Centralia City Council to Consider AAA TRAVEL SHOW $525,000 Loan for Fox Theatre / Main 3

Governor Hotel Olympia $1 Saturday, October 15 Weekend 9:30 a.m. – 2:30 p.m. (doors open 9 a.m.) Edition Saturday, RSVP TODAY! Oct. 8, (360) 704-6185 Serving our communities since 1889 — www.chronline.com 2016 Commisson Candidates At 95, She’s Still Poetic A Look at the County Commissioner Campaigns Lewis County Woman’s Poetry Attracts of Bobby Jackson and Bob Bozarth / Main 6 Attention at Twin Cities Senior Center / Life 1 Sheriff John Snaza Returns Home; Full Recovery Expected THURSTON COUNTY : No After sustaining life-threat- recouping well,” Lewis County Rob Snaza said his brother is eager to get back to his job. ening injuries in an off-duty mo- Sheriff Rob Snaza, his twin will continue recovering for the “He’s out and about, he’s Timeline for Return to torcycle crash in August, Thur- brother, told The Chronicle next couple of months, but add- walking and he’s getting his Work; Rehab Continues ston County Sheriff John Snaza Thursday. “The family is excited ed that he is expected to make a cast off on Monday, and so he returned home on Wednesday about his progress and he’ll be full recovery. A timeline has not will continue his therapy and By Justyna Tomtas and is continuing rehabilitation. back in action in just a matter of yet been set for his return back [email protected] “John is back home and he is time.” to work, but Rob said his brother please see SNAZA, page Main 16 Farewell for a Child of Sudan and Upper America Who Wed in Chehalis Basin Leaders Uniting Around Water Retention DRAFT ECOLOGY REPORT: Others Prefer Massive Aquatic Species Enhancement By Justyna Tomtas and Aaron Kunkler The Chronicle Elected officials and com- munity leaders in Lewis County have for the most part voiced their support for a water reten- tion facility near Pe Ell after taking the time to review the draft Programmatic Environ- mental Impact Study released by the state Department of Ecology last week. The Chronicle / File Photo Rachel Kuir, left, a W.F. West graduate, married James Chol Biar, right, a fellow South Sudanese refugee who was living in Colorado, in Chehalis in January 2007. please see PLANS, page Main 16

REFUGEES MARRIED IN first time since their homeland had become overwhelmed with Anderson CHEHALIS: After Surviving violence. Terror in South Sudan In 2007, the Chehalis United James and Selected as and Finding Welcome Methodist Church played host four of the to a remarkable meeting of cul- ive children County’s 911 in America, a Loss tures when one of those refugees he had with Manager That Is Felt Deeply in — now a college student and his wife, for- Chehalis supermarket worker, mer Chehalin Lewis County embarked on a new journey — Rachel Kuir, By The Chronicle marriage with one of her fellow are seen in Lewis County has selected By Brian Mittge refugees. this courtesy interim leader Dave Anderson For The Chronicle On that summer day Ra- photo. to serve as the E911 Communi- chel Kuir, a W.F. West graduate, Sixteen years ago a hand- cations manager, according to a married James Chol Biar, a fel- press release issued Friday less ful of the “Lost Children” of low South Sudanese refugee who than an hour before the court- Sudan left an African refugee was living in Colorado. The two house closed for the weekend. camp and settled down in Lewis County, finding homes for the please see FAREWELL, page Main 11 please see COUNTY, page Main 16

The Chronicle, Serving The Greater Governor Takes Action Community Garage Sale Deaths Lewis County Area Since 1889 Executive Space Stepp, James N., 93, Follow Us on Twitter Centralia @chronline Order Available May, John Clair, 73, Targets as Massive Packwood Find Us on Facebook Heroin, Sale at SWW Bragg, Clifford, 77, Centralia www.facebook.com/ Colcord Sr., Michael A., 58, thecentraliachronicle Opioid Fairgrounds Rochester Addiction Steele, Chester R., 100, Takes Shape Chehalis / Main 13 / Main 5

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News Making the Save of the Weird a “love lock” on the Brooklyn Cops Plan to Charge Dad Bridge be warned: There’ll be a in Scary Clown Mask price to pay. New York City officials on Who Followed Bus Friday announced a $100 fine for AUBURN, Mass. (AP) — Po- proclaiming your undying love lice in Massachusetts say they with a padlock on the famous plan to charge a father who wore span. a scary clown mask and followed Officials removed hundreds his child’s school bus. of locks and placed signs on the Auburn police say some mid- bridge’s pedestrian walk warn- dle-school-age children were ing violators of the fine. so scared that they hid under a But the signs aren’t without backyard deck. humor. One says “No lock, yes Police say the man followed lox” with a picture of a crossed the bus Tuesday. They posted a out padlock and a bagel and lox. picture on their Facebook page Last year, 11,000 locks were Thursday saying they intended removed to a tune of $116,000. The locks are a trend seen to seek charges of disorderly con- Matt Baide / [email protected] duct and disturbing the peace. around the world. They can pose safety and structural hazards, as Napavine goaltender Molliegh Fulleton makes a save in Napavine’s win over Onalaska in a Central 2B League girls soc- Because the charges have not cer game at Onalaska on Thursday. See more on page Sports 3 and online at www.lewiscountysports.com. been formally filed, the man’s happened in Paris in 2014 when a name was not made public. section of bridge fencing collapsed Police wrote on Facebook: under the weight of the locks. “We are hopeful that others will Notable Quote learn from this incident and not TE Jared Cook Says He repeat these types of behaviors.” Police nationwide have been Found Chicken Head in dealing with reports of clown Order of Wings “HOLD THE PHONE! You’re telling me we could fix sightings and hoaxes involving threats of violence by clowns. GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) — flooding, but killing off those demon rope-fish with Packers tight end Jared Cook got an unappetizing surprise in his 500 oscillating teeth straight out of the depths of the Some Claim Bigfoot order of chicken wings last week, a fried chicken head. Cook said he Mesozoic Era is the deal-breaker?” Spotted on Michigan found the head Tuesday as he was Eagle Nest Camera at home, eating a carry-out order Aaron VanTuyl BEULAH, Mich. (AP) — from Buffalo Wild Wings. He said columnist and sports editor Some people think they’ve Friday that he was eating his first wing when he saw the head and spotted Bigfoot on a live cam- (see page Main 9 for the full commentary) “immediately spit my food out.” era trained on an eagle’s nest in He returned his order to the Michigan. restaurant for a refund. The story The clip from a camera got attention Friday after he post- Today in History mounted on a tree near a state ed a picture of the head on Twitter. fish hatchery shows baby eaglets The restaurant chain said in a Today’s Highlight in History: of Charles and Anne Morrow Clinton in a momentous 258-176 in the nest while a dark figure Lindbergh. vote; 31 Democrats joined ma- statement: “Buffalo Wild Wings On Oct. 8, 1956, Don Larsen walking on two legs moves on In 1945, President Harry S. jority Republicans in opening takes food preparation, service pitched the only perfect game in the ground below. Truman told a press conference the way for nationally televised and quality extremely seriously a to date as the New The Detroit Free Press re- in Tiptonville, Tennessee, that impeachment hearings. and we are looking into this situ- York Yankees beat the Brooklyn ported the clip was highlighted the secret scientific knowledge In 2001, an SAS airliner tak- ation. We’ve reached out to Jared Dodgers in Game 5, 2-0. on the website of CarbonTV, behind the atomic bomb would ing off from Milan, Italy, hit a Cook and our suppliers for more On this date: which has partnered with the information.” be shared only with Britain and private jet, careened into an air- state to install the eagle cam. Cook said when he returned In 1869, the 14th president Canada. port building and exploded; all The company tells the Free Press the food, the workers apologized of the United States, Franklin In 1957, the Brooklyn Baseball 110 people on the MD-87, four the clip was captured in May. and said that his discovery meant Pierce (puhrs), died in Concord, Club announced it was accept- people in the private jet and Idaho State University Profes- his food was fresh. New Hampshire. ing an offer to move the Dodgers four people on the ground were sor Jeff Meldrum, who studies the “That doesn’t make it any bet- In 1871, the Great Chicago from New York to Los Angeles. killed. legend of the never-confirmed ter,” Cook said. Fire erupted; fires also broke out In 1967, former British Prime In 2005, a magnitude 7.6 man-ape-like creature, tells the He said he will probably not in Peshtigo, Wisconsin, and in Minister Clement Attlee died in earthquake flattened villages on newspaper the video is “interest- return to Buffalo Wild Wings, several communities in Michi- London at age 84. the Pakistan-India border, kill- ing,” but “doesn’t offer much by but he was not sure he will be gan. In 1970, Soviet author Alex- ing an estimated 86,000 people. way of compelling evidence.” able to give up wings overall. In 1918, U.S. Army Cpl. Alvin ander Solzhenitsyn was named Ten years ago: Word reached “Seeing as how it’s one of my C. York led an attack that killed winner of the Nobel Prize for the United States of North Ko- Is Love Worth $100? favorite foods, I don’t see how I 25 German soldiers and resulted literature. rea’s claim that it had exploded can give that up,” he said. “My in the capture of 132 others in In 1982, all labor organiza- a nuclear weapon for the first Brooklyn Bridge wife is a vegetarian and she’s the Argonne Forest in France. tions in Poland, including Soli- time, conducting an under- strongly encouraging I become In 1934, Bruno Hauptmann darity, were banned. ground test that defied interna- Padlocks Lead To Fines one now. ... I think it’s good ad- was indicted by a grand jury in In 1998, the House triggered tional warnings (because of the NEW YORK (AP) — If vice. Eventually I will become New Jersey for murder in the an open-ended impeachment time difference, it was Oct. 9 in you’re thinking of attaching one but not right now.” death of the kidnapped son inquiry against President Bill North Korea). The Weather Almanac

5-Day Forecast for the Lewis County Area River Stages National Map Gauge Flood 24 hr. Forecast map for Oct. 8, 2016 Today Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Height Stage Change Chehalis at Mellen St. 110s L 48.84 65.0 0.00 100s H Skookumchuck at Pearl St. 90s L 73.09 85.0 +0.01 80s H Cowlitz at Packwood 70s 60s 1.24 10.5 +0.22 H 50s Cowlitz at Randle 40s Rain Likely Rain Likely Partly Cloudy Mostly Sunny Rain Likely Matthew 3.88 18.0 +1.85 30s 65º 55º 66º 52º 67º 48º 72º 51º 63º 51º Cowlitz at Mayield Dam 20s 3.62 ---- R-05B 10s 0s This map shows high temperatures, type of precipitation expected and location of frontal systems at noon. Almanac Regional Weather Sun and Moon L H Cold Front Stationary Front Warm Front Low Pressure High Pressure Data reported from Centralia Sunrise today ...... 7:21 a.m. Temperature Bellingham Brewster Sunset tonight ...... 6:36 p.m. Yesterday’s High ...... 64 Moonrise ...... 2:16 p.m. National Cities Yesterday’s Low ...... 54 59/55 60/49 Moonset...... 11:51 p.m. Normal High ...... 67 Port Angeles Today Sun. Normal Low...... 45 58/54 City Hi/Lo Wx Hi/Lo Wx Record High ...... 84 in 1943 Seattle Anchorage 49/35 s 50/35 pc Record Low...... 30 in 1970 62/57 Boise 77/50 s 78/51 s Precipitation Olympia Ellensburg First Full Last New Boston 68/56 sh 62/47 s Yesterday ...... 0.02" 63/56 68/50 10/9 10/16 10/22 10/30 Dallas 80/58 s 82/57 s Month to date ...... 0.65" Tacoma Honolulu 88/74 s 88/75 pc Normal month to date ...0.65" Centralia 63/58 Pollen Forecast Las Vegas 86/69 s 88/71 s Year to date...... 25.23" 65/55 Yakima Nashville 76/50 s 76/49 s Normal year to date ....29.46" Chehalis Allergen Today Sunday Phoenix 91/74 t 95/73 s 72/49 Longview 65/55 Trees None None St. Louis 68/50 s 72/52 s Salt Lake City 72/50 s 76/54 s AreaWe Want Conditions Your Photos 71/51 Grass None None Vancouver Shown is today's Weeds None None San Francisco 79/56 s 75/56 s Yesterday weather. Temperatures Mold None None Washington, DC 69/54 sh 67/51 s Portland 72/52 The Dallesare today's highs and CitySend in your weather-related Hi/Lo Prcp. photo - graphs to The Chronicle for our Voices 71/53 73/52 tonight's lows. World Cities page. Send them to voices@chronline. com. Include name, date and descrip- Today Sun. Today Sun. tion of the photograph. Regional Cities City Hi/Lo Wx Hi/Lo Wx City Hi/Lo Wx Hi/Lo Wx Today Sun. Today Sun. Baghdad 102/70 s 100/73 s New Delhi 97/73 s 97/73 s City Hi/Lo Wx Hi/Lo Wx City Hi/Lo Wx Hi/Lo Wx Beijing 64/45 s 64/45 s Paris 63/43 s 59/41 s Weather (Wx): cl/cloudy; pc/partly Bremerton 62/57 ra 63/55 ra Spokane 62/51 ra 66/48 ra London 61/45 sh 59/41 s Rio de Janeiro 73/66 s 75/68 pc cloudy; r/rain; rs/rain & snow; s/sunny; Ocean Shores 60/57 ra 60/55 ra Tri Cities 73/55 pc 76/52 s Mexico City 68/54 pc 64/50 cl Rome 70/59 s 72/57 pc sh/showers; sn/snow; t/thunderstorms Olympia 63/56 ra 64/52 ra Wenatchee 66/53 ra 70/53 ra Moscow 50/46 cl 48/36 cl Sydney 64/59 cl 68/63 cl

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360-736-3900 • WWW.CENTRALIAOUTLETS.COM • I-5 EXIT 82 • BOTH SIDES • CENTRALIA CH565039kh.cg • Main 3 LOCAL The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016 Centralia City Council to Consider $525,000 Loan for Fox Theatre TUESDAY MEETING: if we don’t get the loan commit- Historic Fox Theatre ATTEND THE MEETING ment from the city and we can’t The Centralia City Council get the state money, that’s a huge Restorations Requests will consider a resolution sup- amount of money we can’t say Loan Commitment to porting the loan to the Historic we’ve raised.” Fox Theatre Restoration proj- Over the past eight years, Continue Renovations ect at its Tuesday night meet- the restorations committee has by Reaching Grant ing. The meeting will be at 7 raised almost exactly $1.5 mil- p.m. on Oct. 11 at the city hall, lion, half of which was raised in Requirements located at 118 W. Maple Street the last year alone. in Centralia. White said it is important to By Justyna Tomtas keep the momentum going to [email protected] ensure the theatre is restored. The Centralia Council on come up with the funds required “I think it’s just really impor- Tuesday will consider offering after determining that a com- tant, even though this is compli- a loan to Historic Fox Theatre mercial loan does not make good cated and you can imagine it’s Restorations in the amount of business sense. frustrating on some levels espe- $525,000. In this Sept. 14 Chronicle ile photo, a construction worker from Sterling Construc- “We’d obviously have to try to cially for me, but it’s always ex- The money has been request- tion, of Centralia, knocks away bricks from the top of the south wall at the Fox cobble together some more fund- citing,” White said. “We doubled ed in order for the restorations Theatre in downtown Centralia. ing opportunities,” White said. our fundraising for the entire committee to receive $250,000 “I mean $525,000 is a lot of mon- project just in the last year and allotted to the theater in the vide for disbursement of funds The city owns the Fox The- ey to try to get committed for a we’ve had amazing signs of sup- state’s supplemental capital bud- as needed, according to the the atre, which has a long-term lease project at this point. Ultimately port from the state, from the coal get. agenda report. with the Historic Fox Theatre if we cannot secure this in some transition board and from other To date, the committee has Scott White, president of His- Restorations. form we will eventually lose the places that say ‘you are a legiti- also received $373,000 from toric Fox Theatre Restorations, White said the city recently state money and that opportu- mate project that is important to the TransAlta Coal Transition clarified the committee is asking extended the lease for another 20 nity. That would be tragic.” the economy here, and the com- Weatherization Board, which the city for a loan commitment some years, with the option for If the loan commitment was munity.’” will be used for a project to re- to help move the project forward. the non-profit to later purchase approved, White said the theater The project at the theater is place the HVAC system, the “We can really use the help the building. will have the opportunity to be- delayed some, but White said main roof of the building, and from the city,” White said. The agenda report states that gin to look at other grant options a permit for the work has been to repoint and rebuild the south “We’re not asking for a check or any improvements made to the — many of which would come submitted to the city. wall of the theatre. even to execute the loan at this facility will help increase the val- in smaller chunks — to get the Preparations for the project According to the agenda re- time. We really just need a loan ue of the city’s asset. money committed from other have been ongoing. The parapet port, if the council is agreeable commitment that helps us meet If approved, $525,000 would organizations. on the top of the south side of the to the concept of a loan, city staff the requirement of the state.” be set aside in reserves as re- “With this commitment not theater wall has been removed, will begin the process of nego- The state requires the resto- stricted for the Fox Theatre im- only are we able to say we have helping to ease safety concerns. tiating terms. A lending agree- rations committee to have the provements, stated the agenda this money from the coal transi- “Everything above that was ment would be brought back to full amount for the project, esti- report. tion board, from the state, and leaning away from the building, the council within 30 days for mated to be $1.153 million, prior Without it, White said, the commitment from the city, it will so that whole parapet has been review and potential action. The to reimbursing the money it has restoration committee would makes us even a more attractive removed and we are actually in a terms negotiated would only pro- allotted. have to get “very creative” to grantee,” White said. “Whereas much safer position,” White said. Inmate Faces New Charge After Allegedly Flooding Cell Twice at Lewis County Jail

By The Chronicle Deputies responded to the sion sprinkler. that charge was later dropped, ment from Lewis County for An inmate in the Lewis Coun- complaint at the Lewis County The damage was estimated to Waggener was sentenced to nine “bodily injury” sustained during ty Jail has been charged with sec- Jail and found Waggener tam- cost about $900. months in jail after pleading a 2014 stint in the Lewis County ond-degree malicious mischief pered with a fire suppression His most recent jail stint be- guilty to assaulting and harass- Jail. after he reportedly damaged a sprinkler head, flooding his cell gan last month when he allegedly ing corrections officers while he The settlement stems from a fire suppression sprinkler head and the entire ground floor of kicked out a Centralia police car’s was in the jail awaiting trial on January 2014, incident in the jail twice and flooded his cell. the housing unit, according to window when he was accused of the first charge. during which officers sprayed a On Thursday at approxi- the Sheriff’s Office. assaulting another person. Waggener spent time at West- full 3-ounce can of pepper spray mately 7 a.m., Wellington Miles Deputies were called back Previous to that, Waggener ern State Hospital before being on him and for five hours did not Waggener, 27, of Centralia, was a second time at 6:30 p.m. on was last arrested in July 2015 declared competent to plead allow him to wash it off. booked into the jail for second- Thursday after Waggener report- on suspicion of burglary with guilty to those charges. Waggener told the court ear- degree malicious mischief. He edly did the same thing again, sexual motivation after he was About a month before his ar- lier this year that he does not was already in custody on unre- flooding his cell a second time accused of entering a woman’s rest on that incident, Waggener have direct access to the money, lated charges. after damaging the fire suppres- hotel room in Centralia. While was awarded a $300,000 settle- which is held in trust for him. News in Brief tomers in Washington, Oregon, ored, along with the Cowlitz lyon Beach Homeowners As- The winners, comprising Onalaska Alliance Idaho, Alaska and Montana. Tribal Housing plant and county sociation plant, the Washington around one-third of the plants in Awarded Grant for Park During the first two rural water and sewer District 6 Lake State Department of Corrections the state, were selected on their By The Chronicle grant cycles of 2016 Northwest, Mayfield plant. Cedar Creek plant, the Martin performance meeting pollution FCS has awarded more than In Grays Harbor County, the Way Facility LOTT Clean Water limits, monitoring and report- The coffers of the Onalaska $191,000 in grants. Since 2007, Aberdeen, Montesano, Ocean Alliance plant and the Thurston ing requirements, spill preven- Alliance received a boost this week when the grant program be- Shores, Westport and Elma water County Tamoshan plant received tion planning, pretreatment and when the group was awarded a gan, 587 rural grants have been plants were honored, along with recognition. Wastewater plants overall operational demands of $1,500 rural community grant by awarded to the tune of $1,138,050. the county’s Pacific Beach plant. clean water before it is discharged their water quality permit, a re- Northwest Farm Credit Services. Feb. 1, 2017, is the deadline In Thurston County, the Car- back into the environment. lease from Ecology said. “Thank you for the gener- for the next batch of rural grants. ous donation to Onalaska Al- Additional information on the liance as we develop Carlisle grant program can be found Lake Community Park,” said onine at northwestfcs.com/Stew- Cathy Murphy, president and ardship/Rural-Communities. chairman of the board for the Onalaska Alliance, in a press re- lease. “The grant will be used in Three Lewis County the first stage of a day-use area as we establish the border of the Wastewater Plants playground area. This includes Honored by Ecology cutting out trees, clearing out the brush and leveling the ground to By The Chronicle establish the boundary for the The state Department of Ecol- playground. Your partnership in ogy honored 119 wastewater treat- this project is greatly appreciated.” ment plants across the state that Northwest Farm Credit Ser- achieved full compliance with vices is a financial cooperative water quality permits in 2015, for farmers, ranchers, agribusi- including plants in Lewis, Grays nesses, commercial fishermen, Harbor and Thurston counties. timber producers, rural home- In Lewis County, the city of owners and crop insurance cus- Centralia’s water plant was hon- The Associated Students of Centralia College Present

Rick Shenkman’s Election 2016 – My name is Wendy Kinswa and I would like to tell you about my stay at Prestige Post Acute & Rehab – Centralia. How Will You Decide? The personnel are friendly, helpful and want to make your stay a good one. The therapists are all very nice and want to get you back on your feet. At 6:30 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 12 times I felt like they were pushing me too much but then I realized that they Corbet Theatre - Washington Hall want to help you get stronger so that you can return home. The nurses and aides also do their part to help you. The nurses make sure Centralia College you take your medications and the aids are busy running back and forth to Free and open to all get you what you need and they deliver your meals to you. If you need help eating, they do that too. All the ofice staff are friendly and help connect you to the services you Join TV pundit Rick need. Kris heads up the activity program where there are plenty of things to do. It’s been a nice stay but it is time for me to go home. Shenkman on a one-hour Wendy Kinswa romp through American politics and you’ll never be a Prestige Post Acute victim of political BS again. & Rehab Center - Centralia Questions? 360-736-9391, ext. 224 [email protected] 917 S. Scheuber Rd., Centralia,Wa. 98531 Office: 360-736-9384 • Cell: 360-880-9384

Centralia College does not discriminate against any person on the basis of race, color, national CH565106kh.do origin, disability, sex, genetic information, or age in admission, treatment, or participation in its CH564606hw.cg programs, services and activities, or in employment. All inquiries regarding compliance with access, Fax: 360-736-6284 equal opportunity and/or grievance procedures should be directed to the Vice President of Human Resources and Legal Afairs, Centralia College, 600 Centralia College Blvd, Centralia, WA 98531, or email: [email protected] call 360-736-9391, ext. 671. Main 4 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016

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CH564966bw.do • Main 5 LOCAL The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016 Monthly Housing Report: Listings in Lewis County The Chronicle is published Tuesday and Thursday evenings and Decrease; Closed Sales Remain Almost Unchanged Saturday mornings by Lafromboise Communications, Inc. MISSED OR LATE PAPER? By The Chronicle ago, with 387 reported in Sep- with 107 reported in September, had 4.43 months of inventory. Delivery deadlines: Listings in Lewis County’s tember. In August, there were a 3.88 percent increase from a Areawide, two months of Tuesday and Thursday ...... 5:30 p.m. 420 listings reported. year ago. inventory was reported for the Saturday ...... 7:30 a.m. housing market are starting to Missed papers will only be credited up to 2 weeks, decline, while the number of Pending sales have also ap- The median price of a home month of September. PLEASE call us immediately Monday - Friday at closed sales have stayed fairly peared to slow in comparison to in Lewis County has increased Numbers for the 23-county 360-807-8203 or leave us a message on our after hours consistent compared to numbers August, but remained only one 13.21 percent from a year ago, service area of the MLS showed line at 360-807-7676 number short of the September and was reported at $180,000 in new listings were up 14.5 percent Tuesday ...... 5:00 - 7:00 p.m. last month and a year ago. Thursday ...... 5:00 - 7:00 p.m. According to numbers re- 2015 number with 131 reported September. That’s lower than the overall. Pending sales increased Saturday ...... 7:30 - 10:30 a.m. leased by the Multiple Listing last month. median sale price in August of by 9.3 percent, closed sales in- Service this week, the county Neighboring counties of this year, when it was $188,750. creased by 9.5 percent and prices TO SUBSCRIBE had 92 new listings in the month Thurston and Grays Harbor also Lewis County had 3.62 of homes and condominiums To start a new subscription or to schedule a vacation months of inventory in September. stop or restart, visit www.chronline.com or call cus- of September, compared to 130 saw a drop in active listings from also went up by nearly 9 percent. tomer service at 807-8203 or (800) 562-6084, ext. in August. In September 2015, numbers a year ago, reporting a A balanced market is considered Inventory for single-family 1203. Monday - Friday ...... 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. there were 93 new listings. 2.58 percent and 7.2 percent de- to be between four and six months. homes and condominiums Active listings have seen a de- crease, respectively. The number Thurston County had 2.29 across the service area reported TO PLACE CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING crease of more than 27 percent of closed sales in Lewis County months of inventory in Septem- about an 8 percent decrease from Call 807-8203 or (800) 562-6084, ext. 1203, or visit from numbers released a year have stayed pretty consistent ber, while Grays Harbor County a year ago. www.chronline.com. Monday - Friday ...... 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Classified / Legals / Obituary Manager Amanda Curry ...... 736-3311 ext. 1277 Spaces Available for Community Garage Sale at Fairgrounds [email protected] OFFICE LOCATION AND HOURS By The Chronicle 321 N. Pearl St., Centralia The annual Fall Community Monday - Friday 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Garage Sale will return to the Southwest Washington Fair- SUBSCRIPTION RATES grounds Saturday, Oct. 22. Newsstand weekday rate ...... $1 The sale will feature more Newsstand weekend rate ...... $1 than 200 vendor booths in seven Home delivery buildings. Most vendors will One month ...... $12.90 Three months ...... $35.15 be selling garage sale type mer- Six months ...... $65.15 chandise, but there also will be One year ...... $122 crafters, a few commercial ven- By mail to Washington and Oregon/Other States dors and several antique and col- One month ...... $17.05 / $19.60 lectible sellers. Three months ...... $50.50 / $58.80 Schools, churches, service Six months ...... $99.15 / $115.40 clubs and nonprofits are also en- One year ...... $194 / $227.45 couraged to participate in this Online subscriptions to chronline.com One day ...... $2 event. The sale is all indoors or un- One month ...... $8 der cover and goes on rain or shine. One year ...... $84 Vendor booth space is avail- Print subscribers always have full access to chronline.com. Subscriptions are non-refundable but the printed sub- able until Friday, the day before The Chronicle / File Photo the sale. Spaces are $45 for a scriptions can be started and stopped for vacations or The crowds attending the Spring Community Garage Sale at the Southwest Washington Fairgrounds rummage through sale 10-foot-square area, which in- when extended breaks in service are requested. Balances items in 2015. With hundreds of vendors selling everything from warm cozy quilts to the cold hard steel of medieval sword may be held on account or can be donated to Newspapers cludes one table, two chairs and blades, there was something for everyone. in Education. vendor gate passes. Vendor spac- es are not rented on sale day. BACK ISSUES The Fall Community Garage ets are on sale at the fair office. 12 and under are admitted free this or other events at the fair- Limited copies of back issues of The Chronicle are avail- Gates are open to the general with an adult. Parking is free in grounds, call (360) 740-1495 or able at $1 per copy. Back issues greater than two weeks Sale is one day only. Early-bird old are $2 per issue. shoppers can enter at 8 a.m. for public 9 a.m.-4 p.m. General ad- fair lots. go to www.southwestwashing- $5. Early-bird admission tick- mission for adults is $1. Kids age For more information on tonfair.net. THE NEWSROOM For news tips, corrections or story ideas, please contact the appropriate person listed below. EDITOR State Department of Health Disciplines for Area Health Workers Eric Schwartz ...... 807-8224 [email protected] PUNISHMENT: Lewis tical nurse credential of Christy Registered nurse Carolyn inadequate records and using an Sports Editor L. Bamberger. Her license was J. Boundey was charged with inappropriate billing code. Aaron VanTuyl ...... 807-8229 County Nurse Suspended previously suspended by the unprofessional conduct by the Information about health [email protected] for Diverting Medication; Colorado State Board of Nursing Nursing Commission after she care providers is available on Visuals Editor in 2014. failed to comply with terms of the DOH website at doh.wa.gov. Pete Caster ...... 807-8232 Clark County [email protected] The Medical Commission probation. Visitors to the webpage should Police, Fire, Courts, Environment, Psychologist Charged withdrew an amended statement The Agency-Affiliated Coun- click on the “How Do I” section West and Central Lewis County Communities With Unprofessional of charges against physician selor Program charged agency- for more information. The site Natalie Johnson ...... 807-8235 Sheila M. Smitherman. affiliated counselor Eric Nolan includes detailed information [email protected] Conduct After Taking The secretary of health in- Johnson with unprofessional about the license status of health Outdoors, Flood, definitely suspended the certi- conduct after he allegedly took a Rural Lewis County Communities Patient to Nude Beach care workers, including the expi- Jordan Nailon ...... 807-8237 fied nursing assistant credential client to a nude beach where he ration and renewal date of their [email protected] By The Chronicle of Samuel C. Eggert. Last year, exposed himself, made explicit credential, disciplinary actions Education, Business, South Thurston County The Washington State De- Eggert entered into a diversion sexual comments and inappro- and copies of legal documents Communities, Napavine, Lewis County Govern- ment, Legislature, Tourism, Religion, partment of Health recently re- agreement requiring him to priately touched the client. issued after July 1998. The infor- South Lewis County Communities leased a list of at least 80 health participate in drug and alcohol Psychologist Christopher K. mation is also available by call- Justyna Tomtas ...... 807-8239 care professionals from around abuse evaluation and treatment, Johnson entered into an agree- ing (360) 236-4700. [email protected] the state who were disciplined in but then failed to respond to a ment with the Psychology Board Health care consumers who Sports, News and Photography June and July for various infrac- Department of Health inquiry. that releases him from a 2014 think their provider has acted Matt Baide ...... 807-8230 tions. There were three actions tak- agreement, fines him $2,000, re- unprofessionally are encouraged [email protected] The Health Systems Qual- en in Cowlitz County. quires him to practice under su- to report their complaints. Sports Reporter Steven Elliott Crane had his pervision and mandates he pur- Lars Steier ...... 807-8230 ity Assurance Division works [email protected] with boards, commissions and registered nursing assistant cre- sue continuing education. The Death Notices, What’s Happening, advisory committees in order to dential denied by the secretary agreement is a result of Johnson Opinion, Letters to the Editor, Voices set licensing standards for more of health after it was discovered providing an inadequate patient Doug Blosser ...... 807-8238 than 80 health care professions, that he lied about his criminal evaluation and delaying the [email protected] ranging from medical doctors to history on his application. submission of another patient’s October 7 - 13 [email protected] veterinarians. The Psychology Board evaluation. Johnson also created [email protected] charged psychologist R. Russ a dual relationship with a patient Church News Regionally, health care work- Pete’s Dragon • PG [email protected] ...... 807-8217 ers were reprimanded in Lewis, with unprofessional conduct by evaluating the patient to form Noon - Saturday & Sunday Senior Media Developer after Russ allegedly failed a re- an expert opinion for use in liti- Thurston, Grays Harbor, Pacific 3:00 pm - Fri., Sat., Sun., Mon., Brittany Voie ...... 807-8225 and Clark counties. quired ethics program. gation and treated that same pa- Tues., Wed., hurs. [email protected] In Lewis County, the Phar- The secretary of health ended tient instead of referring them to THE CHRONICLE probation for certified nursing another provider. macy Commission suspended PUBLISHER the pharmacy technician cre- assistant Matthew Daniel Levi The Massage Program Snowden • R 6:00 pm - Fri., Sat., Sun., Mon., Christine Fossett ...... 807-8200 dential of Jamie M. Stemkoski St. John. charged massage practitioner [email protected] for two years after she admitted In Grays Harbor County, Rawle A. Morris with unpro- Tues., Wed., hurs. Regional Executive Editor to diverting medication from a Kenneth Allen Boice was condi- fessional conduct after Morris Michael Wagar ...... 807-8234 pharmacy where she was em- tionally granted a chemical de- allegedly failed to provide ade- Jason Bourne • R CH564550kh.do [email protected] ployed. pendency professional credential quate proof of having completed 9:00 pm - Fri., Sat., Sun., Sales Director Brian Watson ...... 807-8219 There were four actions taken by the secretary of health. Boice required continued education. Mon., Tues., Wed., hurs. is required to comply with condi- Chiropractor Nicholas M. [email protected] in Thurston County. Circulation Manager The Nursing Commission tions imposed when he received Peck was charged with unprofes- Minor with parent before 7 pm only Anita Freeborn ...... 807-8243 came to an agreement with reg- a chemical dependency profes- sional conduct by the Chiropractic $4.00 All Ages • Under 11 - $2 [email protected] 112 N. Tower Ave. • Centralia • (360) 736-1634 istered nurse Rebecca Lynn Tay- sional trainee credential in 2014. Commission for allegedly keeping The Chronicle Print Division and Sign Pro lor that requires her to submit to In Pacific County, Nicole Sales Director evaluation via a substance abuse Marie Leone had her registered Chantel Wilson ...... 807-8213 monitoring program. Taylor pre- nursing assistant credential in- [email protected] Design Director viously tested positive for mor- definitely suspended by the sec- Valley Brewing lood LL Kelli Erb ...... 807-8211 phine after she was observed to retary of health after she admit- F C [email protected] be impaired at work at a skilled ted taking narcotics that were nursing facility. intended for a patient. Homebrew beer, cider, mead, wine, LAFROMBOISE COMMUNICATIONS, INC The Nursing Commission There were five actions taken and home made soda supplies. PRESIDENT, COO also reinstated the licensed prac- in Clark County. Christine Fossett ...... 807-8200 Monthly and private brewing [email protected] Business Manager News in Brief classes offered. Mary Jackson ...... 807-8207 [email protected] smoke coming from the second Also darts, billiards, No Injuries in House Fire Director of Production and IT floor, according to a press release. live entertainment, Jon Bennett ...... 807-8222 on North Prairie Road Fire units immediately start- and special events. [email protected] South of Chehalis ed extinguishing the fire and Printing and Distribution ...... 807-8716 were able to keep it contained FAX NUMBERS By The Chronicle to the kitchen and the common area because the family kept Advertising Fax ...... 736-1568 Lewis County Fire District Classified/Circulation Fax ...... 807-8258 5 units responded to a report of their doors shut in the residence. Obituaries ...... 807-8258

a kitchen fire located in the 300 No injuries were reported. CH564388kh.os Newsroom Fax ...... 736-4796 block of North Prairie Road Housing accommodations for (360) 388-8289 128th VOLUME, 36th ISSUE south of Chehalis at 7:30 p.m. on the victims have been made with 434 NW Prindle St. THE CHRONICLE (USPS - 142260) Wednesday. a nearby family. District 5 units Chehalis, WA POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Chronicle, When the first fire units ar- were assisted by Lewis County 321 N. Pearl St., Centralia, WA 98531. rived at the scene, they found a Fire District 6 and the Winlock The Chronicle is published three times a week at 321 N. Pearl St., Cen- two-story structure with light Fire Department. tralia, WA, 98531-0580. Periodicals postage paid at: Centralia, WA. Main 6 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016 ELECTIONS

Board of Lewis County Commissioners: District 2

Pete Caster / [email protected] Pete Caster / [email protected] Bobby Jackson poses for a portrait at The Chronicle oices on Wednesday, Nov. 18, 2015, in Centralia. Lewis County Commissioner candidate, Bob Bozarth, poses for a portrait last year in Centralia. Bobby Jackson Says Bob Bozarth: ‘We’ve Got He Offers ‘Reasonable to Be Brave’ on Budget Approach’ to County Issues and Battling Bureaucracy CAMPAIGNING: Radio Broadcaster, While he said timber is important, CAMPAIGNING: Lewis County bringing it back would require a long- ELECTION COVERAGE Former Minister Identifies Businessman Promises term fight with state and federal authori- See stories on Edna Fund and Dan Flooding as the Biggest ties for control. Until then, he said the Focus on Finances and Keahey, the candidates for the board county needs a backup plan. of Lewis County Commssioners in Issue in Lewis County “I don’t think [timber] will ever be Over-Regulation District 1, in the upcoming Tuesday By Aaron Kunkler what once was,” he said. “Can we bring By Aaron Kunkler edition. it back to some degree of relativity to our [email protected] area? I think we can, but it’ll be an ongo- [email protected] Republican Bobby Jackson is run- ing fight.” Bob Bozarth is a local businessman ated with criminal arrests, housing and ning for the District 2 seat on the Board Jackson said attracting modern in- and contractor who says his campaign is prosecution are priorities for him. of Lewis County Commissioners against dustry to recoup falling timber revenue focused on tackling the budget, stream- Indigent defendants cost the county a Bob Bozarth, who registered as an inde- would also help balance the county bud- lining the county’s permitting process lot of money, which may result in poten- pendent. get. and lowering crime rates. tial criminals either not being arrested, Jackson is a radio sportscaster and For Jackson, this requires marketing Bozarth, an independent, is running booked or incarcerated. has nearly 30 years of experience in sales the county’s assets, a skill which he said for the District 2 seat on the Board of “I think [officers] are backing off on a lot and public relations. He said the top two has been honed over the years as a sales Lewis County Commissioners against of this stuff simply because they cannot af- issues he would address if elected are representative and public relations spe- Bobby Jackson, a Republican. ford to put people through the process,” he mitigating flood damage and jumpstart- cialist. “One of the biggest things we’ve got to said. “I don’t have a great answer for that, ing the economy by attracting a modern “I believe the county is desperately in get under control is the budget,” he said. but I think it’s something that we need to industry. need of someone who understands mar- “We’re all over the place trying to figure get on the table and start talking about.” “I think the top issue is flood mitiga- keting, that understands how to build the this thing out.” Bozarth, 62, is a W.F. West High tion and the fact that we are ... at the cusp correct perceptions of our county and If elected, Bozarth said he would dive School graduate and said he received on- of finally pulling together possibilities also someone who understands business,” deeper into the budget than just line the-job training before starting his busi- and solutions,” he said. “The one solution he said. item expenses and see how and where ness, Bozarth Underground Utilities and that stands out above all the others is the Jackson, 58, lives in Chehalis and is county revenue is generated and where Excavation, LLC., more than 30 years ago. water retention system.” married with three children and eight it is going. He’s also intent on creating He and his wife of nearly 33 years The water retention system he referred grandchildren. He works at the KELA/ a three-month reserve, which the county live on the outskirts of Napavine. They to is one of four alternatives presented in KMNT and has some college education could use to fund operations in the case have four children and six grandchil- a state-funded environmental study that from Southwest Baptist University in of a disaster or emergency. While cur- dren. He’s the father of former Napavine lays out an option of creating a dam near Missouri and Darton College in Georgia. rent commissioners say they have that Mayor Nick Bozarth. Pe Ell to deal with floodwaters. The draft He’s a former minister. reserve, Bozarth said he is not convinced. While Bozarth said there may be environmental report was released last If he is elected, Jackson said he will In dealing with the permitting pro- better candidates in Lewis County who week. begin working to heal perceived divides cess, one which Bozarth said he’s come didn’t file, his personal character is what Coupled with a dam, Jackson said lo- between the commissioners’ office and to know well while operating his con- gives him his edge in this race. cal environmental mitigation projects the community. tracting business, he said he would “I don’t know everything there is to to aid the native fish population is the “It’s time for the county to have a com- streamline the process. know about being a county commis- county’s best bet at tackling the persistent missioner in the District 2 seat who is rea- He gave credit to current commission- sioner, and I know that there’s a lot more problem. sonable in his approach to business and ers who began a process to simplify per- qualified people out there that could Second, he is focusing on the effects of his approach to employer relationships mitting in the county, but said it wasn’t probably do a lot better job,” he said. a receding timber industry, one he doesn’t and his approach to the community at enough. Bozarth said state and federal “The reason they should vote for me for think will rebound to its former levels. large,” he said. “It’s time for a reasonable regulations have overburdened business- being county commissioner is because “We have to begin thinking about the approach, and I am that guy.” es in the county, and that he would use of my honesty and my integrity and I do future and that’s where industry and Jackson said his forward-thinking his position on the board of commission- have a general knowledge of government technology comes in,” he said. “We have approach to policy is in the interest of ers to push back against bureaucracy. at the county level.” to be forward thinking. Any community the next generation of leaders and Lewis “If we don’t, what are we going to be He said the county needs to be based that wants to survive, especially in the County residents. left with in a few short years?” he said. in constitutional governance, which pro- economy that we’re dealing with in Lewis “It doesn’t end with me, I have a period “We’ve gotta be brave about it.” tects personal property rights as well as County right now, have to be thinking of time to accomplish the things that I Also high on his to-do list is tackling being transparent. about how we can set things in motion.” need to accomplish, the things that God crime in the county, and particularly “I’m a quick learner when it comes He pointed to projects aimed at bring- has given me to accomplish,” he said. Centralia and Chehalis, where he said to picking up on stuff,” he said. “I don’t ing broadband internet to the county as “When I’m done, I need to hand the baton the crime rates place the cities in a league think it’s going to take me very long to one of critical importance, and one that off to the next generation.” with larger municipalities such as Taco- get my feet on the ground.” could begin to attract technology and Jackson and Bozarth advanced to the ma, SeaTac and Yakima. Jackson and Bozarth advanced to the modern industries to the region. Nov. 8 general election automatically af- “We don’t need that here in Lewis Nov. 8 general election automatically after Providing tax incentives and a techni- ter incumbent Bill Schulte chose not to County,” he said. incumbent Bill Schulte chose not to file for cally trained workforce are also critical file for reelection. Schulte is currently on Figuring out how to reduce incar- reelection. Schulte is currently on leave as he pieces of the calculation, he said. leave as he seeks treatment for cancer. ceration and administrative costs associ- seeks treatment for cancer. A Look at the Voter Base State Releases Registered Voter Figures: Lewis County at About 45,000

By The Chronicle some 45,000 active registered Grays Harbor County has istration must be completed by as Department of Motor Vehi- As of Wednesday, there were voters out of a population of around 40,000 active registered midnight. Since Monday, Oct. cles offices or post offices, in ad- nearly 4.2 million active regis- around 75,000. voters in a county of some 71,000 10, is a federal holiday, counties dition to county auditor offices. tered voters in Washington state, In Thurston County, there people. will be honoring an Oct. 11 post- For more information on according to a press release by are nearly 171,000 active regis- Washington residents can mark on mail-in applications. registering to vote, visit https:// the Secretary of State’s office. tered voters out of a total county register to vote until Oct. 10 in- In-person applications may www.sos.wa.gov/elections/regis- In Lewis County, there are population of more than 262,000. person or online. Online reg- be completed at state offices such ter.aspx. The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016 • Main 7 LOCAL / NORTHWEST

Tenino Health Department Announces Hepatitis A Woman to Diagnosis for Worker at Chehalis Grocery Store Compete for PRECAUTIONS: There Have became aware of the virus after precautions to ensure the safety fever, loss of appetite, abdominal a blood test following an opera- of their customers. No cases of pain, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea State’s ‘Best Been No Cases of Virus tion. Hepatitis A associated with the and jaundice. Associated With Self- “We sanitized the bakery bakery have been reported, ac- Symptoms usually develop Bagger’ Title completely, threw away any- cording to the county. two to seven weeks after expo- Reported Notification thing that possibly could be con- John Abplanalp, county sure, and some infections may By The Chronicle By The Chronicle taminated,” he said. community services manager, have very mild or no symptoms. A Tenino woman will Customers who were not vac- All his employees wear gloves said Hepatitis A is uncommon However, it usually resolves compete for the title of cinated against Hepatitis A and and tested negative for Hepatitis in the county since hygiene has itself within a few weeks and Washington State’s Best Bag- ate decorated cakes or cupcakes A, McDaniel said. improved over the past few de- does not lead to a chronic infec- ger on Oct. 12 as she faces off from the Chehalis Shop’n Kart People who may have been cades and a vaccine is widely tion the way other hepatitis in- with eight other contestants between Sept. 22 and Oct. 6 may exposed in the past two weeks available. fections can, Abplanalp said. from across the state. have been exposed to the virus, can contact their health care He also said they have no in- It can be dangerous for peo- Lori Holt, of Tenino according to Lewis County Pub- providers for guidance, accord- dication it has spread. ple with liver damage or condi- Market Fresh, will compete lic Health and Social Services. ing to Lewis County Public Hepatitis A is a viral liver dis- tions, especially other types of at the McGavick Conference A press release said a bakery Health and Social Services. ease that is spread from person hepatitis, he said. Center in Lakewood to see worker with the virus was re- The release also said the to person by fecal-oral contact, Abplanalp also urged resi- who will represent the Ev- ported to the health department store contacted Lewis County often by inadequate hand wash- dents who have not been vacci- ergreen state in the national on Oct. 6 by the business. Public Health and Social Servic- ing after using the restroom or nated to do so and prevent the competition, according to a Shop’n Kart owner Darris es as soon as they became aware changing diapers. possibility of contracting hepati- press release from the Wash- McDaniel said the employee of the infection and have taken Symptoms include fatigue, tis A in the future. ington Food Industry Asso- ciation. The Best Bagger Battle is sponsored by the associa- tion’s education foundation. The competition is open to all grocers from around the state. The first-place winner will receive a cash prize of $2,000 and an all-expenses paid trip to compete next February in the 2017 Na- tional Grocers Association Best Bagger Championship in Las Vegas. “Washington has a proud

history of accomplished gro- The Associated Press cery baggers, taking home Elaine Thompson / the National best Bagger In these Sept. 14, photos, Pierce County Executive Pat McCarthy, left, Democratic candidate for state auditor, speaks at the AWB Policy Summit in Cle Elum. Sen. Mark title three of the last four Miloscia, right, R-Federal Way, Republican candidate for state auditor, speaks at the same summit. years,” stated the release. Each contestant will compete in two rounds, and Different Experiences Provide Contrast in State Auditor's Race the top three baggers will like homelessness, which cities advance to the final round. CAMPAIGNING: Successful The first round contestants Candidate Will Be and counties around the coun- will be required to fill three try are trying to combat with paper bags, according to the Charged With Rooting ‘‘The most important element is that populist limited resources. release. Second round con- Out Waste and Fraud nature, that connection with citizens, the "I was very, not just disap- testants will fill three reus- pointed, but pretty upset Sen. able bags. in Government watching out for the public dollar.’’ Miloscia would use a backdrop of homeless people and a press Contestants will be By Gene Johnson judged based on speed, conference to say that perfor- The Associated Press Brian Sonntag mance audits are going to eradi- proper bag building tech- former state auditor nique, distribution of weight SEATTLE — One is a state cate homelessness," she said. between bags, style, attitude senator with a background in "It's just a ludicrous statement. and appearance. conducting audits. The other ... Performance audits could po- Contestants are required runs one of Washington's big- tentially help with some of those to spend more than 25 per- gest county governments. insisted on his innocence, and Miloscia called it an outrage issues, but it's no silver bullet." cent of their working hours So which kind of experi- rejected calls for his resignation and suggested that if elected he McCarthy concedes that ex- bagging groceries as a regu- ence is more important in the from Republicans and Demo- might audit Seattle's approach to perience in auditing might be larly assigned duty. All ages Washington state auditor's race crats alike. He returned to work drug enforcement. a bonus for a state auditor, but are able to participate. between Republican Sen. Mark last December. A federal jury "We need somebody in the says what the office really needs The competition will be Miloscia and deadlocked on the main charges State Auditor's Office who's go- is someone who can lead a large at 3 p.m. Oct 12 at the Mc- Democratic Election against him in the spring, and ing to focus on accountability agency: "You don't need a pilot Gavick Conference Center at Pierce County he decided not to seek re-elec- and eliminating waste in gov- to run Alaska Airlines." Clover Park Technical Col- Executive Pat tion. The U.S. Attorney's Office ernment and solving the real Miloscia's counter: "If that's lege, located on Steilacoom McCarthy? 2016 in Seattle said it will try him problems we face, homelessness, the case, by her definition she Boulevard Southwest in Not neces- again next year. dysfunctional mental health sys- could go now manage the Se- Lakewood. sarily either, Beyond the notion of re- tems, improving transit agencies, ahawks or be attorney general." says Brian storing confidence in the office, all those issues," he said. McCarthy has raised about Sonntag, who however, the candidates have McCarthy calls such com- $136,000 to Miloscia's $127,000. ran the audi- different visions for how they'd ments a distraction — such For his part, Sonntag says News in Brief tor's office for run it. performance audits make up he's not endorsing either, after 20 years before retiring in 2013. Over the past three decades, a small fraction of the office's Sprung, the candidate he sup- Centralia Public "The most important element McCarthy has been a Tacoma work — and says they under- ported, failed to make it out of is that populist nature, that con- school board member, deputy state the complexity of problems the primary. Works Department to nection with citizens, the watch- county auditor, elected county ing out for the public dollar," auditor and finally county ex- Flush Fire Hydrants Sonntag said. "If an agency is ecutive. During the Next big enough to have a good man- She says she has a deep un- Pole Buildings agement structure in place, you derstanding of how local gov- Three Weeks don't have to reinvent auditing ernments work, one that would On Sale Now! By The Chronicle and you don't have to reinvent give her good perspective as the office plumbs the operations of The Centralia Public Works management. You need to be agencies around the state. Site Prep Department will begin flushing able to work with the team that exists with that eye on commu- Miloscia, a Democrat- Available fire hydrants on Monday, Oct. turned-Republican, served 10. The process will continue nicating with citizens." The auditor is the elected seven terms in the state House through the city for approxi- of Representatives before his 24’x24’x10’ 24’x24’x10’ mately three weeks, according to official charged with rooting election in 2014 to the Senate, Machine Storage 2 Car Garage a press release from the depart- out waste and fraud in govern- ment operations. It employs where he chairs the Account- ment. about 350 people around the ability and Reform Committee. The routine flushing of hy- state and is tasked with ensur- A former B-52 pilot, he says he drants helps remove sediment ing governments from sewer gained crucial experience by from the main water lines and in- • 4” Concrete w/Fibermix Reinforcement districts to statewide agencies auditing Boeing programs for • 18” Eave & Gable Framed Overhangs troduces fresh water to dead-end have adequate financial controls the Air Force. • 3’x6’-8” Steel Insulated Walk-In Door lines. • Optional Concrete Is Available • (2) 10’x8’ Steel Panel Overhead Doors and abide by applicable laws Miloscia won the August • 2” Vinyl Back Roof Insulation • 2” Vinyl Back Roof Insulation To flush the hydrants, water and their own policies. The of- primary with 37 percent of the has to be expelled in large quan- fice conducts about 2,400 audits vote, but the two Democrats in 24’x36’x10’ 38’x30’x10’ tities at a high velocity from the a year and helps train officials the race — McCarthy and Se- 2 Car Garage & Workshop Monitor RV Storage mains through the fire hydrants. on how they can improve their attle attorney Jeff Sprung — to- Drivers and pedestrians in the operations — for example, by gether collected 53 percent. Centralia area are urged to use helping county planning depart- Since then, Miloscia has caution when they observe water ments streamline their rules so run an aggressive campaign • 4” Concrete w/Fibermix Reinforcement flowing from fire hydrants, stated that stressed his belief in the • 18” Eave & Gable Framed Overhangs they can issue building permits • 4” Concrete w/Fibermix Reinforcement • (1) 12’x12’ Steel Panel Overhead Door the release. more quickly. power of audits to improve • (2) 10’x8’ Steel Panel Overhead Doors • (1) 10’x8’ Steel Panel Overhead Door Households should also check government and his harsh criti- • 3’x6’-8” Steel Insulated Walk-In Door • (1) 3’x8’ Steel Insulated Walk-In Door It also conducts "perfor- • 2” Vinyl Back Roof Insulation • 2” Vinyl Back Roof Insulation their water supply prior to wash- mance audits," which evaluate cism of what he sees as waste ing clothes or doing other water- the effectiveness of government and incompetence. He held a 30’x48’x12’ All Buildings Include: using activities to keep turbid wa- activities. news conference in Seattle to RV - Boat - Car & Workshop � 2” Vinyl Back Roof Insulation � 18 Sidewall ter from being used. Both McCarthy and Milos- criticize the city's approach to & Trim Colors � Free Estimate � Designed Customers might want to con- cia have said a key priority is homelessness, saying it needs for 85MPH Wind � Exposure B + 25lb. duct those activities before 7:30 "adult supervision" and doesn't Snow Load � Building Plan � Construction erasing the pall cast over the � Guaranteed Craftmanship a.m. and after 5 p.m. during the office by Auditor Troy Kelley's know whether the millions of • 4” Concrete w/Fibermix Reinforcement 30’x36’ � Permit Service • (1) 10’x10’ Steel Panel Overhead Door CH564595hw.do next three weeks to avoid times federal fraud indictment in early dollars it's spending are doing Prices do not include permit cost or sales tax & are based on a level • (1) 10’x8’ Steel Panel Overhead Door accessible building site w/less than 1’ rock fill. Non commercial usage, when water quality might be dis- 2015. Kelley, a Democrat from any good. • (1) 3’x6’-8” Steel Insulated Walk-In Door price maybe affected by county codes and/or travel considerations. Ad turbed. Tacoma, was accused of keep- He also criticized King • 2” Vinyl Back Roof Insulation prices expire one week from publish date. Prices reflect Lewis County only. For more information on how ing $3 million he should have County's proposal to create safe Jorstad’s Metal Buildings a particular area of the city will be refunded to customers of his injection sites where heroin ad- www.jorstadmetalbuildings.com affected, or to learn more about former real-estate services busi- dicts can use drugs under med- 360-785-3602 the flushing activity, contact the ical supervision, an approach ness about a decade ago, before 243 Bremgartner Rd. • Winlock, WA 98596 Public Works Department at he was elected. public health advocates say Lic#jorstmb843dq • Owner: Josh Johnson • [email protected] (360) 330-7512. Kelley took a leave of absence, will save lives. In an interview, Main 8 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016

Columnists, Our Views, Richard Lafromboise, Publisher, 1966-1968 Christine Fossett, President J.R. Lafromboise, President, 1968-2011 and Publisher Opinion Letters to the Editor Jenifer Lafromboise Falcon, Chairman No Education Plan, but Costly State Worker Contracts Proposed Gov. Jay Inslee’s budget of- lawmaker, state Sen. John Braun, As the state emerges from office. The involvement of the fice is proposing $500 million in Our Views Centralia. The Republican com- the Great Recession, there are public, and members of the Re- contracts for state workers in 38 state’s workforce. mented on the contracts — and indeed good reasons for boost- publican party, would provide a employee unions. That number All the while, Inslee has the possibilities of approval by ing pay for workers who have greater ability to reach a mutual includes raises for 50,000 state still failed to bring forward a the Legislature — during an in- seen their wages frozen during compromise that would create a workers totaling roughly 6 per- proposal to deal with funding terview with The News Tribune years of financial challenges. smoother road for the proposals cent over two years, according to of the state’s public education this week. The State Patrol, included in during the upcoming legislative The News Tribune. system, which has seen little “It’s about $500 million the proposed raises, deserves session. The proposals came after per biennium in general fund to see additional pay on par Lawmakers will find it chal- advancement in the years since customary, secret negotiations (money), but in total, it’s about with those of their colleagues in lenging to manage the costs of between the Governor’s Office the landmark McCleary deci- $1 billion,” Braun said. “It’s a ton other agencies. That’s a senti- Inslee’s proposals with the grow- and the unions, discussions sion. The state Supreme Court of money, I don’t know where it ment the Legislature has already ing demands for a solution on that remain closed to the public. on Thursday upheld a $100,000 all comes from.” codified in legislation approved education. They’re also cast against the a day fine against the state as He noted that some of the last year. On that matter, we’re still backdrop of a gubernatorial a task force works to come to a proposed raises outpace the Still, it’s yet another reminder waiting on a plan from Inslee, election year in which Inslee solution. rate of inflation, and questioned of the potential value in opening something that was promised stands to benefit politically by On the state contracts, we whether such large raises are the state union negotiations be- last time he was elected yet still offering more money to the share the concerns of our own necessary. yond the Governor’s own budget eludes the voters of this state. COMMENTARY: Editor’s Note How to Cope With Bad Press: Rip the Messenger The easiest and least labor-inten- It seems to me that by noting the sive way of dealing with bad press is company was “unhappy” with the to criticize it or allude to nonexistent coverage, it’s implied that the cover- inaccuracies. age was incorrect. It’s a tactic featured prominently I’d like to hear the alternate in- in this year’s presidential race, and terpretation of the quotes. I see little one I was disappointed to see at room for another meaning. The Tuesday’s debate hosted by the Lewis quotes weren’t manufactured. They County Chapter of the Washington were surprisingly authentic. There Realtors Association at the Veterans was no request for a correction or Memorial Museum. clarification on behalf of the com- The topic was economic develop- pany, even when the opportunity to ment and, to the surprise of no one, do so was offered by Pesanti. the discussion turned to the long- Yes, the company chilled on pro- eyed industrial park being marketed viding comment to The Chronicle by commercial real after the story was published. I’m estate giant Bena- sure Alhadeff would have worded roya in Winlock. his responses to our questions in The Chronicle pub- a more diplomatic way if given a lished a widely-read second chance. Squabbling with the and illuminating county in a public forum does the Letters story on the topic company no favors when it comes to Kirby Opposes Contract, But Fails in September 2015. finding tenants. But the substance LETTERS POLICY It was written by of the story struck the target, along to Show Up for Board Meeting award-winning By Eric Schwartz with a lot of nerves in the halls of • Limit letters to the editor to 500 words or journalist Dameon Lewis County government. I was so happy to read that Centralia School less. Pesanti, who At the time, none of the county’s Board member Neal Kirby is in support of sal- • Include the town where you live and a earned numerous industry accolades commissioners — including Fund — ary increases for teachers. He knows teachers daytime telephone number. for his government reporting before were aware of Benaroya’s plans to put are hard-working individuals who work end- • The Chronicle does not publish letters that taking his talents to The Columbian the land up for auction until being less hours and pay for basic supplies out of advocate boycotts of local businesses. their pockets. in Vancouver. contacted by The Chronicle. That, in • Emailed letters are preferred. Send to An executive with the Bellevue itself, lends additional credence to However, I don’t understand why Kirby is [email protected] • Letters may be mailed to Letters, The company was very critical of ele- a strained relationship between the opposed to the newly negotiated contract, but failed to attend the school board meeting to Chronicle, 321 N. Pearl St., Centralia, WA. 98531 ments of Lewis County government developer and the county. or dropped off at The Chronicle’s front desk. and said the process was made more So why would anyone be unhap- cast his vote for or against the contract. If you difficult than it needed to be. The py with the coverage? don’t show up to vote, you don’t have the right story included strong quotes reflect- to criticize the vote of those who showed up The implication seems to be that Hopefully, Kirby will propose this in fu- ing genuine frustration on behalf of and did their jobs. the error was made in publication; ture negotiations. Believe me, increasing sala- the real estate company. At least, I can respect someone who shows that we should have merely acted as ries would bring a good amount of peace with Joe Alhadeff said the county said a sounding board for this irritated up, stands up and votes no, as in Jami Lund’s case, all the while disagreeing respectfully. But all teachers. Oh, but wait, for Kirby to do that, “one thing out of one side of their real estate executive, rather than re- he would have to actually be at a school board mouth” while “making the process so lay the information on to our readers. Kirby’s absence and subsequent attacks on his fellow board members is cowardly. And the meeting for a critical vote. Well, it was a nice difficult that nobody wants to do it.” In case there’s a genuine mis- idea anyway. “I don’t want to sound like I’m understanding of how this news- reason he didn’t show up? Kirby was on vaca- crying or whining, but it’s counter paper sees as its role, let me explain tion. The elected official, voted by the commu- Nancy Herzog productive to have staffers that con- something about our newsroom: Chehalis stantly throw up roadblocks. … It’s Our reporters are not the friends of nity to carry out the business of the Centralia brutal. It’s just brutal,” Alhadeff said. politicians. They are not supporters School District to the best of his ability, was on He said word of Benaroya’s strug- of specific corporate agenda. They vacation. Funny thing is, I was at the school Democrats: Don’t Waste Your Vote; gles would trickle through to other do not support specific policies or board meeting when Kirby was sworn into of- developers in the Pacific Northwest. projects. Their job — their duty — is fice, promising to “faithfully discharge the du- Mark Your Ballot for Clinton “And you know what they’re go- to use the resources we have (limited, ties of the office.” This is an open letter to my fellow Demo- ing to get told? (Lewis County) is but greater than any current alterna- Since taking office, he has missed six board crats. I know from my recent caucus experi- a pain in the butt and they delay tive sources) to provide information meetings. He is not following through with his ence that many of you favored Bernie Sanders. things and beat stuff to death and to our readers. Not just press releases oath, but, boy, is he quick to criticize the other But the simple truth is that he will not be the never let you get to the goal line. or carefully crafted messages from board members who show up for work. Kirby next president of this country. Nor will Gary Then people say there’s better places official channels, but real, honest-to- asserts that the district is being unfair to new Johnson or Jill Stein be the next president. to do business. It’s sad because that goodness news. teachers because more experienced teachers The next president will either be Donald county needs jobs and economic de- It’s a difficult and daunting job. get paid at a higher rate. Trump or Hillary Clinton. Now the choices velopment,” Alhadeff said. We fail at times. There are stories The Centralia School District does not set become much clearer. You will be asked to When pressed on the topic by we never get to, issues that remain the rate of pay for teachers. The salary sched- choose between an egomaniac who confuses challenger Dan Keahey Tuesday, uncovered as a function of trying ule is set by the Washington state Legislature. himself with the second coming of Christ and Lewis County Commissioner Edna to provide a true cross section of School districts can choose to pay their teach- a person with extensive government experi- Fund seemed to question the The Lewis County life for our subscrib- ers more than the state salary schedule, but ence, and a tendency to shade the truth when Chronicle’s coverage. ers, whether it’s a 3,000-word story they cannot pay less. attacked. “I’ve been up there,” she said of on flood mitigation policy or a short Teachers receive salary increments for the I suspect for some of you this will not be Benaroya’s corporate office. “I’ve writeup on a bunch of senior citizens first 16 years of their career. However, salaries easy, because you want a morally pure choice. talked to those individuals. Some of striving to build the world’s largest become stagnant for teachers with more than But in this country politics are more often the the people were not too happy, hon- rubber band ball. 16 years of experience. A training day paid possible, contending with the impossible, and estly, with the press coverage that When journalism is at its best, at per diem does allow for more experienced there are no morally pure choices, nor will came out last fall. And they said ‘we though, it’s challenging people with teachers to earn more money than a new teach- there ever be. want to work with you.’” power and exposing information er. This is the same in the Centralia School So do not waste your vote on either John- In response to a notification that that would otherwise be unavailable District as it is across the state. son or Stein. Voting for either will be a vote for I would be publishing this column, to the public. Kirby has an interesting idea to pay all Donald Trump, and against Hillary Clinton, Fund added that the claim came If our Benaroya story doesn’t fit teachers the same salary for a training day. If and Trump is simply too great a danger to be from the company itself, and that at that bill, then nothing does. the Centralia School District would like to considered. least one executive will not be talk- ••• raise the pay of the new teachers to the per ing to the press ever again and feels Eric Schwartz is editor of The diem of a teacher at the top of the pay scale, I Larry Scott he was misquoted. Chronicle. would fully support this innovative idea. Centralia

Editorial Mission Statement Letters Policy To Send Your Letter Questions n We will strive to be the voice of reason for the n Please type opinions, if possible, and limit let- n Address letters and commentaries to “Our n For questions on a letter call Doug Blosser at peaceful settlement of conflict and contention ters to 500 words. Shorter letters get preference. Readers’ Opinions.” Please sign them and include 807-8238 or toll-free, 1-800-562-6084, ext. 1238. on key local issues. We will work to be fair at all Contributors are limited to publication of one your full address and daytime telephone number for verification and any questions. Send them to times and to provide a balance of opinions. We item every two weeks, with exceptions as war- Editorials will make our opinion pages available for public 321 N. Pearl, Centralia, WA 98531. E-mail letters can ranted. Items submitted are subject to editing and be sent to [email protected]. n Editor Eric Schwartz can be reached at (360) discussion of vital issues and events affecting will become the property of this newspaper. Po- 807-8224, or by e-mail at eschwartz@chronline. the quality of life in Lewis County and adjoining etry is not accepted. com. regions. When necessary, we will be willing to take a tough, definitive stance on a controver- sial issue. • Main 9 OPINION The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016 Power Rankings: A Reasonable, Balanced Look at Flood Options

The Chronicle ran a pretty rooting everyone along the river to support two — maybe even big front-page story on the De- COMMENTARY: VanTuyl’s Views and interrupting families, local three — lakeside resort towns. partment of Ecology’s options economies, tradition, commerce, Who’s going to pay for this see what else is on the table. Council is having an epiphany for the future of the Chehalis education and probably a bridge hole/lake? The flood, that’s Part 2: Also a Dam (also right now, thinking “Oh! Why River Basin. club or two. who. Much like President(ial south of Pe Ell, with a big reser- didn’t we think of that? Fix Let’s be candidate) Trump, we’ll just voir). This one’s not expected to flooding ourselves! What a honest, the So, those are the options, al- demand the flood cover all costs be popular with “people.” And, novel concept!” Meanwhile the story was though there’s one notable idea for what we see as the solution what’s more, it would likely state, in this alternative … will long enough absent on this list, brought to to the problem it’s created. If mean the elimination of lamprey continue to try to buy up river- to drown out light by Chronicle Visuals Editor the flood’s got so much money in the upper basin. HOLD THE your attention front property for land restora- Pete Caster. it doesn’t need to work or pay PHONE! You’re telling me we span (my FIRST tion. This option is alternatively ALTERNATIVE FIVE: Dig a Hole. taxes, it can surely cover the flood pun of the could fix flooding, but killing called the “keep doing what’s You know where excess water cost of digging a big hole. It’s day!) The long off those demon rope-fish with worked so well for the last 50 goes when it floods? The ground, like asking someone to pay their 500 oscillating teeth straight out years” play. and the short By Aaron VanTuyl that’s where. And if the ground own mortgage, really. This will, of it: The state’s of the depths of the Mesozoic is lower, it can hold more water however, wreak havoc on the ALTERNATIVE FOUR: got four options Era is the deal-breaker? Just ic- Buy ’Em before we reach flood stage. It’s county’s Accounts Receivable that might solve flooding. Since ing on the cake if you ask me. Out. For somewhere in the simple thermodynamics, a sci- department, which will start by you have a job, or a life, or may- We’re not talking about beauti- neighborhood of $1.8 billion, entific field I don’t fully under- sending tersely-worded “past be a TV program that requires ful salmon or even sharks, for this option presupposes that stand. due” bills addressed to “Flood,” 30 of your daily waking minutes that matter. The lamprey’s the the owners of some 16,000 So, the plan: Dig a really, and eventually turn the debt and didn’t have time to read the type of thing you show teenag- acres along the Chehalis River really, impossibly big (“innova- over to a collection agency, whole thing, let ME do the com- ers as a cautionary tale on prom will take a buyout (that’s about tive”) hole. Look up the Bing- which will send representatives prehension legwork for you! night. If clearing that goblin out $112,000 an acre, by my shaky ham Canyon Copper Mine, to the shore of the Chehalis Riv- the water table is part of the deal, math). Land purchases would which is in Utah (so, really, not er to shout at the passing water. ALTERNATIVE ONE: (This one I’m on board. have to be voluntary. Knowing all THAT innovative; Utah isn’t “I KNOW YOU CAN HEAR actually has two sub-options, one or two landowners along exactly renowned for its progres- ME! ARE YOU TOO GOOD which is kind of a hoodwinking ALTERNATIVE TWO: Save the that particular river, I’m posi- sive ideas). Check out the size of TO PAY YOUR BILLS SIR?!” on the state’s part.) Freeway. This option dinks tive this would pass with flying that hole! That’s a great place to What will this do to the fish? Part 1: Build a Dam (bigger around with levees and walls colors. put the extra water! Fish love lakes! Just, like, throw than any similar flood retention and will more or less keep the “Why, the state wants to buy Now, naturally, there’s going some fish in there. dam ever built, a mile south of water off of I-5 in the event of my land, which has been in my to be some questions, so here’s Does this lake have a name? Pe Ell). It’s called “innovative,” a(nother) hundred-year flood. family for generations, to solve the answers. Pete’s Lake, of course. (If you’re which — at least in terms of Where’s the water go so that flooding? Where do I sign?! If How will the water get there? behind this idea, feel free to getting a bunch of government travelers can safely go from Seat- unloading this putrid chunk With some hoses or a levee or use “For Pete’s Lake” as a catch- entities to commit to something tle to Portland in cars while you of hideous real estate had ever something, probably. Although phrase.) — basically means “unlikely” or and I go from Centralia to Che- at any point in history been an if it’s big enough, gravity will What if we just piped all the at the very least “far-fetched.” halis on jet skis? Your basement, option I would have absconded draw the water into the hole. flood water down to Califor- The dam would only be used if if you’re lucky, and your upstairs years ago! As everyone knows What if it gets full? Ha! A nia, where it seems like they’re it floods … But if it does its job, bedroom if you’re not. real estate in Adna is downright hole that size could never get always running out of water? there won’t be any floods, so impossible to move! Thank the full. Don’t be ridiculous, this is obvi- isn’t building it a self-defeating ALTERNATIVE THREE: Fix Your stars the government is here to And if you slope the sides ously a serious discussion. prophecy? It’s like building a Own Stuff. This option takes take this pristine riverfront farm right, we’ll have a massive lake ••• robot designed to destroy robots; major state-funded projects off off my hands!” after one flood-level event (sci- Aaron VanTuyl is The Chronicle the first robot it detects will be the table and lets municipali- One of the stated benefits: entific citation needed). Think of sports editor and a Saturday colum- itself and it’ll immediately turn ties flood-proof their own stuff, This option facilitates natural the tourism dollars that would nist. His weekly ranking of the news its repulsor rays inward and which seems like a no-brainer. processes instead of interrupting flow in with a massive man- is largely satirical. Send feedback to commit robo-Hari-Kari. Let’s I don’t think the Chehalis City ecosystems, as opposed to up- made lake. It’d be big enough [email protected]. Letters Centralia School to provide the information. And, It was truly remarkable to see. its full potential while focusing if approved, adding items to LETTERS POLICY I was asked four years ago on pressing needs and solutions, Board Member the board agenda will require a why I thought Edna was the “one” and by her working together on board majority. • Limit letters to the editor for the job of county commis- the state, county or city level Laments Resistance to I've asked for protocols al- to 500 words or less. sioner. My answer then, and still with the drive, enthusiasm and Protocol Discussion lowing a member to keep confi- • Include the town where to this day, remains the same — ambition this county needs. dential who brings up an issue, you live and a daytime “She matters because she believes Please join me in supporting On Oct. 19, the Centralia telephone number. thinking the board member • Letters may be mailed to that we matter. She believes in and voting for Fund for Lewis School Board will discuss its can share the response with the preserving our yesterdays, fac- County commissioner. operating protocols. I've tried to Letters, The Chronicle, 321 constituent. When I brought up N. Pearl St., Centralia, WA. ing our many challenges of today, change the protocols to make issues on Medicaid, the state and is dedicated to making our Lisa Betts issues more transparent and to 98531 or dropped off at The attorney's general office wrote tomorrow the best that our com- Edna J. Fund Campaign, Onalaska allow board members to be bet- Chronicle’s front desk. there were widespread efforts by munities has ever seen!” ter informed and free to develop the district to discredit me, as- I’ve also had the distinct data to help them in policy deci- Support for Alternative sertions not validated by the in- privilege and honor of witness- sions and evaluations. Fund Still ‘the One’ for terim superintendent's internal ing this dedication along with her Three Flood Solution What I've encountered is investigations. County Commission compassion for others, which is more proposed restrictions in I support Alternative Three Most staff will not share con- exceptional, for our community amendments to the protocols. It’s been an absolute privilege for the Chehalis Basin Flood cerns for fear of repercussions. members first-hand while door One protocol I couldn't of mine to work side-by-side as Plan. Alternative Three is the I've asked about issues I've heard, belling very long hours through- change requires members "take a volunteer with Commissioner $600 million dollar alternative out the county with her. I saw responsibility for board deci- only to have my character im- Edna Fund on her campaign. I’m that has nonstructural flood pro- Edna send get-well wishes to a sions, regardless of how one pugned for not sharing who told impressed with both her profes- tection. Alternative One is the woman who had fallen, and listen voted, and not share a different me. sionalism and work ethic. She’s $1.2 billion dollar alternative, for to a man for several minutes talk opinion outside the board meet- Steve Warren as interim dedicated to listening and mak- a dam near Pe Ell, thus hurting about how his town is struggling. ing." wrote me, when denying infor- ing the necessary changes in all of our fish, the salmon that And, while she heard from sev- I'm not supposed to publicly mation, that I manipulate data to order to get the job done. Her we depend upon. eral people about the challenges discuss opinions differing from my own ends. level of expertise and dedica- Please read the Chehalis Ba- and downfalls that so many board majorities. Rather than address possible tion to community, where she’s sin Flood Plan Alternatives. We In trying to get information, errors in my data, I got a char- currently serving as an elected people in our county are facing, need to educate ourselves as to the district office has refused to acter attack. Board members Lewis County Commissioner, is either being losses of wages and how these alternate plans will im- provide much information, even should be able to protect most top-notch. income, or businesses closing, pact our cities and our rivers and denying public record requests. confidential sources (excepting Four years ago, when Edna while trying to adjust, cope, and fish. Do we want to pay the rich Most of my requests are simply personnel complaints). approached me about working stay afloat in their homes, apart- landowners along the I-5 freeway copying a document or sharing If the district wants public on her campaign, I jumped at the ments, campers or wherever they for their land grab in the flood documents in the district office. trust and support, improved pro- chance. I really didn’t know what could find shelter. She listens be- zone? Do we want to restore the I was also denied attendance at a tocols and transparency in how it was I was jumping into, but boy, cause she believes in all of us, her natural floodplain along the riv- literacy curriculum conference it conducts business is crucial. it sure came to me about halfway community, and county and for ers? Does our state have this kind attended by over 40 staff in Bos- Certainly as a board member, I through one of the many pa- that reason, we matter. of money to pay for this massive ton. should be able to get information rades that we were in! As a new- I believe Edna can take Lewis construction work that Alterna- When we hired the human to help form policy and evaluate bie to all of the politicking, I was County to the next level as coun- tive One will demand? Thank resources director, the board was the district. overwhelmed by the amount of ty commissioner because of her you for your time. told none of the applicants mer- hard work and many long hours outstanding ability to tackle any ited an interview. Without an Neal Kirby Edna dedicated to her campaign, situation head-on, her strong Lee Rimmer application, interview, or evalu- Centralia School Board member not to mention the community. desire to see our county reach Olympia ation of his performance as the interim superintendent or ex- planation why average buildings' scores on the state achievement Great Gifts & Terrific Buys index fell from third highest in the county to 11th during his ONE DAY ONLY! year as interim, Steve Warren Shop was appointed. My requests to discuss it in Save the date! executive session before his ap- pointment or review the applica- Shopping Wednesday, November 16th tions were denied. How do we evaluate the su- Local The Chronicle’s Call-In Sale! perintendent if we can't review his work? Local I've asked for more informa- Call The Chronicle at 807-8203 Wednesday, Nov. 16th tion on remedial programs. I've & Save Big asked for copies of corrective to Shop Local & Save Big! letters, if any, of staff involved in online gambling on district ALL ITEMS START AT computers reported to the state 25% OFF RETAIL gambling commission. I've asked 10AM - 11AM FEATURED ITEM for details on the expenditure of Check out $500,000 a year more than Cheh- REMAINING ITEMS REDUCED TO (10) $50 Sunbird alis spends in "additional pay" to The Chronicle teachers listed by OSPI. I haven't 35% OFF RETAIL for weekly Gift Cards received these items. 11AM - NOON featured items! CH565131bw.os A majority of board members ANY ITEMS NOT SOLD has now endorsed a change in information requests that allow 50% OFF RETAIL the superintendent to appeal to NOON - 1PM the board chair, and the chair ONLY ONE ITEM OR GIFT CARD FROM EACH BUSINESS MAY BE PURCHASED PER CALL gets to advise on whether he has Main 10 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016

Sirens, Court Records, Records Lotteries, Commodities Sirens CENTRALIA POLICE DEPARTMENT lia. He was cited and released for misdemeanor warrant. block of Northwest Louisiana Av- in the alley scaring children at the Cash Stolen alleged driving on a suspended • At 9:49 a.m. on Thursday, enue who asked an employee if he elementary school. The reporting license near Oxford and Warsaw police arrested and booked Bri- had cyanide because he “wanted party said they could not see the • At 4:04 p.m. on Wednesday, streets. anna L. Gallion, 26, of Centralia, to get it over with now.” clown, but heard kids screaming police received a report of stolen • At 5:52 p.m. on Thursday, on an outstanding warrant. • At 4:29 p.m. on Thursday, “there is a clown.” cash from a business in the 1100 police cited and released Michael • At 3:05 p.m. on Thursday, police received a report of people block of Harrison Avenue. The L. Harris, 58, of Morton for al- police arrested and booked Josh- asking for money in the 1600 block Dog Locked in Vehicle case is under investigation. leged third-degree driving with ua L. Harris, 45, of Centralia, for of Northwest Louisiana Avenue. a suspended license in the 1100 an outstanding warrant. The individuals were reported to • At 11:49 a.m. on Thursday, Domestic Assault Results block of Scammon Creek Road. look excited and nervous. police received a report of a dog in Arrest • At 4:50 p.m. on Thursday, locked in a vehicle barking in the CHEHALIS POLICE DEPARTMENT 1300 block of Northwest Louisi- Arrests Pills Found police received a report of a • At 8:43 p.m. on Thursday, person who said a vehicle kept ana Avenue. police arrested and booked Ge- • At 11:33 a.m. on Wednesday, • At 10:35 a.m. on Thursday, driving slowly in front of his res- rardo Pichardo-Sanchez, 25, of police arrested and booked Clar- police received a report of pills idence in the 200 block of South- Head Injury Reported Centralia, for alleged fourth-de- issa A. Lopez, 29, of Centralia, for found on the floor in the 1500 west 10th Street. The man said • At 1:10 p.m. on Thursday, gree assault, domestic violence, block of Northwest Louisiana an outstanding warrant. he grows medical marijuana. police received a report of a man after officers responded to a • At 12:06 p.m. on Wednes- Avenue. in the 1200 block of Bishop Road physical dispute in the 1100 block day, police arrested and booked Runaway Juvenile who sustained a head injury. He of Long Road. Items were broken Jason R. Slight, 46, of Centralia, Shoplifter Arrested and Booked and another person was injured. for alleged possession of meth • At 11:36 a.m. on Thursday, was transported to Providence • At 10:36 a.m. on Thursday, and an outstanding warrant. police received a report of a ju- Centralia Hospital. police received a report of a fe- Thefts • At 3:03 p.m. on Wednes- venile in the 300 block of North- male shoplifter outside of a gro- day, police arrested and booked west Georgia Avenue who stole Syringes Found • At 10:29 a.m. on Thursday, cery store in the 1600 block of James L. Mead, 25, of Centralia, $25 from his grandmother and police received a report of a sto- Northwest Louisiana Avenue who • At 3:31 p.m. on Thursday, for an outstanding warrant. ran away. len bright blue three-wheel bicy- was not cooperating. She was re- police received a report of a • At 4:48 p.m. on Wednesday, cle in the 1300 block of Harrison strained until officers arrived. No woman who said she found two police arrested and booked Mi- Lost Mattress Avenue. other information was provided. syringes on Southeast Spring chael S. Cabe, 34, of Montana, • At 3:08 p.m. on Thursday, • At 3:53 p.m. on Thurs- • At 8:30 p.m. on Thurs- Street. for an outstanding warrant. police received a report of stolen day, police arrested and booked day, police received a report of • At 11:13 p.m. on Wednesday, money in the 1300 block of Alex- Rachelle L. Heat for allegedly a mattress in the middle of the Erratic Driver ander Street. police arrested and booked Levi roadway near Front and Pacific shoplifting in the 1600 block of • At 4:58 p.m. on Thursday, S. Ramirez, 28, of Centralia, on Northwest Louisiana Avenue. streets. Driving with a Suspended an outstanding misdemeanor police received a report of a dark warrant. Possible Clown red small truck speeding and License • At 12:57 a.m. on Thurs- Suspicious Circumstances driving erratically on Interstate • At 7:53 p.m. on Wednesday, day, police arrested and booked • At 10 a.m. on Thursday, po- Sighting Reported 5. The driver reportedly cut off police cited and released Miriam Christian T. Winterholler, 43, lice received a report of a man who • At 11:47 a.m. on Thursday, other vehicles and flipped the re- Solorio Alvarado, 29, of Centra- of Centralia, for an outstanding said he was in a store in the 1300 police received a report of a clown porting party off.

Make This The Year You Pre-Plan ments are under the care of Cattermole 42-43-48-49-52-54-55-59-65-66-69 Death Notices Funeral Home, Winlock. Funeral Planning ahead of ime means: • JAMES N. STEPP, 93, Centralia, died • CHESTER R. STEELE, 100, Chehalis, died Tuesday, Sept. 27, at Mother Joseph Care Wednesday, Oct. 5, at Ellen’s Place Commodities • Your family knows your wishes Center, Olympia. A potluck celebration Adult Home, Chehalis. Service details Gas in Washington — $2.71 (AAA of • Your loved ones are relieved of inancial issues of life will be 2 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 19, at are pending. Arrangements are under Washington) • Emoional, costly decisions are avoided Fort Borst Park Kitchen 2, Centralia. the care of Cattermole Funeral Home, Crude Oil — $49.55 per barrel (CME Winlock. • You have peace of mind knowing you have • JOHN CLAIR MAY, 73, Packwood, died Group) Saturday, Oct. 1, at home. A graveside Gold — $1,256 (Monex) given your family a loving git service is scheduled for 1 p.m. Friday Silver — $17.52 (Monex) Call Gary to schedule a Pre-Planning appointment or for at Evergreen Cemetery, Packwood. Lotteries advice on how to start the conversaion about inal wishes Arrangements are under the care of Brown Mortuary Service, Morton. Washington’s Thursday Games Corrections • CLIFFORD BRAGG, 77, Centralia, died Powerball: ••• CH564554kh.os Saturday, Oct. 1, at home. At his request, Next jackpot: $91 million OUR LEWIS COUNTY no services will be held. Arrangements The Chronicle seeks to be accurate Mega Millions: ARRANGEMENT OFFICE are under the care of Cattermole Funer- and fair in all its reporting. If you find 1126 S. Gold St., Suite 208 Next jackpot: $41 million an error or believe a news item is incor- Centralia, WA al Home, Winlock. • MICHAEL A. COLCORD SR., 58, Rochester, Match 4: 07-10-13-16 rect, please call the newsroom as soon died Sunday, Oct. 2, in Centralia. No ser- Daily Game: x2-2-2 as possible at 807-8224, between 8 a.m. For Appointments Call 360-807-4468 Available 24/7 vices are planned at this time. Arrange- Keno: 08-13-16-18-19-20-27-29-36- and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Richard "Tony" Anton Pannkuk COME HAVE Beloved Husband, Father, Grandfather, Uncle and Brother LUNCH ON US July 7, 1947 - Oct. 3, 2016 CREMATION PRE-PLANNING DON’T MAKE A $1300 MISTAKE Compare us to Prices as of 9/1/2016 Neptune Society! Neptune Our Plan Worldwide $ $ (compares to our Worldwide plan) 2,718 1,324

0% Interest Financing • Lock in Today’s Prices for Life • Local Coverage Available No-pressure lunch-n-learn seminars are happening in your neighborhood every week! Tony was greatly loved and will be missed dearly... Country Cousin 1054 Harrison Ave, Centralia Funeral Mass: Wednesday, October 12 ...... 11:00 am Thursday, October 13, 2016, 1:00 p.m. Wednesday, November 2 ...... 11:00 am CH565011bw.cg Bethel Church, Chehalis Space is limited so reserve your seat now at cremationsocietyseminar.com or call Graveside Service: Dan at 253.831.2646 Following Funeral Mass Grand Mound Cemetery Celebration of Life Potluck: Following Graveside Service Riverside Fire Authority, James "Jim" 1818 Harrison Ave., Centralia Richard “Tony” Anton Pannkuk, 69, of Rochester, Wash., passed away Nathan Dec. 24, 1922 - Sept. 27, 2016 near Prince George, Canada, Oct. 3, 2016. He was born July 7, 1947, Stepp in Olympia, Wash., to Edward and Pearl Pannkuk. Tony grew up on the family farm with his ive brothers and four sisters. James Nathan "Jim" Stepp In 2002, he retired from Lewis County Fire District 12 (Riverside) was born Dec. 24, 1922, in as Assistant Fire Chief, after 25 years of service. Tony spent most of his adult life Brownwood, Mo., and passed supporting his community as the former Fire Chief for the Rochester Fire Department and away Sept. 27, 2016, in teaching CPR to high school students. At his 50 year class reunion, Olympia, Wash. Tony received the Distinguished Alumnus Award in recognition He was the irst-born child of his outstanding lifetime achievements. of William E. and Clara Helen (Walker) Stepp. He was an avid outdoorsman and spent his years in retirement pursing his passion Jim was preceded in death of traveling the world, hunting, skiing, writing for outdoor magazines and producing by his parents; wife, Norma hunting videos. He was a life member with the Guide and Outitters Association of British H.; brothers, Bart, Ivan, Kenny Columbia and an active National Rile Association member. Tony passed away of a and John; sister, Marilee heart attack in the mountains of Prince George, British Columbia, while hunting moose Doernbecher Childrens' Chandler; his irst wife and and wolf. He had a charismatic personality with a wonderful sense of humor and was a Hospital Foundation (TAX ID mother of his daughters, consummate teacher and mentor who touched the lives of many. He was never shy about 93-05795889), Mail Stop 45, Carroll Arnold. He is survived stopping and talking to strangers or giving a helping hand to someone in need. by his daughters, Jill Johnston P.O. Box 4000, Portland, Ore., and Sharon Turner; sister Cora 97208-9852. Tony is survived by his wife of 31 years, Pam; ive children, Michal, Glidden of Longview, Wash.; A celebration of life potluck Whitney, Lori (husband Doug), Hobe (wife Shoni) and Rich (wife Gaby); many loving grandchildren, will be held at Borst Park 10 grandchildren; and four great-grandchildren. kitchen 2, Centralia, Saturday, great-grandchildren and great- He was preceded in death by his grandson, Justin Anderson. great-grandchildren; nieces Nov. 19, 2016, at 2 p.m. Take and nephews; and many friends I-5 Exit 82. Feel free to share At the family’s request, donations may be made to Riverside Fire District from Ryderwood, Packwood stories. Cards may be sent c/o in Centralia or West Thurston 1 Fire District in Rochester. and Chehalis. Jill Stepp Johnston, P.O. Box To view this obituary, please go to chronline.com/obituaries. In lieu of lowers, Jim 221, Vader, WA 98593. Sticklin Funeral Chapel 1437 South Gold requested donations to Oregon Condolences may be offered at To view the obituary, please go to Centralia, WA 98531 Health & Science University, chronline.com/obituaries. www.sticklinsfuneralchapel.com (360) 736-1388 • Main 11 RECORDS / FROM THE FRONT PAGE The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016

Lewis County District Court Actions by Lewis County Dis- degree driving while license suspended, endangerment, sentenced to 90 days or equal to 40 grams, dismissed with • David James Zifka, 25, Salkum, oper- trict Court included the following sentenced to 90 days in jail with 90 sus- in jail with 67 suspended, fined $500 prejudice. ating a vehicle without ignition interlock, pended, fined $600, $386 in fees. defendants, charges and case dis- on count 1, sentenced to 364 days in Held Aug. 31 sentenced to 360 days in jail with 360 • Stuart Arturo Acosta, 22, Centralia, jail with 341 suspended, fined $500 on • Nicholas Lee Gurnett, 36, Lacey, fail- suspended, fined $750, $346 in fees. positions: first-degree driving while license sus- count 2, concurrent, $1,472 in fees. • Travis Winchester Naillon, 36, Che- Held Aug. 24 ure to comply with police, flagger or fire- pended, sentenced to 364 days in jail Held Aug. 26 fighter, dismissed without prejudice. halis, driving under the influence, sen- • Steven Ray Stanton, 49, Toledo, un- with 354 suspended, fined $750, $386 • Dawn B. Ngiraingas, 29, Lakewood, tenced to 364 days in jail with 363 sus- lawful hunting of big game, sentenced • Romelia Perez Mejia, 20, Centralia, in fees. third-degree driving while license sus- pended, fined $750, $751 in fees. to 364 days in jail with 364 suspended, driving under the influence, sentenced • Lumphon Tong Chomthanat, 32, pended, dismissed with prejudice. to 364 days in jail with 336 suspended, • Julia Ann Roller, 42, Onalaska, third- fined $250, $2,043 in fees. Maple Valley, possession of marijuana • Noe I. Lopez Cruz, 24, Mossyrock, fined $750, $2,786 in fees. degree driving while license suspended, • Adrik Erwin Thorsen, 32, Olympia, less than or equal to 40 grams, dismissed fourth-degree assault, dismissed with- sentenced to 90 days in jail with 90 sus- disorderly conduct, sentenced to 90 with prejudice. • Justin Daniel Williams, 30, Centralia, out prejudice. driving under the influence, sentenced pended, fined $600, $386 in fees. days in jail with 71 suspended, fined • Rebecca Lynn Higgins, 27, Puyallup, • Fred Valdez, 60, Tacoma, third-de- $400, $283 in fees. fourth-degree assault, sentenced to 364 to 364 days in jail with 313 suspended, • Felix Emilio Santiago Crespo, 29, gree driving while license suspended, • Jared Michael Bargel, 37, Mossyrock, days in jail with 347 suspended, fined fined $1,200, $4,256 in fees. Chehalis, third-degree driving while li- dismissed without prejudice. reckless driving, sentenced to 364 days $500, $583 in fees. • Kevin Arian Alvarez, 23, Sunnyside, cense suspended, sentenced to 90 days in jail with 77 suspended, fined $600, in jail with 360 suspended, fined $500, • Danielle Star Howlett, 20, Vancouver, Held Aug. 30 second-degree driving while license sus- $1,360 in fees. fourth-degree assault, dismissed with • Richard Henry Leventon, 24, Che- pended, sentenced to 90 days in jail with $386 in fees. • Lynann Renee Bennett, 34, Lacey, prejudice. halis, first-degree negligent driving, 90 suspended, fined $600, $386 in fees. • Mark Roy Schweitzer, 46, Oakville, (1) driving under the influence, (2) mak- • Tasha Ardel Ranae Overstake, 28, Pe sentenced to 90 days in jail with 88 sus- • Johan Henry Holmes, 30, Rochester, third-degree driving while license sus- ing a false statement to a public servant, Ell, third-degree driving while license pended, fined $750, $346 in fees. third-degree driving while license sus- pended, sentenced to 90 days in jail with sentenced to 364 days in jail with 331 suspended, sentenced to 90 days in jail • Jason Mathias Purcell, 32, Vancouver, pended, sentenced to 90 days in jail with 71 suspended, fined $600, $386 in fees. suspended, fined $750 on count 1, sen- with 90 suspended, fined $500, $386 in Washington, driving under the influence, 90 suspended, fined $600, $386 in fees. • Staci Rashell Stutesman, 35, Ray- tenced to 364 days in jail with 331 sus- fees. sentenced to 364 days in jail with 266 • Jodie Duane Self, 58, Chehalis, third- mond, third-degree driving while li- pended, fined $250 on count 2, concur- • Marquis Miguel Rial, 19, Portland, Or- suspended, fined $1,000, $5,402 in fees. degree driving while license suspended, cense suspended, sentenced to 90 days rent, $2,879 in fees. egon, (1) driver under 21 years old con- • Zachary Devon Schlosser, 21, Rent- sentenced to 90 days in jail with 70 sus- in jail with 90 suspended, fined $600, • Juan Ojeda Cirilo, 25, Centralia, third- suming alcohol/marijuana, (2) reckless on, possession of marijuana less than pended, fined $600, $386 in fees. $386 in fees. Chehalis Municipal Court Chehalis Municipal Court 1 and 3 dismissed with prejudice, sen- ing, sentenced to 90 days in jail with fourth-degree assault, dismissed with • David Lee Denton, 33, Roches- criminal cases, including sentenc- tenced to 90 days in jail with 86 suspend- 90 suspended, fined $300 with $300 prejudice. ter, third-degree theft, dismissed with ed, fined $300 with $300 suspended on suspended. prejudice. es, fines, fees and findings of not • James Lewis Wilder, 37, Rochester, count 2. • Steven Roy Luurs Jr., 36, Winlock, third-degree driving while license sus- • Hailey Leanne Fonder, 19, Olympia, guilty or dismissals. • Richard Lloyd Coryell, 41, Chehalis, third-degree driving while license sus- pended, sentenced to 90 days in jail with third-degree theft, sentenced to 364 • Robert Lynedon Van Ness, 30, Mon- third-degree driving while license sus- pended, dismissed with prejudice. 90 suspended, fined $300 with $300 days in jail with 364 suspended, fined tesano, third-degree theft, sentenced pended, sentenced to 90 days in jail with • Dale Lee Richart, 61, Centralia, hit suspended. $500 with $300 suspended, $150 in fees. to 364 days in jail with 364 suspended, 85 suspended, fined $600 with $300 sus- and run, unattended vehicle, dismissed Held Sept. 21 • Emmanuel Martinez, 24, Centralia, fined $600 with $300 suspended, $150 pended, $253 in fees. with prejudice. • Kate Ashley Beckett, 25, Chehalis, fourth-degree assault, dismissed with- in fees. • Paul Michael Griffith, 43, Centralia, • Felicia Marie Segerman, 19, Chehalis, third-degree driving while license sus- out prejudice. Held Sept. 14 two counts of third-degree theft, sen- third-degree theft, dismissed without pended, sentenced to 90 days in jail with • Reed Stewart West, 58, Cheha- • Jerry Lee Albaugh, 50, Centralia, tenced to 364 days in jail with 364 sus- prejudice. 90 suspended, fined $600 with $300 sus- lis, third-degree theft, dismissed with third-degree theft, dismissed with pended, fined $800 with $400 suspend- • Brandy June Shea, 36, Centralia, pended, $103 in fees. prejudice. prejudice. ed on count 1, count 2 dismissed with third-degree theft, sentenced to 364 • Travis Darnold Compton, 25, Che- • Kaylah Larissa Zelazny, 24, Chehalis, • Kendra C. Comfort, 29, Chehalis, (1-2) prejudice, $210 in fees. days in jail with 354 suspended, fined halis, disorderly conduct, sentenced to third-degree theft, sentenced to 364 two counts of second-degree criminal • Nicholas Allen Huston, 23, Che- $600 with $300 suspended, $150 in fees. 90 days in jail with 89 suspended, fined days in jail with 364 suspended, fined trespassing, (3) resisting arrest, counts halis, second-degree criminal trespass- • Jonathan Scott Swegle, 51, Chehalis, $600 with $300 suspended, $225 in fees. $300 with $300 suspended. Centralia Municipal Court Centralia Municipal Court • Zachery L. Daugherty, 21, Chehalis, sentenced to 364 days in jail with 364 • Michael T. Hildesheim, 45, Chehalis, ing false statement to public servant, criminal cases, including sentenc- third-degree driving while license sus- suspended, fined $100 on count 1, sen- third-degree driving while license sus- sentenced to 364 days in jail with 358 pended, sentenced to 1 day in jail, fined tenced to 90 days in jail with 90 suspend- pended, sentenced to 90 days in jail with suspended, fined $800 with $400 sus- es, fines, fees and findings of not $25, $403 in fees. ed, fined $100 on count 2, $150 in fees. 73 suspended, fined $200 with $100 sus- pended, $700 in fees. guilty or dismissals. • Jeffeory R. Benjamin, 33, Centra- • Megan J. Rowley, 41, Tacoma, third- pended, $1,253 in fees. • Winona F. Gladue, 28, Chehalis, Held Sept. 13 lia, (1) fourth-degree assault, domestic degree theft, sentenced to 364 days in • Jennifer West, 35, Centralia, (1) vio- fourth-degree assault, domestic vio- • Zacharey J. Hanley, 26, Onalaska, violence, (2) third-degree malicious mis- jail with 304 suspended (10 days in jail lation of no contact-protection order lence, sentenced to 364 days in jail with third-degree driving while license sus- chief, sentenced to 364 days in jail with and 50 days electronic home monitor- violation, (2) making false statement to 364 suspended, fined $800 with $400 pended, sentenced to 90 days in jail with 363 suspended, fined $400 with $200 ing), fined $1,500 with $500 suspended, public servant, sentenced to 364 days in suspended, $210 in fees. 86 suspended, fined $600 with $300 sus- suspended on each count, concurrent, $740 in fees. jail with 364 suspended, fined $600 with • Baylor J. Scott, 20, Centralia, (1) ob- pended, $543 in fees. $310 in fees. • Robert E. Garcia, 53, Rochester, (1) $300 suspended on each count, $200 in structing law enforcement officer, (2) • Seneca Tomallo, 35, Centralia, third- Held Sept. 20 third-degree theft, (2) third-degree driv- fees. minor in possession and/or consump- degree theft, sentenced to 364 days in • Bryan R. Elliott, 19, Galvin, (1) mak- ing while license suspended, sentenced Held Sept. 27 tion, sentenced to 364 days in jail with jail with 364 suspended, fined $800 with ing false statement to public servant, to 365 days in jail with 365 suspended, • Jennifer A. Woodhead, 34, Rochester, 359 suspended, fined $600 with $300 $400 suspended, $150 in fees. (2) third-degree driving while license fined $800 with $400 suspended on third-degree driving while license sus- suspended on each count, concurrent, • Manuel Arceo-Garcia, 30, Centralia, suspended, sentenced to 364 days in count 1, sentenced to 90 days in jail with pended, sentenced to 90 days in jail with $800 in fees. obstructing law enforcement officer, jail with 356 suspended, fined $400 with 90 suspended, fined $800 with $400 sus- 88 suspended, fined $600 with $300 sus- • Makia D. Conine, 19, Centralia, sec- sentenced to 364 days in jail with 359 $200 suspended on count 1, sentenced pended on count 2, $450 in fees. pended, $303 in fees. ond-degree driving while license sus- suspended, fined $600 with $300 sus- to 90 days in jail with 89 suspended, • Christopher L. Guillen, 38, Centralia, • Kyle L. Davidson, 30, Centralia, third- pended, fined $25, $103 in fees. pended, $300 in fees. fined $400 with $200 suspended on fourth-degree assault, domestic vio- degree theft, sentenced to 364 days in • Wesley B. Steele, 65, Centralia, disor- • Jesse R. Burbridge, 35, Rochester, count 2, concurrent, $1,003 in fees. lence, sentenced to 364 days in jail with jail with 364 suspended, fined $600 with derly conduct, sentenced to 90 days in third-degree driving while license sus- • Synthia L. Barnes, 20, Morton, (1) mi- 362 suspended, fined $800 with $400 $300 suspended. jail with 90 suspended, fined $800 with pended, fined $25, $103 in fees. nor in possession, (2) fighting in public, suspended, $250 in fees. • Jessica N. Hart, 25, Centralia, mak- $400 suspended. Centralia Business Licenses Business licenses issued in • Andersen Construction Co., (503) 840-2507 er A, (360) 269-5599 • Blazer Bites, 600 Centralia College Centralia during June, July and 283-6712 • Mountain View Contracting, 629 S. • Dancor Construction Inc. Blvd. August: • Grant Wilson’s Workshop Cedar, (360) 791-1701 • Dogz Downtown, 115 W. Maple St., • Quality Taxi, (360) 523-4253 • Blairco Inc., (360) 695-1476 • 3MB Construction & Tree Removal • The Caveness Group, 620 W. Main St., (360) 736-0288 • Wing Hands LLC, (360) 519-4175 • BPCI, (253) 286-3900 • Brazil’s Installations (360) 736-8200 • Treasures for You, 528 N. Tower Ave., • Anderson General Contracting, (360) • Reynolds Construction LLC, (360) • J&J Brothers Construction LLC, (360) • Tower Trading Co., 402 N. Tower Ave., (360) 508-2308 789-8452 751-1600 523-8494 (360) 669-0461 • Quality Taxi • Fantastic Sam’s, 507 Harrison Ave. A • Willards Gifts, (360) 748-9921 • Sharp Bros. Inc., (360) 701-4125 • Tips-n-Toes Hair Salon, 120 S. Tower • Jorstads Metal Buildings LLC, 501 E. • Dead Ending Haunted House LLC, • Courage Coffee, (360) 388-6458 • Built Right LLC, (360) 239-6021 Ave. C, (360) 736-2153 Pear St., (360) 880-1813 1720 S. Gold St., (360) 480-4935 • Blue Numa Massage, 1126 S. Gold St. • RJ’s Specialty Foods, 1709 Midway • The Courtyard Salon & Spa, 1537 • The Beehive Salon, 1190 W. Magnolia • The Starr Exchange, 801 W. Main St. 224, (360) 324-2861 • J.R. Carpentry LLC Kresky, (360) 880-4782 St., (360) 807-3849 • Calypso Window Washing LLC, 111 • Silvernail Homes LLC • Gill Construction, (360) 508-0165 • Greener Futures Electric Inc., (360) • The Train Center, 404 S. Tower Ave. 4, W. Magnolia, (360) 269-4947 • Kildow Brothers Inc., (360) 754-2603 • Providence SoundHomeCare, 1010 S. 274-8046 (360) 736-2354 • Stewart and Son Computer, (253) Scheuber Road, (360) 459-8311 • W&G Construction LLC, (360) • Stacie Stoney Coaching, 328 N. Tow- 565-0138

community, a leader. It's so sad Now Rachel, after cutting off Farewell that he leaves his kids and his HOW TO HELP all of her long, beautiful hair in wife. The whole community is A fund has been set up to mourning, is raising their chil- Continued from the front page MISSED very, very sad." support former Chehalin Ra- dren alone. She’s emotionally James is survived by Rachel chel Kuir and the five children devastated, Toloba said, but she had known one another back in and their five children, ages 8 is a survivor. the Kakumar refugee camp in she is now raising without her years to eight months: Yar, Aguil, husband, James. “She’s a very tough young Kenya, where both had lived as YOUR Dau, Ngon and Adut. The GoFundMe account is at woman,” her adoptive mother in children after fleeing the murder- Toloba attended the funeral bit.ly/RachelKuirFamily Chehalis said. “She has survived ous militias that killed their fami- in Colorado, and will return for the hell of war and travel from lies and destroyed their homes. a traditional celebration of life South Sudan to refugee camp Kuir’s adoptive mother, Lola ceremony held 40 days after the 17 years old, although with no with little kids, surviving on no PAPER? Toloba, was photographed in this death. birth certificate, her age at the food and no water and animals newspaper beaming at her Af- “Life stands still when you time was believed to be 19. chasing them and bombs drop- rican daughter’s marriage. The hold your weeping daughter in Education was extraordinari- ping around them.” front-page headline read, “An your arms during the funeral for ly valuable to her. The community has rallied American wedding, Sudanese her husband,” Toloba posted on “There’s a saying in Dinka around the family. A GoFundMe style,” with pictures of the couple, culture: education is my mother Call Facebook last month. “Unimagi- support page already has more tall and elegant in their wedding nable grief.” and father,” Toloba said. “Rachel than 1,100 donors and upwards attire. When I spoke with her re- came home and asked me how of $100,000 in pledged donations 360-807-7676 Kuir and her new husband cently, Toloba’s voice was tinged it was that kids here can be so (see sidebar for a link to donate.) moved back to his home in Boul- with sadness as she described the disrespectful to the teachers. She That support is a sign that der to build a life together. They highs and lows her daughter’s couldn’t understand how people these refugees, after surviving Leave a message had children. Last year they life has taken after a childhood could act like other students did.” terror, were welcomed by Amer- with the day moved into a Habitat for Hu- that began with terror. She graduated less than four ica and gave back a hundredfold manity home. years later with a full diploma, to the communities that gave missed including Their fairytale story took BOTH RACHEL AND JAMES were one of nine Dinka refugees to them a fresh start. a tragic turn, however, as this children when their villages were graduate from W.F. West in 2005. These young people were your name, year’s summer turned to fall. ransacked, their families mur- She worked at Fuller’s and known as the “Lost Boys and James Chol Biar died unex- dered. Though they didn’t know Safeway, and studied nursing at Girls” of Sudan, but what they address and pectedly of a brain aneurysm each other then, their painful Centralia College. She and James found here was the best that phone number. early the morning of Sunday, stories were similar: they fled had quickly established contact America is and can be. Sept. 18. It turns out he also had into the desert, wandering for after settling in the United States. Rachel and James began life undiagnosed acute leukemia. months through heat, wild ani- They courted from afar for years. running away from death and de- James had earned degrees in mals and extreme hunger. From After their marriage and struction. It turns out they were After hours math and economics, and had that time, Rachel was forced into moving to Boulder, her prior- also running toward something is checking plans to earn a master’s degree. He ity was having children. She the role of mother for her sib- good, something important. messages worked as a grocery store cashier. lings. dreamed of having six kids, then Chehalis and Centralia were Justin Thiok, president of the After they met as teenagers going back to college. important stops on his journey Tuesday & Thursday South Sudanese Community As- in a refugee camp, they resettled “It’s very significant in Dinka as these Lost Children found a 5:00 p.m. to 7 p.m. sociation of Colorado, told the separately to America in 2001 culture to have lots of kids, and good life together in the Ameri- Boulder Daily Camera newspaper — James to Colorado, Rachel she started a little bit later than can Dream. and Saturday that James’ death is a major loss. to Chehalis. Without knowing some kids do, so she definitely ••• 7:30 a.m to 10:30 a.m. "Everybody knew him in our any English, Rachel entered W.F. wanted to have as many kids as Brian Mittge can be reached at community," he said. "He was West High School within a week possible as quickly as possible,” [email protected], or on CH547464ac.sw a very important person in our of arriving in America. She was Toloba said. Twitter @bmittge. Main 12 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016 Nation/World Nation in Brief World in Brief Hurricane Threatens UN Criticism of Trump Some of South’s Draws Russian Most Storied Cities Complaint ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla. (AP) GENEVA (AP) — Russia — Hurricane Matthew spared lodged a formal complaint last Florida’s most heavily populated month with the United Nations stretch from a catastrophic blow over a top U.N. official’s con- Friday but threatened some of demnations of Donald Trump the South’s most historic and and some European politicians, picturesque cities with ruinous an intervention that underscores flooding and wind damage as it the unusual links between the pushed its way up the coastline. Republican presidential nomi- Among the cities in the cross- nee and the Kremlin. hairs were St. Augustine, Florida; There is no evidence Trump Savannah, Georgia; and Charles- sought Russia’s assistance, or ton, South Carolina. was even aware of the criticism “There are houses that will by Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein, the probably not ever be the same U.N. high commissioner for hu- again or not even be there,” St. man rights. Augustine Mayor Nancy Shaver Vitaly Churkin, Russia’s am- lamented as battleship-gray bassador to the United Nations, floodwaters coursed through the told The Associated Press on Fri- streets of the 451-year-old city day that he complained to U.N. founded by the Spanish. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon Matthew — the most power- about Zeid’s remarks. The Associated Press ful hurricane to threaten the At- Fernando Vergara / Three diplomats familiar with lantic Seaboard in over a decade Colombia’s President Juan Manuel Santos is embraced by his wife Maria Clemencia Rodriguez after speaking to journalists at the conversation said the com- — set off alarm as it closed in on the presidential palace in Bogota, Colombia, Friday. Santos won the Nobel Peace Prize Friday, just days after voters narrowly plaint occurred in a private meet- the U.S., having left more than rejected a peace deal he signed with rebels of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, FARC. ing Sept. 13. Churkin angrily pro- 300 people dead in Haiti. tested a pair of speeches by Zeid that denounced “demagogues” and specifically targeted Trump Report: Big Increase and several populist leaders in in People Seeking Colombian Leader Santos Europe, even likening their tac- Asylum on Border tics to Islamic State propaganda. SAN DIEGO (AP) — Hun- Tolls Rises as Haiti dreds of thousands of people Wins Nobel Peace Prize have sought asylum along the Digs Out From U.S.-Mexico border in the last By Joshua Goodman and Karl Ritter Hurricane Matthew two years, a dramatic increase The Associated Press that shows how migrants have JEREMIE, Haiti (AP) — Peo- changed from mostly Mexican BOGOTA, Colombia — By “I invite everyone to bring together our ple across southwest Haiti were men trying to evade capture to winning the Nobel Peace Prize, strength, our minds and our hearts in this great digging through the wreckage more Central American families President Juan Manuel Santos of their homes Friday, salvaging who often turn themselves in, a got a big boost Friday in his ef- national endeavor so that we can win the most what they could of their meager report for the federal govern- forts to save an agreement seek- possessions after devastating ment shows. ing to end Colombia’s half-cen- important prize of all: peace in Colombia.” Hurricane Matthew killed hun- tury conflict. Asylum seekers, many of Juan Manuel Santos dreds of people in the impover- them fleeing drug-fueled vio- The prize, announced by the Colombian president ished country. lence south of the border, peaked Norwegian Nobel Committee, The central government’s of- in 2014 at 170,000, nearly triple puts pressure on both conser- ficial death toll stood at nearly the 63,000 who arrived the previ- vative critics and leftist rebels gress to smooth their transition gratulation of sorts on winning 300, but an official in southwest ous year. Before 2012, there were to find a way forward after the into a political movement. the Nobel. Haiti said that figure did not in- fewer than 30,000 a year. shocking defeat of the accord in The accord’s defeat in the “I hope it leads to a change in clude at least 80 more people and In the 2015 fiscal year, the an Oct. 2 referendum. referendum by the narrowest the accords that are damaging authorities doing the on-ground number declined to 140,000 peo- Santos dedicated the prize to of margins — less than half a for our democracy,” Uribe said assessment in remote corners of ple, according to the report by his fellow Colombians, especially percentage point — humiliated in a message on Twitter. the southwestern peninsula said the Institute for Defense Analy- the victims of the bloody con- Santos, especially since polls had Nobody knows how the im- it would likely be much higher. ses, a federally funded research flict, saying it would redouble his predicted it would pass by an al- passe will end but most analysts Saint-Victor Jeune, an official organization that was tapped to commitment to end hostilities most 2-1 margin. He had signed agree that a bilateral cease-fire with the Civil Protection agency help develop new measures of that left 220,000 dead and almost the deal with the FARC just six already in place can’t endure working in Beaumont, in the border security. The Associated 8 million displaced. days earlier in front of world for too long without resolution. mountains on the outskirts of Press obtained a copy of the re- “I invite everyone to bring to- leaders. Amid such uncertainty, the No- hard-hit Jeremie, said 82 bodies port from a government official gether our strength, our minds bel prize gives some oxygen to found by his team had not been involved in border issues who and our hearts in this great na- NOW HE’S SCRAMBLING to save Santos’ efforts, although how recorded by authorities in the acted on condition of anonym- tional endeavor so that we can the accord. This week, he dis- much is unknown. capital because of spotty com- ity because it has not been made win the most important prize patched negotiators to Cuba, to In Bogota’s Plaza Boli- munications. public. of all: peace in Colombia,” San- see if the FARC will make addi- var, where thousands gathered tos said alongside his wife in his tional concessions, and presided Wednesday in the biggest street first public appearance after be- over meetings with opponents demonstration in years to de- Finland, US to Stocks End Lower ing notified he had won in a pre- led by his former ally turned mand the peace deal be saved, Deepen Military to Cap First Weekly dawn phone call from their son. archrival: ex-President Alvaro an activist distributed white dai- Colombians are split on their Uribe. sies symbolizing peace. A small Ties Through Pact Loss in a Month support for the peace deal. Uribe, who inflamed wide- group camped in the plaza since HELSINKI (AP) — Finland NEW YORK (AP) — Stocks Some see it as the best chance spread hatred of the rebels by then celebrated with shouts of and the United States have signed ended slightly lower on Wall in a generation to halt the con- warning that the peace deal “Peace deal now!” and “Colombia a bilateral defense cooperation Street on Friday, giving the mar- flict with the Revolutionary would take Colombia down wants peace!” pact pledging military col- ket its first weekly decline in a Armed Forces of Colombia, or the path of communist Cuba, “Even though Uribe won the laboration at the time when the month. FARC; others are outraged that emerged as the big victor in vote, I think Santos has some ad- Nordic country is increasingly The market edged up in rebels behind scores of atroci- the referendum and is pushing vantage right now,” said Adam concerned over Russia’s activi- early trading after a much an- ties, from kidnappings to attacks for harsher punishment for the Isacson, an analyst at the Wash- ties in the Baltic Sea region. ticipated report on hiring last on civilian targets, probably will FARC. ington Office on Latin America The deal was signed in Hel- month showed decent gains. It never spend a day in prison and But he’s been conciliatory so who was in Colombia for the ref- sinki on Friday by the U.S. Depu- quickly turned lower and re- instead be reserved seats in con- far, and even sent Santos a con- erendum. ty Secretary of Defense Robert O. mained down for the rest of the Work and the Finnish Defense day. Suppliers of basic materials Minister Jussi Niinisto. and industrial companies lost While Washington and Hel- the most. Deadly Chinese Narcotic sinki already closely cooperate The government reported through joint military drills on that employers hired last month air, land and sea, the non-legally at a slower pace than forecast, Can Be Purchased Online binding pact seeks to deepen but not slow enough to signal the By Erika Kinetz and Desmond Butler the ties through information ex- economy is in trouble and cause global source of synthetic drugs, Weber, assistant secretary of de- change, joint research and devel- the Federal Reserve to hold off on The Associated Press carfentanil is not a controlled sub- fense for nuclear, chemical and opment in areas like cyberdefense raising interest rates later this year. stance. The U.S. government is biological defense programs and training among other things. SHANGHAI — It’s one of pressing China to blacklist it, but from 2009 to 2014. “Companies Bonds were little changed on the strongest opioids in circula- the news. The yield on 10-year Beijing has yet to act. shouldn’t be just sending it to tion, so deadly an amount small- “We can supply carfentanil anybody.” Philippines Tells US Treasury notes slipped to 1.72 er than a poppy seed can kill a percent from 1.74 percent. ... for sure,” a saleswoman from Carfentanil is 100 times more person. Until July, when reports Jilin Tely Import and Export powerful than fentanyl, a related No Joint Patrols in of carfentanil overdoses began to Co. wrote in broken English in a drug that is itself up to 50 times surface in the U.S., the substance South China Sea New Jersey Gas Prices September email. “And it’s one of stronger than heroin. was best known for knocking out MANILA, Philippines (AP) to Jump After Vote moose and elephants — or as a our hot sales product.” Forms of fentanyl are sus- — The Philippine defense chief chemical weapon. The AP did not actually order pected in an unsuccessful 1997 said Friday that he told the U.S. to Raise Tax Passes Despite the dangers, Chinese any drugs, or test whether the attempt by Mossad agents to kill military that plans for joint pa- TRENTON, N.J. (AP) — Gas vendors offer to sell carfentanil products on offer were genuine. a Hamas leader in Jordan, and trols and naval exercises in the in New Jersey is about to get openly online, for worldwide China’s Ministry of Public were used to lethal effect by Rus- disputed South China Sea have more expensive after lawmak- export, no questions asked, an Security declined multiple re- sian forces against Chechen sepa- been put on hold, the first con- ers voted Friday to raise the tax Associated Press investigation quests for comment. ratists who took hundreds of hos- crete break in defense coopera- by 23 cents per gallon to pay for has found. The AP identified For decades before being dis- tages at a Moscow theater in 2002. tion after months of increasingly the state’s expired transportation 12 Chinese businesses that said covered by drug dealers, carfen- The theater siege prompted strident comments by the coun- trust fund. they would export carfentanil to tanil and substances like it were the U.S. to develop strategies to try’s new president. If Republican Gov. Chris the United States, Canada, the researched as chemical weapons counter carfentanil’s potential Defense Secretary Delfin Lo- Christie approves the bill, which United Kingdom, France, Ger- by the U.S., U.K., Russia, Is- use as a tool of war or terrorism, renzana also said that 107 U.S. he is expected to, it would make many, Belgium and Australia for rael, China, the Czech Republic according to Weber. “Countries troops involved in operating sur- New Jersey’s gas tax the sixth- as little as $2,750 a kilogram. and India, according to publicly that we are concerned about veillance drones against Muslim highest in the nation, up from Carfentanil burst into view available documents. They are were interested in using it for of- militants would be asked to leave 49th before. It would still remain this summer as the latest scourge banned from the battlefield un- fensive purposes,” he said. “We the southern part of the country lower than the gas tax in neigh- in an epidemic of opioid abuse der the Chemical Weapons Con- are also concerned that groups once the Philippines acquires boring New York and Pennsylva- that has killed tens of thousands vention. like ISIS could order it commer- those intelligence-gathering ca- nia, though. in the U.S. alone. In China, the top “It’s a weapon,” said Andrew cially.” pabilities in the near future. • Main 13 LOCAL / NORTHWEST The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016 Chehalis Tribe Awarded Over $1.3 Million to Enhance Programs By The Chronicle grant funding from the U.S. De- Another grant in the amount receive $1,343,785 in grant fund- release. “From drug courts to The Confederated Tribes of partment of Justice. of $346,791 will be used for an ing. youth engagement the Depart- the Chehalis Reservation has The largest grant allocated engagement program to provide The grants come from vari- ment of Justice is supporting in- been selected to receive more to the Chehalis Tribe is in the one-on-one support to high-risk ous programs designed to pro- novative programs to improve than $1.3 million in grants that amount of $709,862. It will pro- youth, and the third grant for vide resources for tribal youth, the lives of those who are mem- vide funding for drug and alco- $287,132 will help support vic- victims of crime and those strug- bers of our 25 federally recog- will be dedicated to programs to hol courts and treatment services. tims of crime with “a compre- gling with drug and alcohol ad- nized Tribes.” combat alcohol and drug abuse, It will be used to continue the of- hensive, collaborative approach diction. In all, three tribes received enhance youth programs and fender re-entry program, which including culturally appropriate “These grant funds go to grants to enhance youth out- help crime victims. includes services to combat drug services for the victim, family support programs important reach; four received funds for In all, six tribal communities abuse and domestic violence, ac- and community,” stated the re- to Western Washington Tribal drug and alcohol courts and in Western Washington were cording to a press release from lease. communities,” U.S. Attorney treatment services; and four to awarded more than $8 million in the U.S. Department of Justice. In all, the Chehalis tribe will Annette L. Hayes said in the support victims of crime. Gov. Inslee Issues Executive Order to Fight Abuse of Heroin, Painkillers ACTION: State Agencies Ordered to Work With ‘‘We all have an important role to play in the Local Public Health, statewide movement to fight one of the most Tribal and Other Officials devastating crises facing our communities ...’’ to Expand Treatement, Prevent Over-Prescribing Jay Inslee governor SEATTLE (AP) — Gov. Jay Inslee on Friday issued an ex- ecutive order to boost efforts to role to play in the statewide tions in how often painkillers are prevent and treat opioid abuse in movement to fight one of the prescribed so that health provid- Washington. most devastating crises facing ers and others can intervene. Inslee ordered state agencies our communities today — the "Opioid use disorder is a pre- to work with local public health, Ted S. Warren / The Associated Press public health crisis of opioids ventable and treatable chronic tribal and other officials to pre- Gov. Jay Inslee speaks Friday at the University of Washington Medical Center in and heroin," Inslee said in a pre- disease, much like diabetes or vent unnecessary prescribing of Seattle. Inslee announced an executive order to ight the rising abuse of opioids pared statement. heart disease, and needs to be addictive painkillers and expand in Washington state. Inslee also called for using treated as such," Secretary of treatment for those addicted to data to better detect misuse and Health John Wiesman said in a opioids. The order calls for ef- than from vehicle or firearm-re- ers, law enforcement officials, pa- monitor for overdose deaths. The prepared statement. forts to prevent overdose deaths, lated deaths, they said. Prescrip- tients and family members who Department of Health, working The state agencies must sub- including expanding access to tion opioid drug deaths have have been affected by opioid abuse. with others, will monitor pre- mit a progress report by the end naloxone, a medication used to gone down, but fatalities from "We all have an important scribing practices to spot varia- of the year. counter overdose effects. heroin overdoses are rising, par- Last year, 718 people died ticularly among young people. from opioid overdoses in Wash- Inslee announced the execu- ington, according to state of- tive order at a news conference ficials. More people die in acci- at the University of Washington • • dental deaths from heroin and Medical Center in Seattle, where Shop Dine Play prescription painkiller overdoses he was joined by medical provid- News in Brief Downtown Centralia Saturday, October 8, 2016 Caretaker Accused of The 5-4 majority said Judy Deggs could not bring her 3 pm - 8 pm Raping 90-Year-Old wrongful death claim because at the time he died, in 2010 at Woman Near Elbe age 84, her father had known for gets $5your passport; the TACOMA (AP) — A regis- more than three years that he first 200 girls receive a tered sex offender has pleaded had asbestos. Because the statute Starting Locations: goody bag. not guilty to raping a 90-year-old of limitations would have already woman who he was supposed to run on bringing personal injury THE STATION COFFEE BAR & BISTRO be caring for at her Pierce Coun- claims, Justice Steven Gonzalez 120 S. Tower Avenue ty home. The News Tribune re- wrote, the daughter could not ported that James Crowder Jr. bring a wrongful death claim. HUBBUB entered not guilty pleas Thurs- In her dissent, Justice Debra 505 N. Tower Avenue day to four counts of second- Stevens called that "topsy-turvy degree rape. He's being jailed on illogic." She said wrongful death Girls $500,000 bail. claims are separate from personal Night Court documents say the injury claims, and obviously can't For more information call: woman reported in September be brought before someone dies. 360.736.4333

that she had been raped and CH565010bw.os abused by Crowder since he moved in to take care of her in Weyerhaeuser Sells 2010. She told investigators she Paper Mill in Longview Printed by PAISLEY’S POSSE Out was friends with Crowder's aunt and had agreed to let him move LONGVIEW (AP) — Wey- in after he was released from jail. erhaeuser Co. has sold its print- The 51-year-old Crowder has pre- ing paper business, including its vious conviction for incest and paper mill in Southwest Wash- ington. The Federal Way-based 2016 Turkey Trot child molestation. He has denied raping the woman and allegedly company says it will pay down told police she was his girlfriend. debt with most of the proceeds from the sale of North Pacific FREE Turkey Giveaway Paper Co., or NORPAC, to One Look for the participating lyers in stores Split State Supreme Rock Capital Partners. Court Bars Wrongful The company did not dis- Also sweet treats close terms of the deal in its an- from Dawn’s Delectables Death Lawsuit nouncement Wednesday. Weyerhaeuser has oper- OLYMPIA (AP) — A split ated the paper mill in Longview Washington Supreme Court has through a joint venture with Centralia Merchants Turkey Trot barred a woman from bringing Nippon Paper Industries Co. a lawsuit following the asbestos- After the sale, Weyerhaeus- related death of her father, a er will still own a sawmill and Oct. 1 - Nov. 17, 2016 longtime worker at a pulp and a log export operation at the $5 minimum purchase, 1 entry per business, per day. paper mill in Longview. Longview site. Enter to win at these businesses: Full Range of • Pioneer West • Frules ~ Family Medicine ~ • Bead Opus • The Station Cofee House • Anderson’s True Value • Black Dog We Antiques welcome • Dawn’s our new Delectables • Salewsky’s Jewelry providers • Simply to better Collectibles • Centralia Square serve you! Antiques • Rectangle Gallery • Madly Eclectic Keiran Shute, MD Don Allison, MD • Prim Rose • Closet Envy Riffe 745 Williams St. Primitives • Shady Lady CH565133bw.cg

Medical Mossyrock CH565275hw.cg Center, Inc. 360-983-8990 • Hub Bub • Bath Depot 20 Turkeys To Give Away Main 14 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016 NORTHWEST / LOCAL Sanctions Remain Against State in Education Funding Case $100,000 A DAY: School on any of the recommendations the summer, most recently last suggested through the years month. It is set to meet again Districts’ Attorney Says concerning funding sources and next week, and its report is due ‘Showdown Is Going compensation." by Jan. 9, the first day of the 2017 "In its latest report, the State legislative session. to Be at the End of the continues to provide a promise In a written statement, Gov. 2017 Legislative Session’ —’we'll get there next year’ — Jay Inslee said that the informa- rather than a concrete plan for tion the task force is compiling By Rachel La Corte how it will meet its paramount is "crucial as we make choices The Associated Press duty," the court wrote. "In terms that will likely have profound OLYMPIA — The state Su- of demonstrating measurable impacts on our education system preme Court ruled Thursday progress, the State's 2016 report for decades to come." that $100,000-a-day sanctions offers no more than the previous The court's lone dissent, writ- should continue against Wash- reports the court has determined ten by Justice Sheryl Gordon Mc- ington state while a task force fell short." Cloud, argued that the sanctions works to determine how the state Since the original 2012 ruling, against the state should be lifted. will comply with a 2012 court or- lawmakers have spent more than She wrote that while she be- der to fully fund the state's basic Ted S. Warren / AP Photo $2 billion to address issues raised lieved the progress made thus education system. Tom Ahearne, the lead attorney in a lawsuit against the state of Washington over in the lawsuit. State officials have far by the state is due to previ- The majority, led by Chief education funding, speaks during a hearing before the Washington State Su- estimated that the costs related ous court orders, she disagreed Justice Barbara Madsen, wrote preme Court Wednesday in Olympia to that court mandate are at least with the majority that the state's that once the state files a report another $3 billion. inability to determine a funding A plan passed by the Legisla- source was a violation. on actions taken to remedy the exemptions passed by the Legis- at the end of the 2017 legislative funding issues after the next bi- ture earlier this year did not say Under Thursday's ruling, the lature in order to find the money session," Ahearne said. "I don't ennial budget is signed by the exactly where lawmakers will contempt order the court im- know what's going to happen." governor, the high court will de- needed for compliance. find the rest of the money they posed in 2014 remains in place termine whether additional ac- Ahearne said Thursday that In Thursday's ruling, the need, but instead established a along with the sanctions it im- tions need to be taken. he was happy with the court's rul- court wrote that the state has task force to find the state dol- posed last year. Those sanctions, In a hearing before the court ing because it makes it very clear until Sept. 1, 2018, to fully fund lars needed to replace some lo- which are supposed to be set last month, Tom Ahearne, an at- that those sanctions are still a pos- education, but that the details of cal levy spending and instructs aside into a separate education torney for the coalition of school sibility if the Legislature does not how to do that — as well as how the 2017 Legislature to finish the account, are nearing $42 million, districts, parents, teachers and finish its work next year. He said lawmakers will pay for it — must work. It also instructs the task according to the Office of Finan- education groups that sued the that while he hopes lawmakers be in place before the Legislature force to make recommendations cial Management. state, had argued that the court will finally come up with a con- adjourns next year. on teacher pay and asks for clari- Lawmakers did not allo- should increase pressure on the stitutionally sound plan, based on The court wrote that while fication on how local levies are cate that money when writing a state, either by shutting down previous legislative sessions, he's the state knows what it needs to used. supplemental budget earlier this the schools in the 2017 school not overly optimistic. do, "it has simply not provided The bipartisan task force year, but there is enough money year or closing hundreds of tax "The showdown is going to be a complete plan, nor has it acted has been meeting throughout in reserves to cover the amount. News in Brief Sheriff’s Office: Man ties responded to a business in Conner, he fled and a short foot The meeting will be at the According to the Washing- the 100 block of Foster Creek chase ensued. Northwest Sports Hub at 10 a.m. ton State Patrol, both vehicles Arrested in Toledo After Road in Toledo to a report of a He was eventually detained. Five items of business will be were traveling westbound on U.S. disorderly individual. For failing to leave the prop- on the agenda. Highway 12 when a 16-year-old Allegedly Threatening Gary W. Conner, 33, a tran- erty when asked and for dirtying The PFD oversees the North- driver from Mossyrock yielded to Stab People With sient, had entered the store and the windows, Conner was ar- west Sports Hub. The meeting is to traffic to make a left turn onto told employees that he did not rested for first-degree criminal open to the public. Winston Creek Road. Pencil, Wiping Nasal have to leave. Conner, dressed trespass and third-degree mali- Whitney Davis, 19, of Mossy- Discharge on Store in yellow rain gear, said he was cious mischief. He was booked rock, rear-ended the 2009 Ford from New York and claimed to into the Lewis County Jail. Crash Near Mossyrock Focus with her 2001 Honda Window be a “psycho,” according to the Civic. Both cars were totaled, ac- Sheriff’s Office. Injures Two Drivers cording to the State Patrol. By The Chronicle Conner became “belliger- Public Facilities Meeting Wednesday Both of the drivers were in- The Lewis County Sheriff’s ent” and began to wipe his nasal jured and transported to Provi- Office arrested and booked a discharge on the store windows. Scheduled for Tuesday By The Chronicle dence Centralia Hospital. transient man into the county When a customer stood between at Sports Complex A two-vehicle accident 4 miles Davis was cited for driving jail after he reportedly threat- Conner and the store clerks, west of Mossyrock left both driv- too fast for conditions, according ened to stab customers with a Conner allegedly threatened to By The Chronicle ers injured on Wednesday. to the State Patrol. pencil and wiped his nasal dis- stab the customer with a pencil, The Lewis County Public Fa- The crash took place at ap- Alcohol and drugs were not charge on a store window. stated the Sheriff’s Office. cilities District will have its regu- proximately 7:17 p.m. near Win- a factor, and both drivers were At 4:10 a.m. on Friday, depu- When deputies contacted lar meeting on Tuesday. ston Creek Road, milepost 83. wearing their seat belts.

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CH563328cd.cg The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016 • Main 15

Columns, Celebrations, Voices Community Conversations Anniversaries Births

• ALEXANDRA AND RYAN SCHOPP, Chehalis, twins, a boy, Davis Ryan David and Gloria Schopp, 5 pounds, 7 ounces, and a girl, Georgia James Schopp, 4 Voice of the People Waldock pounds, 12 ounces, Sept. 16, Providence St. Peter Hospital, Olympia. Grandparents are Rod and Gina Davis, Chehalis, and Gerd and Jeri Chronicle readers share their thoughts every day Schopp, Las Vegas, Nevada. through social media, including Facebook, Twitter and • JESSICA PEARCE AND SEAN PANCAKE, Centralia, a girl, Kendra Brooke the comment section of Chronline.com. Here are some of Pancake, Sept. 23, 6 pounds, 5 ounces, Providence Centralia Hospi- the recent highlights of conversation. tal. Grandparents are Lee and Cathy Pearce, Centralia, and David and Patricia Pancake, deceased. Great-grandparents are Robert and Facebook readers react to “Harold’s Burger Bar Powered Alice Wilber, Bend, Oregon. by Secret Recipes and ‘Grandmotherly Love’”: • KRISTEN AND ADAM BETTS, Napavine, a girl, Lavender Jean Betts, Sept. 24, 8 pounds, 1 ounce, Providence Centralia Hospital. Grand- parents are Kris and Steve Norby, Winlock; Lisa Betts, Onalaska; and Ted and Sheila Betts, Camano Island. Great-grandparents are Linda Dean Fletcher: I had my first “drive- Jean Jager, Onalaska; Buzz and Susie Norby, Newberg, Oregon; Don in” burger here for my 12th birthday in 1961. I and Sheila McLean, Vernonia, Oregon; Shirley Brown, Olympia; and remember walking across the tracks from my house to buy it. Fifty years later (2011) ... I cel- Clyde Betts, El Paso, Texas. • JAYNA AND MATTHEW PRATER, Chehalis, a girl, Hope Louise Prater, ebrated again with another Harold’s burger ... David and Gloria Waldock, 1966 I can’t count how many I’ve enjoyed over the Sept. 26, 7 pounds, 13 ounces, Capital Medical Center, Olympia. years. Always delicious! David and Gloria (Ander- • LISBETH PETZEY MARROQUIN AND HENRY PAGUADA BARRIENTOS, Centra- son) Waldock, will be celebrating lia, a boy, Henry Leonardo Paguada Petzey, Sept. 26, 6 pounds, 15 their 50th wedding anniversary ounces, Providence Centralia Hospital. Grandmother is Lola Toloba, Saturday, Oct. 22, at Mackinaw’s Chehalis. Great-grandparents are Dorothy and Donald Smith, Che- Restaurant, Chehalis. halis. • KIRA DUNCAN AND JAMES MORGAN, Centralia, a boy, Arthur James Barbara Nichols Lewis: We’ve gone to David was born Dec. 13, 1942, Harold’s Burger Bar with our kids since the ’70s. in Cottage Grove, Oregon, and Morgan, Sept. 26, 7 pounds, 7 ounces, Providence Centralia Hospital. ASHLEY AND CODY RIDER, My husband remembers when his dad took Gloria was born June 20, 1947, in • Onalaska, a girl, Blakely Rae Rider, Sept. 28, 5 pounds, 10 ounces, Providence Centralia Hospital. Grandpar- his mom and all his brothers and sisters there Stouffville, Ontario. ents are Cherina and Robert Rider, Onalaska, and Vickie and Jim for special times. Lots of memories and lots of The couple were married Oct. Wink, Napavine. Great-grandparents are Evalyn Nelson, Centralia; good, good food! 22, 1966, at St. Joseph Parish, Salvador and Norma Mendiola, The Dalles, Oregon; and Toni and Chehalis, with the Rev. Joseph David Ross, Port Orchard. Dakin officiating. They had a • JESSICA AND JEREMY BRAGG, Winlock, a girl, Jaelynne Kay-Marie reception at the Chehalis Recre- Bragg, Sept. 28, 9 pounds, 8 ounces, Providence Centralia Hospital. Shari Sederberg Tamasese: Back in the ation Park hall. Grandparents are Deb and Jon Hensley, Winlock; Joan and Rocky ’50s me and my Mom’s regular stop was for the David began work about 1962 Lemmon, Toledo, Oregon; and Darin and Jenni Bragg, Winlock. foot long Coney island. ... yummo! Glad to see at the Waldock Ace Hardware Great-grandparents are Connie Alvord, Napavine; Anne and Roland you are still going. Now that I live over 5,000 store in Chehalis. His father, Leo, Randt, Winlock; and Jack Hensley, Bremerton. miles away it’s a little hard to be able to enjoy opened the store in 1944. David JESSICA AND CALEB KISER, those Coney Island dogs. • Chehalis, a girl, Meredith Rose Kiser, Sept. closed the business in 2007. 29, 5 pounds, 10 ounces, Providence Centralia Hospital. Grandpar- Gloria worked at the W.F. ents are Deidre and John Kiser, Chehalis, and Marie and Robert Rog- West High School library for ers, Longview. Great-grandparents are Darlene and George Ashlock, nearly 24 years. Toppenish; and Annabel and Tex Rogers, Noland and Iola Walker, Donna McKenna-Brooks: Got out of the They have lived in Sunset and Jack and Carol Kiser, all deceased. hospital two years ago on a Sunday. Wanted West, near Adna, since 1976. • WHITNEY AND CHRIS BANNISH, Adna, a boy, Kade Michael Bannish, one of their delicious Coney Island dogs ... they Their children and spouses Sept. 30, 9 pounds, 8 ounces, Providence Centralia Hospital. Grand- are closed on Sundays and looked at the prices are Duane Waldock and Marc parents are Mike and Pam Marte, Raymond, and Debbie and Jerry and their prices had really risen ... bummer! Osborn, Seattle, Julie (Joe) Bannish, Raymond. Grandparent is Snake Bannish, Raymond. Cleary, Chehalis; JoAnne (Joe) • CAMILLE AND CHASE BUFFINGTON, Morton, a boy, Owen Elliott Buff- Enbody, Chehalis; Matt Waldock, ington, Oct. 2, 8 pounds, Providence Centralia Hospital. Grandpar- Chehalis; and Jennifer (Eric) Ol- ents are Rob ad Sue Blubaugh, Morton; Rodney Buffington, Chehalis; sen, Williamsburg, Virginia. and Reresa Ahlsten-Buffington, Onalaska. Great-grandparents are Barbara McEwen: My grandma intro- They have seven grandchild- Wallace Lundeen, Adna, and Merv and Jan Buffington, Centralia. duced me to Harold’s when we came home ren. from Iowa. Best place to eat around town. Loved their shrimp burgers. Super nice folks Names in the News Look for our Tuesday too. Livestock Coalition commentary by Julie McDonald Awards Local Scholarships The Washington State Live- Jane Halverson Carden: Still the best stock Coalition awarded the or- burger I have ever had ... love the goop! Mom ganization’s scholarships to two took us there for burgers for years, now I stop Lewis County residents for the

by when in town. 2016-17 school year. CH565051hw.do The Buster Smith Scholarship was given to Elizabeth Warren for this school year. Warren is a 2015 graduate of Rochester High School. Suzanne Mauermann-Ladiser: I grew up She currently attends Wash- in Centralia and this was always my favorite ington State University, majoring place. We left in 2001 and I can’t wait to get in agricultural education. She is back to visit burger bar. HAROLDS!!!! also enrolled in the WSU Hon- ors College and has plans to ap- ply to WSU’s College of Educa- tion in 2017. The Dr. Everett Macomber Scholarship was awarded to Amy Hoium, a 2016 graduate of Rochester High School. Chronline Comments Hoium is enrolled in the veterinary technician program Artwork By Haley - Age 6: Grandma was on hospice at Centralia College. She’s been The following comments were submitted by ART CONTEST readers of www.chronline.com. All stories are avail- active in 4-H and FFA, and has The Visiting Nurses Foundation is holding an art contest for children ages 3-17 that have able for reading online. raised various farm animals. had experience with hospice. 6 contest winners will have their artwork printed on a card Both scholarships are for that the foundation will use and all winners will receive a $25 gift card to Applebees! $500. CONTEST DETAILS Applications for 2017 schol- All drawings or paintings can be submitted on regular 8 1/2 x 11 paper • Story: Love of Computers Inspires Must include child’s name, age, address and phone number and parent’s email arships are available on the co- Include relationship with the hospice patient - past or present Business in Chehalis alition’s website at www.waslico. All entries are due by October 28th com, and will also be available SUBMIT ALL ARTWORK TO JENNY COLLINS USERNAME: hiccup1234 online at www.washboard.org. VISITING NURSES FOUNDATION 222 SOUTH PEARL STREET CENTRALIA, WA 98531 (360) 623-1560 Great profile of an aspiring local business. Thanks for making the article bilingual!! Communicates to folks Lewis County is an inclusive, welcoming community. Hurray! • Story: Chehalis Man Survives Grizzly Bear Attack: ‘I Could Actually Hear the Teeth Chewing Into the Bone’ USERNAME: Frosted Flake I am very pleased with the official decision to NOT kill Includes two dental cleanings, one dental exam, unlimited this bear. Because it was acting perfectly normally. Instead digital x-rays, PLUS 10% off all services! of making an example of her, to teach the other bears a les- son. This is a major step in the right direction. I am very im- pressed Mr. Rico was able to make the same decision. Given the circumstance, it shows great character. Evening appointments available! Free implant consultation Free 2nd opinions Find Us on Facebook Follow Us on Twitter www.facebook.com/

@chronline CH564597hw.cg thecentraliachronicle Send your comments, criticisms and feedback to [email protected] for consideration in Voice of the People. Main 16 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016 FROM THE FRONT PAGE / NORTHWEST

unanimously recommended Cardinale reported to the Che- ment where they felt a discon- in three states. Prior to that he County him for the position after con- halis City Council in May that nect between themselves, their served as a helicopter instructor ducting interviews with the unless the dispatch center had management and Lewis County pilot in the US army and an in- Continued from the front page four finalists, according to the an effective manager, services government. strument examiner. He retired release. would not improve. Concerns Prior to his role as interim at the rank of chief warrant offi- Anderson has served as the Lewis County E911 Com- included providing follow-up 911 manager, Anderson was county’s interim 911 manager cer four after 22 years of service. munications dispatchers took a information to first responders, the emergency medical services Anderson earned an associ- since mid-January. He was one majority vote of no confidence providing correct unit status for program aviation manager for of four finalists from a pool of in Anderson in May, less than a first responders and the need Air Methods Inc., Headquar- ate’s degree in science engineer- 20 applicants, according to the week after Anderson and county to standardize the reporting of tered in Englewood, Colorado, ing from Centralia College and press release from the county. commissioners dismissed con- complaints, concerns and com- Anderson managed 55 pilots is currently pursuing a bach- A selection committee com- cerns from area police and fire pliments. and 14 multi-million dollar he- elor’s degree in business admin- prised of first responders, emer- chiefs on the center’s manage- In letters and statements licopters operating with the Life istration management at Cen- gency management personnel ment. to The Chronicle, dispatchers Flight Network from 12 EMS air tralia College, according to the and other county employees Chehalis Fire Chief Ken later described a work environ- ambulance bases operating 24/7 press release.

he said. impact on the forested riverside Plans “This is an innovative and ecosystems around the reservoir. DRAFT FLOOD MITIGATION, AQUATIC SPECIES STUDY scalable and really interesting Alternative Four, which Continued from the front page AVAILABLE AT AREA LIBRARIES option,” he said. would include buying some Following the recent release of a state-funded environmental 21,000 acres of riverfront land Others representing con- J. VANDER STOEP, also with the from willing property own- servation groups in the basin study to address persistent flooding in the Chehalis River Basin and its four major options, hard copies of the study have been made Governor’s Work Group, said he ers, would also help utilize the have told The Chronicle they available for public viewing at four area libraries. These libraries too would wait to hear the input natural floodplains in the upper are leaning toward Alternative include the following: from two public hearings sched- basin, as opposed to putting in a Four, a restorative flood protec- Vernetta Smith Chehalis Timberland Library at 400 North Market uled prior to picking an alternative. manmade barrier, he said. tion option that includes buying Boulevard in Chehalis. However, he also said that as “Dams have been kind of the about 21,000 acres of riverfront Centralia Timberland Library at 110 S. Silver St. in Centralia. a matter of public record he has land in the upper basin and con- classic way to provide flood pro- Aberdeen Timberland Library at 121 E. Market St. in Aberdeen. been involved as part of a broad tection for well over a century, ducting restorative work. Montesano Timberland Library at 125 S. Main St. in Montesano. community effort to evaluate County Commissioner Edna The Governor’s Work Group tasked with recommending a strat- and I think moving forward, we and put forth the idea of water have a much better understand- Fund, who is also the vice chair- egy is accepting comment through the end of the month. retention for a long time. woman of the Flood Authority, The report is also available online at chehalisbasinstrategy.com. ing of the impacts that dams Regardless of which option have on our ecosystems. We said she is most interested in the he later casts his support toward, Pe Ell dam coupled with salmon The Proposed Alternatives have a much better understand- Vander Stoep said forecasts ing of floodplain connectivity habitat restoration. Fellow com- show that doing nothing in the missioner Gary Stamper said he Four alternatives were presented in the EIS, and a fifth alterna- and flood risks and instead of tive to do nothing remains. Chehalis Basin would result in repeating the mistakes of the hadn’t learned enough about the The no action alternative would continue local-scale flood dam- an estimated $3.5 billion worth proposal to make a decision. past and completing this mas- age reduction actions and would include aquatic species habitat of property damage from flood- sive public works project, I think A dam with a permanent actions, two projects found throughout the other four alternatives. ing over 100 years, without tak- reservoir could provide an eco- Alternative One includes building a dam near Pe Ell on the Che- it’s time to look at new solutions,” ing climate change into account. he said. nomic boost to the town, she halis River, airport levee improvements and levees in Aberdeen and “That’s a lot and I’m not sure He said the dam would said, along with fish mitigation Hoquiam. Two options for the dam are being considered, one with if the cost of doing nothing is provide flood benefits, but at a to protect salmon and other na- a permanent reservoir and one with a seasonal reservoir with fish fully understood,” he said. “tremendous cost” to local eco- tive species. passage. With the no action alterna- “There’s revenue as a result of Alternative Two focuses on adding a combination of walls and le- tive, local-scale flood damage systems. He said he is willing to those dams because people are vees along Interstate 5 to protect the freeway with no flood reten- look at all the options to see the tion facility. Along with the I-5 projects, it also includes airport levee reduction actions would con- able to fish,” she said. tinue, but he said those projects impacts and benefits of them all. Ron Averill, a Flood Author- improvements and the Aberdeen/Hoquiam North Shore Levee. Staff and elected officials Alternative Three does not include any large structural, state- would “only slightly” reduce the ity representative for Centralia, estimated cost in damages. with the city of Centralia did not said the body as a whole largely funded projects. It relies on local flood damage reduction projects return requests for comment and species habitat restoration actions. The state would search for Thomas O’Keefe, Pacific supports water retention. Northwest Stewardship director from The Chronicle. “The Flood Authority is cre- property owners along the Chehalis River who are willing to sell easements or portions of their land to allow for restoration of the for American Whitewater conser- The first of two public meet- ated to mitigate flooding, and river and creek side environments. vation group, said the restorative ings on the Chehalis Basin alter- so we favor that option with the Alternative Four, the restorative flood protection, relies on pur- option is also attractive to him. natives will be on Tuesday, Oct. dam in it,” he said, adding there chasing about 21,000 acres of land in the upper basin and planting “Speaking for our organiza- 18, at the Veterans Memorial are concerns with some of the trees along the state-acquired property along the river, as well as tion, and looking at the fact that Museum, 100 SW Veterans Way, other alternatives. wood obstacles that would be submerged in the water and the re- we have a river that is doing rela- Chehalis. The second is on Thurs- The no action alternative is connection of floodplains. With property owners’ consent, the sur- tively well in terms of fish popu- day, Oct. 27, at Montesano City a “no winner,” he said, primar- rounding hillsides would be cleared of trees and the farms would lation and overall health of the Hall, 112 N. Main St., Montesano. ily because if nothing is done, be moved to those areas. ecosystem, and comparing that For both of the meetings, there salmon species will be put on to places around the state that will be an open house at 6 p.m., the endangered species list. He have dams and all the problems a short presentation at 6:30 p.m. also said that Alternative Four, and a public hearing at 7 p.m. with the governor’s committee the basin from the headwaters they have with that, we’re very known as restorative flood pro- The Governor’s Work Group that’s pushing the one with the down to the coast,” Dawes said. interested in exploring the op- tection, causes some concerns will make a final recommenda- because its goal is to buy farm water retention up in Pe Ell.” “It’s obvious we need to do some- tion that does not have the dam,” tion by the end of the year. The land and actually increase flood- Bob Bozarth, also a commis- thing and we can’t just continue he said. Legislature will consider fund- ing in the upper Chehalis Basin. sioner candidate, said that he to study this to death. I tend to He said the dam option Averill said the Flood Au- hasn’t had a chance to look over favor the water retention one could hurt river habitat, elimi- ing for the chosen alternative thority will craft a response to the proposals, but is strongly op- because I think it gives the best nate a species of lamprey from when the session convenes in the Programmatic EIS with the posed to Alternative Four, which benefit to the entire basin.” the upper river and have a severe January. concerns it has. includes buying up some 21,000 acres of land along area rivers WHILE THE FIRST option was fa- PE ELL MAYOR Lonnie Willey and restoring the riverfront. vored by local politicians, Steve also said the dam with the per- “I don’t see that as a viable op- Malloch, who is on the Gover- PUMPKIN TRAIN RIDE manent reservoir is the most at- tion,” he said. “I’m not in favor nor's Work Group, said Alterna- tractive option to him. of that at all. I can see nothing tive Four provides some benefits AND PUMPKIN HUNT The reservoir could provide but headache there.” a dam would not. a source of revenue from people But he said he would wait October 29 & 30 coming to the town to recreate THE CITY OF Chehalis also sup- to cast his support behind any SATURDAY: 11AM, 1PM, 3PM | SUNDAY: 11AM, 1PM on the waters, stopping at lo- ports the dam near Pe Ell and specific proposal until after the cal stores and restaurants while was one of the first cities to pass public comment period ends at $10 Per Person • Under 2 Free they’re there. a resolution in support of the ef- the end of this month. While he said he’s looking fort back in 2010. “While I am very interested Join the fun for a special holiday treat, our annual tradition of hosting to learn more, he thinks some- “I know we have supported in the innovation that the re- Pumpkin Train Rides behind our vintage 1916 logging locomotive. thing needs to be done based on the concept of a retention facil- storative flood alternative and Children receive treats, and then get a chance to hunt for their perfect the report. ity and improvements to the the flood retention provide pumpkin. here will also be “Personally, I think there’s habitat along the way as one of because those are both new ap- a costume contest for three age groups: 4 and under, been enough studying done and the favored options,” Chehalis proaches on this scale. … I don’t 5-12, and 13+. enough money spent. We need to Mayor Dennis Dawes said. think I can say that I support do something,” he said. “My per- He said the no action alter- one of the alternatives produced Get your tickets sonal feelings are that a retention native is not an option, and that yet,” he said. online at

facility is necessary. You’ve got to Alternative Two, which focuses Additionally, the Governor’s steamtrainride.com CH565271cd.cg stop the water somewhere.” largely on adding levees along Work Group is not limited by Reservations Required. County commissioner can- Interstate 5, would be beneficial the four prepackaged alterna- 360-748-9593 didates Dan Keahey and Bobby to the freeway, but would hurt tives, he said, and may choose Jackson both said they tend to people downstream. Averill to take elements from multiple favor the same option. also said he opposes Alternative approaches for a final recom- Jackson said at Tuesday’s Two, because although it would mendation. CH565255bw.do commissioner debate that protect the interstate, he said it Alternative Four would treat choosing not to act now would would cause additional flooding the flooding problems in a more set the county back by decades, for the basin. natural way, he said. It would and Keahey told The Chronicle “I’m just hoping that every- utilize natural flood control and he’s excited to see movement. one will go into these meetings floodplains to reduce water flow “The one that seems to make with an open mind and under- downstream. A project like Al- the most sense is water retention stand that we have to look at the ternative Four has never been along with fish habitat restoration alternative that will offer the tried on a scale as large as the projects,” Keahey said. “I agree best solutions for everyone in one proposed in the draft report,

you our family, we are just so he was reported to be in criti- Snaza overwhelmed and so apprecia- cal, but stable condition. He was tive of the support that we have later transferred to Harborview Continued from the front page received,” Rob said. “Especially Rehabilitation Center in Seattle. in our line of work, when these He sustained head, arm and get back to being physically fit,” types of things happen you re- leg injuries, according to earlier Rob said. ally find out how you truly are reports in The Chronicle. The duration of the ongoing Drs. Hansen and Cooper, owners of Morton Medical Center, in rehab depends on how he pro- respected and liked. It’s just in- John and Rob Snaza have Morton, would like to welcome Physician Assistant, Kay Brooks gresses and what his doctors ul- credible.” been sheriffs of neighboring and Nurse Practitioner Jennifer Montoure. Both Kay and On Aug. 23, John was trav- Thurston and Lewis counties timately decide, Jennifer specialize in family practice and are welcoming and Rob said. eling with friends on Highway since Rob was elected in 2015. 200 at milepost 23 near Noxon, John has been the Thurston accepting new patients. Morton Medical Center has been The Snaza serving the community for over 40 years. The providers and family has ex- Montana, when he lost control County sheriff since 2010. Both perienced an of his Harley Davidson around a have worked in law enforcement their staff look forward to serving your healthcare needs. Our outpouring of curve and went off an embank- in the area since the 1990s. ofice hours are M-Th 8-4:30, F 8-4, closed Sat-Sun. Schedule support from ment, according to Montana “I want to thank everyone an appointment today: 360-496-5145. the community Highway Patrol. He reportedly for their continued support and since the sher- was not wearing a helmet. He we know that John will be back Morton Medical Center John Snaza iff’s accident in was then airlifted with serious soon,” Rob said. “We are just Thurston county Montana. injuries to Kootenai Health in excited that he’s around to talk 531 Adams Ave., Morton, WA 360-496-5145 sherriff “I can tell Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, where about.” The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016 • Sports 1

LEWISCOUNTYSPORTS.COM Napavine Splashes Past Ony 3-1 / Sports 3

Follow Us Online! WF West 55, Rochester 0 • Tumwater 41, Centralia 0 • Forks 22, Tenino 20 FRIDAY NIGHT FACEBOOK.COM/LCSports Sports editor: Aaron VanTuyl PREP FOOTBALL Toledo 56, Mossyrock 14 • Toutle Lake 56, Winlock 7 • Adna 12, Rainier 7 Phone number: 807-8229 e-mail: [email protected] ROUNDUP Pe Ell-Willapa Valley 46, South Bend 0 • Onalaska 67, Chief Leschi 0

2B Football TOO MUCH TOLEDO Indians Run Past Mossyrock 56-14 in River Division Showdown

PETE CASTER / [email protected] Toledo’s Dylan Hoiseck coasts into the end zone Friday night during a SWW 2B River Division football game at Mossyrock.

By Jordan Nailon touchdown apiece. Newhouse was at first unable to [email protected] Early on the game had all the breathe and then noted pain in trappings of a 12-round slugfest, his neck. With no ambulance on MOSSYROCK — Toledo but injuries to Mossyrock and sight the game was halted for at delivered a death by a thousand the inevitable onslaught of the least 10 minutes while coaches, cuts to the hometown Vikings Toledo attack wound up cutting parents and medical personnel here Friday night as 11 different the game short, literally. in attendance checked on the players contributed to the Indi- player. With a running clock ans’ total of 480 offensive yards With 7:53 remaining in the fourth quarter the game was already in effect due to Toledo’s en route to a 56-14 victory in 42-point lead the decision was their SWW 2B League River Di- called off by the officials after a Mossyrock player sustained an made by the officials to call off vision football contest. the game in order to facilitate Dakota Robins paced To- injury during a Toledo onside kick attempt. The injured Vi- the highest level of care for Ne- ledo with three touchdowns on whouse, who was eventually just eight touches, while Dylan king, Joe Newhouse, recovered the kick and turned his back to loaded into an ambulance and Hoiseck added two scores (one transported to Morton General the wall of oncoming Indians by air, one by ground), and Dal- Hospital. ton Yoder, Keyton Wallace and just before absorbing an echo- Ethan Buck all added a rushing ing hit to his neck and back. please see TOLEDO, page S5 Mossyrock’s James Cheney runs towards the Toledo defense Friday in Mossyrock.

2A Football 2A Football Tumwater Starts Bearcats Cruise Taking Apart Past Rochester By The Chronicle Tigers Early ROCHESTER — The Bearcats ran into a little trouble ROUGH START: Tumwater early on, but quickly righted the Recovers Fumble, Scores ship to crush Rochester 55-0 here Friday in Evergreen 2A on Opening Kickoff in Conference football action. 41-0 Win Over Tigers Austin Emery ran eight times for 114 yards and three By Aaron VanTuyl first-half touchdowns, and W.F. [email protected] West tallied 308 yards on the Kickoff omens don’t get ground to improve to 6-0 on the much more indicative than this. season. Tumwater’s Nathan Seaman “Give Rochester credit. They launched the opening kick deep came out, and defensively, they into Tiger territory, where re- had some answers for what we turner Jose Pineda couldn’t quite were trying to do,” Bearcat get a grip on the ball. Adam Bob Wollan said. Warren, a senior up-man on the Those answers included an kicking team, found the ball in interception by Jared Winters on his hands on the opposition’s 20- the Bearcats’ second series, be- yard line and didn’t miss a step fore the rushing attack settled in. on his way to the end zone. “Austin had some big runs, MATT BAIDE / [email protected] please see CENTRALIA, page S2 W.F. West’s Austin Emery runs the ball during an Evergreen 2A Conference game at Rochester Friday night. please see BEARCATS, page S2

Friday, Oct. 28th 5:30-7:30pm Centralia Thorbeckes 2020 Borst Ave., Centralia Fee: Donation*

*Proceeds go to the Veterans Memorial Museum in Chehalis Ask about our 3-month single membership special - On sale now! CH564508bw.do

Sports 2 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016 SPORTS LEWISCOUNTYSPORTS.COM SCOREBOARD

WFW — Camoza 30-yard run; Laufenberg Comp-Att-Int 0-4-0 2-5-0 Scoring Summary Jackson 34, Kamiak 33 Preps kick Fumbles/Lost 5/3 1/1 TL — Zak Lucas 60-yard run Juanita 31, Lake Washington 14 Penalties/Yards 3/15 4/40 TL — Lucas 15-yard run Local Prep Schedules Kalama 48, Wahkiakum 6 SATURDAY, Oct. 8 Team Stats WFW ROC TL — Marshall Coleman 17-yard run Kentlake 21, Tahoma 3 Football First Downs 16 5 Individual Stats WIN — Anthony Clevenger 2-yard run; Neah Bay at Morton-White Pass, 2 p.m. Rushing Yards 308 34 Rushing: SB — A.J. Sanchez 13/49; PWV — kick good King’s 51, Cedar Park Christian (Bothell) 13 Napavine at Life Christian, 7 p.m. Passing Yards 112 96 Jurek 29/242, Gutierrez 5/107 TL — Lucas 75-yard kick return King’s Way Christian School 52, Castle Rock Total Yards 420 130 Passing: SB — N/A; PWV — Matt Pearson TL — Zach Vetter 23-yard pass to Riley College Soccer 28 Comp-Att-Int 6-10-1 10-19-1 2-5/14 Kent Grays Harbor at Centralia, 7 p.m. Klahowya 34, Charles Wright Academy 15 Cross Country Fumbles/Lost 2/0 4/0 Receiving: SB — N/A; PWV — Ryan TL — Lucas 5-yard run Adna at Highclimber Invitational (Shelton), Penalties/Yards 3/20 2/20 Shepherd 2/14 TL — Dusty Archer 7-yard run La Center 45, Stevenson 0 9:30 a.m. TL — Asher VanHoof 1-yard run La Salle 48, Goldendale 7 Individual Stats At Onalaska LaConner 54, Friday Harbor 0 Rushing: WFW — Emery 8/114, Steen MONDAY, Oct. 10 LOGGERS 67, WARRIORS 0 Team Stats WIN TL 3/39, Henry 2/29; ROC — Slaymaker 15/37 Chief Leschi 0 0 0 0 —0 Lake Stevens 54, Glacier Peak 3 Boys Golf First Downs 7 7 Passing: WFW — Wollan 6-10/112; ROC — Onalaska 48 6 6 7 —67 Aberdeen at W.F. West, 3:30 p.m. Rushing Yards 161 221 Lakes 42, Spanaway Lake 8 Bryce Lollar 9-17/61, Daniel May 1-2/35 Passing Yards 98 65 Centralia at Rochester, 3:30 p.m. Lakewood 25, Anacortes 23 Receiving: WFW — Hawking 1/28, Guer- Scoring Summary Total Yards 259 286 Lewis and Clark 17, Shadle Park 7 rero 1/48; ROC — Schneider 4/27, B. Smith ONY — Trace Lawrence 61-yard run; Comp-Att-Int 8-14-1 3-3-0 TUESDAY, Oct. 11 1/35 conversion good Fumbles/Lost 6/3 2/1 Liberty 63, West Seattle 27 Girls Soccer ONY — Safety Penalties/Yards 4/35 4/35 Kalama at Toledo, 6 p.m. Liberty (Spangle) 45, Colfax 6 At Adna ONY — Lazzaro Rodriguez 63-yard kick Adna at Napavine, 6 p.m. Lincoln 56, Mount Tahoma 8 PIRATES 12, MOUNTAINEERS 7 return; conversion good Individual Stats Onalaska at Winlock, 6 p.m. Lind-Ritzville/Sprague 47, Davenport 20 Rainier 0 7 0 0 —7 ONY — Lawrence 20-yard run; conversion Rushing: WIN — Seth Lindsey 17/95; TL — W.F. West at Centralia, 7 p.m. Adna 0 0 12 0 —12 good Lucas 8/127 Lummi def. Tulalip Heritage, forfeit Rochester at Aberdeen, 7 p.m. ONY — Lawrence 5-yard run; conversion Passing: WIN — Clevenger 8-14/98; TL — Lynden 31, Blaine 23 Hoquiam at Tenino, 7 p.m. Scoring Summary failed Marshall Coleman 1-1/32 Volleyball Marysville-Pilchuck 21, Arlington 13 RAI — Zack Lofgren 24-yard pass to Dillon ONY — Lawrence 28-yard run; conversion Receiving: WIN — Nicholas Patching 4/41; Toutle Lake at Mossyrock, 7 p.m. Mead 56, Rogers (Spokane) 24 Stancil ; kick good good TL — Logan Grabenhorst 2/62 Toledo at Onalaska, 7 p.m. ADN — Isaac Ingle 8-yard run; pass failed ONY — Rodriguez 1-yard run,; conversion Meadowdale 55, Lynnwood 28 Morton-White Pass at Adna, 7 p.m. ADN — Ingle 57-yard run; pass failed ONY — Ernie Roque 25-yard run; kick Monroe 56, Mariner 7 Winlock at Pe Ell, 7 p.m. failed Statewide Football Scores Kalama at Napavine, 7 p.m. Montesano 36, R.A. Long 12 Team Stats RAI ADN ONY — Ashton Haight 15-yard run; kick Thursday’s Scores W.F. West at Centralia, 7 p.m. Moses Lake 31, Davis 0 First Downs 12 4 failed Auburn Riverside 26, Decatur 7 Aberdeen at Rochester, 7 p.m. Rushing Yards 48 124 ONY — Hazen Inman 4-yard run; kick good Northwest Christian (Colbert) 49, Reardan 0 Mount Baker 41, Meridian 28 Hoquiam at Tenino, 7 p.m. Passing Yards 115 0 Peninsula 23, North Thurston 7 Mountain View 27, Kelso 14 Swim & Dive Total Yards 163 124 Team Stats CL ONY University 10, North Central 8 Centralia, Rochester, W.F. West at Black Newport 26, Riverside 0 Comp-Att-Int 8-19-0 0-6-2 First Downs 7 18 Hills, 5 p.m. Nooksack Valley 35, Lynden Christian 32 Fumbles/Lost 1/0 4/2 Rushing Yards -8 402 Friday’s Scores Penalties/Yards 4/35 1/15 Passing Yards 85 0 Adna 12, Rainier 7 North Beach 56, Ocosta 0 Total Yards 77 402 Almira/Coulee-Hartline 64, Yakama Tribal 30 North Kitsap 44, Bremerton 10 Friday’s Local Results Individual Stats Comp-Att-Int 10-22-2 0-1-0 Archbishop Murphy def. Granite Falls, forfeit Prep Football O’Dea 47, Bainbridge 6 Rushing: RAI — N/A; ADN — Ingle 8/78 Fumbles/Lost 4/1 2/1 Auburn Mountainview 42, Auburn 21 At Centralia Passing: RAI — Lofgren 8-19/115; ADN — Penalties/Yards 2/10 6/40 Battle Ground 33, Union 29 Oak Harbor 39, Marysville-Getchell 7 THUNDERBIRDS 41, TIGERS 0 Conner Weed 0-6/0 Bellarmine Prep 45, South Kitsap 27 Okanogan 35, Chelan 12 Tumwater 21 7 13 0 —41 Receiving: RAI — N/A; ADN — N/A Individual Stats Bellevue 33, Interlake 7 Olympic 48, Kingston 6 Centralia 0 0 0 0 —0 Rushing: CL — Brazelle 2/4; ONY — Trace Bellevue Christian 30, Chimacum 23 Onalaska 67, Chief Leschi 0 At Forks Lawrence 7/136, Haight 21/98, Rodriguez Bellingham 56, Sehome 43 Scoring Summary SPARTANS 22, BEAVERS 20 5/73, Roque 1/25, Inman 3/20 Black Hills 49, Aberdeen 0 Othello 62, Ephrata 15 TUM — Adam Warren 20-yard fumble Tenino 7 6 0 7 —20 Passing: CL — Baker 10-22/85; ONY — Bonney Lake 36, Wilson 0 Pe Ell/Willapa Valley 46, South Bend 0 return; Keson Waller kick Forks 0 14 0 8 —22 Blair 0-1/0 Brewster 34, Bridgeport 7 Port Townsend 57, Coupeville 0 TUM — Rico Speigner 16-yard run; Nathan Receiving: CL — N/A; ONY — N/A Camas 31, Skyview 9 Prairie 30, Hudson’s Bay 28 Seaman kick Scoring Summary Capital 16, Central Kitsap 0 TUM — Noah Andrews 63-yard run; Sea- TEN — 37 yard run Spencer Brewer; kick At Mossyrock Cascade (Everett) 34, Mount Vernon 33 Prosser 50, Grandview 0 man kick good INDIANS 56, TIGERS 14 Cascade (Leavenworth) 70, Cle Elum/Roslyn Redmond 28, Mercer Island 25 TUM — Andrews 14-yard run; Seaman kick FRK — 6-yard pass; kick no good Toledo 6 22 21 7 —14 6 Renton 33, Port Angeles 6 TUM — Andrews 83-yard kick return; kick TEN — Miles Cannon to Guy Murillo; kick Mossyrock 7 0 7 0 —54 Cashmere 48, Omak 7 Republic 26, Selkirk 20 failed no good Central Valley 38, Ferris 17 TUM — Keson Waller 2-yard run; Seaman FRK — 15-yard pass; conversion good Scoring Summary Chewelah 35, Lakeside (Nine Mile Falls) 14 Richland 21, Kamiakin 20, OT kick FRK — 1-yard run; conversion good TOL — Dakota Robins 3-yard run; Andreas Chiawana 48, Southridge 0 Ridgeield 21, Mark Morris 7 TEN — Miles Cannon to Guy 3-yard pass; Malunat kick failed Clarkston 10, Cheney 6 River Ridge 42, Eatonville 17 Team Stats TUM CEN kick good MOS — James Cheney 40-yard run; Adrian Clearwater Valley, Idaho 61, Pomeroy 14 Roosevelt 21, Nathan Hale 18 First Downs 14 6 Bazante kick Clover Park 22, Highline 14 Rushing Yards 325 -12 Team Stats TEN FRK TOL — Dylan Hoiseck 24-yard run; Keyton Colton 74, St. John-Endicott/Lacrosse 6 Royal 50, Kiona-Benton 8 Passing Yards 21 107 First Downs 9 N/A Wallace conversion run Columbia River 35, Woodland 24 Sandpoint, Idaho 41, Eastmont 27 Total Yards 346 95 Rushing Yards 73 N/A TOL — Wallace 8-yard run; Malunat kick Colville 62, Medical Lake 0 Seattle Prep 31, Lakeside (Seattle) 18 Comp-Att-Int 3-7-0 14-21-2 Passing Yards 167 N/A TOL — Dalton Yoder 18-yard pass to Hoiseck; Concrete 20, South Whidbey 8 Sedro-Woolley 17, Burlington-Edison 14 Fumbles/Lost 3/2 1/1 Total Yards 240 N/A Malunat kick Connell 59, River View 6 Penalties/Yards 10/85 7/60 Comp-Att-Int 16-23-2 N/A TOL — Robins 5-yard run; Malunat kick Curtis 14, Rogers (Puyallup) 3 Selah 56, Wapato 0 Fumbles/Lost 0/0 N/A MOS — Derek Harper 63-yard kickof return; Cusick 30, Columbia (Hunters) 0 Sequim 47, North Mason 12 Individual Stats Penalties/Yards 4/30 N/A Bazante kick Dayton-Waitsburg 55, Mabton 30 Shorecrest 34, Shorewood 3 Rushing: TUM — Speigner 5/91, Jakob TOL — Yoder 1-yard run; Malunat kick Deer Park 22, Freeman 17 Squalicum 68, Emerald Ridge 55 Holbrook 6/61, Andrews 6/102, Mason Bur- Individual Stats TOL — Robins 4-yard run; Malunat kick East Valley (Yakima) 38, Toppenish 13 bidge 7/42; CEN — Jose Pineda 6/14 Rushing: TEN — Brewer 2/35, Kalkus TOL — Ethan Buck 5-yard run; Malunat Eastlake 58, Mount Si 34 Steilacoom 27, Orting 14 Passing: TUM — Matthew Brown 3-4/21; 15/30, Cannon 4/8; FRK — N/A kick Eastside Catholic 41, Blanchet 13 Sultan 35, Cedarcrest 17 CEN — Joey Alif Passing: TEN — Cannon 16-23/167; FRK Edmonds-Woodway 28, Snohomish 26 Sumner 21, Olympia 16 Receiving: TUM — Austin Faught 2/21, — N/A Team Stats TOL MOS Eisenhower 48, Wenatchee 31 Sunnyside 33, West Valley (Yakima) 16 Cade Otton 1/9; CEN — Cale Shute 4/28, Receiving: TEN — Griis 4/68, Brewer 4/55, First Downs 21 6 Ellensburg 56, Quincy 0 Jordan Thomas 4/64, Derek VanDeLaarschot Wright 3/17, Murrillo 5/27; FRK — N/A Rushing Yards 392 83 Entiat 32, Wellpinit 22 Sunnyside Christian 42, Touchet 20 2/13 Passing Yards 88 37 Enumclaw 27, Federal Way 15 Tacoma Baptist 54, Rainier Christian 8 At Pe Ell Total Yards 480 120 Everett 37, Mountlake Terrace 10 Timberline 21, Yelm 7 At Rochester TITANS 46, INDIANS 0 Comp-Att-Int 3-12-0 5-11-1 Evergreen (Vancouver) 41, Fort Vancouver 0 Todd Beamer 20, Thomas Jeferson 0 BEARCATS 55, WARRIORS 0 South Bend 0 0 0 0 —0 Fumbles/Lost 0/0 1/0 Ferndale 55, Stanwood 14 W.F. West 7 27 7 14 —55 Pe Ell-WV 7 14 18 7 —46 Penalties/Yards 4/35 6/60 Fife 22, White River 7 Toledo 56, Mossyrock 14 Rochester 0 0 0 0 —0 Forks 22, Tenino 20 Toutle Lake 56, Winlock 7 Scoring Summary Individual Stats Franklin Pierce 71, Evergreen (Seattle) 12 Tri-Cities Prep 46, Liberty Christian 6 Scoring Summary PWV — Ever Gutierrez 41-yard run; Tyson Rushing: TOL — Yoder 13/104, Marcus Garield 11, Ballard 6 Tumwater 41, Centralia 0 WFW — Austin Emery 23-yard run; Cory Nissell kick Ouellette 8/69, Robins 10/53; MOS — Garield-Palouse 60, Tekoa/Rosalia 8 Davis kick PWV — Kaelin Jurek 6-yard run; run failed Cheney 8/54 Gig Harbor 38, Shelton 21 W. F. West 55, Rochester 0 WFW — Emery 10-yard run; Cory Davis PWV — Matt Pearson 1-yard run; Jurek run Passing: TOL — Yoder 3-12/88; MOS — Gonzaga Prep 42, Mt. Spokane 17 Wahluke 53, College Place 12 kick PWV — Jurek 11-yard run; pass failed Evan Gootgeld 4-10/22 Graham-Kapowsin 71, Puyallup 43 Walla Walla 42, Pasco 8 WFW — Emery 39-yard run; Cory Davis PWV — Gutierrez 36-yard run; run failed Receiving: TOL — Fano Hanson 1/60, Hanford 26, Kennewick 21 Warden 47, Columbia (Burbank) 41 kick PWV — Jurek 3-yard run; run failed Hoiseck 1/18; MOS — Bo Miles 4/24, Justin Hazen 42, Kentridge 12 WFW — Ka’imi Henry 3-yard run; kick PWV — Jurek 6-yard run; Nissell kick Gootgeld 1/15 Heritage 64, Benson, Ore. 0 Washington 21, Foss 6 failed Hockinson 47, Washougal 12 West Valley (Spokane) 25, Pullman 12 WFW — Nole Wollan 48-yard pass to Tyson Team Stats SB PWV At Toutle Hoquiam 46, Elma 7 White Swan 40, Lyle-Klickitat-Wishram 6 Guerrero; Davis kick First Downs 4 21 DUCKS 56, CARDINALS 7 Ilwaco 35, Raymond 17 Wilbur-Creston 36, Springdale 7 WFW — Henry 10-yard run; Davis kick Rushing Yards 72 452 Winlock 7 0 0 0 —7 Inchelium 90, Northport 14 WFW — Lafe Johnson 2-yard run; Tyler Passing Yards 0 14 Toutle Lk. 26 23 7 0 —56 Inglemoor 40, Newport 28 Woodinville 31, Issaquah 0 Laufenberg kick Total Yards 72 466 Ingraham 24, Franklin 20 Zillah 23, Naches Valley 7 SPORTS ON THE AIR

SATURDAY, OCT. 8 CBSSN — Utah St. at Colorado St. Noon AUTO RACING 7:30 p.m. ESPN2 — Purdue at Nebraska 4 p.m. ESPN or ESPN2 — UCLA at Arizona St. GOLF NBC — NASCAR, Sprint Cup Series, Bank of ESPN or ESPN2 — Washington St. at Stanford 3:30 a.m. America 500, at Concord, N.C. ESPNU — UNLV at San Diego St. GOLF — European PGA Tour, Alfred Dunhill 9:30 p.m. 11:30 p.m. Links Championship, inal round, at Carnoustie & NBCSN — Formula One, Japanese Grand Prix, at ESPNU — Bethune-Cookman at SC St. Kingsbarns, Scotland Suzuka, Japan GOLF Noon COLLEGE FOOTBALL Noon GOLF — Web.com Tour Championship, inal 8:30 a.m. GOLF — Web.com Tour Championship, third round, at Atlantic Beach, Fla. CBSSN — Cincinnati at UConn round, at Atlantic Beach, Fla. 3 p.m. 9 a.m. 3 p.m. GOLF — Champions Tour, Toshiba Classic, inal ABC — Notre Dame at North Carolina State GOLF — Champions Tour, Toshiba Classic, sec- ESPN2 — Iowa at Minnesota ond round, at Newport Beach, Calif. round, at Newport Beach, Calif. BTN — Maryland at Penn St. 9 p.m. HORSE RACING ESPN — LSU at Florida GOLF — LPGA Tour, Fubon LPGA Taiwan Cham- 2 p.m. ESPNEWS — East Carolina at South Florida pionship, inal round, at Taipei, Taiwan NBC — Breeders’ Cup Challenge Series, Keene- ESPNU — TCU at Kansas Midnight land (Juddmonte Spinster Stakes and Dixiana FS1 — Oklahoma vs. Texas, at Dallas ESPN2 — Asia Paciic Amateur Championship, Bourbon Stakes), at Lexington, Ky. SEC — Auburn at Mississippi St. inal round, at Incheon, Korea (same-day tape) MLB BASEBALL 10 a.m. HORSE RACING 1 p.m. CBSSN — at Navy 2 p.m. TBS — AL Division Series, Game 3, Cleveland at 12:30 p.m. NBC — Breeders’ Cup Challenge Series, Keenel- Boston ABC, ESPN, or ESPN2 — BYU at Michigan St. and, at Lexington, Ky. 4:30 p.m. ABC, ESPN or ESPN2 — Indiana at Ohio St. MLB BASEBALL TBS — AL Division Series, Game 3, Texas at ABC, ESPN or ESPN2 — Iowa St. at Oklahoma St. 1 p.m. Toronto BTN — Purdue at Illinois FS1 — NL Division Series, Game 2, LA Dodgers NBA BASKETBALL CBS — SEC game TBA at Washington 4:30 p.m. ESPNU — Game TBA 5 p.m. NBA — Preseason, New Orleans at Houston FSN — Army at Duke MLB — NL Division Series, Game 2, San Fran- 6:30 p.m. 1 p.m. cisco at Chicago Cubs NBA — Preseason, Denver at L.A. Lakers SEC — Vanderbilt at Kentucky MIXED MARTIAL ARTS NFL FOOTBALL 3:30 p.m. 5 p.m. 10 a.m. CBSSN — N. Illinois at W, Michigan FS1 — UFC 204, prelims, at Manchester, Eng- 4 or 5 p.m. land CBS — NY Jets at Pittsburgh ABC, ESPN or ESPN2 — Michigan at Rutgers NBA BASKETBALL 1 p.m. 4 p.m. 12:30 p.m. FOX — Atlanta at Denver ESPN2 or ESPNU — Texas Tech at Kansas St. NBA — Preseason, Charlotte at Boston 1:25 p.m. FSN — Syracuse at Wake Forest 4:30 p.m. CBS — Cincinnati at Dallas 4:30 p.m. NBA — Preseason, Philadelphia at Cleveland 5:20 p.m. FOX — Washington at Oregon NBC — N.Y. Giants at Green Bay SEC — Georgia at South Carolina SUNDAY, Oct. 9 WNBA BASKETBALL 4 p.m. COLLEGE VOLLEYBALL Noon FS1 — Arizona at Utah 10 a.m. ABC — WNBA Finals, Game 1, Los Angeles at 7 p.m. ESPN2 — Ohio St. at Michigan Minnesota • Sports 3 SPORTS The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016

Thursday’s 2B Girls Soccer Napavine Splashes Past Onalaska in C2BL Battle By The Chronicle ONALASKA — Napavine earned its second Central 2B League win of the season, top- ping Onalaska 3-1 here on a sog- gy Thursday night. Napavine scored in the 25th minute on a goal by Lucy Sevilla for a 1-0 halftime advantage. Sevilla added a second goal in the 48th minute off a free kick to put the Tigers up 2-0. Kayla Casey got on the board for Napavine in the 67th min- ute. Onalaska’s Djjin McCarter put one in the net for the Log- gers during stoppage time, but it wasn’t enough as the Tigers earned the win. “They played one of their best games of the year,” Napavine coach Mike Dieckman said. “We switched the defense up, I switched it to put a sweeper keeper in and they played way better that way, so that worked out for us.” MATT BAIDE / [email protected] Dieckman praised the play Napavine’s Rebecca Snaza (8) of Sevilla tonight, saying she is and Onalaska’s Hannah Cameron one of the team’s best players and fight for the ball during a Central leaders. 2B League match in Onalaska on For Onalaska, it was a disap- Thursday. pointing loss on their home field. “It was a tough game definite- ly, we just couldn’t put it togeth- on the rebound and scored to of a long pass and Kleemeyer Edminster and Payton Asel- er,” Onalaska coach Chris Van Adna Halts Kalama give the Pirates a 1-0 halftime knocked the ball over Kalama’s ton worked well together in the Clifford said. “We had the right KALAMA — Adna re- idea but the goals just didn’t hap- mained undefeated after Thurs- lead. goalie in the 68th minute. midfield, the coach added, and pen. We gave up some free kicks day, defeating Kalama 3-1 here in Pirate coach Juli Aselton not- Holli Edminster added an in- the defense — Abby Kruger and down on our end and that’s that, Central 2B League soccer action. ed that Kalama’s Emily Mickel- surance goal in the 71st minute, Brynn Arrington in the middle, soccer is like that.” The Chinooks’ game plan son did a nice job blocking Adna again over the keeper’s head, for and Jennika Poppe and Swenson Napavine (2-8, 2-6) travels — packing in the defense and star Devanie Kleemeyer from the final 3-1 margin. on the outside — played excellent. to Adna on Tuesday for another clearing the ball immediately the goal. Dougherty used her speed Adna (9-0, 8-0) hosts league contest, while Onalaska — worked early on, until a shot The Chinooks scored in the well in the win, Aselton said, but Napavine at 6 p.m. on Tuesday in (4-5, 3-5) plays Winlock on the from Holli Edminster bounced 66th minute, but the celebration will miss a few weeks after an another league contest. road on Tuesday in a league off a defender to freshman Alys- was short-lived as Jordyn Swen- ankle sprain suffered late in the NOTE: Host Ocosta edged To- matchup. sa Dougherty, who followed up son found Kleemeyer at the end game. ledo, 1-0, on Thursday night. Thursday’s 2A Girls Soccer Aberdeen Scores Twice in Second Half to Beat Centralia By The Chronicle MATT BAIDE / [email protected] Aberdeen scored two second Aberdeen’s Megan Auld (11) and half goals in rainy and windy Centralia’s Sarah Williams (6) fight conditions to earn a 2-0 win over for possession during an Evergreen Centralia in Evergreen 2A Con- 2A Conference girls soccer game in Centralia Thursday night. ference soccer at Tiger Stadium on Thursday. Aberdeen got on the board in Tumwater Thumps Rochester the second half, and sealed the ROCHESTER — Tumwater win with a goal during stoppage scored two goals in the first half time. en route to a 5-0 win over Roch- “It’s disappointing to lose. You ester here in Evergreen 2A Con- don’t want to lose, (but) we had our chances,” Centralia coach ference action on Thursday. Henry Gallanger said. “We had Tumwater scored two goals our chances and we just didn’t in the first half, and got another capitalize on them. We just goal in the second half. Roches- have to capitalize on them. They ter scored two own goals in the wanted it more. They worked second half as Tumwater cruised harder tonight.” to the win. Centralia (4-7, 2-3) travels “It was nasty. We got our girls to Chehalis for a Swamp Cup healthy and we were running matchup with W.F. West on with them. We played a heck of Tuesday. a lot better,” Rochester coach John Hayes said. “With condi- Black Hills Slips Past W.F. West tions like that, once it got to 3, we with a goal from Nereida Soto, “It was a real good game. It them.” were sluggish. It was just one of TUMWATER — Black Hills assisted by Melynn Jorgensen, to was one of the more fun games Anderson noted that McK- those nights. The ball bounced scored in the 80th minute to cut the Black Hills lead to 2-1 at as a coach to watch the girls play,” enna Moon played her best game edge W.F. West 3-2 in Evergreen their way and they took it to us. halftime. W.F. West coach Allen Anderson of the year, doing a great job con- 2A Conference soccer action W.F. West tied the game in said. “Black Hills is a good team. I thought our girls responded trolling the center of the field. here Thursday. the 76th minute on a corner kick We lost 5-1 the first time and pretty well.” Black Hills got on the board from Soto to Kiara Steen for the I was real happy to see the girls W.F. West (3-7-1, 1-4) hosts Rochester (1-5-3, 0-5) hosts in the 20th minute, and added a goal. But in the 80th minute, go out and compete really well. Centralia in an Evergreen 2A Aberdeen in another Evergreen score in the 26th minute for a 2-0 Black Hills got another goal to We improved quite a bit since Conference Swamp Cup match- 2A Conference contest on Tues- advantage. W.F. West answered earn the win. the first match we played against up on Tuesday. day.

Thursday’s 2B Volleyball Mossyrock Handles Onalaska in Three to Improve to 7-1 By The Chronicle Little played great tonight. She job hustling tonight. They played next Tuesday in a battle of Cen- MOSSYROCK — The Vi- Pirates Power Past had great set ups, good serves great defense and of course did a tral 2B heavyweights. kings improved to 7-1 on the and changed the momentum as great job setting,” said Napavine “Kalama has a great program. season, sweeping Onalaska 25-11, Pe Ell in Four one of our setters.” coach Monica Dailey. They have a great coach,” said Presley Peterson also had a The three setters that Dailey Dailey. “It’s going to be a battle.” 25-9, 25-16 in Central 2B League PE ELL — After losing the good night for the Trojans, es- delivered those kudos to were For Morton-White Pass, Car- volleyball action here on Thurs- first set Adna was able to battle day. pecially on serve receive where Oliva Woodrum, Ashley Dickin- ly King handed out 10 assists and back to best the Trojans in four Stephanie Fried had 11 kills, she was 18 or 21 on serve receive son and Ada Williams. Williams, Taylor Hazen landed four kills in sets of Central 2B League volley- Hannah Smith had five kills, An- passes. Dakota Brooks added 15 in particular, dished five assists addition to seven of seven serv- ball here Thursday night, win- dee Nelson had seven kills and digs to the Pe Ell effort and post- and posted a perfect serving ing. ning 20-25, 25-20, 25-8, 25-10. Paige Moorcroft recorded eight ed a perfect serving night. night for the Tigers. Timberwolves coach Tammy In the face of defeat Pe Ell kills for the Vikings. Mossyrock “I’m proud,” Nelson added. For Napavine, Jordin Pruett Kelly said the loss boiled down to coach Amy Nelson found plenty coach Alex Nelson noted the “They showed exactly what they notched eight kills to go with one primary factor. with which to be pleased. team’s excellent passing work, can bring … It was positive a perfect hitting night. Abbi “We just struggled tonight “I was so proud of them. We with six players recording four or game.” Music held down the defensive with the serve receive,” said Kelly. haven’t played a game to our full more digs. Pe Ell (1-7, 1-4 league) hosts front with 11 digs and three stuff Morton-White Pass (5-3, 2-3 potential yet. Everyone on the “The team’s main focus was Winlock on Tuesday. blocks and Mollie Olson turned league) will play at Adna on eliminating our errors, make court played together, competed, in another stellar performance Tuesday. good decisions and get the ball really working on our attacking that included six aces, 15 kills Napavine (8-0, 5-0 league) in. That was a huge improvement and net play,” said Nelson. “They Tigers Maul Morton- and 16 digs. will play host to Kalama on Tues- from our last game,” Nelson said. came out and they were confi- “Tonight they did a great job day in a game that will feature Nelson also noted the team dent and composed. Those first White Pass in Three of staying really excited during a “pink out” by both teams and was solid in serve-receive with two games were really great.” NAPAVINE — The Tigers the game. They played with a lot their fans in an effort to raise only one error. Nelson noted that Railey were able to get by Morton- of energy and a lot of aggression,” awareness of breast cancer. Mossyrock (7-1, 4-1) hosts Smith turned in a perfect serving White Pass here Thursday night said Dailey. “I just want them to NOTES: Also on Thursday, To- Toutle Lake Tuesday in another night and added 12 digs, while in straight sets of Central 2B take that into the next game and ledo lost in three sets at Toutle league contest, while Onalaska Maggie Elliott posted eight kills League volleyball, 25-14, 25-9 to not be intimidated and to play Lake, 25-7, 25-8, 25-17, and Wah- (3-4, 2-3) hosts Toledo Tuesday and 11 digs. and 25-10. with confidence.” kiakum defeated host Winlock in a league matchup. Nelson added that, “(Ellie) “My three setters did a great Napavine will play Kalama in three, 25-9, 25-10, 25-14. Sports 4 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016 SPORTS

Thursday’s 2A Volleyball Centralia Dominates Aberdeen in Evergreen Sweep By The Chronicle Chelsea Petrino and McKenna will play host to W.F. West on Hoyt added seven kills and Mag- Despite the errors, Dam- ABERDEEN — Centralia Smith added five kills each. Kary Tuesday for their rivalry Swamp gie Vadala dished 10 assists. schen says she can still see allowed 28 total points against Sathre posted eight kills and Cup match. Damschen added that Megan through the fog to a brighter day Aberdeen in a 3-0 sweep of the three blocks. Pallas had a good night at the for her team. Bobcats here in Evergreen 2A “It was nice. Everybody con- Wolves Whack W.F. West service stripe for the Bearcats “We’re a young team. We Conference action on Thursday. tributed,” said Centralia coach and Jordan Crawford played well have people in the stands say- The Tigers won the first set Neil Sharp, who complimented Black Hills walked away with defensively. ing, ‘Wow, it’s a new era for W.F. 25-7, took the second 25-8 and his team on what he considered a four-set victory over the home- “We are very tentative with West.’ People can see it. It really wrapped it up with a 25-13 win. to be a “balanced, focused and town Bearcats Thursday night in serving but she is a confident is a process. It’s just not translat- Centralia’s Joelle Mettler had disciplined” effort. Evergreen 2A Conference volley- server. Our actions as a team ing to wins yet, but in the long 28 assists, five assists, eight digs “We’re beginning to see some ball play, winning 25-11, 25-13, aren’t necessarily confident but run it will pay off.” and was 28 of 28 serving. Team- of those things we were working 22-25, 25-16. we still count on her to serve W.F. West (3-6, 2-2 league) mate Rachel Wilkerson also on in practice,” added Sharp. “It “We made a ton of errors. The confidently,” explained Dam- will play at Centralia on Tuesday turned in a perfect night from was a strong team performance. third game was a little better but schen, or Pallas. “We have a team in the Swamp Cup rivalry game. the service stripe on 15 attempts I thought Tavi had a nice break- we still have a ton of room to im- capable of competing at a high including six aces, and added out game with her six kills and prove,” said Bearcats coach Em- level. We just need to clean up NOTE: Top-ranked Tumwa- five kills and five digs for good Joelle played especially well to- ily Damschen. our game. Teams are mostly get- ter stayed undefeated (8-0, 4-0 measure. Taviana Keahey tal- night.” For W.F. West Makenzie ting points from us making mis- league) with a sweep of Roches- lied six kills for Centralia, while Centralia (12-7, 2-2 in league) Moore posted eight kills, Kailey takes.” ter Thursday night.

Centralia Prep Cross Country

Continued from Sports 1 MWP Girls As if the No. 2-ranked Thun- derbirds needed the boost a 7-0 Take Fourth lead just 9 seconds into the game provided. at Bill Kehoe Noah Andrews scored three touchdowns, and the Thunder- Invitational birds looked dominant from start By The Chronicle to finish in a 41-0 win at Centra- lia Friday night in Evergreen 2A LACEY — The Mor- Conference football action. ton-White Pass girls cross “Tonight they didn’t make country team placed the mistakes that they made last fourth, while the Mossyr- week that we would have had to ock boys placed seventh, at have them make in order to be the Bill Kehoe Invitational more in the game,” Tiger coach at St. Martin’s University Matt Whitmire said. in Lacey on Friday. Unfortunately for Centralia, Mossyrock’s Sarah the Thunderbirds were coming Lovan was the highest lo- off a 33-23 loss at Steilacoom in cal finisher, ending in Week 5 — their first regular-sea- sixth place with a time of son loss since Aug. 31, 2012. MATT BAIDE / [email protected] 21:07. Morton-White Pass’ “Talking to their coaching Centralia’s Derek VanDeLaarschot runs the ball during an EvCo football game at Tiger Stadium Friday night. Kaylen Collette placed staff before the game, sometimes 14th, running the race in a loss can be the best thing for a behind the eight-ball early, Cen- high point, reached Tumwater’s Aliff finished 14 of 21 pass- team,” Whitmire said. “What- 22:29. Also finishing in tralia came up big on the T-Birds’ 5-yard line. Quarterback Joey ing for 107 yards. Jordan Thomas the top 30 were MWP’s ever it was that Steilacoom did, opening drive, with Pineda Aliff went 6 of 7 in that span for caught four passes for 64 yards. I think it’s the same Tumwater Alissa Hughes, Jaylea Ra- knocking away a fourth-down 64 yards, but a fourth-and-1 was “Overall, I was very happy henkamp and Elexcious team that we’re going to see for pass in the end zone to force a backed up 5 yards on an illegal the next six or seven weeks.” with our kids’ performance, in Hampton, finishing in turnover. motion flag. Centralia went for it, terms of their effort,” Whitmire 25th, 27th and 30th place Andrews ran for 96 yards on The offense, though, didn’t six carries, while Rico Speigner but Aliff was quickly flushed out said. “We have a ways to go in respectively. Northwest have much luck keeping the de- of the pocket and his pass to Jose terms of execution, but at the end tallied 91 yards on five carries for fense off the field. After a three- Christian earned the girls the winners. Tumwater ran for Pineda wasn’t enough to move of the day the kids know we have team title over Rainier. and-out Tumwater needed just the chains. three more weeks to go that’s go- 325 yards while keeping Centra- three plays to get back to the end On the boys side, lia in negative rushing yardage Tumwater turned the ball ing to determine how far they Onalaska’s Zachary zone on a 16-yard run from Rico over on downs on its next drive, for the game. play after the regular season’s Wright was the highest lo- Speigner. but Centralia threw two inter- “They are so much better, fun- After another Tiger punt An- done.” cal finisher, earning 12th damentally, than anybody that ceptions — one by Andrews, Derek VanDeLaarschot drews — who had lined up at with one hand, on a tipped pass place with a time of 17:31. we play, and I don’t mind saying quarterback up to that point — played well at linebacker, Whit- Mossyrock’s Sean John- that,” Tiger coach Matt Whit- — in the last minute of the first mire added, and Derek Baumel ceded his spot under center to half, sandwiched around a lost son was the next highest mire said. “What makes them was a standout at defensive end. Matthew Brown, who pitched Tumwater fumble, and the T- finisher, ending up in 21st really special is, No. 1, the quality the first handoff of the series Birds went into the intermission Centralia (2-4, 0-2 league) place with a time of 18:02. of athletes that they get, as well to his left and to Andrews, who plays at Rochester on Friday. Tenino’s Kellen Pearson as the number of quality athletes. up 28-0. zipped 63 yards up the left side was the highest Beaver You put those things together, for a score. Andrews added a 14- Andrews ran the second-half kickoff back 83 yards for a touch- NOTE: It was the final game finisher, taking 45th place. along with the coaching, and yard touchdown run later in the in Centralia for Tumwater head that’s just an outstanding football second quarter. down, and Keson Waller scored Northwest Christian also program. Our kids have noth- The Tigers’ best look at the on a 2-yard run with 8:16 left in coach Sid Otton, who will retire earned the boys team title ing to hang their heads about to- end zone came in the second the third quarter to make it 41-0 at the end of this season. Otton, as Timberline finished in night.” quarter, when an 11-play drive and push the running clock into in his 49th season, has a record second. Despite putting themselves covered 65 yards and, at its operation. of 389-130, with six state titles. Love he Chronicle? Want to share the love? Do you subscribe to the chronicle ... or want to subscribe? Share the love and get a 2nd

MATT BAIDE / [email protected] W.F. West’s Ka’imi Henry runs the ball past Rochester’s Patrick Riley (5) during an suscription for a friend, loved Evergreen 2A Conference game at Rochester Friday night. one or neighbor! said. “We just couldn’t stop Bearcats them tonight.” Ben Slaymaker led the War- Continued from Sports 1 riors’ rushing attack, carrying To renew or start today, the ball 15 times for 37 yards, and defensively we settled down and Bryce Lollar completed 9 of call 807-8203! and started making some plays,” 17 passes for 61 yards. Wollan said. Rochester was held to 130 “I was impressed with how First Subscription First Subscription First Subscription yards of offense, with 96 coming the Rochester kids competed, all $12.90 for 1 Month $65.15 for 6 Months $122.00 for 1 Year through the air. the way through,” Wollan added. Kolby Steen added three car- It was the first time back on Add Additional ries for 39 yards for W.F. West, the Warriors’ field for Wollan, Subscription + $8 $48 $84 and Ka’imi Henry ran twice for who coached Rochester from 1996 to 2002 before taking the 29 yards and two touchdowns. Total for 2 $20.90 $113.15 $206.00 Nole Wollan completed six of 10 head coaching job at Pullman = passes — to six different receiv- High School. Subscriptions must start and end at the same time and may not be combined. ers — for W.F. West, including a “It was strange,” Wollan not- 48-yard touchdown pass to Ty- ed, of being in Rochester’s visit- No refunds if canceled early. son Guerrero. ing locker room. “But I ran into a lot of ex-players there, so that

Lafe Johnson and Jaiyden CH563806hh.sw Camoza added touchdown runs was kind of fun.” for the Bearcats in the fourth W.F. West (6-0, 2-0) hosts quarter. Black Hills in their homecoming “We just couldn’t capital- game on Friday, while Rochester ize and couldn’t move the ball,” (0-6, 0-1) hosts Centralia in an Rochester coach Mark Smith EvCo contest the same night. • Sports 5 SPORTS The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016

1A Football Beavers’ Comeback Comes Up Short in 22-20 Loss at Forks By The Chronicle Spartans. pass. the lead to 22-20, but the Beavers’ them apart on the passing game; FORKS — Tenino had a “It was a couple missed oppor- The Beavers answered with comeback fell short in the clos- we just ran out of time,” Bullus chance to win in the closing tunities. We had a little blocking a touchdown pass of their own, ing seconds. said. “It was a good battle, one seconds, but couldn’t convert as breakdown on the extra point,” with Miles Cannon finding Guy Cannon completed 16 of 23 of my favorite games to coach. I Forks earned a 22-20 win over Bullus said. “Against a power Murrillo for a score to retake passes for 167 yards, with two have nothing but respect, those the Beavers in Evergreen 1A running team, it’s hard to stop the lead. But Forks had another touchdowns and two intercep- are tough kids. I know how on conversions and that one scoring pass, this time a 15-yard tions. Brewer ran twice for 35 League action here Friday. tough it is to be a first-year A missed extra point in the extra point made it a two-score catch-and-run, for a 14-13 lead at yards, and Garrett Kalkus car- coach; (Forks coach Emil West) second quarter was costly, as game.” halftime. ried the ball 15 times for 30 yards. Forks ran the ball well and con- Tenino took the lead in the Forks pulled ahead in the fi- Chase Griffis was the leading is changing the identity, and they trolled the time of possession, first quarter on a 37-yard scam- nal stanza on a 1-yard run, and receiver with four catches for 68 are buying in.” which Tenino coach Tim Bullus per by Spencer Brewer. Forks led by 9 with the conversion. yards. Tenino (3-3, 0-2) hosts Elma equated to a four-to-one time got on the board in the second Cannon found Murrillo for “Our kids played hard. They on Friday in an Evergreen 1A of possession advantage for the quarter on a 6-yard touchdown a 3-yard touchdown pass to cut loaded the box and we picked League battle. Toledo

Continued from Sports 1 A report from Mossyrock High School athletics’ Twitter account around 11 p.m. noted that while details were scarce, Newhouse’s injuries were not believed to be life threatening or permanent. Way back in the first half, though, the Vikings had a one- point lead to call their own. To- ledo’s Robins scored the first touchdown of the game on a 3-yard run but the subsequent point-after kick was blocked. So, when Mossyrock’s James Cheney busted loose for a 40- yard touchdown run with 17 seconds left in the first frame the Vikings were able to take a 7-6 lead after a successful kick from the newly-eligible soccer convert Adrian Bazante. The Vikings held onto their lead until 5:41 in the second quarter when Hoiseck slashed his way to a 24-yard touchdown run. A two-point conversion run by Keyton Wallace earned Toledo back their missed point PETE CASTER / [email protected] and put the Indians up 14-7. The Mossyrock’s Bo Miles is tackled by Toledo’s Seth Nichols, left, Dalton Yoder, center, and Larry Demery, right, during the second quarter of a SWW 2B River Division foot- score was a sign of many more ball game on Friday night in Mossyrock. things to come as the Indians the fourth quarter. ball for us. It doesn’t matter who outscored Mossyrock 22-0 in “He carries two jerseys, and gets the touchdowns, as long as the second quarter and 43-7 by one’s a guard’s,” said Thibault of we’ve got points going up on the the end of the third frame. the multi-dimensional Buck. board,” said Robins. “It’s that Wallace again got in on the Wallace also posted an inter- urgency that this is our last year. action when he punched in an ception that led directly to the It’s our last hoorah. Let’s go!” 8-yard run for a score with 1:31 Indians’ first scoring drive of to go in the half and after re- In addition to the injury the game, and quarterback Dal- sustained by Newhouse, Vi- covering one of their infamous ton Yoder tallied an impressive onside kicks, Yoder was able to king stalwarts James Cheney, 104 rushing yards and a touch- Bo Miles and Justin Gootgeld find a streaking Hoiseck for an down on 13 carries. 18-yard touchdown pass with also wound up hobbled during The star of the show for Tole- the contest. The loss of players just :28 seconds before the half. do, though, was Robins and his Toledo scored on their first of that caliber would hurt any hat trick of touchdowns. team, but the blow was especial- drive of the second half as well “He has good vision,” said ly tough on a Mossyrock squad when Robins found paydirt Thibault of Robins. “He’s just a from five yards out. good athlete.” that dressed only 19 players. A failed pooch kick by To- For his part, Robins was “For them to be starting 19 ledo on the ensuing kickoff gave Toledo’s Keyton Wallace (33) catches a pass Friday night in Mossyrock. humble in the pensive postgame guys I thought they played really Mossyrock a spark of life though well,” said Thibault of Mossyr- and final score of the night on a “We’ve just got a lot of great atmosphere. as Derek Harper returned it “I can only do as good as my ock. “I can see them making the 63-yards to the house for Mossy- four yard rush with 3:06 left in kids who are happy to be here,” linemen can and they did a great playoffs.” rock’s second, and final score of the third frame. said Thibault. “I thought the job. All my credit goes to my Mossyrock coach Jason Cole the evening. Toledo coach Jeremy third quarter was a good one. It linemen,” said Robins. was unsure of how severe any Yoder got back in the action Thibault was happy to see his was a tempo thing.” The senior slotback added the injuries to his players were in shortly thereafter with a one team put the pressure on and Ethan Buck capped off the that the spread out offensive the postgame daze. yard touchdown run on fourth keep it on. He says intermittent Toledo scoring action with his workload is a key to his team’s Toledo (6-0) hosts Wahkia- and goal from the one yard line lapses in intensity is a point of first touchdown of the year a success. kum next Friday while Mossyr- and Robins notched his fourth concern for his team. five yard rush with 8:04 left in “It doesn’t matter who get the ock (2-4) travels to Winlock. 2B Football No. 10 Pirates Edge No. 7 Mountaineers 12-7 in Defensive Battle By The Chronicle fense came on the ground, but ries for 107 yards and a score. ran in four touchdowns, and the we wanted to take care of busi- ADNA — The Pirates weath- the Pirates were able to limit “He had some really good Loggers defense shut down the ness from the get-go,” Saade said. ered the storm here Friday night Rainier (5-1) to 48 rushing yards. power runs,” Fluke said of Jurek. Warrior run game, with Chief “They came out with a lot of en- — both literally and figuratively Spencer Burdick, Johnson “He had a really good night again. Leschi netting negative-8 yards ergy and by the time we looked — to hand No. 7 Rainier its first said, stood out from what was He hit the hole really hard.” on the ground. up, it was 48-0 after a quarter.” loss of the season, 12-7, in SWW an excellent job by the defensive Gutierrez started the scoring “Our mentality is we want to Lawrence carried the ball 2B League Mountain Division line, which included Bo Moon, in the first quarter, and Jurek take away the run and defend seven times for 136 yards. Haight football action. Derek Chilcoate, Brynden Jager, scored three of his four touch- the pass. I thought our kids did carried the rock 21 times for 98 Isaac Ingle ran eight times for Skyler Smith and C.J. Dunnagan. downs in the second half. Quar- a good job of that,” Onalaska yards, and Rodriguez had five 78 yards and two touchdowns, “Those six guys up front terback Matt Pearson added a coach Mazen Saade said. “Our carries for 73 yards. but four turnovers — three in played fabulous,” Johnson said. 1-yard scoring run, and both of kids came to play today. I was Onalaska (4-2, 2-2) travels to the first half — left Adna trailing “And Isaac (Ingle) really came on his completions went to Ryan impressed with the way our kids Randle next Friday to take on 7-0 at the intermission. in the second half and made a Shepherd for a total of 14 yards. played tonight.” Morton-White Pass in another “We just couldn't get any- lot of plays for us at middle line- The defense, meanwhile, held Lawrence kicked off the scor- Mountain Division contest. thing going, and the weather got backer.” South Bend to 72 total yards, all ing on the first play from scrim- progressively worse as it went,” Adna (4-2) plays at Chief Le- on the ground. mage, taking the ball 61 yards Lucas, Ducks Fly Adna coach K.C. Johnson said. schi next week, though the exact The Titans were coming off a for an early lead. The Loggers “The win’s on the defense tonight. day has yet to be determined. 48-0 win over Ocosta on Sept. 30, recorded a safety, followed im- Past Winlock and improved to 2-0 in Coastal The kids played great defense; mediately by a 63-yard kick TOUTLE — Zak Lucas they sucked it up and got the job Division play. return touchdown by Lazzaro Jurek, Trojans Blast “We’ve still got a lot of work scored four touchdowns, and done. Offensively, we were our Rodriguez. Lawrence had three Toutle Lake crushed Winlock, own worst enemy.” South Bend 46-0 to do, but everything’s coming straight touchdowns after that, together,” Fluke said. “The next 56-7, here Friday night in SWW Rainier’s Zack Lofgren con- PE ELL — The Titans record- scoring on 20-, 5- and 28-yard 2B River Division football action. nected with Dillon Stancil for a will be pretty hard-fought, so runs. Rodriguez scored on a ed their second-straight run- hopefully everything’ll be click- Lucas scored on runs of 60, 24-yard touchdown in the sec- ning-clock shutout here Friday 1-yard run for a 48-0 lead af- 15 and 5 yards, and ran a kickoff ond quarter, and Ingle scored ing on all cylinders.” ter the first frame. Ernie Roque night, hammering South Bend Pe Ell-Willapa Valley (4-2 back 75 yards for a score on his on an 8-yard run in the third 46-0 in SWW 2B League Coastal scored the lone second-quarter way to a 127-yard rushing night. to bring Adna to within a point overall) hosts Ilwaco in Menlo touchdown, sprinting in from Division football action. on Friday. Winlock’s lone score came at 7-6. Ingle then broke off a 57- Kaelin Jurek led Pe Ell-Wil- 25 yards out for a 54-0 halftime on a 2-yard keeper from quarter- yard run later in the third for lapa Valley’s rushing attack with lead. back Anthony Clevenger in the what proved to be the decisive 242 yards on 29 carries, with four Loggers Saw Onalaska cruised in the first quarter, though Toutle Lake touchdown. touchdowns. second half, as Ashton Haight led 49-7 at halftime. “We just ran a toss sweep, and “The o-line did really good, Through Warriors scored the only points of the Seth Lindsey led the Cardi- he cut right back up the middle and the defense was stellar ONALASKA — Onalaska third quarter on a 15-yard run. nals with 95 rushing yards on and just outran everybody,” throughout the whole game,” scored 48 points in the first Hazen Inman ran the ball in 17 carries, and Clevenger com- Johnson said. “It was a good job PWV coach Josh Fluke said. quarter en route to a 67-0 win from 4 yards out in the fourth pleted 8 of 14 passes for 98 yards. blocking and a good job reading “The boys did real good.” over Chief Leschi here in SWW quarter to cap the scoring. Nicholas Patching caught four of by him, and he just put the pedal Jurek highlighted a 452-yard 2B Mountain Division football “After two tough losses, it was those passes for 41 yards. down.” rushing total for the Titans, with action on Friday night. our homecoming game and we Winlock (0-6, 0-2 league) All of Adna’s 124 yards of of- Ever Gutierrez adding five car- Onalaska’s Trace Lawrence talked about that all week that hosts Mossyrock on Friday. Sports 6 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016 SPORTS

College Football No. 15 Stanford Wary With Washington St Coming to Town STANFORD, Calif. (AP) — yards per game at 360.0. He’s Washington State is coming off already thrown for 1,495 yards a huge home victory over Or- and 12 touchdowns and is fourth egon and Stanford is coming off nationally with a 373.8 yards per a huge road loss to Washington. game average. The Cougars are hoping to “Falk does a good job of han- carry that success into this week dling things when the situation and the Cardinal want nothing is not perfect,” Shaw said. “He more than to play better. slides to the soft spot and throws A victory Saturday for either downfield. He has a strong arm team will go a long way in deter- and is very accurate.” mining the caliber of bowl game each team may wind up in at the STILL WATCHING MCCAFFREY: Mc- end of the season. Caffrey rushed for 49 yards on The No. 15 Cardinal (3-1, 2-1 12 carries against Washington Pac-12), preseason favorites in last week but he still remains the North Division, probably one of the most dangerous play- have more to lose. A second loss ers with a ball in his hands. He will make it impossible to re- leads the country with 214.5 all- main in the national discussion purpose yards per game. and will likely hurt running back “Those offensive linemen at Christian McCaffrey’s chances at Stanford have a big role in mak- the Heisman. ing him as good as he is,” Leach The Cougars (2-2, 1-0) can said. “I think he’s good anyway. gain national respect and push You can see that in his versatil- quarterback Luke Falk into the ity. He’s a factor in returns and conversation. TED S. WARREN / The Associated Press catches the ball out of the back- “I don’t think that will be the Stanford running back Christian McCafrey (5) runs the ball against Washington in the irst half on Friday, Sept. 30, in Seattle. field.” same Stanford team we’ll see,” Cougars coach Mike Leach said. tential game-winning field goal Washington State has become Air Raid passing attack and now BY THE NUMBERS: Washington “One key with Stanford is to be as the clock expired. running the ball. a run game, it keeps you honest. State has two consecutive games physically strong enough to ad- “We should have won that The Cougars rushed for 280 You can’t play soft coverage; you of 200 or more yards rushing dress the issues Stanford gives game but that’s on us,” Leach yards and scored six times on the have to account for the running for the first time in 11 years. ... you. Washington is pretty strong. said. “We have to do a better job ground in a 51-33 victory over game.” Stanford has won 48 of 54 games Stanford got back on their heels of putting ourselves in position Oregon, and Falk passed for 371. Other things to know as played at home since 2008. ... and never came out of.” to control our own destiny.” “Mike Leach will attack Stanford prepares to host Wash- The Cougars have not beaten a Stanford owns an eight-game What worries Stanford coach scheme and personnel,” Shaw ington State: top 15 team since 2003. ... The winning streak against the Cou- David Shaw, whose team was said. “He doesn’t care if Rich- Cardinal have averaged 34.1 gars, extending it last year when limited to 29 yards rushing in ard Sherman is out there. The FANTASTIC FALK: Falk is the FBS’ points in games following a loss Washington State missed a po- last week’s loss, is how prolific conflict he puts you in, with this active career leader in passing under Shaw. Washington Looks to End 12-Game Losing Streak Against Ducks EUGENE, Ore. (AP) — The for a touchdown. so it’s unclear exactly what was last time Washington won at “We’re going to put the best going on. Autzen Stadium was in 2002, guy out there, at that and every Doesn’t matter much anyway when the Huskies upset the No. other position, to help us win this week because he’s back. Dye 23 Ducks and then drew the ire this game,” Oregon coach Mark has been a bright spot on the of the fans by dancing on the “O’’ Helfrich said. Ducks’ defense, which has strug- at midfield. gled this season. After nearly a decade of dom- PURPLE HAZE: Washington has “He’s just one of those guys inance within the conference, been the best in the country at that works extremely hard every Oregon (2-3, 0-2 Pac-12) is limp- getting to the quarterback. The rep of practice, whether it’s de- ing into Saturday’s rivalry game Huskies have 21 sacks through fense or special teams,” Helfrich against the No. 5 Huskies (5-0, five games, tied with Ohio for the said. “That’s absolutely conta- 2-0) with a three-game losing most in the FBS. Eight of those gious. We need more guys like streak, while Washington is ris- sacks came last week against that.” ing in its third year under Chris Stanford as the Huskies defensive Petersen. line overpowered the Cardinal on DAWG SLED: Whether it’s Myl-

The Huskies also defeated YOUNG KWAK / The Associated Press the line of scrimmage. es Gaskin or Lavon Coleman, Oregon back home in Seattle in In this Oct. 1 ile photo, Oregon quarterback Dakota Prukop (9) throws a pass dur- What’s even more impressive Washington is getting excellent 2003, but that was the last time ing the irst half of an NCAA college football game against Washington State in with Washington’s success get- production from its running they’ve won in the series. The Pullman. Prukop, a graduate transfer from Montana State, has started in all ive ting to the quarterback has been backs. Ducks have since won 12 straight. of Oregon’s games thus far, throwing for 1,173 yards and eight touchdowns with its ability to do it without blitz- After Coleman broke out Following Washington’s 44-6 two interceptions. ing. It’s been the Huskies front with 181 yards against Arizona victory over Stanford last week, four — sometimes five — rush- two weeks ago, it was Gaskin’s fans at Husky Stadium chanted preparing hard and staying fo- Herbert has been competing ers that have recorded most of turn to show off with 100 yards “Beat Oregon!” cused on the right things and in practice this week with Da- the quarterback sacks thus far. rushing and two touchdowns While ending the streak may showing up on Saturday with kota Prukop, a graduate transfer against Stanford. Coleman did be important to the fan base, it great energy and playing as a who started in Oregon’s first five DYE’S RETURN: After a mysteri- his part as well, rushing for 74 doesn’t really change a thing team,” Petersen said. “You can’t games. ous absence last weekend, Or- yards and a score, and the Hus- when it comes to Washington’s tell them, ‘OK, now we’re going Prukop completed 14 of 22 egon freshman linebacker Troy kies finished with 214 yards on preparation, Petersen said. He to prepare really hard.’ That’s lu- passes for 132 yards and one in- Dye is expected to return against the ground against the Cardinal. hasn’t mentioned the streak to dicrous.” terception in Oregon’s 51-33 loss the Huskies. There were ru- That’s not good news for Ore- the players. Oregon has totally different at Washington State last week- mors about why he didn’t travel gon. The Ducks are allowing 210 “We know it’s important. But concerns at this point. Reeling end. The Ducks showed a spark to Pullman but Helfrich made yards per game on the ground, all these games are important. I from the uncharacteristic losses, on their final series when Her- a point this week of suggesting including 280 yards rushing and mean, I want our guys to just do Oregon may start freshman Jus- bert led the team on an 85-yard it was injury-related. Oregon six touchdowns to pass-happy what they’ve been doing — just tin Herbert at quarterback. drive capped by his 4-yard run doesn’t disclose injuries as policy Washington State last week. Prep Football Time for Football Teams From Private Schools to Have a League of Their Own? BS, the BBC and The about private-school advantages. up? Washington Post have all Tale of the Tape Next, for the playoffs, put Because it would be far more done stories about it. The those that qualify into either the C How ATM sizes up against the teams that forfeited to it rewarding to reach the postsea- predicament that is Archbishop ATM S. Whidbey Sultan Granite Falls Class 3A or 4A field. Most of the son in a league this competitive Murphy football has become in- 200-250 pounders 12 4 6 2 aforementioned schools already than it would be stomping over a ternational news. 250-plus pounders 6 2 1 1 compete in one of those divi- bunch of cupcakes. This is what Completely Total over 200 pounds 18 6 7 3 sions, and Archbishop Murphy high-school football should overmatched Source: Rosters listed on maxpreps.com should. be — every win euphoric and physically, the The system isn’t all that every loss crushing. Don’t worry, past three different from what you see in are playing in the Cascade but also one that highlights the kids will get over the latter teams on the Trinity League in Southern a long-known truth: Private quickly. the Wildcats’ League, which is a Class 2A/1A California. Private powers such hybrid comprised primarily of schools have an inherent advan- But I like the idea of playing schedule have as Mater Dei, Servite, Orange my neighboring schools. There’s forfeited in small-town schools. tage on the football field. Lutheran and Rancho Santa They reportedly requested First off, they have a 50-mile some serious geographic pride lieu of endur- Margarita compete against one there. ing a blowout By Matt to move up to the WesCo 3A radius from which they can another during the regular sea- League but were denied, ren- draw athletes. They are also Well, you can always sched- — and the fear Calkins son, then take on public powers ule a neighbor during nonleague is that it is dering them baseball bats in a able to offer students academic such as Centennial and Long The Seattle league full of piñatas. And their scholarships. Amazingly, these play, but trust me, the rivalries going to keep Beach Poly in the playoffs. with your league opponents will Times would-be opponents have want- academic scholars tend to be Wait a minute, you’re tell- happening. get real heated real fast. I went So how do you fix a fiasco ed no part of the beatings. 260-pound beasts who eat steel ing me that if my kid plays for to a private Catholic school in that has so engrossed the general In its nonleague opener, plates for dessert, which is why Bellarmine Prep, I have to drive Southern California, and our public? ATM topped Issaquah 73-0, private schools almost always from Tacoma all the way to Ev- Easy. You make it a private which was the score at halftime. reach the playoffs. erett for ATM? most intense games weren’t nec- matter. It then put a 59-0 whooping on It’s no wonder, then, that Yes, but just once every other essarily with the schools around The time has come for the Bishop Blanchet, which made leagues such as the WesCo year, and it’s for a 7 p.m. start. the corner. We learned to loathe top private high schools in the the 3A state semifinals last might be reluctant to open their Remember, this realignment is our league counterparts regard- Puget Sound area to play in the year. A 38-0 victory over fellow doors to a school like ATM, for football only. less of distance, and the atmo- same league for football. The private-school power King’s fol- knowing they’d likely be hand- Why just football? sphere didn’t suffer — mainly private-to-public imbalance lowed — and then the no thank ing the Wildcats the league title, Because it’s a different because the games were always has become too lopsided not to yous began. too. The solution? Something animal. You don’t need a parent competitive. consider such a change. Will Citing safety concerns, South like this. driving all over the area every Look, there is no easy answer everybody like it? No. But they’ll Whidbey, Sultan and Granite Create a seven-team league week for 5:30 p.m. soccer games, to this public-vs.-private prob- eventually learn to. Falls all scratched their games vs. consisting of private schools for but three Friday nights every lem. And one has to be careful If you need a CliffsNotes ATM. Some think the forfeiters football only. The teams would fall is doable. Plus, there’s the to completely overhaul league version of what’s going on with are simply trying to avoid hu- include O’Dea, Seattle Prep, Bel- safety aspect. Losing 105-8 in structures because of a few foot- Archbishop Thomas Murphy miliation, but given the premi- larmine Prep, Kennedy Catholic, basketball is embarrassing, but ball teams. — known colloquially as ATM um placed on concussions and Eastside Catholic, Archbishop it wouldn’t be a risk to a student- But if the private schools — here it is. The Wildcats have a other health issues in football, Murphy and Bishop Blanchet. athlete’s health. mentioned wanted to make 1,500-pound starting offensive the concerns are legitimate. Every school listed has had re- OK, but right now my team something like this happen, they line and several college-level It’s an unprecedented situa- cent success on the football field, makes the playoffs every year. could. It’s a private solution that recruits at other positions. They tion in the state of Washington, and nobody could complain Why would I want to give that could benefit the public. SPORTS The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016 • Sports 7

WWW.ATHLONSPORTS.COM WEEK 5 SCHEDULE Thursday, Oct. 6 Don’t forget to follow us! Arizona at San Francisco 8:25 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 9 @ AthlonSports New England at Cleveland 1 p.m. Philadelphia at Detroit 1 p.m. Chicago at Indianapolis 1 p.m. / AthlonSports INSIDESUNDAY Tennessee at Miami 1 p.m. Washington at Baltimore 1 p.m. @ AthlonSports Houston at Minnesota 1 p.m. A WEEKLY SPIN AROUND THE NFL N.Y. Jets at Pittsburgh 1 p.m. Atlanta at Denver 4:05 p.m. Cincinnati at Dallas 4:25 p.m. Buffalo at Los Angeles 4:25 p.m. San Diego at Oakland 4:25 p.m. N.Y. Giants at Green Bay 8:30 p.m. Monday, Oct. 10 Tampa Bay at Carolina 8:30 p.m. Bye: Kansas City, New Orleans, Seattle, Jacksonville (All times Eastern) CAN’T MISS MATCHUPS Houston (3–1) at Minnesota (4–0) While both the Texans and Vikings are winning with defense, a couple factors indicate this is a bad matchup for Houston. The Texans are a top-five defense statistically, but they are easier to deal with now that star DE J.J. Watt is on injured reserve. Also, only five teams have a worse turnover differential than Houston’s minus-3. That plays right into the hands of the Vikings, who have an NFL-best 11 takeaways while having given the ball away only once on a fumbled punt. Cincinnati (2–2) at Dallas (3–1) The Cowboys have found the right formula to win with a rookie quarterback: Give it to your stud rookie running back as much as possible. Ezekiel Elliott leads the NFL in rushes and rushing yards, and his success keeps the pressure off of Dak Prescott, who has yet to throw an interception. The Bengals, on the other hand, have not run the ball well at all; but A.J. Green leads the NFL in catches (32) and ranks third in yards (468). Cincinnati needs to feed Green, get a lead and force Dallas to the air. Bufalo (2–2) at Los Angeles (3–1) These two teams were left for dead early but have bounced back nicely. The Rams have won three in a row since being shut out to open the season, while the Bills GAMEOFWEEK THE Matt Ryan leads the NFL in passing yards and passer rating. have beaten the Cardinals and Patriots the last two weeks after an 0–2 start. Both teams love to run the ball and win with defense. but the Rams aren’t getting it done on offense, as they are averaging just 3.0 yards STRENGTH VS. STRENGTH per carry, 31st in the NFL. The Bills have been better, ranking fifth at 4.6 per carry. The Falcons offense is soaring again, but Denver is a no-fly zone NUMBERS GAME

o what happens when the best passing offense in the NFL meets game’s best look ordinary. It held Andrew Luck of the Colts to 197 yards the best pass defense the league has seen in years? We’re about passing and sacked him ive times; the following week, Bengals wideout S to ind out. A.J. Green, who leads the NFL in receptions, got just 77 yards on his eight The Atlanta Falcons, NFL leaders in total offense and scor- catches. Winning through the air at Denver is a tough way to go. ing, take their show on the road this week to face the Denver Broncos, On the plus side for Atlanta, the Broncos have been rather ordinary NFL leaders in making life miserable for opposing quar- against the run (4.2 ypc against, 19th in the NFL), while the terbacks. Something has to give. Falcons have also run the ball well (4.7 ypc, 4th). Getting Atlanta comes in fresh off torching the defending NFC Devonta Freeman going (5.9 ypc this season) will be key champion Panthers 48–33 thanks to 503 yards passing and for the Falcons. four touchdowns from Matt Ryan. Julio Jones caught 12 Who has the edge: Broncos passes for 300 yards. And while those were career days, When Denver has the ball: Trevor Siemian of the Bron- they were no luke. The Falcons are averaging 42.6 points cos has been eficient, if not spectacular, in his irst four ca- and 513.6 yards per game during a three-game winning reer starts. But after leaving the win against the Bucs early streak since dropping the season opener. with a sprained shoulder, his status is in doubt for this week. The Broncos just played their best defensive game of John Gworek Rookie Paxton Lynch got his feet wet (14-of-24, 170 yards, the season, going on the road and holding Tampa Bay to Athlon Sports 1 TD, 0 INT) and will make his irst start if Siemian can’t go. seven points and 215 total yards while forcing three turn- Senior Editor Whoever starts, expect Denver to lean on C.J. Anderson overs. Bucs quarterback Jameis Winston completed fewer @JohnGworek against a Falcons defense that allows 4.5 yards per carry, 177 than half his passes for just 179 yards, threw two intercep- 26th in the NFL. It won’t help that linebacker Sean Weath- tions and was sacked ive times. Again, no luke: Denver’s erspoon ruptured his right Achilles against Carolina and will Passes attempted by Buccaneers quar- 61.3 passer rating against would be the lowest the league miss the rest of the season. If the Broncos do have to go to the air, they terback Jameis Winston so far, most has seen since 2009 for a full season. And just like last season when they should ind open receivers; only one team has allowed more passing yards in the NFL. Winston, who attempted won the Super Bowl, the Broncos lead the league in sacks. than Atlanta, and no one has allowed more touchdown passes. 535 last season, is on pace for 708 Old-school thinking says that defense wins championships, but the Who has the edge: Broncos for a full season. Only Matthew Staf- NFL has become a passing league where the team with the better quarter- Final analysis: We’ll have to respect the Falcons as being legit if they ford (727 in 2012) has ever attempted back usually wins. How will this one play out? can beat last season’s Super Bowl teams in consecutive weeks. We’re not more than 700 in NFL history. Don’t When Atlanta has the ball: Ryan leads the NFL in passing yards per ready to go there yet. Atlanta has allowed at least 28 points in every game expect the pace to slow down this week game (368.3) and passer rating (126.3), and he’s tied for the lead in touch- this season. Denver hasn’t allowed 28 points at home since November against Carolina: Last season, Winston downs with 11. Jones leads in receiving yards per game (122) and ranks 2014. It won’t happen this week, either. attempted 90 passes in two games third in yards per catch (22.2). But the Denver defense has made even the Prediction: Broncos 23, Falcons 16 against the Panthers. POWER RANKINGS AFC NFC OUTSIDE THE HUDDLE 1. Broncos 1. Vikings 2. Steelers 2. Eagles The Cardinals and Panthers, expected to be sustained in preseason, but he is expected to be Bell’s back 3. Patriots 3. Seahawks Super Bowl contenders, are both 1–3. Worse, the healthy enough to join Brady in facing the Browns. ... Pittsburgh’s ofense 4. Raiders 4. Packers status of their starting quarterbacks is uncertain Bears quarterback Jay Cutler may be healthy may be the best in the 5. Ravens 5. Cowboys this week after Carson Palmer and Cam Newton enough to face the Colts as he recovers from a NFL now that running 6. Texans 6. Falcons left their respective games Sunday with possible sprained thumb. But he may not get his job back back Le’Veon Bell is 7. Bengals 7. Rams Brian Hoyer concussions. It’s especially concerning for Palmer, after led Chicago to its first win of back from suspension. 8. Bills 8. Redskins as the Cards had a short week before facing the the season last week. Coach John Fox would not In his return to the lineup 9. Chiefs 9. Giants 49ers on Thursday night. ... commit to a starter early in the week, which isn’t Sunday night against Kansas 10. Jaguars 10. Panthers One player Arizona won’t need to worry about exactly a vote of confidence for Cutler. ... 11. Colts 11. Cardinals in San Francisco is star linebacker NaVorro Bow- The Eagles had the week off after a 3–0 start, City, Bell was his usual productive 12. Chargers 12. Saints man. The four-time All-Pro sustained an injury to and they should get two starters back to face self with 18 carries for 144 yards and ive catches 13. Titans 13. Buccaneers his left Achilles tendon against the Cowboys and is Detroit this week. Tight end Zach Ertz, who caught for 34 yards. Only four times in his career has Bell expected to miss the remainder of the season. ... six passes in the season opener but finished the put up more yards from scrimmage in a game. With 14. Jets 14. Bears The return of Tom Brady is being well- game with a displaced rib, has been cleared to Antonio Brown in the NFL’s top ive in catches and 15. Dolphins 15. Lions documented, but the New England defense will also return after missing two games. Corner Leodis receiving yards, and Ben Roethlisberger leading the 16. Browns 16. 49ers get a boost. Linebacker Rob Ninkovich was serving McKelvin, who left the opener with a hamstring NFL in touchdown passes, it’s tough to imagine a suspension while recovering from a triceps injury injury, is also expected to return. many defenses slowing the Steelers down. Photos: Ryan, Winston: Harrison McLary/Athlon Sports. Bell: Tom DiPace

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Sports 8 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016 SPORTS

MLB Dodgers Take NLDS Opener Against Nationals, 4-3 By Bill Plunkett a game since June 20 (before he but got Chris Heisey looking at a The Orange County Register went on the DL with a herniated ALEX BRANDON / The Associated debatable strike three to end the disc in his back). Press eighth. WASHINGTON — For Clay- It was Kershaw’s shortest post- Los Angeles Dodgers Roberts was forced to make ton Kershaw, it was the equivalent season start since he was knocked starting Clayton of a “trust fall.” another call in the top of the ninth out in the fifth inning of Game Kershaw throws during when the Nationals intention- Even before taking the mound Game 1 of baseball’s for Game 1 of the National League 6 of the 2013 NLCS. That left 12 ally walked Yasiel Puig to load the outs for the Dodgers’ — National League Divi- Division Series against the Wash- sion Series against the bases with two outs — and Jansen ington Nationals, the Dodgers ace an average night’s work for them scheduled to bat. Forced to choose during the regular season. Washington Nationals, said he felt less of a burden to car- between a pinch-hitter (Andre Joe Blanton got the first two at Nationals Park on Fri- ry his team this postseason. It was day in Washington. Ethier was momentarily on deck) “a different feeling” than he had in followed by Grant Dayton who popped up in the and his closer, Roberts chose his the past, this feeling that he could closer and let Jansen bat. “rely” on his teammates, born of rookie left-hander’s playoff bap- watching the Dodgers thrive dur- tism. Pedro Baez got two more — Once a switch-hitting catcher, ing his 75-day absence this season. and Yasmani Grandal one when Jansen struck out (batting left- That faith was put to the test he threw out Daniel Murphy on a handed against Mark Melancon) out and no one on in the eighth quickly. steal attempt. he said managers tend to be more to end the top of the ninth then Kershaw labored through five Dodgers manager Dave Rob- “aggressive” with their bullpen use inning. struck out Turner, Harper and innings, squandering most of a erts proved he wasn’t kidding in in the postseason. He went to his Jansen gave up a two-out dou- Werth to close out the game in the four-run head start the Dodgers his pre-game remarks either when closer, Kenley Jansen, with one ble to pinch-hitter Clint Robinson bottom of the inning. offense provided. But the Dodgers’ bullpen allowed just one hit over the final four innings as they took the opener, 4-3, Friday night. Game 2 in the best-of-five se- ries will be played Saturday at Na- tionals Park. Corey Seager gave the Dodgers Great iPhone meets an early lead when he crushed a first-pitch from Nationals ace Max Scherzer in the first in- great network. ning. The pitch came in at 97 mph and left at 109, the exit velocity as ® Seager sent it over the center field iPhone 7 on U.S. Cellular. wall. Two innings later, the Dodgers made it 4-0 with a three-run burst Switch now to get 7GB of data per line against Scherzer. Andrew Toles led off with a single and worked for only $49 a month. Plus, a strong signal his way around to score on an RBI single by Chase Utley. Two in the Middle of Anywhere. batters later, Justin Turner lined a two-run home run just over the left-field wall. Handing Kershaw a four-run lead is usually safe — but not so much in October. Kershaw was forced to throw 17 pitches even while striking out the side in the first inning. An er- ror by Utley extended the second inning for the Nationals and Ker- shaw had to work to strand the bases loaded. The Nationals cut the Dodgers’ lead in half with a two-out, two- run single by and Kershaw had to strike out Danny Espinosa with two on to avoid more damage. In the fourth, backup catcher Pedro Severino touched him for a leadoff double and worked his way around to score on a sacrifice fly by Trea Turner, pulling the Na- tionals within a run. The Nationals left two more runners on base in the fifth in- ning. They went 1-for-9 with run- ners in scoring position against Kershaw, stranding seven runners on base against him. In five innings of hard la- bor, Kershaw threw 101 pitches — more than he had thrown in

MLB Playoff Glance All Times PST DIVISION SERIES (Best-of-5; x-if necessary) American League Toronto 2, Texas 0 Thursday, Oct. 6: Toronto 10, Texas 1 Friday, Oct. 7: Toronto 5, Texas 3 Sunday, Oct. 9: Texas (Lewis 6-5) at Toronto (Sanchez 15-2), 7:38 p.m. (TBS) x-Monday, Oct. 10: Texas (Perez 10- 11) at Toronto (Stroman 9-10), 1:08 or 6:08 p.m. (TBS) x-Wednesday, Oct. 12: Toronto at Texas, 8:08 or 9:38 p.m. (TBS)

Cleveland 2, Boston 0 Thursday, Oct. 6: Cleveland 5, Bos- ton 4 Friday, Oct. 7: Cleveland 6, Boston 0 Sunday, Oct. 9: Cleveland (Tomlin 13-9) at Boston (Buchholz 8-10), 4:08 p.m. (TBS) x-Monday, Oct. 10: Cleveland at Boston (Rodriguez 3-7), 6:08 p.m. (TBS) x-Wednesday, Oct. 12: Boston at Cleveland, 6:08 or 8:08 p.m. (TBS) An entirely new camera system. The brightest, most colorful iPhone display ever. National League The fastest performance and best battery life in an iPhone. Water and splash Chicago 1, San Francisco 0 * Friday, Oct. 7: Chicago 1, San Fran- resistant. And stereo speakers. Every bit as powerful as it looks—this is iPhone 7. cisco 0 Saturday, Oct. 8: San Francisco (Sa- mardzija 12-11) at Chicago (Hendricks 16-8) 8:08 p.m. (MLB) Monday, Oct. 10: Chicago (Arrieta 18-8) at San Francisco, 9:38 p.m. (FS1) x-Tuesday, Oct. 11: Chicago (Lackey 11-8) at San Francisco, 8:08 or 8:40 p.m. (FS1) x-Thursday, Oct. 13: San Francisco at Chicago, 8:08 or 8:40 p.m. (FS1)

Los Angeles 1, Washington 0 Friday, Oct. 7: Los Angeles 4, Wash- ington 3 Saturday, Oct. 8: Los Angeles (Hill 12-5) at Washington (Roark 16-10), 4:08 *iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus are splash, water, and dust resistant and were tested under controlled laboratory conditions with a rating of IP67 under IEC standard 60529. Splash, water, and dust resistance are not permanent conditions, p.m. (FS1) and resistance might decrease as a result of normal wear. Do not attempt to charge a wet iPhone; refer to the user guide for cleaning and drying instructions. Liquid damage not covered under warranty. Things we want you to know: Monday, Oct. 10: Washington (Gon- New Line, Retail Installment Contract and Device Protection+ (DP+) required. Credit approval also required. A $25 Device Activation Fee applies. A Regulatory Cost Recovery Fee (currently $1.82/line/month) applies; this is not a tax zalez 11-11) at Los Angeles (Maeda or gvmt. required charge. Additional fees (including Device Connection Charges), taxes, terms, conditions and coverage areas apply and may vary by plan, service and phone. Offers valid at participating locations only and cannot be 16-10), 4:08 or 6:08 p.m. (MLB) combined. See store or uscellular.com for details. Device Protection+: Enrollment in a DP+ Plan is required for this promotion. The minimum monthly price for DP+ is $8.99 per month per Smartphone. A service fee/deductible per x-Tuesday, Oct. 11: Washington at approved claim applies. You may cancel DP+ anytime. Property insurance coverage is underwritten by American Bankers Insurance Company of Florida. The Service Contract Obligor is Federal Warranty Service Corporation in all states, Los Angeles, 5:05 or 8:08 p.m. (FS1) except in CA (Sureway, Inc.) and OK (Assurant Service Protection, Inc.). All these companies operate under the trade name Assurant. Limitations and exclusions apply. For more information, see an associate for a DP+ brochure. Kansas Customers: In areas in which U.S. Cellular receives support from the Federal Universal Service Fund, all reasonable requests for service must be met. Unresolved questions concerning services availability can be directed to the Kansas x-Thursday, Oct. 13: Los Angeles at Corporation Commission Office of Public Affairs and Consumer Protection at 1-800-662-0027. Limited-time offer. Trademarks and trade names are the property of their respective owners. ©2016 U.S. Cellular Washington, 5:05 or 8:08 p.m. (FS1) The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016

Editor: Eric Schwartz Phone number: 807-8224 Life e-mail: [email protected]

Pete Caster / [email protected] Poet Thelma Holt listens as a fellow writer reads after a freestyle writing exercise at a Wednesday writing group at the Twin Cities Senior Center in Chehalis.

LEWIS COUNTY WOMAN’S Rain Birds POETRY TELLS STORY By Thelma Holt OF HER LIFE “When winter comes this year, my dear,” My husband says to me, By Eric Schwartz “We’re going south just like the birds! [email protected] “We’ll be Rain Birds,” says he! So we packed up and headed out Ask Thelma Holt how she got To find a warmer clime, started writing poetry, and you All holidays, with relatives might be met with silence. the sun refused to shine! The 95-year-old Lewis In Tucson town the rain poured down: County resident has been writ- it froze most every night! ing prose for so long, she’s not So further south we journeyed on, exactly sure when she began to Mexico seemed right. putting her poetic words to pa- But there the level of the snow per. in mountains crept so very low Ask her why she enjoys ply- Besides the rain and skiffs of snow, ing the aesthetic and rhythmic A mighty wind began to blow! qualities of the English language, We lost the travel trailer’s vents, though, and you’ll find the an- and tipping over was our fear! swer right there in the bound The awful roads took three hubcaps, notebook she uses to keep her And blew two tires in the rear! work. Homeward bound we ran into “Poetry has everything The big earthquake disaster, That music has, and more Mudslides where houses long had been; There’s melody and rhythm we hurried on the faster! And sentiment galore! When we got home our friends all said Poetry has one advantage “Can’t beat this winter’s weather!” It comes closer to the heart Next year when hubby talks “Rain Bird,” Therefore can be more per- I’ll pull out every feather! sonal Right from the very start Poetry’s appeal is much more lasting And it satisfies a hunger A FAN OF POETRY? MINERAL SCHOOL EVENT IS FOR YOU For beauty that’s in every breast The public is invited to join Mineral School for an evening of verse Of old and young, or younger. and song, as well as heavy hors d’oeuvres and wine-by-donation Thelma Holt writes down her thoughts during a freestyle writing exercise last at 6:30 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 22. Piano & Poetry will begin with Poetry recaptures vanished week at a Wednesday writing group at the Twin Cities Senior Center in Chehalis. moments preview selections from “Mineral: The Musical” by Diane Mapes. Readings and discussion with Tod Marshall and Mineral School‘s Thus creating special scenes School in 1939. From there, she Each chore just to suit own Nicole Hardy will headline the evening. Gonzaga professor That through the passing of and award-winning poet Tod Marshall is the author of three poetry the years began a long and successful ca- We’ve worked it all out I collections: Dare Say (2002), The Tangled Line (2009), and Bugle Enhances all your dreams reer as a teacher at Seventh-day think it’s real cute (2014). “Dare Say”, Marshall’s first collection of poetry, was the 2002 Poetry stirs wholesome emo- Adventist schools throughout No more complains and winner of the University of Georgia’s Contemporary Poetry Series. tions the Pacific Northwest. More We don’t fight because His third collection of poetry, “Bugle”, won the Washington State Entertains, inspires than 30 years were spent be- What he can do better Book Award in 2015. Seattle writer Nicole Hardy is the author of Comforts, in our times of tween Portland and Seattle, with He does!” “Confessions of a Latter Day Virgin” and the poetry collections “This need stops in Woodland and Enum- Many of Holt’s poems are Blonde and Mud Flap Girl’s XX Guide to Facial Profiling”. This reading Fills what our soul requires.” claw along the away. She retired whimsical and light, such as one is free to all, with donations welcome. The school is located at 114 The poem, titled “Give Me in 1982. she wrote in 1950 called “The Mineral Road S., Mineral. Poetry,” is one of 82 written in She and her husband moved Legends of the Health Foods,” clear, beautiful cursive and cal- to Arizona for a few years, but a poetic epic in which healthy ligraphy inside the notebook she they eventually found them- foods play all the lead roles. carries to a weekly writers meet- selves back in the Evergreen Struck by the poetry, she was the collective work that she pur- ing at the Twin Cities Senior State. once able to pay half the price sued publication of Holt’s poetry Center in Chehalis. “I was so excited to get back to for hearing aids by taking up the in The Chronicle, which will SUBMIT YOUR OWN salesman on his offer to buy the The quality of the work Washington,” she said. “I was so feature more of the poems on POETRY caught the attention of local happy to see all the trees, I could poem. the Voices page (page Main 15) writer Gayle Schilling, who fre- have kissed the kitchen floor.” “I figure that poem was at The Chronicle is happy quently hosts her own writers Thelma’s husband died last least $2,000,” she joked. in the months ahead. to publish the work of local forums. year, but memories of his life Aside from a few entries in For an opportunity to meet writers and other reader- Holt and read more of her po- submitted material. Send “She has a wonderful grasp and her love for him are found a 1998 edition of the Washing- your submissions to voices@ of words,” Schilling said. “Her in her poetry. ton State Grange Poetry Contest, ems, all are invited to attend the weekly writers meeting at the chronline.com. If sending by stuff is beautiful.” “My husband’s a honey Holt’s work hasn’t been widely mail, address to Newsroom The poetry in many ways A capable man published. That’s not why she Twin Cities Senior Center, 2545 Assistant Doug Blosser at tells the story of Holt’s life. He wears the pants does it, though. It has simply be- N. National Ave., Chehalis. The 321 N. Pearl St., Centralia. She was born in Montesano According to God’s plan come part of who she is. group gathers at 1 p.m. every and graduated from Elma High And when I don’t do Schilling was so struck by Wednesday. Life 2 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016 LIFE

Community Editor’s Best Bet Final Borst Open House of the Year

The Borst Home, Carriage House Museum Also being honored are the Master Garden- and One-Room Schoolhouse will be having its ers, who helped with the months in which heir- final open house of the year 1:30-3:30 p.m. Sat- loom gardens and herb were featured. urday. Among those being recognized will be a new Calendar Numerous people will be honored during a group of people interested in history who have program 2-2:30 p.m. in the one-room school. come dressed in Victorian costumes and helped Saturday, Oct. 8 Among those being honored will be be plan this year’s revitalized monthly subjects. HAVE AN EVENT YOU Mitch Smith and his Centralia High School Also honored will be the volunteers, who Breast Cancer Support class of 1996, which built the school in shop come each month to guide, answer questions WOULD LIKE TO INVITE class. and keep the museum going, and Emil Pierson The Lewis County retired teachers group Group Plans Tea and THE PUBLIC TO? and Sarah Scherer, from the city’s community planned, raised funds for and completed its Fashion Show Submit your calendar items dream to bring a pioneer school to the Borst development department. to Newsroom Assistant Doug land for the public to enjoy. Each October, re- The program will include dedication of the The Lewis County Breast one-room school quilt made by retired teach- Cancer Support Group is holding Blosser by 5 p.m. Friday the tired teachers come to the school to visit and week before you would like ers in 1990. Jean Bluhm purchased the material its eighth annual tea and fashion share teaching memories. them to be printed. He can be The retired teachers are being honored not and 12 teachers made each block representing show 1-4 p.m. today at the Lewis reached at calendar@chronline. & Clark Hotel, Centralia. only for getting the school built and being vol- 12 of the 180-200 one- or two-room schools in com or (360) 807-8238. Please unteers at the open houses, but this year they Lewis County in the mid-1800s. This quilt will This informative and en- include all relevant information, tertaining event supports local gave money to provide crayons, glue and other now be hung in the school. as well as contact information. The Borst Home is located at the south end women and men who have gone Events can also be submitted materials for children to have hands-on experi- through, or are currently under- at www.chronline.com ences in the school and Carriage House. of Fort Borst Park in Centralia. going, breast cancer treatment. Fashions are provided by the Dress Barn and modeled by cancer survivors. Attendees will Valley Community Church, 104 Frase Road, Onalaska, (360) 870-2782, http:// have the opportunity to make svcchurch.com/griefshare/ purchases at a discount. Lunch will be provided by Joy’s Once Upon A Thyme. Monday, Oct. 10 Local cancer specialist and hematologist Dr. Dustin Os- Cosmopolis Woman born, from Osborn Cancer Care, will be the featured speaker. to Speak at Women’s Tickets are available for $20 at Smith’s Mercantile and El- Luncheon egance By Design, or by calling Brenda Peterson, Cosmop- (360) 273-4100. olis, will be speaking about For more information, call “Finding Value and Worth” at Candy Koons, (360) 304-8472. a luncheon for women at noon Monday at the Centralia Church Lewis County Breast Cancer Support of the Nazarene. Group Annual Tea & Fashion Show, 1-4 Peterson will talk about her p.m., Lewis & Clark Hotel, 117 W. Magno- transformation from a taunted, lia St., Centralia, catered by Joy’s Once Upon a Thyme, tickets $20, available at insecure, overweight child into Smith’s Mercantile, Elegance by Design a woman secure in her inner or by calling (360) 273-4100 beauty. Mom Children’s Clothing Bank and Also, Kathy Arnold, Chehalis, Exchange, 1-3 p.m., Chehalis First Chris- will talk about her therapy dolls. tian Church, 111 NW Prindle St., (360) Admission is $10. For reser- 269-0587 or (360) 748-3702 vations, call Kay, (360) 269-2449, Karaoke, with Lou Morales, 7:30 p.m., open at 4:30 p.m., game starts at 6:30 Public Agencies Chehalis Eagles, 1993 S. Market Blvd. or Mary, (360) 748-8718. Child p.m., food available, (360) 736-9030 Wednesday, Oct. 12 Chehalis, (360) 748-7241 care is available by reservation Health and Hope Medical Out- Riverside Fire Authority Board of Com- missioners, 5 p.m., Headquarters Station, Steam Train Ride and Museum Visit, only. reach, free medical clinic, 5:30-8:30 CC Professor Will Reveal Mt. Rainier Railroad and Logging Mu- p.m., Northwest Pediatrics, 1911 Cooks 1818 Harrison Ave., Centralia, (360) 736- The Nazarene church is lo- 3975 or [email protected] seum, Elbe-Mineral, 10 a.m., 12:45 p.m., cated at 1119 W. First St. Hill Road, Centralia, for those whose How to Obtain Huge 3:30 p.m., 1-888-STEAM-11 The luncheon and program income is less than 200 percent of the Biker Bingo, doors open 3 p.m., bin- are sponsored by the Centralia- poverty level, (360) 623-1485 Discounts for Travel Libraries go 4-7 p.m., Twin Cities Senior Center, Community Farmers Market, 11 a.m.- At a Wednesday Lyceum pre- 2445 N. National Ave., Chehalis, fund- Chehalis Christian Women’s 4 p.m., Boistfort Street, Chehalis, (360) Book Babies, for babies birth-age 2, raiser for Lewis County A.B.A.T.E. schol- Connection. 740-1295 sentation at Centralia College, 10 a.m., Chehalis arship fund, bingo $1 per sheet, black- CC physics professor Michael Family Storytime, for children, 10:15 out $2 per sheet, 50/50, winner takes Herbal Beginnings, 1-3 p.m., 4162 Jack- Threapleton will talk about how a.m., Tenino all, hot dogs, chips, pop, bakery items, son Highway, Chehalis, (360) 262-0525 Public Agencies he achieved huge savings on travel Toddler Time and Playgroup, for chil- (360) 581-5250 Game Night, Fords Prairie Grange, Centralia City Council, 7 p.m., City and lodging during trips to Aus- dren age 2, 10:30 a.m., Centralia Lucky Eagle Oktoberfest, celebra- 2640 Reynolds Ave., Centralia, potluck Hall, 118 W. Maple St., Centralia, (360) tralia and Singapore this summer. Watercolor & Acrylic Painting, for tion of craft beers, 6 p.m., Chehalis dinner 6 p.m., (360) 918-1356 330-7670 adults, 10:30 a.m., Oakville Rooms, Lucky Eagle Casino, $10 admis- Pinochle, 6 p.m., Chehalis Eagles, He and his wife flew in first Lewis County Planning Commission, Preschool Storytime, for children 3-6 sion, live German music, (800) 720-1788 1993 S. Market Blvd., Chehalis, (360) class but only paid the coach fare, 6 p.m., Lewis County Courthouse, (360) years, 11:30 a.m., Packwood UFC 204, 7 p.m., CraftHouse, Lucky 748-7241 and stayed in five star hotels for 740-1284, http://goo.gl/1a1Zb Build With Roominate, for children Eagle Casino, (800) 720-1788 “Storks,” 7 p.m., Roxy Theater, Mor- Lewis County PUD Commission, 10 essentially nothing. Threapleton grades 1-6, 1 p.m., Salkum Bluegrass Jam, Adna Grange, 2-5 ton, rated PG, adults $7, students and will share his strategy of achieving Origami at the Library, for children p.m. bluegrass jam, 5-6 p.m. supper ($6), seniors $6 a.m., PUD auditorium, 345 NW Pacific these massive discounts by lever- grades 1-6, 1:30 p.m., Oakville 6-7 p.m. bluegrass open mic, donations Ave., Chehalis, (360) 748-9261 or (800) accepted at door 562-5612 aging the power of rewards earn- LEGO Club, for children, 3 p.m., Tenino White Pass Job Fair, 9 a.m.-1 p.m., day Public Agencies ing credit cards. He will explain Writer’s Workshop, for teens and adults, 5 p.m., Packwood lodge, main floor, White Pass Ski Area Lewis County Commission, 10 a.m., Libraries how your FICO score is the key. Portland to Seattle Beer and Wine BOCC board room, second floor, Lewis Weekly lyceum lectures are Festival, 4-10 p.m., Pacific Athletic Cen- County Courthouse, agenda available Preschool Storytime and Play- presented 1-1:50 p.m. Wednes- Organizations ter, 2091 Jackson Highway, Chehalis, at http://goo.gl/agwWM, (360) 740-1120 group, for children 3-6 years, 10:30 a.m. Centralia days in Washington Hall 103, raffles and door prizes, $25 at the door Chehalis City Council, 5 p.m, City and are free and open to the pub- Friendly Neighbors Garden Club, 11 or $20 online (http://www.p2sfest.com) Hall council chamber, 350 N. Market Community Coloring, Conversation a.m., call for meeting locations, (360) The Junebugs, 9:30 p.m.-1 a.m., Craft Blvd., Chehalis, agendas available at and Games, for teens and adults, 2 p.m., lic. Lyceum may also be taken as 266-0253 House sports bar, Lucky Eagle Casino, http://ci.chehalis.wa.us/meetings, (360) Salkum a one-credit humanities course. Take Off Pounds Sensibly, 10:15 a.m., Rochester 345-1042 Red & Ruby Play Music for the 1930s For more information, con- Assembly of God church, 702 SE First St., “Storks,” 3 and 7 p.m., Roxy Theater, Centralia Historic Preservation Com- and ’40s, for all ages, 5 p.m., The Station tact Shelley Bannish, director Winlock Morton, rated PG, matinee $5, evening mission, 5:30 p.m., City Hall, 118 W. Ma- Coffee Bar & Bistro, Centralia of Student Life & Involvement, Cowlitz Prairie Grange, potluck din- showing adults $8, students and se- ple St., Centralia, (360) 330-7695 Teen Writing Group, for teens, 5 p.m., (360) 736-9391, ext. 224. ner 6:30 p.m., meeting 7:30 p.m., (360) niors $7 Lewis County Board of Health, 9 a.m., Centralia 864-2023 BOCC Board Room, second floor, Lewis STEAMtastic Family Night Series, for Bingo, doors open 5 p.m., bingo Seniors’ Bible study, 2 p.m., Calvary Organizations County Courthouse, agenda available all ages, 5:30 p.m., Winlock starts 6:30 p.m., Forest Grange, 3397 Assembly of God, Centralia, (360) 736- at http://goo.gl/zKXB3, 740-1148 Jackson Highway, Chehalis 6769 or (360) 324-9050 Prairie Steppers Square and Round Centralia Parks Board, 5 p.m., Fort Young Professionals Lewis County Zonta Club of Centralia-Chehalis, Dance Club, 7-8 p.m. Plus, 8-10:30 p.m. Borst Park Kitchen 2, (360) 330-7662 Organizations Networking Social, 5-8 p.m., Riverside noon, Elks Lodge, 1732 S. Gold St., Cen- Mainstream, potluck at break, Oakview Mossyrock Fire Department, fire Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 2200, Golf Club Roof Top Bar, Chehalis, (206) tralia, (360) 330-0564 Grange, Centralia, (360) 736-5172 or commissioners, noon, main station, 137 7 p.m., American Legion Hall, 111½ W. 293-6126 Good Sam Tri-Mountain Wander- (360) 273-4884 E. Main St., Mossyrock, (360) 983-3456 Main, Centralia, (360) 736-6852 Open mic, 6-10 p.m., Jeremy’s Farm ers, 10 a.m., The Restaurant, by Sunbird Gluten Intolerance Group of Lewis Grays Harbor Fire District 1, 7 p.m., Rainy Daze Quilt Guild, 7 p.m., Stu- to Table, 476 W. Main St., Chehalis, (360) Shopping Center, (360) 785-4139 County, 10 a.m., Providence Centralia Oakville Fire Hall, (360) 273-6541 dent Services Building cafeteria, Centra- 748-4417 Hospital chapel conference room, (509) Lewis County Cemetery District 4, 6 lia College, (360) 262-3877 Mental Health Matters, 6-7:30 p.m., 230-6394, [email protected], p.m., Randle Fire Station annex, (360) Support Groups http://goo.gl/bWXTmr Centralia Bridge Club, 6:30 p.m., St. Mark’s Lutheran Church, 10000 U.S. 494-4031 Unity Church, 800 S. Pearl St., Centralia, Highway 12, Rochester, (360) 273-9884 Domestic violence support group, (360) 748-1753, [email protected] Burger Nite, Chehalis Eagles, 5-7 p.m., 5:30-7 p.m., 125 NW Chehalis Ave., Che- Libraries Organizations Two Town Tuners, 7 p.m., Lewis and 1993 S. Market Blvd., $2, Chehalis, (360) halis, sponsored by Human Response Clark Hotel, 117 W. Magnolia St., Centra- 748-7241 Network, (360) 748-6601 Build & Play Saturday, for children Chehalis American Legion Post 22, lia, (360) 269-8146 or (360) 748-3521 Bunco Night, social hour 5:30 p.m., Widows and Widowers Lunch, 11 age 2-sixth grade, 10:30 a.m., Centralia general meeting, 4 p.m., 555 N. Market Breastfeeding Coalition of Lewis bunco 6 p.m., Chehalis Moose Lodge, a.m., The Restaurant, 1757 N. National Canning From Your Garden, for Blvd., Chehalis, (360) 740-7889 1400 Grand Ave., Centralia, $20 per per- Ave., Chehalis, presented by Sticklin Fu- adults, 2 p.m., Centralia County, noon-1:30 p.m., second floor, Lewis County Community Network, Lewis County Public Health & Social Ser- son, tickets may be purchased at door, neral Chapel and Brown Mortuary Ser- Movie at the Library: The Boys of ‘36, 3-5 p.m, second floor conference room, vices, 360 NW North St., Chehalis, (360) proceeds to benefit Lewis County His- vice, (360) 736-1388 3 p.m., Salkum Lewis County Public Health & Social Ser- 740-1234 torical Museum Emotions Anonymous, 12 Step Club, vices Building, 360 NW North St., Cheha- “Election 2016: How Will You Decide?,” 8 p.m., Yard Birds, (360) 304-9334 lis, (206) 719-3226 Mount St. Helens Patchwork Quilters, Support Groups 10 a.m.-2 p.m., Lewis County Historical Rick Shenkman, 6:30 p.m. Corbet The- Bereavement support, 10-11 a.m., Centralia Bridge Club, noon, Unity Museum, 599 NW Front St., Chehalis, atre, Centralia College, (360) 736-9391, Morton General Hospital conference Alzheimer’s caregiver support group, Church, 800 S. Pearl St., Centralia, (360) (360) 880-5134 ext. 224 room, (360) 496-3591 or (360) 807-7775 10:30 a.m-noon, Centralia First United 748-1753, [email protected] Methodist Church, 506 S. Washington Centralia-Chehalis Emblem Club, 7 Ave., Centralia, (360) 628-4980 p.m., Elks Lodge, 1732 S. Gold St., Cen- Support Groups tralia, (360) 736-5439 Survivors of sexual assault/abuse, Sunday, Oct. 9 5:30-7 p.m., 125 NW Chehalis Ave., Che- Support Groups halis, sponsored by Human Response Network, (360) 748-6601 Bingo, doors open 5 p.m., bingo Grandparents as Parents, 6-8 p.m., 321 N Pearl St., Centralia • 360.736.6322 starts 6:30 p.m., Forest Grange, 3397 420 Centralia College Blvd., Centra- NAMI Lewis County Connections Jackson Highway, Chehalis lia, (360) 736-9391, ext. 298 or (877) Support Group, 5:30-7 p.m., Twin Cities Community meal, 1-3 p.m., Rotary 813-2828 Senior Center, (360) 880-8070 or sher- [email protected] Riverside Park, Centralia, free, spon- Lewis County Breast Cancer Support sored by Jesus Name Pentecostal Group, 5:30 p.m., Providence Regional Al-Anon, Fellowship in Unity, 6 p.m., Church, Chehalis, (360) 623-9438 Cancer Clinic, 2015 Cooks Hill Road, Unity Center, 800 S. Pearl St., Centralia, Steam Train Ride and Museum Visit, (360) 304-8472 (360) 736-8104 or (360) 736-6439 Mt. Rainier Railroad and Logging Mu- Lewis County Breast Cancer Support Second Chance/Lewis County Brain seum, Elbe-Mineral, 10 a.m., 12:45 p.m., Group, 5-7 p.m., Providence Regional Injury Support Group, 5 p.m., call (360) 3:30 p.m., 1-888-STEAM-11 Cancer System — Centralia, 2015 Cooks 864-4341 or (360) 983-3166 for meet- Hill Road, (360) 304-8472 ing location CH564831sl.os GriefShare, a recovery group for Support Groups those who have lost a loved one, 7-8:30 GriefShare, a video seminar focus- Tuesday, Oct. 11 p.m., Mountain View Baptist Church, ing on helping people who have lost a 1201 Belmont Ave., Centralia, $10, (360) Hardel Mutual Plywood Corporation - Sign Pro appreciates your business! loved one, 12:30-2 p.m., Shoestring Bingo, Chehalis Moose Lodge, doors 827-2172 • Life 3 LIFE The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016

Handout “Fun jumpers” get their thrills plunging in free fall from 3 miles to 1 mile above the ground at a brisk pace: 120 mph. This group — Rusty Sullivan (from foreground) of Grandview, David Fogleman of Olathe and Jay Fabing of Gardner — ind their aerial entertainment through Skydive KC in Butler, Mo. ‘Fun Jumpers’ Take the Leap From Three Miles Up By Donald Bradley first tandem jump. He was sit- south of Kansas City. (p.m.),” he said. Fun jumpers fill out the loads. The Kansas City Star ting on a picnic table looking The King Air sat fueled, Hall, 44, has jumped out of This never gets old to them, and at his phone outside the main ready and wet. First-timers an airplane about 5,500 times. they never stop learning. They BUTLER, Mo. — Come in a building at Skydive KC when checked in for tandem jumps. He opened the Butler business bring their own gear and pay Benz, come in a beater, nobody something flashed above him. Then waited. Gulp. in June 1998, something he’d $26 per jump. Skydiving is not a cares. “I didn’t even know he was Out in the fun jumpers’ wanted to do ever since watch- cheap pastime. Getting certified If you make jumping out there,” Duckworth said. “It packing hut, they checked gear ing his dad, a door gunner in of an airplane a regular thing, costs about $3,000. Parachutes looked like he came in too hot, and talked. But not a lot about Vietnam, jump at a small field in run twice that, or more. that’s good enough for the but then slowed and landed on regular jobs. Paola, Kan. bunch on the ground at the “This gets to be an $8,000 his feet like it was nothing. “Everybody comes here for “It was harder to jump back hobby pretty fast,” Hall said. small airport in the Bates Coun- “I knew right then I wanted different reasons,” said David then,” he said. “Not a lot of Skydivers would say worth ty seat of Butler. to be part of this forever.” Lang, 24, who coaches indoor places to do it. My parents didn’t every nickel. Weekend mornings, the Other drop zones in the area skydiving at iFLY in Overland want me to do it, but I jumped gravel lot fills up with everyone provide much the same services Park. “But everybody’s the same as soon as I turned 18 and pretty “Where else do you get to live from lawyers to window wash- and camaraderie as Skydive KC. when we get here.” much haven’t stopped since. in the moment?” asked Derek ers, retired folks to college stu- Falcon Skydiving is at No- Some read, one slept. Some- “If there’s not a wedding or a Wallen, who came to Butler dents, many if not most of them ah’s Ark Airport in Kansas City, body ran into Butler to get good- funeral, I’m here every weekend.” from Omaha, Neb., for a special from the Kansas City, Mo., area. North, and Missouri River Val- ies from Koehn Bakery, a local Skydive KC has seen steady team jump practice. “Our lives All ages, all walks and once ley Skydiving is in Henrietta, favorite. growth over the years. The are about jobs, wives, kids, the here, they are the same. They Mo. Everybody watched the King Air, which holds 16, goes house, money. come for that one minute when On a recent Saturday morn- sky. Inside the main building, up about 25 times a weekend, “It is only here, jumping, nothing else matters, the one ing, rain had stopped but clouds Hall, the owner, monitored the reaching altitude in nine min- when we truly live in the mo- minute when life makes perfect hung thick over Skydive KC’s weather on his laptop. utes. A lot of tandem first-tim- ment. Nothing else matters up sense. drop zone in Butler, an hour “I think we’re looking at 1 ers. Then there are students. there. Nothing.” These “fun jumpers” climb aboard Skydive Kansas City’s Beechcraft King Air and ascend in blue sky high enough to see Truman Lake 30 miles to the east. Then out the door they go more than 14,000 feet above Business Card Listings green farmland. The one minute? That’s how long it takes to free fall from Place your business card here for only roughly three miles to one $75 per month. mile at 120 mph with salvation packed on their back. “This consumes you,” said Aaron Jensen, 39, an IT guy from Peculiar with 1,100 jumps. 736-3311 “Nothing like it in the world.” Golf? Please. Contact your Chronicle ad representative today! Only skydivers know why others do it because it’s why they SEASONED FIREWOOD do it. Only they know when to Locally owned and nod when the stories are told. LOGGING operated for over They are family. Things that R&K 24 years happen up there — and that’s • CLEAR CUTTING & THINNING a lot of things — are like old • CLEAR CUT RE-SEEDING things in the attic they’ve all TOAD’S AUTO CH564530kh.do seen. • SELECT LOGGING They jump. They hang out 360-894-1423Ken 1021 N. Pearl St. Centralia, WA 98531 in the packing hut between 360-736-2266 [email protected] CH564605R.N LIC# 0056001827 jumps, longer in rain. They LICENSED, BONDED & INSURED www.toadsauto.com crank the music and party at the RV campground on Saturday nights. Someone hits the fence on landing that day — beers all RSTAD’ around, on them. OMETAL BUILDINGS LLC S Theirs is a bond forged in J adrenaline, neighbors on a two- mile road. www.jorstadmetalbuildings.com “These are my brothers and Pole Building • All Steel Structures • ConcreteCH564575hw.do Office: (360) 785-3602 sisters,” said Jay Fabing, a para- Josh Johnson educator from Gardner, Mo. “I 360.736.6322 | www.signpro100.com 243 Bremgartner Rd. Cell: (360) 880-1813 trust them with my life up there.” 321 N. Pearl, Centralia, WA 98531 Winlock, WA 98596 [email protected] The bucket list people, the Lic # jorstmb843dq ones who pay $200 for a one- time tandem jump, pay the bills at Skydive KC. Commercial “But the fun jumpers bring & Residential LLC the buzz,” said Skydive KC owner Chris Hall. “They swoop 118 W. Pine St., Centralia, WA 98531 1-800-321-1878 in with the cool suits and little 360-736-7601 Ext. 15 fast parachutes — they put on a Fax: 360-623-1054

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CH564522bw.cg [email protected] show and that’s inspiring to stu- www.nicholson-insurance.com dents and first-timers.” Heating & Cooling • Rooing • Electrical Services www.chehalissheetmetal.com • FREE Estimates ALSO LOCATED IN CH550015.cg Enter John Duckworth. Todd Working OLYMPIA & VANCOUVER Agent He’s 31, a window washer 800-201-9221 • (360) 748-9221CHEHASM252MH Serviced by all licensed staff from Kansas City and had never Lewis and Thurston Counties even been on a plane until his Life 4 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016 Faith Religion, Church News Debate Simmers Over Name of Devils Tower Monument in Wyoming

By Bob Moen The Associated Press CHEYENNE, Wyo. — When President Theodore Roo- sevelt designated the country’s first national monument 110 years ago, the proclamation inadvertently left out a punc- tuation mark, and what was supposed to be Devil’s Tower became Devils Tower instead. Some say that’s not all it got wrong. According to local Ameri- can Indians and others, the landmark’s name was based on an incorrect translation and is offensive given the tower’s reli- gious significance. “It hurts us to think about such a beautiful, sacred place called Devils Tower,” said Chief Arvol Looking Horse, spiritual leader of the Great Sioux Nation. Looking Horse has peti- tioned the U.S. Board on Geo- graphic Names to change the name of the huge rock butte to Bear Lodge, and has asked the Obama administration to rename the site Bear Lodge Na- tional Monument. Other locals oppose chang- ing the name, saying it’s unnec- essary and would cause confu- sion and hurt tourism. “The truth is, the vast majority of all of the public worldwide rec- ognize it as a landmark, as Dev- ils Tower; they don’t see it as an Stephen Berend / Gillette News Record via The Associated Press evil thing, as a bad thing,” local This undated ile photo shows Devils Tower near Moorcraft, in northeastern Wyoming. As the nation’s irst national monument approaches its 110th anniversary in rancher Ogden Driskill said. 2016, some American Indian tribes are seeking to change the name of the geologic feature to Bear Lodge and the name of the monument to Bear Lodge National Supporters hope President Monument, because they view the name as unbeitting for a monument they consider to be a sacred site. Opponents of the idea say changing the name would cause Barack Obama will change the confusion and hurt tourism. name during his administra- tion’s final months. Obama has monument using powers ognized names in the National used his administration’s execu- granted to him in the 1906 An- Park Service inventory.” tive authority to unilaterally re- tiquities Act. The monument “To us, it is a very sacred place. A sacred site Looking Horse said opposi- name other geologic features — is maintained by the National tion centers on fears of losing most notably changing Mount Park Service and has become that’s like a church, a place of worship.’’ tourist dollars. McKinley to Denali in Alaska — popular with rock climbers. “It’s all about money, and and create new national monu- Depicted in the 1977 movie Chief Arvol Looking Horse that’s what we are up against in ments. “Close Encounters of the Third spiritual leader of the Great Sioux Nation the world today when everything Opponents are relying on Kind,” Devils Tower attracted is based on money,” he said. the state’s Republican congres- about 480,000 visitors last year. Driskill, who is a state sional delegation to continue Among them were American Lakota language, Mato Tipila. Proponents of the name senator, said the monument at least blocking Congress Indians who regularly hold reli- Local tribes have their own leg- change say the use of “devils” to is among his county’s top eco- from renaming the monument gious services there. ends about how the tower was describe a sacred site is offensive. nomic drivers. He contends and the Board on Geographic The landmark is a sacred created, but most involve a bear However, the Board on the effort to change its name is Names from moving to rename site to at least 26 affiliated tribes, clawing at a rock while trying to Geographic Names has a pol- based more on political correct- the tower and the nearby com- said Tim Reid, monument su- reach people on top of it. icy of not acting on petitions ness than religious reasons. munity of Devils Tower, which perintendent. The head of an 1870s Army- to change a feature’s name if With the board unable to act, consists of a post office, tourist Many religious ceremonies led expedition reported local legislation involving the same proponents of the new name shops and a campground. take place in June, and the Park tribes called the site “bad god’s feature is pending before Con- are pinning their hopes on the The tower can be seen for Service asks climbers to volun- tower,” which resulted in expe- gress, said Lou Yost, the board’s Obama administration. miles, standing out like a giant tarily refrain from scaling the dition members settling on the executive secretary. The interior secretary can tree stump among surrounding tower during that month. name “Devil’s Tower.” The measure introduced change a geologic feature’s title hills. It rises about 865 feet from “To us, it is a very sacred place. However, because there’s no by Wyoming Republican Sens. if the Board on Geographic its rocky base to its relatively A sacred site that’s like a church, historical evidence that tribes Mike Enzi and John Barrasso Names fails to act “within a flat top, which is about the size a place of worship,” Looking associated the monument with and Rep. Cynthia Lummis reasonable time,” which is not of a football field. By compari- Horse said. bad gods or evil spirits, it is sus- would preserve the Devils Tow- defined. The agency declined to son, the Washington Monu- According to the Park Ser- pected the name given the tower er name in federal law. comment about Devils Tower. ment in Washington, D.C., is vice, most maps from 1874 to by the expedition was the result Gov. Matt Mead also oppos- Secretary Sally Jewell used 555 feet tall. 1901 marked the tower as Bears of bad translation, according to es the new name, saying “Devils the provision to change Mount Roosevelt designated the Lodge — or in Looking Horse’s the Park Service. Tower is one of the most rec- McKinley to Denali.

“Kittens” “Vanessa” “Niko” “Tucker” We have six kittens in this litter! Vanessa is a very sweet 4 year old Niko is about 3 years old and They are about 11-12 weeks old. Tucker is an energetic 2 year old. kitty. She raised a litter of kittens came to us in a cat trap. No one Super sweet and love to play with He loves to play with other dogs, and now plans to retire from has claimed him, so now he can kitten toys! We also have about but also needs a secure fence, as motherhood! She would love to be yours. Sweet boy that would 12 more kittens right now! Lots to he likes to wander. We think he is a be your new best friend!! love to be a couch potato! choose from. Husky/Lab mix. #10908 #10909 #10927 #10639 Lewis County Animal Shelter Pets of the Week Send monetary donations to: Thank you for your support of our shelter! Lewis County Animal Shelter 560 Centralia-Alpha Road As always we can use wood pellets, clay (non clumping) litter, dry kitten chow P.O. Box 367 (not cat), and canned pate style cat food. We are almost out of bleach, we are Chehalis, WA 98532 also low on copy paper. Thanks so much for your support!

Please put an I.D. tag on your pets and remember to get them spayed or neutered! CH564577hw.do 360-740-1290 FOR LOW COST SPAYING OR NEUTERING CALL 748-6236 Open 10-4 Monday - Saturday Check us out on petfinder.com under Chehalis or Lewis County • Life 5 FAITH The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016

River Baptisms: ‘Surrendering Church News ing Conflicts.” Themselves’ to Water, Christ New Sermon Series to Start at On Nov. 6, the sermon will be on “The Par- Centralia United Methodist able of the Unforgiving Servant,” and the work- Pastor Tom Peterson will begin a four-part shop will be on “Forgiveness.” sermon series at Centralia United Methodist The Winlock United Methodist Church is Church Sunday during 11 a.m. worship service. located at 107 SW Benton Ave., and the phone Based on the book by Joyce Meyer, the theme number is (360) 785-4241. is “Get Your Hopes Up.” Topics for discussion will include “Raising Our Expectations”; “Hope Gospel Music Coming to in the Midst of Struggles”; “The Relationship Between Hope and Happiness;” and “How Our Ethel/Silver Creek Grange Hope in the Future Impacts Our Present.” A Gospel music event will be at 5 p.m. to- More information is available by calling Pe- night at the Ethel/Silver Creek Grange. terson at (360) 736-7311. For more information, call Shirley Billings, (360) 736-5929. Winlock Methodist to Start The Grange is located at 1624 U.S. Highway 12, Ethel, at the corner of Brim Road and High- Series on Emotional Health way 12. Mike Stewart / The Associated Press The Winlock United Methodist Church is Nicholas Lewis is baptized in the Chattahoochee River Sept. 18 near Demorest, Ga. offering a four-week series on emotional health, The ancient sacrament is memorialized in the Gospel account of John baptizing starting on Oct. 16. Down East Boys, Evergreen Jesus in the Jordan River. Pastor Susan Griggs will preach at the 10 3 to Perform at Bethel a.m. worship service on one aspect of emotion- By Mike Stewart River. Children from age 7 and al healing and then will present a workshop on A concert featuring the nationally known Down East Boys and Washington’s Evergreen The Associated Press adults well into their 70s are bap- the same topic at 12:30 p.m. after a light lunch. tized by pastors or family. On Oct. 16, the sermon will be on “Repair- 3 will be at 6 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 16, at Bethel DEMOREST, Ga. — Take Many denominations don’t ing Brokenness,” and the workshop will be on Church, 132 Kirkland Road, Chehalis. me to the river — the saying fully immerse baptismal candi- “Self-Esteem.” Both of these groups specialize in Southern still resonates in some Southern dates, preferring to sprinkle them On Oct. 23, the sermon will be on “Jesus’ Gospel music, and blend hymns of old with some of the newest songs written today. churches where the tradition of with water. And in churches that Assertiveness,” and the workshop will be on river baptism remains alive. An offering will be taken. do immersion baptism, water “Assertiveness.” The chilly, rapid waters of On Oct. 30, the sermon will be on “Recon- For more information, call the church, (360) tanks built inside the church’s North Georgia’s Chattahoochee ciliation,” and the workshop will be on “Resolv- 748-0119, or visit www.bethel-church.com. and Coosawattee rivers serve to sanctuary have largely replaced baptize members of the River excursions to dunk members in a river or pond. again in the fall. Prayers go out ebrate new life in Jesus Christ. summer sun shone above foli- Point Community Church in for good weather, but Sept. 18 “It’s relaxing and restorative age not yet browned by autumn, Cornelia and the Resaca Church But 49-year-old Kevin Mang- in the waters,” said Mangum, and the mountain stream rushed of God in Resaca. um, the pastor who leads River brought a “real frog-choker,” as On a couple of recent late- Point, says river baptisms of- Mangum described the heavy who fly-fishes at this same spot past. summer Sundays, congregants of fer a special setting to assemble rains. on the Chattahoochee. “I felt immense joy and peace,” each church gathered for the an- a crowd and demonstrate lives Mangum said that as he looks Resaca Church of God mem- she said. “The peace comes from cient sacrament, memorialized changed by Christ. at the hundreds of congregants ber Ciara Langford watched two knowing my children are surren- in the Gospel account of John His church performs a mass by the river’s edge in the rain, he of her daughters baptized in the dering themselves to something baptizing Jesus in the Jordan baptism, once in the spring and sees their dedication as they cel- Coosawattee recently, as a late- larger than they are.”

APOSTOLIC Grace Baptist Church COMMUNITY CHURCH First Christian Church NON-DENOMINATIONAL Join us for Sunday School 9:45 am, Morning Centralia, (Independent), 1215 W. Main. The Apostolic Faith Church Worship 11:00 am. Sunday evenings 6:00 pm 736-7655. www.centraliachristian.org. 196 NW Cascade Ave., Chehalis, Rev. Jack - Adult Bible Study & Bible Adventures for kids Sunday Morning: Worship 10:00 am - Chasteen, Pastor. Sun. School 9:30, Service with stories, games and fun for ages preschool 11:15 am with Nursery and Sunday School 11:00, Evening Service 6 pm, Midweek - 5th grade. Wednesday Evening Prayer Centralia Community Church for Pre-school - 5th grade. Lead Pastor Life Center Service Wed. 7:30 pm. 748-4811. Meeting & Bible Study 7 pm. Pastor Anthony A community with people just like you! Brad Brenner. Sunday Gathering at 10:30 am. Sunday Services at 9:00 am (acoustic) & 201 N. Rock Street | Centralia ASSEMBLY OF GOD Hayden. 19136 Loganberry S.W., Rochester. For more information visit us at www.gracein- 10:30 am. Nursery care provided for both 360-736-5898 Bethel Church services Classes for all ages also offered. Real Life. Real People. Real God. “Following Christ, Loving People, rochester.org or call 360-273-9240. Great programs throughout the week! First Christian Church www.yourlifecenter.com Restoring Hope” INDEPENDENT BAPTIST Pastor Mark Fast, 3320 Borst Ave. (across Gatherings & Locations: Senior Minister, Brian Carter. Nursery and from Centralia High School) (360) 736-7606 Sunday school 9:30 am. Sunday morning Chehalis Centralia Bible Baptist Church www.cccog.com. 132 Kirkland R. (I-5, Exit 72) 1511 S. Gold Street worship 10:30 am. Special needs adult Sundays at 9am & 11am (360) 669-0113 Cooks Hill Community Church ministry on 1st Monday 7 pm. Small group Wednesdays at 7pm www.centraliabbc.org 2400 Cooks Hill Road, Centralia, fellowships. NEW BEGINNINGS CHURCH Downtown Centralia Pastor, Tim Shellenberger Pastor Mitch Dietz. Sunday 111 NW Prindle, 748-3702 603 NW St. Helens Ave. 413 N. Tower Ave. Sunday Worship: 9:15 am & 11:00am Mornings: Worship Services at www.chehalischristian.org PO Box 1164 Chehalis, WA. 98532 Sundays at 10am Sunday Evening: 5:30pm 9am & 10:30 am. (Sign language LUTHERAN (360) 748-7831 www.go2newbc.com Central Ofices Wednesday in the Word: 7:00pm available at 10:30), Youth and Pastor Ken Rieper 132 Kirkland Rd., Chehalis Children’s Sunday School Classes and Immanuel Lutheran Church ELCA Sunday school begins at 9:30 am 360-748-0119, bethel-church.com Faith Baptist Church - 740-0263 Nursery 10:30 am. Call the church for more 1209 N. Scheuber Rd, Centralia. Worship & Celebration 10:30 am 436 Coal Creek, Chehalis, www.fbc-wa.org information at 736-6133 or check out our Pastor, Linda Nou, 360-736-9270, Wednesday SUMMIT 6:30-8 pm Calvary Assembly of God Sunday School (all ages) 9:30 am website at Sunday Worship Svcs: 9am Contemporary, “A loving place to worship” Children’s Church/Morning Worship 10:30am www.cookshillcc.org. 11am Traditional, Fifth Sunday in month 302 E. Main St., on the corner of Gold & Sunday 6 pm, Thursday Bible Study and blended Svc 10am. In Lent, Svc @ Wed PENTECOSTAL CHURCHES Main Streets, Centralia, WA 98531. Church Master’s Club for kids— 7pm CONSERVATIVE BAPTIST 7pm. Sun School 1015am; Jesus Name Pentecostal Church of Phone: (360)736-6249. Pastors Jim & Shirley Napavine Baptist Church Christian Fellowship of Winlock Youth Grp Sun 630pm. admin@ilccentralia. Chehalis, 1582 Bishop Rd., Chehalis. Blankenship. Services: New Sunday Service org or www.ilccentralia.org Sunday Services: Prayer 9:45 am & 6:15 pm, Schedule: Sunday School: 9:00am-10:00am. NapavineBaptist.com • 262-3861 630 Cemetery Rd., Winlock Church ofice phone: (360) 785-4280 Services: 10 am & 6:30pm. Wed. Services: Fellowship with the Family: 10:00am- CALVARY CHAPEL Peace Lutheran Church & Preschool Sunday Worship Service: 10:30am-12:00pm Chehalis–LCMS, Bishop Rd. & Jackson Hwy. Prayer 7:15 pm Service 7:30 pm. Anchor 10:30am. Worship Service: 10:30am. Sunday Youth Nite: Fri. 7:30 pm. Elder Bishop Bur- Evening Service: 6:00pm. Calvary Chapel Sunday School for all ages: 9:00-10:15am Worship Svc. 9:00 am, 10:30 Coffee Hour, Services at Harrison Square Presbyterian Quality Nursery Care provided Sun. School 11:00 am. Re v. Daniel Freeman gess, Pastor Shannon Burgess. Jackson Prairie Assembly of God Church 1223 Harrison Ave., Centralia, WA. Awana: Thursday evenings from 6:00- 748-4108. (360) 748-4977 website: www.jnpc.org. “Building community with people like you” Sunday School: 11 am. Sunday Service 9 8:00pm, Youth Group for kids 6th-12th Pathway Church of God 262-9533, 4224 Jackson Hwy., (Mary’s am. Wednesday Bible Study and Prayer: 7 grade Sundays 6:00pm-8:00pm ,Pastor: St. John’s Lutheran Church-ELCA 2190 Jackson Highway, Chehalis. Winter 1416 Scheuber Rd., Centralia. Corner) Chehalis. Sunday School for all pm. An in-depth, verse by verse study of Terry Sundberg, Andrew Johnson, Associate 736-3698. Everyone Welcome! ages: 9:30am. Sunday Morning Worship: God’s word. 360-827-3291 Youth Pastor Services: Sunday Worship 8:30 & 11:00 am. Sunday School & Adult Classes 9:45 am. Sun. Morning worship 11:00 am., 10:30am. Sunday Prayer: 5pm. Sunday Wednesday 7:00 pm, Evening Focus: 6:30 pm w/contemporary ROMAN CATHOLIC Mountain View Baptist Church Coffee/ fellowship follows the service. Pastor 1201 Belmont, Centralia. (1 block west of I-5 Matthew March. Ofice hours Monday - Pastors Rick and Debbie Payton. worship. Wednesday Evening Family Night: St. Joseph Church 7pm. Adult Bible Study, Youth & Children. interchange on Harrison, right on Belmont) Thursday, 9:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. Phone: PRESBYTERIAN 682 S.W. Cascade, Chehalis. 736-1139. Sunday School (all ages) 9:45 am. Worship Intern: Patrick Miess, Youth Pastor: Masses, Sat.- 5:00pm. Sun.- 10:30am (360) 748-4741. Jared Hunt. Lead Pastor Bill Morris. Sunday Services: 8:30 & 11 am. and 6 pm. Website: www.stjohnschehalis.net. Mass in Spanish: Sun.- 1:00pm AWANA (Sept-May). Web: jacksonprairiechurch.com Reconciliation: Sat. 3:30-4:30 pm St. Marks Lutheran Church-LCMC Napavine Assembly of God 45 minutes before daily Masses EVANGELICAL CHURCH 10000 Highway 12, Rochester. Adult Class Pastor Will Karch - 414 SE 2nd, Napavine. Father Jacob Maurer 748-4953 Adna Evangelical Church, 748-3569 9:00 a.m. Sunday service 10:00 a.m. Fellow- Harrison Square Presbyterian Church ship follows service. Pastors: Greg Wight- 262-0285. Sunday Services, Sunday School: St. Mary’s Church Sunday: Bible Classes 10:00 am, 1227 Harrison Ave., Centralia. Pastor Rev. 9:30am, Morning Worship: 10:30 am. Eve- 225 N. Washington, Centralia. Worship 11:00 am, Midweek Small Groups, man and Lauren Macan-Wightman. Ralph Carr. Sundays: Education Classes for ning Service: 6pm. Wednesday: Bible Study: call for times. 115 Dieckman Rd., Chehalis. Church phone: 273-9571. Web: adults 9:30 am. One Worship Service at Masses: Sun.- 8:30 am www.lutheransonline.com/stmarksrochesterwa 7pm. Royal Rangers & Missionettes Father Jacob Mauerer 748-4953 www.adnachurch.org 11:00 am. K-5th Grade attend beginning of worship then released to go to their class. Oakville Assembly of God St. Francis Xavier Mission St. Paul Evangelical Lutheran Church -ELCA Nursery available. “Emerge” Student Minis- 273-8116. A Church for the Whole Family! 139 Spencer Rd., Toledo EVANGELICAL FREE tries, Wednesdays, 6:30-8:00 pm. Sunday Worship Service: 10:00 am, Sunday 379 State Rt. 505, Winlock, WA 98596. Youth Saturday - 5:00 PM Central Bible Evangelical Free Church and Adult Sunday School at 9:30 am. El- Justin McGregory, Director Evening Bible Study: 6:00 PM, Wednesday, (360) 864-4126 Phone: (360) 736-9996 Transformers Kids K-6th grade, Youth 2333 Sandra Ave. Centralia, WA 98531. 360- ementary Age Sunday School durin gportion Sacred Heart Church 736-2061. Pastor: Randy Sortino. Sunday of worship time. Worship Service at 10:30 E-mail: [email protected] 7th - 12th grade, 7:00 pm. Adult Bible Web: www.harrisonsquarepc.com Study 7:00 pm. www.oakvilleassembly.org 277 7th St. Morton School 9:15 a.m. Morning Worship 10:30 am, coffee and fellowship follow Sunday Sun. - 10:45 AM a.m. Nursery provided. Evening Worship, Worship. Pastor: Rev. Angela Renecker. For Westminster Presbyterian Church Onalaska Assembly of God (360) 496-5456 Sunday, 6:00 p.m., Venture Club-Wednes- more info call the church ofice 360-785- 349 N. Market Blvd., Chehalis. 137 Leonard Rd., Onalaska , 978-4978. day, 6:00 pm, Saturday 7 am, Mens Fellow- 3507. www.stpaullutheranwinlock.org St. Yves Mission Pastor Ed Wegele. Sunday Services Sunday School 9:45 am, Sunday worship ship breakfast. Call for more information. 10:00am with Children’s Church and services 10:45 am, Tuesday Royal Rangers Harmony Rd., Harmony, WA METHODIST (360) 496-5456 EPISCOPAL nursery care. For details, visit (boys) & Mpact Girls 6:30pm, Wednesday Centralia United Methodist Church www.chehaliswpc.org or call 748-0091 Adult Bible Study 6:30 pm. Food ministry on CHRISTIAN SCIENCE St. Timothy Episcopal Church 506 S. Washington. Rev. Tom Peterson. 2nd & 4th Wednesday 12-3pm. Sunday Schedule: Worship: 11:00 am. All Welcome! 736-7311. SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST Pastor Les & Marita Thelander. First Church of Christ • 8:00am & 10:00 am Holy Eucharist www.centraliaumc.com www.onalaskaaog.com. Scientist, 89 NE Park St., Chehalis, Sunday Seventh-day Adventist, Centralia • 9:00am Bible Study 1607 Military Rd., 736-4262. Sabbath School Email:[email protected]. School & Service 10:30 am, Wed. Service Chehalis United Methodist Church • 9-11:30 am child care 9:30 am, Church Service 10:45 am. Wed. 7:00 pm. Nursery provided. Reading room Wednesday, noon Eucharist & healing prayers 16 S. Market Blvd., Chehalis. Vader Assembly of God hrs., Tues. & Thurs. 11am - 1pm (Except Pastor: Rev. Karla Fredericksen. Prayer Meeting 6:00 pm. 302 6th St., Vader. Pastor: Tracy Durham. Contact Church Ofice @ 748-8232 Pastor Ira Bartolome holidays). Address: 1826 S.W. Snively Avenue, Chehalis. Sunday School at 9:30 a.m. Worship Ser- Services: Sundays 10:30 am & 6 pm., vices at 11 a.m. All are welcome, childcare is CHURCH OF GOD Web: StTimonthyChehalis.org Seventh Day Adventist, Chehalis 120 Wednesdays 7 pm. (360) 295-3756 available during the Worship Service. Chilvers Rd, (2 miles west on Hwy. 6 at Exit Onalaska First Church of God Church ofice 360-748-7334 Winlock Assembly of God Corner of Hwy. 508 & 3rd Ave. 77). 748-4330. Pastor David Glenn. Service 706 SE First St. Winlock, WA, (360) 785- (360) 978-4161 FOURSQUARE Winlock United Methodist Church on Saturdays, Sabbath School 9:30 am, 3011, Sunday School 9:30am, Sunday www.onalaskachurchofgod.com 107 SW Benton Ave., Winlock, WA. Pastor Worship Service 11:00 am. Services 10:30am and 6pm, Wednesday Chehalis Foursquare Church Where Your Experience With Christ 990 NW State Ave., Chehalis. Pastor Armin Susan Griggs leads worship at 10:00 a.m. UNITY mid-week service 6:00pm, Pastor John MakesYou a Member. Children attend Sunday School following the Vantrease. Kast. Sunday Service: 10 am., with kids Sunday School: 9:45 am; Morning Worship: Sunday School, nursery provided. Wed. Children’s Message, with childcare available BAPTIST 8:15 am and 11:00 am,, Wednesday: Soup Night Prayer: 6:30-7:30 pm. Women’s and during the church service. Fellowship follows and sandwiches at 6:00 pm, Bible Study Men’s Bible Study. Everyone is welcome, at 10 a.m. All are welcome. 360-785-4241 Dayspring Baptist Church, SBC at 6:30 pm come as you are. (360) 748-4746 MESSIANIC Center for Positive Living 2088 Jackson Hwy., Chehalis. Life Groups God accepts you the way you are A spiritual community open to seekers for all ages begins at 9:30 am. Worship Chesed v’ Shalom Ministries and so do we INDEPENDENT Meets Saturday mornings and believers on all paths to God. Sunday begins at 10:45 am. Pastor Chris Kruger, Service 10:00 am. 800 S. Pearl, Centralia. 748-3401 CHURCH OF CHRIST Centralia Bible Chapel at Immanuel Lutheran 209 N. Pearl St., Christ-centered, Bible- 1209 N Scheuber in Centralia 330-5259. www.unitycentralia.com Dryad Community Baptist Church Centralia, Sunday Bible Study: 9:30 am, based ministry. Family Bible Hour & Sunday Shabbat Service 11:00 am 112 Olive Street, Dryad, Wa.,Bible Study for 10:30 Worship Sunday: 2 pm. Wed. Bible School, 11:00 am. Midweek prayer meeting, Rabbi James Pace all ages: 10:00 am. Morning Worship: 11:00 Study: 6 pm, Thurs. Ladies’ Class: 11 am 6:45 pm. Wednesday, followed by Bible Phone: 360-736-1601 am. Adult Discipleship 6:00 pm. 360-245- Info. 736-9798. Corner of Plum & Buckner. study at 7:30 pm. For more information, www.cvsm.us 3383. 509-230-6393 Toledo, 300 St. Helens St., Toledo, Wel- LeRoy Junker, 807-4633; John Martin, comes You! 10 am Sun. Bible Study, 11 am 736-4001. CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE Worship. 6 pm Sun. Worship, 6 pm Wed. Loving Deeply, Serving Boldly Bible Study, 11 am Tues. Adult Bible Class. Faith Temple Word of Life Sunday School Hour at 9:00 a.m. Worship (bag lunch at 12 noon) Evangelist John 519 W. Cherry In Centralia. If you need a miracle, come. Pastor Larry Radach, Service at 10:30 a.m. Exciting ministries Gadberry, 274-8570 throughout the week for all age groups 748-7916. Sunday School 10:15 am, morn- ing worship, 11:00 am, Sunday evening 6:00 with nursery care provided. Our church is a pm. Wednesday Bible study 7:00 pm. Old- place to make new friends, a place to wor- fashioned preaching & prayer for the sick. ship, learn and grow, a place to share life’s Everyone welcome. 330-2667 or 748-7916. blessings, and a place to ind encourage- ment when weathering a storm. Everyone is welcome!! Pastor Dave Bach 1119 W. First Street in Centralia, 736-9981.

CH564524kh.cg Life 6 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016 LIFE

Onalaska Firefighters Pose for Advertisement

Submitted by Edwin Neumann / for Our Hometowns Lewis County Fire District 1 mem- bers from 1954, pictured from the left, are Henry Newmann, Ed Young, George Olst, Fountain Butcher, Les Mallonee, Kelly Baker and Darrell Dow. They are posing for an adver- tisement picture.

Washington the baseball team rally from Yankees took a 4-2 lead into the Seattle Police Chief a 13-game deficit to a division eighth inning. But Griffey made State Frank Ramon Resigns championship and a trip to the it 4-3 with his fifth home run of Amid Scandal American League Champion- the series, and a bases-loaded HISTORY ship Series. walk by Yankees pitcher David on Oct. 8, 1969 A Slow Start Cone tied the score at 4-4. That brought baseball’s best reliever, HistoryLink.org Seattle Police Chief Frank C. In mid-summer of 1995, the Mariano Rivera, into the game Ramon (1914-1986) retires af- hardly had when the stakes were highest. ter a palace revolt by top police the look of champions. Despite Photo by Ben VanHouten, Courtesy Seattle Mariners commanders. Three assistant But the Mariners had a reliever a talented lineup, they were in Ken Griffey Jr. at bat for the Seattle to match him. Johnson, the police chiefs object to Ramon’s third place in their four-team Mariners, 2010. league’s most dominating start- interference in a gambling in- division, the American League ing pitcher, had volunteered to vestigation that exposed cor- West, and seemingly going no- off day, they stretched their pitch in relief despite having ruption. Seattle Mayor Floyd where. Griffey, their best player, lead to three. had only one day’s rest. The Miller (1902-1985) asks for and had been out of action since By then baseball had the sight of their 6-foot-10 ace com- receives Ramon’s resignation, May, when he ran full-speed Northwest’s attention. The An- ing in from the bullpen to pitch effective Nov. 5, 1969. into the Kingdome’s centerfield gels staged a late charge in the the ninth inning electrified the Courtesy National Archives wall to make a catch and broke season’s final week and caught Illegal Gambling already amped-up crowd. He Curtis JN-4 Jenny, 1919. at the Lifeline Bingo Parlor his right wrist. By late July, the the Mariners on the last day. Mariners were 10 games behind The tie for first place in the retired the Yankees’ best three The mayor had appointed the division-leading California standings meant the two teams hitters, but Rivera and Jack Mc- Military Airplane Lands the three assistant chiefs, Frank Angels, and fan interest was would play an extra game the Dowell, a starter who like John- at Sand Point Moore, George Fuller, and A. C. dwindling. next day, Oct. 2, to determine son was thrown into an emer- Gustin, in December 1968, as Rather than give up the the division championship. The gency relief role, mowed down for the First Time part of a departmental reorga- chase, general manager Woody winner would fly that night to the M’s in the ninth and tenth. on Oct. 8, 1921 nization. Woodward asked CEO John El- New York to start the playoffs The Yankees took a 5-4 lead In August 1969, Gustin lis for approval to spend money the next day against the Yan- in the 11th. Seattle’s miracle U.S. Army Major Henry and Fuller staged a raid on the on some additional talent. El- kees. season was on the line, but it wasn’t over. Cora bunted safely Kress Muhlenberg (1886-1967) Lifeline Bingo Parlor in Seattle lis said yes. Woodward traded Playoff Magic lands a military aircraft for the without Ramon’s knowledge. for proven San Diego pitcher for a single and Griffey singled first time at what would be- The operation revealed that Andy Benes on July 31 and, two More than 52,350 showed too, advancing Cora to third. come Sand Point Naval Air Sta- gambling, illegal under state weeks later, for speedy outfield- up to see the winner-take-all That set up the biggest mo- tion. Muhlenberg pilots a Cur- law, was openly taking place er Vince Coleman. Coleman, game. Much of the city and ment in Mariner history. Ed- tiss JN-4H Jenny biplane from and further, that the operator an immediate upgrade to the region watched on television gar Martinez, the American Camp Lewis in Pierce County had made large payments to Mariners lineup, was a veteran or listened on radio. What had League batting champion, hit and lands at Sand Point on the political figures. of two World Series with the been a tense ’ duel be- a line drive into leftfield, eas- 500-foot dirt strip cleared out Ramon Protects the Gamblers St. Louis Cardinals. About the tween Johnson and California ily scoring Cora and sending of dense woods, considered still same time, Griffey returned. ace Mark Langston, a former Griffey around third, hell-bent too rough for use by aircraft. Ramon ordered that the de- Seattle still trailed California Mariner, for six innings was for home. He beat the throw to Muhlenberg was Assistant Pro- fendants be released from jail by 13 games in mid-August, but decided by one whacky play in the plate, giving Seattle a 6-5 fessor of Military Tactics at the and that no further raids take things were about to change. the seventh. The Mariners had victory, and was mobbed and University of Washington and place. Gustin reported (appar- a 1-0 lead and the bases loaded toppled by his teammates as chief of the Air Service Divi- ently erroneously) that he was On Aug. 24, with two outs in when Luis Sojo hit the ball past the Kingdome quaked in happy sion for the Reserve Officers then approached with an of- the bottom of the ninth inning, first base and into right field. pandemonium. Griffey’s smile Training Corps (ROTC). fer of a bribe to curtail the in- Griffey hit a game-winning Two runs easily scored and a at the bottom of that pileup said Major Muhlenberg piloted vestigation. The three assistant home run against the Yankees’ third was heading home when it all: The Mariners were going the second airplane to land at chiefs gave Ramon and the best , John Wette- Langston caught the throw to play for the league champi- Sand Point. The first was pi- mayor an ultimatum: either land. That blast was a turning from the outfield and threw onship. loted by pioneer aviator Eddie Ramon resigns or they would point. The Mariners won six the ball wildly past his catcher. Writers and players imme- Hubbard (1889-1928). Hubbard request reassignments back to of their next eight games, fin- That allowed Sojo to score too, diately labeled the Mariners- set down a plane on Sand Point their permanent ranks of cap- ishing the month with team giving the Mariners a 5-0 lead Yankees series a classic. Mari- tain. on June 19, 1920, as part of a records for victories and runs en route to a 9-1 victory. The ners manager , Resignation it was. With an tree felling ceremony marking scored. They had cut the An- noise was deafening. For the who had won World Series as election coming up in Novem- the formal development of the gels’ lead nearly in half. first time in their bleak 19-year a player and a manager, called ber 1969, a new mayor would site as an airfield. Riding with history, the M’s had made the it “the best series I’ve ever seen have replaced him. Besides, Filling the Dome Hubbard as a passenger was playoffs and it seemed a whole played and the best game I’ve with 28 years of service, he was Griffey, right fielder Jay Claude C. Ramsay, chairman city was shouting the news. ever been part of” (LaRue, Ta- eligible to retire. In 1971, Ra- Buhner, designated hitter Edgar of the King County Board of At Yankee Stadium the next coma News Tribune, 1995). Commissioners and the leader mon was indicted along with Martinez, first baseman Tino night, the Mariners were play- of local backers for a Sand Point 16 others for complicity in the Martinez and third baseman ing their third game in a third After their epic struggle, airport. scandal. He was alleged to have Mike Blowers were providing city in three days. The Yankees where the teams hit a record King County acquired the received liquor from operators the power. Coleman and sec- won the series opener 9-6 and 22 home runs — 11 each — the site for a military air facil- of gambling establishments. ond baseman Joey Cora added then a 15-inning, five-hour ity and both the Army and the Charges against him were dis- speed and energy. Catcher Dan American League Champion- battle of wills, 7-5. As the series ship Series was anticlimactic. Navy had been considering the missed before trial because he Wilson was a solid presence be- moved to Seattle, the Mariners County’s offer of the land for no had testified before a grand jury hind the plate. Starting pitchers The Cleveland Indians elimi- had to win three straight games nated the Mariners four games cost. At the time, Seattle had no under a grant of immunity. Randy Johnson and Benes and to avoid elimination. airport. relief pitcher Norm Charlton to two. After the final out, even In front of 57,944, the big- though its team had lost, the The Army supplied the fa- were overpowering. It was a po- gest crowd in the city’s baseball cility’s first hanger, a prefabri- Seattle Mariners Win tent combination. crowd of roughly 58,000 lin- history, the Mariners had John- gered to cheer what the Mari- cated metal building shipped Even though the Mariners son pitching again. They won Their First Playoff ners had accomplished. Tears from California and erected at had made it a pennant race, Game Three 7-4. The Yankees streamed down Piniella’s face County expense. That fall, pi- Series With a Dramatic Kingdome attendance was slow grabbed an early 5-0 lead in while he and his players ac- lots undertook to seed the run- to catch up. On Sept. 12, when Game Four, but Edgar Marti- Comeback Against knowledged the ovation. As Art way with grass to create a turf the Mariners beat Minnesota nez hit a three-run home run Thiel wrote in Out of Left Field, surface. The runways at Sand the New York Yankees 14-3 on two homers by Buhner to start a Mariners’ comeback. Point would not be paved with on Oct. 8, 1995 and one by Blowers, the crowd Then, with the bases loaded and his book chronicling the team’s asphalt until 1939. was only 12,102, barely a fourth the score tied at 6-6 in bottom rise from obscurity, Piniella Sand Point became a Naval The Seattle Mariners win of capacity. But that too would of the eighth inning, Martinez “was moved by the moment, as Air Station in 1923 (one of only the first playoff series in their change. On Sept. 21, the Mari- homered again. The Mariners well as by the transformation five in the nation at the time). history, coming from behind in ners moved into a tie for first won 11-8, setting the stage for a of the city’s sports history — an The Navy permitted the Army the 11th inning to beat the New place and then had a day to rest decisive Game Five. electric bonding between team to base the UW ROTC Jenny York Yankees 6-5. Ken Griffey before starting a three-game se- and fans that moved govern- there for a few years. During Jr. scores the winning run as ries with Oakland. More than The Final Drama ments, altered taxation and the winter, students often had the Kingdome crowd goes wild. 150,000 attended those games. With 78 percent of all West- work schedules, interrupted to hike the rutted mud track The dramatic victory caps an The Mariners won all three, ern Washington households classes and weddings, blistered that was Sand Point Way in or- exhilarating two months for giving them a two-game lead watching on television and hands, ravaged throats, and der to fly. the M’s and their fans, who saw over California. After another 57,411 at the Kingdome, the lifted spirits” (Thiel, 138). • Life 7 LIFE The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016

Find answers to the puzzles here on Sudoku Puzzle One Puzzle Two on page Life 8.

Crossword

Celebrity Cipher Today’s clue: I equals U

“XMPZP’N OWXMFOB SPXXPZ XMVO V XPVY

XMVX GWYPN WIX WT OWUMPZP VOE TFOEN

XMPYNPRCPN FO XMP UWZRE NPZFPN.” —

HFXGMPZ XWY BRVCFOP

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: “What women want: To be loved ... to be desired, to be respected ... What men want: Tickets to the World Series.” — Dave Barry © 2016 by NEA, Inc.

Purple Reign: A Did you know? When you place your classified help wanted ad, it will appear Prince Tribute Tour in print, online and be featured in our Top Job Opportunities.

in Minneapolis MECHANIC Automotive full time mechanic. company safety policies and procedures. Able Experience determines pay scale, medical to stand for long periods of time and lift up to By Elaine Glusac insurance provided. ASE certiied preferred. Bring 100 pounds. Send resume to: Tim Brandner, vate parties and after-hours con- resume to Lewis County Fleet Service. Contact The Chronicle Printing Division, 3802 Galvin Chicago Tribune certs at Paisley Park. My husband, Bill at 360-266-0497. Rd., Centralia, WA 98531 or email tbrandner@ a Minnesota native, and I regular- chronline.com Applications are also available CITY OF CHEHALIS Long before he died April 21, ly saw the musician at Glam Slam, is accepting at:321 N. Pearl St., Centralia. the musician Prince taught his applications for the position of Prince’s former downtown music DISTRIBUTION WORKER/ fans to live. Administrative Assistant to the club, and lurked in hope around City Manager $3,103 to $3,771/ DELIVERY DRIVER “If (the) elevator tries to bring First Avenue, the club where month DOE. Application materials Production position in you down,” he sang in 1984’s many of the concert scenes in the & instructions at www.ci.chehalis. newspaper distribution center. Nights and wa.us “Purple Rain” release, “go crazy.” movie “Purple Rain” were filmed. or 350 N. Market Blvd., Rm 101, Chehalis. possible weekends a must. Skills needed for this And so it continues in “It was not uncommon at all Please apply by 10/17/16. position include; punctuality, good attendance, Prince’s hometown of Minne- HUMAN RESOURCE CONSULTANT ability to do repetitive work, ability to lift 50+ on a Friday night to find yourself pounds. Mechanical knowledge, delivery driving apolis, where his own personal dancing next to Prince,” said Day- ASSISTANT 1 Evergreen State College, Olympia, elevator may have crashed with WA. For complete details & learn how to apply experience and forklift training a plus. Send na Frank, owner of First Avenue for this position visit: resume to: Aaron Christin, The Chronicle Printing a fatal drug overdose at age 57, (www.first-avenue.com). “Maybe www.evergreen.edu/ Division, 3802 Galvin Rd., Centralia, WA 98531 employment/stafjobs EOE/AA/ADA or email [email protected]. Applications but his fans are still going crazy before he was a mega celebrity.” in memorial. MEDICAL CAB DRIVERS are also available at:321 N. Pearl St., Centralia. But even in his final week, he Needed, $12 per hour. Beneits based on hours worked. (No telephone Since then, a new tourism was frequently spotted around Requires clean driving record, background check & random drug testing. 360-864-2323 calls unless speciied, please.) All Lafromboise trail has organically sprung up, town, including at the Dakota Jazz Communications Inc divisions are Equal a path to Prince-related sites — Club (www.dakotacooks.com) ELEMENTARY SCHOOL CUSTODIAN Adna Opportunity Employers and provide Drug-free from music clubs to murals — School District is accepting applications for a Workplaces. Drug testing is a prerequisite for, and downtown and the record shop a condition of employment. beaten by fans who have come Electric Fetus (www.electricfetus. full-time Elementary School Custodian. This from near and far to pay their com), where we first stopped on position is for the 2016-17 school year. The LOOKING FOR EXTRA respects. That route lengthened, State of Washington requires a State and INCOME? the unofficial Prince trail. Federal Fingerprint Check before hiring any new SUPPLEMENT starting Thursday, when his sub- Adjacent to a highway, several employee. Additional information can be found at YOUR INCOME! DELIVER urban home and studio, Paisley empty blocks from downtown, www.adnaschools.org or 360-748-0362. THE CHRONICLE! Packwood/Randle Motor Park (www.officialpaisleypark. Route Available We have an independent Electric Fetus does not come by HELP WANTED! LPN contractor delivery opening in the rural area of com), opened for daily tours, just (Licensed Practical Nurse) its popularity through location. Packwood and Randle area. Currently includes before the first official public 6 hours per day, (temporary) remainder of the But as record shops go, this is the 2016-2017 school year, $19.91-$21.51 per hour approximately 75 subscribers and delivery of tribute concert Oct. 13. busiest one I’ve browsed since the DOE. Please contact HR at 360-807-7200 or papers to 4 stores. The individual we contract Initial plans called for hold- [email protected]. with, must be 18 years old, have a valid WA dawn of MP3 technology. Racks Driver’s license, proof of insurance, good driving ing the concert at U.S. Bank Sta- of vinyl take up nearly as much DIETARY TECH dium, but The Associated Press Morton General Hospital is record and a dependable vehicle. Delivery of The space as CDs. Throwback rock seeking an entry level on-call Dietary Technician Chronicle is by 5:30 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday reported recently that the show posters featuring David Bowie to work in our hospital cafeteria. A Food Handlers and by 7:30 a.m. on Saturday. You will also has been moved to the smaller as Ziggy Stardust are for sale. Card is required & can be obtained upon hire. deliver our free, once-weekly publication and as Xcel Energy Center in St. Paul. No further certiication or licensing is required. an independent contractor, you are responsible And an unimaginably diverse Applications are available at www.mortongeneral. for your own fuel, maintenance and expenses. Stevie Wonder, Christina Agu- stream of devotees files through org ilera and Morris Day & The . Please contact Shannon at 360-496-3531 or Route 1008 starts on Mckay St. in Randle and the glass doors, from neo-punks Katelin at 360-496-3580 if you need assistance includes a majority of the roads of Hwy 12, Time are in the long lineup. with asymmetrical haircuts and with the application process. including Silverbrook Rd, State Route 113. “He traveled the world and The route continues on Hwy 12 all the way to sleeve tattoos to music nerds in CHEHALIS COMMUNITY RENAISSANCE TEAM lived in other places, but he al- “Save Ferris” T-shirts and middle- Packwood, which includes delivery to the High ways came back home,” said is seeking a part time Main Street Executive Valley area and various roads in Packwood. The aged preppies straight off the golf Director to provide project management, route pays approximately $625 per month which Bill Deef, vice president of Meet course. A Prince bin holds all of $30,000-$35,000 annually. For information on includes a mileage allotment and several store Minneapolis, the city’s tourism how to apply, visit ci.chehalis.wa.us/renaissance. his recordings on CD and vinyl, Apply by October 14. drops. It is about 85 miles and takes about 3 1/2 bureau (www.minneapolis.org), and as blatant tourists, we treated to 4 hours. The papers will be available to be which publishes an online guide LAWN LABORER picked up in Morton from our bundle hauler. For ourselves to one of the array of Bilingual a plus. Call or text more information contact: Cory Gerber 360-807- to 19 sites around town associ- Electric Fetus T-shirts that fill the 360-789-5152. ated with Prince. “People gave 8247 cell phone 360-388-7038.321 N. Pearl St., front of the store. PRESS HELPER Centralia, WA 98531. 360-736-3311 ext. 1247 him his privacy here.” “Prince was always really chill The We are officially in the Post- Chronicle’s Printing Division when he came in,” the clerk said, is hiring for a PRESS HELPER

Prince Era, but seemingly every- CH548071aa.cg confirming his late appearance to be part of a winning-team that processes high- Place your ad here, one in Minneapolis has a story in the shop. “He was just low-key, quality products printed on a web press. This about seeing Prince. Making my like regular folks.” position requires the employee to be: punctual, own recent tribute trip, I met detail-oriented, able to become forklift and clamp call 360-807-8203. friends who told of attending pri- please see PRINCE, page Life 8 truck certiied, conscientious of all OSHA and Life 8 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016 LIFE

eter with us, taking pictures. We contributed Prince the only purple thing we had in tow, a can cozy, now perched atop a Paisley Park fence post. ADVICE: Dear Abby Continued from page Life 7 Nearby, the Chanhassen Cinema (www. five-star-cinemas.com), which Prince report- That’s not quite what you conjure when edly patronized, showcases another new wall you think of The Purple One. But Minne- mural, this time by the New Zealand-born Boyfriend’s Low sotans point out that Prince — born Prince street artist Mr. G, aka Graham Hoete, paint- Rogers Nelson in 1958 — not only stayed in ed over the summer. the city of his birth, but regularly attended “There’s always something fresh and new Energy Level Causes Timberwolves, Lynx and Vikings games, and happening in the Prince legacy in Minneapo- even wrote a song, “Purple and Gold,” about lis,” said Randy Luedtke, owner of Prince The the NFL team. Tour (www.princethetour.com). He launched Woman High Anxiety Since his death, the attractions related to sporadic three-hour bus trips last spring and Prince have only grown. From Electric Fetus, has since expanded them to daily events, hit- we drove to the nearby Uptown neighbor- ting Electric Fetus, First Avenue, Paisley Park hood to the Sencha Tea Bar at Hennepin Ave- DEAR ABBY: My boyfriend should I handle this in the future and other sites, while attracting visitors from doesn’t get excited about any- without starting World War III? nue and 26th Street. Its back brick wall is cov- around the world. ered in a new Prince portrait spray-painted by thing anymore. — SICK OF GERMS IN ARKAN- “Prince was his own businessman, his own He walks around local artist Rock “Cyfi” Martinez. Fans have artist, his own sound,” said Luedtke, describ- SAS left a few small trinkets in tribute, including the house all day DEAR SICK OF GERMS: ing the musician’s global allure. “He was rock ‘n’ with a gloomy ex- a shell necklace and a small plastic penguin roll, he was R&B, he was soul. And he was sexy.” Here’s how I’d handle it: I’d talk (perhaps from “Happy Feet”?). pression. When I to all the in-laws. I would explain A Prince tour of Minneapolis, either orga- ask him about it, The tributes are more creative and pro- nized or DIY, is both an homage and a crucible that my 2-year-old and I caught fuse at Paisley Park, in suburban Chanhassen, he tells me he is for catharsis. In September, Brian Bourke of bored. whatever the child had, and tell about a 30-minute drive from Uptown. Woven Melbourne, Australia, spent a week in the city, them I don’t want it to happen into, twist-tied onto or otherwise affixed to the I’m scared he dancing at First Avenue, paying tribute at Pais- might get bored By Abigail Van Buren again. Then I would add that in chain-link fence that edges the property — in- ley Park and even attending a Vikings game. the future, I do not want anyone side is a white boxy building that wouldn’t look with me. Our sex “What started out as an opportunity to say life is great, and the relationship to come over if they or one of their out of place in an office park — is a purple pro- a proper goodbye to a man that has been by fusion of emotion. A purple umbrella hangs seems like it’s on firm footing. But children is sick. That’s not an un- our side for over 30 years ended up so much I can’t shake this feeling he doesn’t reasonable request. Because, re- with paper raindrops beneath it near a pair of more than that,” Bourke wrote in an email. faded purple pumps and a notably nonpurple want to be here anymore. grettably, not all children are vac- “This was a release of emotion, a chance to Sometimes I see him staring Austrian flag. Eulogy letters tucked into clear share how we feel about losing Prince with cinated these days, you are lucky plastic bags are arranged in the shape of a mu- out the window as if waiting for you didn’t catch something that others that feel it as deeply as we do.” something to happen. He talks sical note. A handful of fans stalked the perim- And a chance, collectively, to go crazy. could have put your unborn child less and less every day. I’m not at risk. sure what’s wrong, and I’m really scared for him. — ALARMED IN ARIZONA DEAR ABBY: My mother DEAR ALARMED: The be- died recently. She had lovely em- havior you have described could bossed stationery with her mono- be a sign of depression — or not. If gram. Would it be all right for me you want to find out what’s going to use it to acknowledge gifts and on in your boyfriend’s head, sum- notes of sympathy for her death, mon up the courage to ask him if or should I use my own? — SAN- he is unhappy in your relationship. DRA IN SAVANNAH If he says you aren’t the problem, DEAR SANDRA: It would be explain that you can see his be- better to use your own. To receive havior has changed, and tell him an acknowledgment on letterhead that if he’s depressed, he needs to bearing the monogram of the de- talk about it to a doctor and get a ceased might cause a negative re- checkup. There might be a medi- cal reason for his boredom and action. Because the stationery was low energy. expensive, consider having it recut so the monogram is removed and DEAR ABBY: What do I do using it for your own personal cor- when relatives show up to fam- respondence. That way, it won’t be ily gatherings with sick children? wasted. We recently hosted a family party in our home. My sister-in-law ar- ••• rived with an obviously sick child Dear Abby is written by Abigail in tow. I am pregnant and have a Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phil- 2-year-old son. Now my child and lips, and was founded by her mother, I are sick. Pauline Phillips. Write Dear Abby This isn’t the first time some- at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box thing like this has happened. How 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069. Elaine Glusac / Chicago Tribune Purple items are scattered throughout the perimeter of Paisley Park, which opened for daily public tours Thursday. Sudoku Start on Puzzle One on page Life 7. Answers to the Puzzle Two puzzles here will be published in Tuesday’s paper. Crossword

Answer to Puzzle on Page Life 7

Answer to Puzzle on Page Life 7

Celebrity Cipher Today’s clue: N equals B

“FMU KHUEFUJF XZJIPWUHD PG ERR FZVU ZJ

FMEF E BUHJPL IEL IMELKU MZJ GSFSHU ND

VUHURD IMELKZLK MZJ EFFZFSXU.” — PBHEM

OZLGHUD

SOLUTION TO PUZZLE ON PAGE LIFE 7: “There’s nothing better than a team that comes out of nowhere and finds themselves in the World Series.” — Pitcher Tom Glavine © 2016 by NEA, Inc. COMICS The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016 • Life 9

GET FUZZY by Darby Conley NON SEQUITUR by Wiley

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE by Stephan Pastis

HERMAN by Jim Unger

RHYMES WITH ORANGE by Hilary B. Price

DENNIS THE by Hank MENACE Ketcham

DILBERT by Scott Adams

PICKLES by Brian Crane WIZARD OF ID by Parker & Hart

FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston CLASSIC PEANUTS by Charles Schulz

HI & LOIS by Greg & Brian Walker BLONDIE by Dean Young & John Marshall

SHOE by Gary Brookins & Susie MacNelly FRANK & ERNEST by Bob Thaves

B.C. by Mastroianni & Hart BEETLE BAILEY by Mort, Greg & Brian Walker Life 10 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, Oct. 8, 2016 COMICS

GET FUZZY by Darby Conley NON SEQUITUR by Wiley

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE by Stephan Pastis

HERMAN by Jim Unger

RHYMES WITH ORANGE by Hilary B. Price

DENNIS THE by Hank MENACE Ketcham

DILBERT by Scott Adams

PICKLES by Brian Crane WIZARD OF ID by Parker & Hart

FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston CLASSIC PEANUTS by Charles Schulz

HI & LOIS by Greg & Brian Walker BLONDIE by Dean Young & John Marshall

SHOE by Gary Brookins & Susie MacNelly FRANK & ERNEST by Bob Thaves

B.C. by Mastroianni & Hart BEETLE BAILEY by Mort, Greg & Brian Walker