 2 br., wo r k fo r p a r t i a l r e n t . 2 bath. $750 f/l/d. No R e f s . a v a i l . S e q u i m smoke/pets. 928-3615. school dist. Tell others! rent to own? 460-0692 . 1230 CAROLINA St., P. A . : 4 B r. , 2 b a t h . 605 Apartments $1,150. (360)928-3615.

505 Rental Houses Clallam County

SEQUIM HALF ACRE This well-maintained home, built in 2004, is located on a half acre parcel with mountain view! With a total of 1,643 sf, it features 3 bedrooms, 2 baths and an attached 2 car gar716 W. 4th St., P.A. age. Irrigation water to 1 Br., 1 ba, quiet. $630 this property! $225,000. ML#271124. plus dep. No pets/smoking. (360)457-1632. Mark N. McHugh REAL ESTATE 683-0660 BEAUTIFUL Sequim area farmhouse: 4 Br., SPECTACULAR 2 bath, dining room, WATERFRONT VIEWS! sun room, fireplace, 320’ of private high bank garage, fenced yard. waterfront provides pri- Clean, bright and spava c y, a n d p a n o r a m i c c i o u s . N o s m o k views of Vancouver Is- i n g / p e t s . $ 1 , 3 5 0 . land, the San Juan Is- Available July 13. Call lands, Mt. Baker and the for appt.: shipping lanes. A spa(360)387-4911 cious 3 bedroom, 3 bath home surrounded by im- CENTRAL P.A.: Charmm a c u l a t e l a n d s c a p e d ing cottage. Yard and gardens on 5 acres. garage, 2 br., 1 bath. No MLS#271046. smoking, small pets OK, $650,000. refs required. $800. CHUCK TURNER (360)460-2502 452-3333 DISCOVERY BAY: WaPORT ANGELES terfront, new 3 br., 2 REALTY bath, 1,500 sf., no pets. SUNLAND FAIRWAY $850+dep. HOME (360)385-3840, evening. Over 2,000 sf with sunEAST P.A.: 1 Br. with room on course side, master on opposite side office, clean, near C’est of home, laundry room Si Bon. $750 + electric. has ½ bath and office Backyard. N/S or pet. area, located on quiet Refs. Dep. (360)461-3859 cul-de-sac, easy maintenance landscape. EAST P.A.: Beautiful 3 $209,000 Br., 2 ba, 6 ac, water ML#TBA inc., fireplace, mtn. view, Deb Kahle carport. $1,250 mo. (360)683-6880 (970)712-0523 or WINDERMERE (360)477-3143 SUNLAND JAMES & SUNRISE HEIGHTS ASSOCIATES INC. Desirable neighborhood Property Mgmt. near college, hospital, (360)417-2810 shopping etc. Light and HOUSES/APT IN P.A. bright home with 2450 A 1 br 1 ba..............$475 total sf. Spacious living A 2 br 1 ba..............$575 rm with attractive fireplace. Hardwood floor- D 1 br 1 ba..............$600 ing, formal dining, cof- D 2 br 1 ba..............$675 fered ceilings. Very well A 3 br 1 ba..............$750 built home. Full base- H 2 br 2 ba..............$750 ment includes large sec- H 3+ br 2 br............$875 o n d k i t c h e n / l a u n d r y H 3 br 1.75 ba.........$975 room with lots of cabi- H 2 br 2 ba 1 acre.$1100 nets. Rec room has pool H 4 br 2.5 ba.........$1300 SEQUIM table and bar. 75x140 lot. Nice 2-car garage. A 2 br 2 ba..............$825 ML#270542. $217,500. A 2 br 2 ba..............$875 Vivian Landvik H 3 br 2.5 ba.........$1000 (360)417-2795 Complete List at: COLDWELL BANKER 11 Caroline St., P.A. UPTOWN REALTY P.A.: 2 Br., across from www.peninsula Lincoln Park. $750 mo. dailynews.com (360)249-0064

6005 Antiques & Collectibles

Clallam County

AT T R AC T I V E , s p a cious 1 Br.-$545, 2 Br.-$645, in P.A. New carpet, vert blinds, pvt patio, updated appliances, laundr y r ms, v i ew s, o n - s i t e m g r. Ask abt our current discount. www.olympic square.com. 457-7200

C RY P T. M t . A n g e l e s Memorial Park, Mausoleum 2, Tier A, Cr ypt #12, includes entombment, name-bar with vase, and all endowment care prepaid. Appraised at $5,500. Sell for $4,200. (360)582-1531.

6045 Farm Fencing & Equipment

DR POWERWAGON 6HP self-propelled wheelbarrow. 800 lb. cap a c i t y, w o o d e n b o x , electric start. 1999 Pro model. Runs great, good shape. Haul anything effo r t l e s s l y ! $ 7 9 5 / o b o. Cash only. Forks: (360) 374-6636

TRACTOR: ‘52 Ferguson. 6-way back blade, scraper box, and ripper t o o t h , g o o d r u n n e r. $2,500. (360)710-4966.

6055 Firewood, Fuel & Stoves FIREWOOD: $179 delivered Sequim-P.A. True cord. 3 cord special for $499. Credit card accepted. 360-582-7910. www.portangeles firewood.com

FIREWOOD: 6 cord special, $895. Limited time only! 360-582-7910. www.portangeles firewood.com

6065 Food & Farmer’s Market

H A M B U R G E R : Fa r m raised. $2.75 lb. (360)452-2731 COLLEGE AREA P.A. 2 Br, W/D, fireplace. $600, 1 / 2 o f f 3 r d m o. r e n t . 6075 Heavy 1226 Craig Av. 452Equipment 3423 SEMI END-DUMP P.A.: 1 Br. Apt., water view, quiet, clean. $615 TRAILER: 30’. Electric tar p system, excellent mo. (206)200-7244 condition. $6,500/obo. (360)417-0153 Properties by Landmark. portangeleslandmark.com 6080 Home

665 Rental Duplex/Multiplexes

Furnishings

BUTCHER BLOCK ISLAND, 60”x30”x2” on a 34” high stand, with 1 CENTRAL P.A.: 2 Br., 2 low open shelf, $550. 2 bath. Fireplace, garage. MAHOGANY END TAW / D. N o s m o k i n g o r BLES, with leather inlay pets. $800. 460-8797. and 1 drawer, 23”x17” x26” high, $85 ea. 683 Rooms to Rent (2) 1940 vintage TABLE LAMPS with shades, 34” Roomshares high, $55 ea. BOOKCASE light oak finish, 6’x4’x13” deep, 6 adROOMMATE justable shelves (3 in WANTED To share expenses for each half), $110. Cash very nice home west only. (360)457-4348. of P.A. on 10+ acres. COMPUTER DESK $ 5 0 0 m o. , i n c l u d e s utilities, DirectTV. Must Corner desk, light wood, good condition. $50. Call see. Call Lonnie after Christina, 5 p.m. (360)477-9066. (912)308-6910

1163 Commercial Rentals PROPERTIES BY LANDMARK 452-1326

MISC: Ashley bunk bed kit with mattresses, $300. Nice 8 pc living room set, $600. (360)461-6659

RECLINERS: (2) wall hugger recliners, masS E Q U I M : 1 5 0 S. 5 t h s a g e a n d h e a t , gray, Ave., Boardwalk Square. ve r y g o o d c o n d i t i o n . (360)683-3256 $225 each. 452-4760.


Classified

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

DOWN 1 “That’s impossible!” 2 Arctic pullover 3 Call it a night

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. THE ADAM’S APPLE Solution: 10 letters

S E T A R B I V I S I B L E P By David Poole

6/4/13

4 Nerdy type 5 Shake, as a tail 6 Mixologist’s bucketful 7 Command to Fido 8 Southern neighbor of British Columbia 9 Iranian currency 10 Harvard and Yale are in it 11 Leader of the Dwarfs 12 Stat for Jered Weaver 13 Country W of Iraq 19 Clean with a rag 21 Knocked down a peg 24 Rolling in dough 25 More shrewd 27 A-line designer 28 Legal memo’s “concerning” 29 Parisian possessive 33 Religious ritual 34 Household gadget used on a board 35 Big brute 36 Traffic controller 38 Short burst of wind

© 2013 Universal Uclick

B U L G E R B W A T T A C H A

O L M L T I T C K C E N R E E

Y F I O N H O R M O N E I C G

S F R G V V R A T T S M C N N

www.wonderword.com

E P O O A E O O E O G O O E Y

T P U V N M M I A C N W I N R

C M N I B T E E C T U E D I A

A U D I L O S N N E L D E M L

F L E X I B L E T T B N E O O

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

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

PRAAT (c)2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

39 Art Deco designer 40 Game with suspicions and accusations 41 Canada’s smallest prov. 44 Luxury hotel chain 46 Preposterous 47 Causing serious nose-wrinkling 48 “Good heavens!”

C D s : A u t o g r a p h e d , E N T. C E N T E R : Ve r y framed, Bernadette Pe- good cond., with storage ters, $100. Dolly Parton, cabinets. $75. $100. (360)681-2968. (360)460-5402

BED: California King, 6 CHINA CABINET FENCING: 5’, $0.75 per d r a w e r s , h e a d b o a r d . S m a l l , a l l w o o d , r e - board (approx 75-100 $175/obo. m ova bl e t o p s e c t i o n . boards) (360)643-9177. (360)808-0188 $40. (360)457-6431. FISH TANK: 10 gal, with BEE BOXES: Bee super COIN SETS: (8 sets) lights and filter. $20. boxes, clean, new wax. 1986-1993, uncirculated. (360)683-0130 $20. (360)683-7149. $4/set. (360)452-4785. FOLDING CHAIRS: (6), BENCH GRINDERS COINS: US Mint proof 2 from Costco, 4 SamDual head bench grind- sets, 1988-1993. $3 per sonite, great cond. $50 e r, $ 2 5 . S l o w s p e e d set (7 sets). for all. (360)582-1345. grinder, $75. 457-6426. (360)452-4785 FOOSBALL TABLE BICYCLE: Dahon, fold- COMIC BOOKS: (49) Very good cond. $150/ ing , single speed, carry collectible comic books, obo. (360)461-6970. bag. $125. 1960s-1990s. $50 for all. FREE: Boat. ‘64 Bellboy (360)452-9549 (360)452-9685 16’, no trailer or motor, BINOCULARS: Steiner, COMPRESSOR: 2 cyl., local delivery Sequim. 10” x 50E. $150. 1 h p m o t o r, t a n k o n (360)681-4841 (360)681-2747 wheels. $75. FREE: Cabover camper (360)720-6606 B OAT: S ev y l o r b o a t , for 3/4 ton truck, good with paddles and pump, COMPUTER: Dell, with cond. (360)683-6762. $ 4 0 0 v a l u e . A s k i n g Windows XP. $100. FREE: King mattress, (360)417-0826 $200/obo. 504-2113. Simmons memory foam, BOOKCASE: 2 shelves, COUCH: “Click Clack” both sides, no stains. walnut, 36” x 30” x 12” couch, black fake leath(360)385-4596 deep, nice. $30. er, fold down. $40. FREEZER: Upright, 5.5 (360)457-6431 (650)353-6924 c u b i c fe e t , ke n m o r e . BOWLING EQUIPMENT C R A B P OT S : L a r g e , $75. (360)477-0550. Brunswick bowling ball, ropes, bait box, weights. FRIDGE: 18’ GE, albag, and shoes. $20. $35. (360)681-8761. mond color. $75. (360)683-0130 DESK: Solid mahogany (208)851-2284 CANOPY: For short-bed desk, nice, 46” x 36” x HIGH CHAIR: Antique. pick-up, very good cond. 18”. $150/obo. $100. (360)301-6090. $150. (360)457-0746. (360)452-9146

6/4/13

51 Cries in sties 52 Spanish tennis star Rafael 53 Sunset dirección 55 Needed to pay 57 Pepsi alternatives 58 Put away some dishes? 59 California’s Santa __ 60 Small bill 61 United

GARAGE DOOR: Dou- L A M P : T i f f a n y - s t y l e ble, roll-up, white metal, shade, hummingbirds. hardware. $125. $75. (360)681-7579. (360)460-9140 LAWN MOWER: Good, running. $150/obo. GARDEN BEDS (360)797-3088 Raised 4x4 garden beds, can deliver. $50. LAWNMOWER: Works (360)452-7266 great. $25. (650)353-6924 GARDEN TOOLS: Various garden tools, first L I G H T: B a t h , b a r, come, first serve. $10 for vanity, 3 light. $19. all. (650)353-6924. (360)457-9091 GOLF CLUBS: Full ArL I T H O S : Fa u l s t i c h n o l d Pa l m e r, w o o d s , irons, wedges, putter Jamestown Tribe symbag. $65.(360)385-2776. bols, crab and t-bird. $100. (360)681-2968. GREENHOUSE: 4 tier LOUNGE CHAIRS: (2) mini greenhouse, apoutdoor padded reclining prox. 70” x 23” x 32, l o u n g e c h a i r s, h e a d portable. $45. 582-1345. rests. $50 ea. 457-6426. H A M M O C K : L a r g e , M AT T R E S S : Q u e e n , heavy metal stand whith Serta, box spring, very wheel’s, good cond. $40. good shape. $30. (360)582-9700 (360)460-5402 HITCH: Bolt to bumper, MATTRESS TOPPER 6” drop. $10. King-sized memory foam (360)640-0556 mattress topper, 2.5”, clean. $40. 477-3834. JAC K E T: C a b e l a ’s duck-hunting jacket. MEDICINE CABINET $50. (360)461-4847. Custom maple medicine cabinet, outside mount, JACKET: Mens London 3’ x 4’. $50. 452-9146. Fo g , s i ze 4 2 - r e g u l a r, beige, great cond. $25. MEDICINE CABINET (360)582-9700 Oak finish medicine cabinet, matching 3 light JAC K : N ew 1 , 5 0 0 l b bar. $35. 452-4760. motorcycle jack. $50. (360)452-5891 M I C R OWAV E : O s t e r, new. $100. 808-2185, or JACK: two ton hydraulic 457-9092. floor jack, like new. $25. (360)683-4173 MISC: GE microwave, $30. Wall clock, maple JAZZ CD: The best of burl, $20. Sonny Rollins. $5. (360)452-9685 (360)457-5790 MITER SAW: DeWALT JIGSAW: Electr ic jig- DW705 12”, with tool saw. $15. stand. Excellent condi(360)683-4173 tion. $125. 582-0896.

E E F R E Eand Tuesdays A D SS R F Monday

6/4

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PERXET

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

Ans. A here: Yesterday’s

(Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: PINCH BUDDY BRUNCH EFFORT Answer: The food at the restaurant was so bad that customers were getting — FED UP

MOTORCYCLE PARTS POOL TABLE: FredeSissy bar luggage rack rick-Willy’s. $125. (360)460-9080 fo r Tr i u m p h , u n u s e d . $150. (360)452-9591. POWER MOWER MOWER: Sears, cord- C r a f t s m a n 1 0 b l a d e less, electric lawnmow- power mower, used one er, used once. $75/obo. season. $200. 681-3339. (360)775-6944 PRESSURE WASHER NEBULIZER: By Respri- Honda, 5 hp, 2400 P.S.I ronics, portable. $75. $150. (360)452-9842. (360)928-0236. PRESSURE WASHER PAINT: Epoxy II paint, Powermate, 2400 PSI, brown, red, white, yel- 2.3 GPM, mult. attach. low. $10 per gallon, 4 $100. (650)353-6924. gal. (360)477-3834. PATIO TABLE: Bistro, PRINT: Crater Lake, in (4) swivel chairs, um- or iginal 1930s frame. $75. (360)681-7579. brella. $75. (360)452-4760 QUILTING FRAME PAT I O TA B L E : Ta bl e Wooden, Amish-made. $100. (360)683-5233. with 6 chairs. $40. (650)353-6924 REEL: Ambassadeur PELLET GUN: Crosman C-3 LR reel, never used, .22 cal, with scope, used like new. $70. 452-8953. twice, CO2. $60. REFRIGERATOR: Ami(360)504-2374 na, big, works perfectly. PELLETS: 40lb bag of $50. (650)353-6924. Cascade (fir) Wood ROD AND REEL: Spin stove pellets. $175. r o d a n d r e e l c o m b o, (360)460-9080 g o o d q u a l i t y, n e v e r PICTURE FRAME used. $75. 452-8953. pre-cut glass, 30 assorted pieces. $25. ROTOTILLER: Crafts(360)683-0988 man, 5 HP, front tines, runs good. $125. PICTURE FRAMES (360)460-6979 6”-27”, 6 wooden frames. $50. RUGS: Very nice area, (360)683-0988 f l o w e r e d , b u r g a n d y, gold, green, 8’ x 11’. PLAYSTATION 3: With $125 both. 640-0556. extras, including u n o p e n e d c o n t r o l l e r. SCROLL SAW: Delta $100. (360)683-8413. 24” classic, heavy duty PLEXI-GLASS PANELS scroll saw, with stand. (3), 2’ x 8’, .25” thick, $200. (985)290-5769. nice shape. $20 each. SEWING MACHINE (360)582-9392 Serger - Bernette #334DS, ex. cond., all www.peninsula attach. $175. 617-0326. dailynews.com

M ail to : Peninsula Daily News PO Box 1330 Port Angeles, WA 98362

TABLE: Coffee table, SEWING MACHINE Tr e a d l e S e w i n g M a - excellent condition, with c h i n e . $ 1 5 t o g o o d drawer, 80” x 30”. $120. (360)797-1179 home. (360)681-4043. S H O E S : M e n s , n e w, TABLE: Dining table, 8.5, brown casual. $15. dark wood, almost new, (360)457-5790 (4) chairs. $200. (360)504-2113 SHOWERHEAD: New, M o e n 6 3 0 2 B N , a r m , TIRES/RIMS: Nice aluflange, retail $95. Now minum, 8 lug, Ford 33 $55. (360)683-2639. 12.516. $200. (360)461-6970 S L E E P I N G BAG S : 2 NorthFace “Goliath” 3D, T O W B A R : R e e s e Polarguard, practically 5000# tow bar. $50. new. $90 ea. 461-7624. (360)452-9549 SMOOTHIE MAKER TOW BAR: RoadmasNew, Pro 600, sells for t e r, w i t h a l l c a b l e s , $50. Asking $30. cords, and parts. $200. (360)928-0236. (360)452-5891 STAMP PADS: 10 pig- TOW HITCH: Bolton, fits ment ink stamp pads. small truck/car. $60. $20, plus bonus stamp. (360)681-2127 (360)457-3274 T R A I L E R : Fo r r i d i n g STEREO: 2 stereo Opti- mower, 10 cubic feet, mus, pair of 12” 3-way good cond. $50. speakers. $75. (360)681-2535 (360)582-7570 TREE: 12’ Norfolk Pine, S TOV E : B a ck p a ck i n g to be kept indoors. $50. stove, Peak 1, feather (206)617-0326 442 dual fuel, practically new. $55. 461-7624. WALKER: Seat, wheels, break. $45 firm. STROLLER: Umbrella (360)683-6097 stroller, navy, like new $5. Evenings, 452-9693. WASHER/DRYER: Maytag, work well, almond SWIVEL ROCKER color. $100. Brand new, unused, faux (208)851-2284 leather, RV or kids room. $100. 683-8814. WASHER Whirlpool, Energy Star SWIVEL ROCKER with autoload sensor. New, ear th tone, ver y $150. (206)795-4345. comfortable, not recliner. $125. (360)775-2288. WHEELS/TIRES: Sport wheelsand tires, 6 lug, 3 TABLE: Antique, oak, inch centers. $150. end table, unique. $175. (360)457-0746 (360)683-5233 TOOLS: Worm D. skill saw, $50. Angle grinder, $50. (360)301-6090.

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B rin g yo u r ad s to : Peninsula Daily News 305 West 1st St., PA

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• No Pets, Livestock, Garage Sales or Firewood

o r FA X to : (360)417-3507 Email: classified@peninsuladailynews.com

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5A246724

D A S E E D A E FR E E FR RE

F

W O L L A W S L A R Y N X P D

by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

D U T C H OV E N : N ew, still in box, 6 quart, iron with porcelain enamel. $49. (360)775-0855.

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

E N O B D I O Y H S O O P R U

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

CAMP KITCHEN: Cole- DINING TABLE: With man camp kitchen, fold- (6) chairs, 44” x 8’. $195. ing kitchen table, stor(360)990-6053 age. $75. (360)504-2374 DOLLS: (5) clown dolls, BABY BACKPACK: For CARDS: HP Greeting 4 figurines, 1 plastic pichiking. $15. cards, 200, glossy,9.5” x ture. $12. (360)452-9693 8”. $15. (360)457-3274. (360)683-8897

BA R S TO O L S : ( 4 ) wood, matching, 26” high. $40 cash. (360)775-0855

K A E P S R U B O L I B A L L

Attach, Ball, Bobbing, Boys, Bulge, Bump, Call, Cartilage, Cricoid, Deep, Fact, Flexible, Front, Growth, Hormone, Hyoid Bone, Laryngeal, Larynx, Life, Ligaments, Loud, Lump, Lungs, Man, Movement, Neck, Prominence, Protrudes, Reduce, Round, Solid, Speak, Stuck, Swallow, Throat, Thyroid, Tone, Vibrates, Visible, Vocals, Voice Box, Women Yesterday’s Answer: Double

Monday’s Puzzle Solved

AMP: Crate 2 x 12 DFX 100X guitar amp, original foot switch. $80/obo. (360)582-7570

BABY CLOTHES: New- CAULK BOOTS: Feltborn boy, good shape, lined, size 10, new, reover 40 pieces. $20. built. $30. (360)452-9693 (360)681-2747

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

Jumble puzzle magazines available at pennydellpuzzles.com/jumblemags

ACROSS 1 King or queen, but not a prince 5 Coffeehouse connection 9 Carnival features 14 Once again 15 Breezed through 16 “99 44/100 % pure” soap 17 Staff symbol 18 Need after a bank job 20 Partner of true 22 Veg (out) 23 Business that cuts locks 26 Change People, say 30 Just manage, with “out” 31 The Brewers, on scoreboards 32 Gal pal of Jerry and George 34 Church gettogether 37 Sikorsky and Stravinsky 38 “Know what I mean?” 41 Blender setting 42 Paste back together 43 8-Down, to Mexicans 45 Ben-__ 46 Spot for a shot 49 Tabloid twosome 50 Jamaican resort 54 Ancient Aegean region 56 Kind of question with only two possible answers 57 Classic Hitchcock film, and a hint to the end of 18-, 23-, 38- and 50Across 62 “No __ luck!” 63 Paddled boat 64 Movie “Citizen” 65 In good shape 66 Put up with 67 64-Across’s Rosebud 68 Current event?

TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 2013 B7


Classified

B8 TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 2013 6100 Misc. Merchandise

6100 Misc. Merchandise

6105 Musical Instruments

CARD TABLE: Kestell octogon, wood, felt top and accessories. $290/ obo. (360)683-4856.

MISC: Weight bench, new, $75. Aero Pilates machine, $50. Stnls retail clothes rack, $45. Full size lumber rack, $ 2 0 0 . F u l l s i ze a l u m Thule bed rack, $300. Claw foot tub, $250. Antique piano, $1,800. 360-460-6954.

B A B Y G r a n d P i a n o. Gulbransen 54�. beautiful walnut. Excellent cond. and recently tuned. Moving must sell. $999. (360)683-3944.

MISC: 2 BBQ propane tanks, 5 gallon, $20 each. Kids 3-wheel scooter, Radio Flyer, $15. (360)477-8832 MISC: Hot tub, needs circulating motor, paid $8,000 5 yrs. ago, $985. Electric fireplace, like new, 1500 watt, 110 volt, $200. TV cabinet, oak with 2 glass display cases and 4 drawers, $200. IRobot vacuum, spare b a t t e r y a n d b r u s h e s, $100. Electric treadmill and exercise machine, $ 2 5 0 . C a t s c ra t c h i n g t r e e , $ 5 0 . R e c l i n e r, $ 2 0 0 . M i t e r s aw a n d stand, $150. Oak kitchen upper cabinets, $200. W h e e l b a r r o w, $ 5 0 . (360)683-4384. MISC: Scanoe, with oars, excellent condition, $500. Canopy, black, fits Dodge Dakota pickup, $60. (360)683-0626. MISC: Sentry electronic safe, $70. Matching swivel rocker recliners, wine color suede, $340 set. (360)504-2692.

P R E - M OV I N G S a l e : Wood shop tools--bandsaw, lathe, jointer, drill press, router. Kitchen items--bread machine, ice cream maker and more! Sewing rocker, vintage childrens easel/ blackboard, weight set, morgan paint sprayer, painter drop cloths, new 1/2HP motor, stargazing telescope, reel power mower, fertilizer spreaders, hammock with stand, assorted garden tools, ladders, treadmill, kerosene and electric heaters. Call for details, 457-6426.

6115 Sporting Goods

6140 Wanted & Trades

KAYAKS: For sale. EasyRider Eskimo CRX 3G kayaks. 18.6 Ivory with green trim, asking $3,800. 17 Yellow with Orange trim, asking $4,000. Each equipped PIANO TUNING and re- with unused Bat Wing pair since 1984. Gar y sail, outrigger (10’), lee b o a r d a n d f u l l s p r ay Freel Piano Service. skirt. Connects to form (360)775-5480 catamaran. 360-683-4441 YA M A H A D G X 6 2 0 Keyboard. Lightly used R U G E R 3 0 / 0 6 : Ta n g Por table Grand with s a f e t y, h a r d c a s e , 88 Full size Keys. Incl. shoots good, 3x9 Bushs t a n d , b e n c h , A C nell scope. Asking $500. a d a p t o r, fo o t sw i t c h (360)681-5030 FC5, music rest, acc e s s o r y C D - R O M , SHOTGUN: Mossberg O w n e r s M a n u a l 500, 12 ga., 28� vent rib, +more. $550 See on- 3 chokes, new in box, line. (360)343-4052. never been fired. $350/obo. (360)460-8465

6115 Sporting Goods

6135 Yard & Garden

7035 General Pets 9820 Motorhomes 9820 Motorhomes

SOIL: Barnyard blendATTENTION ALL FARMERS/RANCHERS ed. $25 yard. (360)797-3977 or LOGGERS AND (360)808-1842 PRIVATE LANDS I ’ m l o o k i n g fo r Y E W TREES, small or large 8183 Garage Sales amounts. (503)757-1750 PA - East or (503)760-1577. WANTED: Fishing and hunting items, misc. also. (360)457-0814. WE refurbish and repair used laptops. Windows XP or newer, please. As part of the refurbish process we wipe out the previous owner’s data! (360)775-2525 M-F 9 a.m.-6 p.m. http://helpertek.com

6135 Yard & Garden

LANDSCAPING MATERIAL Mushroom compost, bark, rock, sand, topsoil. LOG SPLITTER: Elec- Visit The Heartline, Inc., tric, 5 ton. $300. at 4001 Tumwater Truck (360)457-9650 Rte., P.A. 452-3157.

6125 Tools

BUYING FIREARMS Any & All - Top $ Paid STEEL SHELVING One or Entire Collec3 commercial grade tion Including Estates units, 24 deep x 36 wide Call (360)477-9659. x75� tall, 3 adj. shelves per unit. $120 each. 6140 Wanted S E A K AYA K S : 2 s e a (360)683-8849 & Trades kayaks, with r udders. GARAGE SALE ADS One is fiberglass, Pacific Star, $295. One kevlar, Call for details. BOOKS WANTED! We 360-452-8435 Seaward, $1,500/obo. love books, we’ll buy 1-800-826-7714 (360)437-8223 yours. 457-9789.

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

RIDING MOWER: 2011 Toro Commercial Z Master 48�, twin bagging system, 22 hp Kawasaki, excellent condition. $7,500. (360)797-7710

CHICKS: Top quality native egg layer chicks. $4, $6, $8, $10. We take your rooster, exchange for chick any time. Fertile eggs available, will hatch in as early as 3 days, $4, $2, $1. Jon, (360)809-0780 BIG ESTATE Sale: Fri.Sat., 8-2 p.m., Monte M I N I AU S S I E P U P S English Self Storage, 255432 Hwy. 101, sec- JUST TOO CUTE! DOB tion E. 2 storage units 3-15-13. Two black-tri full of assorted home fur- males, one blue merle nishings and household male, one red merle feitems. Many quality finds male. ASDR registrable. such as copper tub, lg. C u r r e n t va c c i n a t i o n s. wood desks, chairs, ta- R e a d y t o g o t o n e w bles, clothing, vintage homes now. (360)385-1981 Hoosier cabinet, hunting lodge furnishings, some P U P P IES: Black lab artwork and leather desk puppies. $50 each. chair. (360)775-9681

MOTORHOME: ‘84 30’ Spor tscoach III. 454 eng., rear queen bed, full bath, new convection micro, new fridge, wood cabinets, runs well, clean, 47k miles. $8,700. (360)683-1851 MOTORHOME: ‘92 31’ Holiday Ramber. 59,250 mi., Onan generator, oak c a b i n e t s, q u e e n b e d , bathroom separate from shower, new refrigerator. $9,850. (360)683-4710 MOTORHOME: Dodge ‘76 Class C. 26’, good c o n d . , n ew t i r e s, l ow miles, nonsmoker, in PA. $5,000 firm. 460-7442.

PRICED TO GO! 1990 Fleetwood 34’ motorhome. Good condi7025 Farm Animals PUPPIES: Border Collie, tion, low milage, nonsmoker, 454 Chev with 1 2 w k s. , s m a r t , fa r m & Livestock B a n k s Po w e r Pa ck , raised dogs. $200. Onan generator. Steal at (360)775-1788 HEIFER and pony: Jer$6,700. See at 1638 W sey heifer, 7 months old, 12th. (360)452-9611. $950. Welsh pony, $500. Both sweet tempered. 9820 Motorhomes WA N T E D : C l a s s A (360)477-1706. motorhome. Approx 26’-32’, Vortec engine, STEERS: Jersey steers, 1 year old. $700 each. M OTO R H O M E : 1 9 8 5 slide. (360)631-9211. Southwind class A. 27ft, You move! 454 engine, 55k miles, LONG DISTANCE (360)461-4515 all new tires, built in No Problem! SELL YOUR HOME working 4kw generator, drivers door, clean and Peninsula Classified IN PENINSULA good condition. $3,500. CLASSIFIED 1-800-826-7714 1-800-826-7714 Call (360)683-5882.

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 $35,000 for the RV and $20,000 for the CRV or $53,000 together. Please call Bill or Kathy at (360)582-0452 to see the vehicles.

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

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Classified

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS 9832 Tents & Travel Trailers

9802 5th Wheels

9050 Marine Miscellaneous

COACHMAN: Special Edition 2009, 20’. Barely used, like new condition. Clean, everything works! Fully Stocked with many extras. See online PDN ad for full description and pics. $15,000/obo. (360)774-6193

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 water tank. $6,000. (360)683-4552

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 , many extras. By appointment. $22,000. (360)417-0277

KOMFORT: 17L “Lite” Travel Trailer. Immacul 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. $4,500. (360)477-0321. TRAILER: ‘06 23’ Komfort. Loaded, immculate, smooth sides, 1 slideout, $19,000 new. Sell for $12,000/obo. (360)797-1771 TRAILER: 24’ Nomad Lite. Loaded, front walk around bed, rear bath, a i r, m i c r o, d u a l t a n k , dual battery, front/rear entry, exellent. $9,500. (360)457-6372 TRAILER: ‘90 27’ Hi-Lo. G o o d s h a p e. $ 3 , 0 0 0 / obo. (360)683-8059.

9802 5th Wheels 5TH WHEEL: ‘00 35’ Alfa Ideal. 3 slides, with awnings, 2 a/c, excellent cond., must see! $20,000/obo. (360)683-2529

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: 19’ Alpenlite. No leaks. $3,295. (360)775-1288 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. 5TH WHEEL: ‘89 Prowler Lynx 215. New raised a x l e s, 1 2 0 vo l t r e fe r, great shape, fully equipped, comes with hitch. Reduced $2,750. (360)460-6248, eves. 5TH WHEEL: ‘93 30’ Alpenlite, large slide-out, very nice, always parked u n d e r c ove r, ‘ 9 9 Fo r d F250 4x4, super cab XL, super duty 3/4 ton diesel with less than 100K, 1 5 , 0 0 0 l b. 5 t h w h e e l hitch and trailer hitch. Would like to sell as a pkg. Asking $19,950 for both. (360)681-2006. 5TH WHEEL: ‘94 27’ Coachman Catalina. Great cond., single slide, new tires. $4,500/obo. (360)417-8840 5TH WHEEL: ‘96 26’ Jayco Eagle. Excellent condition. $5,000. (360)452-1646 Toy Hauler: 2006 Thor Transport 39 WTB. Two slide outs, Garage model, Generator. $22,000. (360)460-7712

Automobiles 9292 Automobiles 9434 Pickup Trucks 9434 Pickup Trucks 9817 Motorcycles 9180 Classics & Collect. Others Others Others HARLEY: ‘05 Dyna Custom. Low mi., upgrades. $8,000/obo. Call before 4:30 (360)460-7777. HARLEY DAVIDSON ‘08 STREETBOB Dyna, 96 cubic inches, 6 speed, Vacne and Hines ex h a u s t , s t a g e 1 k i t , 9.900 miles. Trades welcome, paid for or not! Bank financing available OAC. VIN#306067 $10,950 Randy’s Auto Sales & Motorsports 457-7272

G L A S P LY : 2 6 ’ c a b i n cr uiser, flying br idge, single Cummins diesel engine, low hours, radar, VHF radio, CB, depth/ CAMPER: ‘11 10’ Alas- f i s h f i n d e r , d i n g h y, kan cab-over. Original d o w n r i g g e r s , 1 6 ’ x 3 2 ’ owner, excellent cond. boathouse. $27,500. $9,000. (360)452-8968. HARLEY Davidson: ‘97 (360)457-0684 1200 Spor t. Red and CANOPY: Fits ‘07 Toyo- JET SKI: Kawasaki STX Black, 15K miles, new t a Tu n d r a , 6 . 5 ’ b e d , 12F, 3 seater, ‘06, excel- tires and battery, custom white, Leer. $800. lent condition, trailer. painted tank, extra tank, (360)460-1870 $6,200. (360)460-2689. 4 extra seats, lots of chrome, blinkers integral LONESTAR: 17’, 100 hp in mirrors, detachable Johnson motor, 9.5 kicksissy bar, custom fener, motor in great shape, der, 2 into 1 exhaust, adg a l va n i ze d E Z - l o a d e r justable shocks. Have t r a i l e r, d e p t h f i n d e r, or iginal par ts too. $2,500. (360)928-9436. $4,250. (360)460-7893 NORDIC: 11’ sailing dinHILLCLIMB ghy. Stored many yrs. June 8-9. Gates open 7 Near new cond. $1,950. a.m. Entrance 1 mi. up (360)457-3903 LANCE Lite: 2003 845 Deer Park Rd., P.A. FolTruck Camper. Great SAILBOAT: West Wight low signs. 1st bike up at condition-used twice. Potter, 19’, with 2010 5 10 a.m. (360)417-7509. Roof air, queen bed, hp Honda 4 stroke, gald i n e t t e c o nve r t s t o vanized trailer, many ex- HONDA: ‘00 XR100R. bed. Shwr stall/pan full tras. $6,500/obo. Excellent cond., low h g h t . B l u e i n t e r i o r. miles. $1000/obo. (360)379-8207 Lots of storage. (360)477-9777 Length-16.5 ft. $8,995. SEA RAY: ‘74 24’ HT Call Cruiser. Reconditioned/ HONDA: 2003 VT750 (360)681-0172 e q u i p p e d fo r o c e a n / A c e D e l u xe C r u i s e r. rough weather fishing/ S h o w r o o m C o n d i t i o n PACKAGE: ‘85 Dodge cruising with ALL NEW M u s t s e e . L o t s o f 350 and 11.5’ self con- equipment and features: Chrome, Many Extras. repowered w/ Merc Hori- Will not find another bike tained camper. zon Engine/Bravo-3 (du- l i k e t h i s . N e v e r l e f t $1,900. (360)457-1153. al prop), stern drive (117 o u t , n e v e r d r o p p e d . hrs.), complete Garmin 1 0 , 3 8 7 L o w M i l e s 9829 RV Spaces/ electronics, reinforced $4,500. (360)477-6968. stern, full canvas, downStorage HONDA ‘81 riggers, circ water heatGOLDWING ing, Yamaha 9.9 kicker, SEQUIM AREA: Full EZ Load trailer, w/disk GL1100, nice clean local hookup, TV, internet. brakes (1,200 mi.), elec- trade. We buy bikes and $350. (360)460-5435. tric winch. Other extras, ATVs cash! 0 financing $52,000 invested. Sacri- available, ask for details! VIN#101599 fice for $18,500. $2,450 9050 Marine (360)681-5070 Randy’s Auto Sales Miscellaneous & Motorsports SLICKCRAFT: 1976 23’ 457-7272 inboard/outboard. 302 BAYLINER: 17’, 70 hp engine, boat and trailer. HONDA: ‘85 Goldwing Yamaha, needs some $5,200. (360)457-8190. Aspencade. 1200cc, engine work but runs. black/chrome, exc. cond. $1,500. (360)460-9365. $3,500/obo. 417-0153. 9817 Motorcycles B E L L B OY : ‘ 6 4 1 8 ’ M OTORHOME: ‘88 Classic. Very good condition, Volvo I/O, 7.5 hp APRILIA: Scarabeo mo- Trans Van, 21’. Self-conJohnson kicker, fullc an- torcycle/scooter 2009. tained, clean, runs good, vas, new EZ Load trailer, This is a pristine motor- 70k miles. $3,600. (360)452-4827 new tires, 2 downr ig- c y c l e w i t h l e s s t h e n g e r s , l o t s o f ex t r a s . 1000 miles on it! Hardly YAMAHA ‘07 V-STAR $2,600. (360)417-1001. used! NOT A SR. 1300 S C O O T E R ! 5 0 0 C C s Only 2,900 miles, Cobra BELLBOY: ‘78 24’ 20 Needs a battery charge. exhaust, like new! 12 KT Cruiser, 80 gal. fuel, $3600/obo. road bikes and Harleys 30 gal. water, 1,750 watt (360)808-6160 in stock! In-house fii nve r t e r, 1 2 0 V s h o r e power, 4 batteries, mi- BMW: ‘74 R75/6. Air- n a n c i n g , c o m p e t i t i ve crowave, refr igerator, head Boxer, excellent rates! VIN#000042 new depth finder, com- condition, 29K mi., new $6,450 pass, GPS, VHF, din- powder coat, shocks, alRandy’s Auto Sales ette, new galley, new ways garaged. $3,500/ & Motorsports Wallas ceramic diesel obo. (360)912-2679. 457-7272 stove/heater, auto levelDIRTBIKE: Honda ‘04 ing trim tabs, enclosed head, trailer with new C R F 1 0 0 . L o o k s a n d YAMAHA: ‘74 DT360. 4k original miles, runs disc brakes, wheels and runs great. $750/obo. good, amazing cond. (360)670-5282 tires. $8,000/obo. $2,500/obo. 452-7253. (360)683-9645 GOLDWING: ‘90 1500. YAMAHA: ‘77 TT500. BOAT: 19’ fiberglass, Runs great, well main- Custom and spare parts. tained. $3,000. trailer, 140 hp motor. $1000/obo. (360)461-2619 $4,980. (360)683-3577. (360)477-4007 HARELY DAVIDSON BOAT LOADER: Eide YAMAHA: ‘79 XS 1100. ‘05 DYNA LOWRIDER boat loader. $300. 8 8 C u b i c i n c h e s , 5 35K, fairing, saddle bags (360)683-8738 s p e e d , l o c a l t r a d e , excellent cond. $2,750/ 12,500 miles. Buy here, obo. (360)808-1922 or C A N O E : 1 3 ’ , s q u a r e pay here. Home of the 5 (360)681-3023 after 6. stern, Old Town, excelle- minute approval. nt. $600. (360)797-1771. VIN#305674 $9,950 9805 ATVs CHRIS CRAFT: 26’ Randy’s Auto Sales Cavalier with trailer, 350 & Motorsports MerCruiser inboard, Bow HONDA: TRX200 4WD 457-7272 Thr uster, radar, GPS, ATV. $600. sounder, toilet with Elec- HONDA: ‘06 CRF 250X. (360)477-6547 tro Scan. $14,995. Excellent shape. $2,900. (360)775-0054 QUAD: 90 cc Eton. 2 (360)461-3415 s t r o ke, l i ke n ew. R e duced $1,300. 452-3213

9808 Campers & Canopies

9740 Auto Service & Parts PA R T I N G : ‘ 8 9 F o r d F250 4x4. LS axle, lots of good parts. $5-$400. No engine or transmission. (360)417-5583.

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

PARTING OUT: Chev. S-10, hydraulic dump bed, grill, front and back bu m p e r s, a i r s h o ck s, new radiator. $50-$400/ obo. (360)477-4838.

9180 Automobiles Classics & Collect.

Ad 1 AMC: Rare 1970 AMX 2-seater, 390 V/8, 4 spd, 95% original. $18,000/ obo. (360)928-9477.

Ad 2

CHEV: ‘56 Belair. 6 cyl., auto, 4 door, paint, interior, chrome, re-done to stock, California car, 2nd owner, always garaged. $21,000. (360)683-7789

Name

C H E V: ‘ 7 9 C o r ve t t e . L82, runs great, lots of new parts! $6,000/obo. (360)457-6540

Address Phone No.

Mail to:

LASALLE: 1938 472 Cad. with t400, disc brakes. Hot rod project. New glass, pr imered. $5,700/obo. (360)504-2583

Bring your ads to:

Email: classified@peninsuladailynews.com

3A181257

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

TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 2013 B9

L I V I N G S TO N : 1 9 8 1 Runabout. Twin hull, 14’, Hummingbird depth finder, fisherman’s weathertop, low hours Honda 30 hp motor, on Long Seaking trailer. Runs good! $5,000. (360)582-0941.

MUSTANG: 1991 h/b. 5.0 5-sp leather, PS, pb, pdl, CD 91k, new tires, rotors. $3,800. James, (360)504-2583 ROLLS ROYCE: 1970 Silver Shadow. Blue with red and tan leather. Always garaged. $7,500/obo. James, (360)504-2583

9292 Automobiles Others BUICK: ‘01 Regal Touring. 107+K mi. $3,000/ obo. (702)366-4727.

BUICK ‘02 LESABRE CUSTOM SEDAN 3 . 8 L V 6 , a u t o, A B S , power options, cruise, tilt, A/C, cassette stereo, dual front and side impact airbags. Only 58,000 original miles! C a r fa x c e r t i f i e d o n e owner with no accidents! Immaculate condition inside and out! Experience the legendary ride and reliability of a Buick sed a n ! Yo u d e s e r ve i t ! Come see the most trusted source for used automobiles for over 50 years! Stop by Gray Motors today! $6,995 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com C H RY S L E R : ‘ 0 2 P T Cruiser LTD. Silver. 93K. $4,500/obo. 457-0238. CHRYSLER ‘02 PT CRUISER This car is fun to drive! This one is has a 4 cylinder engine and a 5 speed manual trans, power windows, tilt wheel, A/C, tinted wind ow s, n ew t i r e s, a n d much more! This clean little ‘02 has just 114k miles and is priced to move! $4,750! Lipman’s Automotive IN HOUSE FINANCING AVAILABLE (360)452-5050 www.lipmansauto.com 2840 E Hwy 101 E PA 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

FORD: ‘99 F150 Lariat Super Cab. Grey interio r, 4 W D, a u t o m a t i c , camper top, bed liner, towing pkg, CD player, power seats/steer ing, CHEVROLET: ‘03 Silve- 117K, great condition. rado HD crew cab LS. 4 $6,500. (360)504-2035. NISSAN: ‘89 300 ZX. wheel drive, Truck has GMC: ‘91 2500 Extra Red. V6. Automatic. T- 158,xxx miles. $10,5000. C a b 4 X 4 . N o r u s t . (360)461-4847 t o p. M a ny n ew p a r t s. $2,500/obo. 477-2334. $4,500/obo. (360)681-3579 M A Z DA : ‘ 8 4 P i c k u p. Runs good, low miles. PONTIAC: ‘03 Bonne$1,200. (360)452-5126. ville SSEi. kreat-riding car, 90k miles, power TOYOTA: ‘05 Tacoma. everything, always garTRD, double cab, 4WD, aged. $8,500/obo. 98K mi., V6. $15,900. DODGE: 1991 D150, (360)809-0356 (360)460-6308 2wd, 3.9V6, auto, 115k, P O R C H E : ‘ 8 8 9 4 4 . 1 15-18mpg. Good glass, VW: ‘81 Diesel pickup. owner, 129,500 mi. , ex- n e w t i r e s , R a d i a t o r Excellent cond., canopy, cellent condition. $6,995. f l u s h e d , r e c e n t L O F. 50+mpg. $3,995. Runs great, starts easy, (360)452-4890 (360)452-4890 dependable truck. Full SATURN: ‘07 Aura. Low size. Would drive any9556 SUVs mi. $8,000. where. $2450/obo. (360)796-4762 Others (360)452-7439 CHEV: ‘98 S-10 4WD. 117K mi., Vortec engine, tow pkg, canopy, good condition. $4,500/obo. (360)477-4838

SCION: ‘08 XB. 40K, excellent. $12,500. (360)928-3669 SUBARU: ‘91 Legacy Wagon. 5 speed, AWD. $2,500. (360)683-5460. SUBARU: ‘96 Legacy. 2.2L, AWD, high miles, runs good. $1,750/obo (360)670-3476 SUBARU ‘97 OUTBACK AWD STATION WAGON 2.5L engine, automatic trans, roof racks, 159k miles, This one has only had two owners! This one has power windows, door locks, mirrors, rear defrost and wiper, roof racks, A/C and much more! These are great in all weather conditions and are known for superior reliability and are t o p o f t h e i r c l a s s fo r MPG with an estimated 27mpg hwy! $4,950! Lipman’s Automotive IN HOUSE FINANCING AVAILABLE (360)452-5050 www.lipmansauto.com 2840 E Hwy 101 E PA TOYOTA ‘96 COROLLA DX SEDAN 1.8L 4cyl, auto! White ext in great shape! Blue cloth int in great cond! Pw, Pdl, Pm, Cassette s t e r e o, t i l t s t e e r i n g wheel, dual airbags, A / C, 3 0 + M P G ! R e a l nice little fuel sipper at our No Haggle price of only $3,495! Carpenter Auto Center 681-5090

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! V W : 1 9 7 3 B e e t l e . One owner who loved it! $2,250/obo. $5500/obo. (360)477-3725 (360)808-6160 VW: ‘66 Bug. Excellent FORD: ‘06 Mustang. 2 shape. $5,000. door coupe, lime green, (360)457-7022 carefully driven 17,400 mi. by senior lady of Se- VW: ‘74 Classic conquim. Spotless interior ver tible Super Beetle. leather seats, auto, air $9,500/obo. Call after 6 cond. File available on p.m. (360)460-2644. regular ser vicing by VW: ‘79 Rabbit/D. 50 Ford in P.A. $14,000/ mpg, many new par ts. obo. Interested buyers $2,000. (360)928-1067. may call (360)681-8192 to view car and file in downtown area, Sequim. 9434 Pickup Trucks

Others

FORD: ‘90 Taurus Wagon. Runs fine, body OK, CANOPY: Arrow canopy has some issues. for shor t bed tr uck. $850. (360)457-4399. White fiberglass. Sliding HONDA: ‘06 Accord LX. w i n d o w. H a s l i g h t s . V6, 49K. orig. owner, re- Been in storage. $150. Phone (360)457-9393. cent maint. $12,500. (360)417-8859 CHEV: ‘78 Scottsdale HYUNDAI ‘09 SONATA M o d e l . C a n o py, r u n s good. $850. SEDAN (360)808-1115 2.4L 4 Cyl., Auto, sunroof, keyless, full power CHEV: ‘80 2 ton. ‘454’ options, cruise, tilt, A/C, engine, 4 sp, 2 sp rear C D / M P 3 s t e r e o, i n fo axle, 3’ deck with 13’ center, 6 airbags. Only dump bed, 70 gal. diesel 48,000 original miles! tank. $2,000/obo. Like new condition in(360)457-4521 or side and out! Accident477-3964 after 6 p.m. free Carfax! Think with your pocketbook! Why CHEV: ‘81 3+3. Dump buy new when you can b ox , 4 W D, 4 5 4 a u t o. get this gently used car $3,000/obo. 460-6176. for half as much? Come see why people have CHEV: ‘88 Dually. Crew chosen us for over 50 cab. $1,500. (360)477-1761 years! Stop by Gray Motors today! C H E V: ‘ 9 5 3 5 0 0 H D. $13,995 8’x15’ wood deck, GRAY MOTORS 84,760 mi., GTX 10-30 457-4901 every 3,000 mi., original graymotors.com owner. $8,500. (360)301-0050 L I N C O L N : ‘ 8 8 To w n C a r. C o z y 2 0 M P G . FORD: ‘88 3/4 ton. Runs Runs great. Good body and interior with some good. $1,000. (360)775-9669 rust spots. Good tires. Brakes redone. All accessories work, includi n g A / C, 1 3 0 k m i l e s. $1,500 or best offer. Call (360)683-1683

9932 Port Angeles Legals

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.

FORD: ‘00 F250 Sup e r C a b. Au t o 2 W D, 147K miles, tow package, power seat and windows, power sunroof, sliding rear glass window. Recent tune up and underbody spray treatment. $5,500/obo. (360)504-0300 FORD: ‘01 Ranger. 4x4, matching canopy, good running. $6,500. 1-360-269-1208 or 1-360-269-1030 FORD: ‘86 F250 XLT. Matching canopy. $1,500. 1-360-269-1208 or 1-3601269-1030.

FORD ‘93 F350 CREW CAB XLT 4X4 LONGBED 460 EFI V8, auto, B&M shift improver, K&N filter, dual fuel tanks, Ultra Alloys, 35” M/T Tires, runn i n g b o a r d s, c a n o py, bedliner, T-Pkg, T-Brake c o n t r o l l e r, P W / D L , cr uise, tilt, A/C, Kenw o o d C D. I f yo u a r e looking for a high-capacity truck that won’t break your budget, this Fo r d i s fo r yo u ! T h i s t r u ck s h ow s t h e ve r y best in care! Herculean power to haul whatever you need! The Ford F350 is a tried and true pickup ruggedly built in the true American way! Come see the Peninsul a ’s t r u ck ex p e r t s fo r over 50 years! Stop by Gray Motors today! $6,995 GRAY MOTORS 457-4901 graymotors.com

9556 SUVs Others

GMC ‘04 YUKON XL DENALI AWD 95k orig mi! 6.0L Vortec V8, auto, loaded! Dk met gray ext in great shape! Gray leather int in great cond! Dual pwr seats, moon roof DVD, 6 disk CD with Bose, quads, 3rd seat, rear air, side a i r b a g s , O n S t a r, p r i glass, roof rack, running boards, aftermarket 17” alloy wheels, and much more! A whole lot of SUV at our No Haggle price of only $13,995! Carpenter Auto Center 681-5090 GMC ‘07 YUKON 2WD, v8, auto, A/C, third seat, 22” wheels and tires, must see, 103k miles. Finance rates as low as 3.9% OAC--ask for details! Trades welcome, paid or not! VIN#317802 $15,950 Randy’s Auto Sales & Motorsports 457-7272

C H E V: ‘ 0 1 B l a z e r. 4 door, clean inside/out, overdrive, good rubber, 4WD, auto, seats fold down, r uns great, air bags, A/C. $3,000. LINCOLN: ‘04 Naviga(360)417-0277 by appt. t o r. 9 5 k , AW D, 4 X 4 , leather, seats 7 comCHRYSLER ‘08 PT fortably, good family veCRUISER 4 cyl., auto, A/C, power hicle, new compressor windows and locks, only and tabs, 6 disc changer 60k miles, local car. We and Bose sound sysfinance everyone! Credit t e r m , v e r y r e l i a b l e . u n i o n s f i n a n c i n g $12,000/obo. (360)460-5421 available OAC. VIN#156339 TOYOTA ‘03 $8,950 MATRIX XR Randy’s Auto Sales 4 cyl., automatic, A/C, & Motorsports power package, 109k 457-7272 miles. Complete finance F O R D : ‘ 0 2 E x p l o r e r r a t e s , bu y h e r e , p ay XLT. Runs good. $2,700 here. We buy cars and firm. (360)504-5664. trucks, cash! VIN#128259 FORD: ‘04 Explorer. Ex$7,950 cellent condition, new Randy’s Auto Sales tires/brakes, all power, & Motorsports trailer hitch, 102K mi. 457-7272 $7,000. (360)683-5494.

TOYOTA ‘08 FORD: ‘87 Bronco II. RAV4 4WD 4x4. $1,500. 1-360-2691208 or 1-360-269-1030. L i ke n ew ! 6 8 k m i l e s, ver y clean inside and FORD: ‘93 Explorer XLT. out, nice tires, automatic 4x4 auto, dark green, transmission, differential tan interior, looks great, locker, lots of power opruns great, 116K orig. tions, AM/FM/CD with mi., new front suspen- USB and Bluetooth, tints i o n , n ew t ra n s, n ew ed windows, great all brakes/wheel bearings, around vehicle with plennew head gaskets/timing ty of room for passenchain, new rocker arms/ gers and cargo! push rods, new radiator. $14,750! $4,900. (360)457-3744. Lipman’s Automotive FORD: ‘95 Bronco 4X4. IN HOUSE FINANCING AVAILABLE Good rubber, runs great, (360)452-5050 139k. $4,500/obo. www.lipmansauto.com (360)457-9148 2840 E Hwy 101 E PA GMC ‘02 ENVOY SLT 4X4 9730 Vans & Minivans 92k orig mi! 4.2L i6 cyl, Others auto, loaded! Pewter ext in great shape! 2 tone CHEV: ‘03 Venture ext. gray leather int in excel CARGO van. Only 13K cond! Dual pwr seats, orig. Carfax mi. 3 seats. moon roof, side airbags, $8,800. (360)457-3903. dual climate, rear air, cruise, tilt, tow, pri glass, FORD: ‘91 Van. Wheelr o o f r a c k , r u n n i n g chair lift, 97k miles, enboards, alloy wheels!! gine purrs. $3,800. VERY nice Envoy at our (360)681-5383 No Haggle price of only $7,995! HONDA ‘01 ODYSSEY Carpenter Auto Center LX 681-5090 2.5 V6, auto, A/C, 4 captain chairs, local trade. GMC: ‘98 Jimmy (Blazer). Low mi. on new mo- Home of the 5 minute tor, clean, runs great, all approval. 0 down financextras. 1st $2,900 takes ing available--ask for details! it. (360)452-6611. VIN#544160 TOYOTA: ‘92 4Runner. $4,950 4WD, V6, auto, sunroof, Randy’s Auto Sales 199,500 mi., fair to good & Motorsports cond. $1,950. 461-0054. 457-7272

9931 Legal Notices 9931 Legal Notices Clallam County Clallam County

NO. 13-3-00197-3 SUMMONS (SM) FORD: ‘94 F150 XLT. Superior Court of Washington County of Clallam Low mi., 4x4, runs good, In re the Marriage of STEVEN B. FAUBION, Petilooks good. $4,500. tioner, and REBECCA D. FAUBION, Respondent. (360)452-6758 The State of Washington to: Rebecca D. Faubion You are hereby summoned to appear within sixty FORD ‘97 F150 XLT days after the date of first publication of this sumSUPERCAB 4X4 4 . 6 L Tr i t o n V 8 , a u t o, mons, to wit, within sixty days after the 4th day of loaded! Pacific green ext June, 2013, and defend the above entitled action in in good shape! Tan cloth the above entitled court, and answer the petition int in good cond! Pw, filed in this matter by the petitioner STEVEN B. Pdl, Pm, 3rd door, Cas- FAUBION, and serve a copy of your answer upon sette st, A/C, sliding win- the undersigned attorneys for the petitioner STEdow, matching canopy, VEN B. FAUBION, at her office below stated; and in cruise, tilt, pri glass, dual case of your failure so to do, judgment will be rena i r b a g s , t o w , a l l o y dered against you according to the demand of the wheels! Real nice older petition, which has been field with the clerk of said F-Series at our No Hag- court. The subject of this action is dissolution of marriage. Dated: 6/4/13. gle price of only $4,995! Carpenter Auto Center KATHLEEN McCORMICK, WSBA#20704 Attorney for Petitioner 681-5090 708 E. 8th Street, Port Angeles, WA 98362 FORD: ‘98 F150. Rims, Legal No. 486089 tinted, black, extended Pub: June 4, 11, 18, 29, July 2, 9, 2013 cab. Quick sale. $2,775. (360)460-0518 NOTICE OF PUBLIC COMMENT PERIOD NIPPON PAPER INDUSTRIES USA CO., LTD. NATIONAL POLLUTANT DISCHARGE 9932 Port Angeles ELIMINATION SYSTEM PERMIT

Legals

CITY OF PORT ANGELES NOTICE OF MITSUBISHI: ‘03 DEVELOPMENT APPLICATION E c l i p s e. B l a ck , gr e a t c o n d . , 1 8 8 k m i l e s . NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on MAY 30, 2013, an application to perform maintenance work $5,700. (360)460-2536. in environmentally sensitive areas to control erosion NISSAN ‘03 350Z round culvert during high flow periods was received TOURING COUPE by the City’s Department of Community & Economic 3 . 5 L V 6 , 6 S p . , 1 8 ” Development. Although a public hearing will NOT Foose alloys, good tires, be conducted for the proposal, written public comtint, rear spoiler, power ment is being solicited regarding the application. w i n d ow s, d o o r l o ck s, Written comments must be submitted to the City and mirrors, power heat- Department of Community & Economic Developed leather seats, cruise, ment, 321 East Fifth St., P.O. Box 1150, Port Antilt, A/C, Bose sound, geles, Washington, 98362, no later than JUNE 19, dual front airbags. Only 2013. The application information may be reviewed 48,000 original miles! at the City Department of Community & Economic Accident-Free! Immacu- Development. late condition inside and out! It really doesn’t get STATE ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY ACT: It is anany better than this! Top ticipated that a determination of nonsignificance will of the line Touring model be issued for the proposal following the 15 day with all the extras! High- comment period which will end on June 19, 2013. d o l l a r Fo o s e w h e e l s ! This 350Z is a blast to APPLICANT: E R I C W H E AT L E Y, C i t y o f Po r t drive! Why buy a new Angeles Streets and Stormwater one when you can have Superintendent a gently used one for a great price? Come see LOCATION: 8th Street between Francis and the guys with over 50 Eunice Streets in the Peabody Creek corridor years of providing pure driving pleasure! Stop by City Hall is accessible for persons with disabilities. Gray Motors today! $14,995 For additional information please call the City of GRAY MOTORS Port Angeles Department of Community & Econom457-4901 ic Development at (360) 417-4750 graymotors.com Pub: June 4, 2013 Legal No. 485784

The Dept of Ecology invites you comment on the proposed National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System wastewater permit renewal for the Nippon Paper Industries Co., Ltd. thermo-mechanical and deinking pulp and paper mill in Port Angeles. The comment period runs June 4 - July 12, 2013.

Read the proposed permit at the following locations: Department of Ecology, 300 Desmond Drive SE, Lacey, WA, (360) 407-7393; Port Angeles Main Library, 2210 S Peabody Street, Port Angeles, WA; online at http://apps.ecy.wa.gov/industrial/proposed.asp.

Written comments may be submitted by mail, email, or fax to Robert Carruthers, P.E., Department of Ecology, Industrial Section, P.O. Box 47600, O l y m p i a , WA 9 8 5 0 4 - 7 6 0 0 , r o b e r t . c a r r u t h ers@ecy.wa.gov, Fax: (360) 407-6102.

A public meeting, followed by a formal hearing to accept oral comments will take place July 9, 2013 at the Port Angeles Main Library’s Carver Room, 2210 S Peabody Street, starting at 6:30 p.m.

The mill is located at 1902 Marine Drive in Port Angeles and employs approximately 205 people. It produced 158,270 salable tons of telephone directory paper in 2011. The mill discharges wastewater to the Strait of Juan de Fuca.

To ask about the availability of documents in a version for the visually impaired call the Waste 2 Resources Program at 360-407-6900. Persons with hearing loss, call 711 for Washington Relay Service. Persons with a speech disability, call 877-8336341. Pub: June 4, 2013 Legal No 485550

91190150

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B10

PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

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360-797-1313 $30 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER

30-DAY ANIME/MANGA RENTAL PASS ONLY 4 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

YOUR PRICE $32.50

YOUR PRICE $19.50

NO LIMIT PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON

NO LIMIT PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON

2 ADULT GUIDED RAFTING TRIP

5 TANS IN HIGHPRESSURE BED

ONLY 5 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

ONLY 4 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

YOUR PRICE $70.20

LIMIT 1 PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON

NO LIMIT PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON

NO LIMIT PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON

112 West Front St., Port Angeles

$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 4 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

YOUR PRICE $13.00

LIMIT 1 PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON

ONLY 4 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

YOUR PRICE $6.50

NO LIMIT PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON

114 S. Lincoln St. Port Angeles, WA

360-452-1118 $55 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER

360-452-7175 $20 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER MUST BE REDEEMED IN FULL AT TIME OF PURCHASE

ONLY 6 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

YOUR PRICE $13.00

LIMIT 1 PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON

LIMIT 2 PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON

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

Electrolysis 200 W. First Street Port Angeles Downtown

YOUR PRICE $16.25

1210-B E. Front St. Port Angeles

Sequim

Since 1975

110 W. First St. Port Angeles 518 N. Sequim Ave., Sequim

$25 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER

YOUR PRICE $29.25

360-457-4150

360-452-9715

$108 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER

YOUR PRICE $6.50

ONLY 2 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

YOUR PRICE $6.50

$45 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER

715 East First Street Port Angeles

LIMIT 2 PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON

Rissa’s

Spray Tanning by Hannah

565 Eureka Way

117 W. First St. Port Angeles

360-477-0715

360-808-6005

360-797-1109

$30 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER

$48 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER

ONE CUSTOMIZED SPRAY TANNING SESSION

TOWARDS 1/2 HOUR TREATMENT

$10 PROMOTIONAL VOUCHER

BY APPOINTMENT ONLY

ONLY 2 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

YOUR PRICE $19.50 LIMIT 1 PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON

NEW CLIENTS ONLY

TOWARD ANY CLOTHING OR ACCESSORY

ONLY 4 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

ONLY 4 VOUCHERS AVAIL.

YOUR PRICE $31.20

LIMIT 1 PER CUSTOMER. NOT A COUPON

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


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