Weekend Edition $1 Saturday, April 27, 2013

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Lady Tigers Earn Pirates Sweep No. 2 Seed With Adna Takes Two From Napavine/ Sports Wins / Sports

Mossyrock Opening Day Preparations Schools Face Financial Mossyrock Hatchery Deposits 3,000 Fish in Mineral Lake Uncertainty CUTS: District May Have to Reduce Programs and Staff to Balance the Budget By Amy Nile [email protected] The Mossyrock School Dis- trict might lose educational pro- grams or cut teachers and staff for the coming year. The school board has autho- rized a reduction in staffing and programs to address declining district enrollment. The district has continually lost students over the last several years, according to data from the state Office of Superinten- dent of Public Instruction. With fewer students, the district re- ceives less state funding. Superintendent Karen Ernest said the economy has played a part in the reduced enrollment. “There aren’t many jobs avail- able in Mossyrock, although we are hoping that as the economy picks up and the mills begin hiring again, this will change,” Ernest wrote in an email to The Chronicle. “Also, gas prices have caused people to move closer to their workplaces in Centralia or Pete Caster / [email protected] Chehalis.” Fish and Wildlife hatchery specialist Tim Summers watches as a load of rainbow trout is scooped up prior to being dumped into a large tanker truck on Thursday after- With that in mind, Ernest noon at the Mossyrock Trout Hatchery. The ish were brought to Mineral Lake in preparation for the opening of trout season this weekend. said, the district is budgeting conservatively — preparing for the worst but hoping for the best By Lisa Broadt season for the Washington De- trout and 4,000 rainbow trout mers said Thursday. — while waiting on the state [email protected] partment of Fish and Wildlife this spring; last September, “You’d swear you could jump Legislature to pass an education hatchery, which, since March, 130,000 fry were released there. from boat to boat,” Troche, also budget. Two days before the start of has planted about 115,000 rain- Nestled in the shadow of a specialist, added. the lowland lakes fishing season, Ernest said she and the prin- bow and brown trout in 17 lakes Mount Rainier, Mineral is one The Mossyrock Hatchery is cipals are reviewing staff needs Mario Troche, of the Mossyrock throughout Lewis, Clark, Ya- of the most heavily fished lakes a traditional trout production Hatchery, on Thursday depos- in case the district has to let kima, Thurston and Cowlitz in Lewis County, according to facility. Hundreds of thousands ited approximately 3,000 fish in teachers or other employees go, counties in preparation for Tim Summers, a fish hatchery of eggs are delivered in cool Mineral Lake. though no firm decisions have opening day. specialist. damp packaging. They grow to been made. The delivery marked the Mineral Lake alone has re- “On opening day, it looks like close of the spring planting ceived more than 22,000 brown a parking lot for boats,” Sum- please see PREPARATIONS, page Main 14 please see MOSSYROCK, page Main 14 Responses Mixed on County Flood Standards Proposal UNDECIDED: Builders Torn Surveyor Chris Butler strug- “Almost universally,” he gled with the thought of 3-foot told the planning commission, on Increasing Freeboard freeboard requirement, he told the “those Chehalis River Basin cer- Standard; Planning Lewis County Planning Commis- tifications we did back in the “There’s concern about additional cost to Commission Will Hold sion at a meeting Tuesday. good old days were turned on It’s a philosophical dilemma, their heads by ‘96 and ‘07.” homeowners. But there’s an understanding Hearing Before Making a he said — a battle between his In 2005, the surveyor re- that building homes higher is better than Recommendation conscience and his squeamish- called, he certified a home in ness with undue government Doty as being 3 feet above flood having homes flood.” By Lisa Broadt regulation. level. In 2007, the home was While mulling it over, Butler, [email protected] filled with more than 2 feet of Angela White of the Chehalis-area Butler Sur- water. Editor’s Note: This is the sec- Master Builders government affairs director veying, looked through old files “Try explaining that one to ond story of a two-part series on in his office, some dating back floodplain regulations. to the 1980s. please see FLOOD, page Main 14

The Chronicle, Serving The Greater Weather Cleanup Plans Deaths Lewis County Area Since 1889 TONIGHT: Low 46 EPA Tests for Contamination Watkins, Gertrude Follow Us on Twitter TOMORROW: High 62 Ann, 71, Oakville @chronline Few Showers at Superfund Site / Main 5 Noel, Bonnie, 89, see details on page Main 2 Packwood Find Us on Facebook www.facebook.com/ Weather picture by thecentraliachronicle Renate Prazak, Onalaska Elementary, third grade

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Community Editor’s Best Bet Downtown Centralia to Hold Girls Night Out Girls Night Out will be 3-8 N. Tower Ave. Those who get the p.m. today in downtown Cen- passport stamped at every partici- Calendar tralia. Thirty-one businesses pating business will be eligible to Today will be offering in-store specials, win a basketful of prizes donated WHAT’S HAPPENING? giveaways, drink specials and by downtown Centralia businesses. prize drawings. The first 250 par- The event is sponsored by the Centralia Ballet If you have an event you ticipants will receive a goodie bag Centralia-Chehalis Chamber of Academy Plans would like included in the full of treats from several vendors. Commerce and TransAlta. Community Calendar, please Passports are $5 each and will For more information, call Sock Hop email your information to be available at Fox Theatre, 123 (360) 748-8885 or email the- [email protected]. S. Tower Ave., or HUBBUB, 505 [email protected]. The Centralia Ballet Acad- Include a daytime telephone emy will be hosting a ‘50s style number where you can be Sock Hop for the entire family reached. on 5-8 p.m. tonight at the Cen- For questions about tralia Armory, 309 Byrd St. calendar items, call Doug Museum Event to For more information, call This is a fundraiser for the Blosser at The Chronicle, (360) the city of Centralia at (360) 330- school’s fall production of “The 807-8238. Honor Veterans 7662. Sorcerer’s Apprentice.” Along The Veterans Memorial Mu- with the dance, there will be p.m. today at the Mount Rainier seum is partnering with the Vis- Sober Fest hula hoop and limbo contests, Lions Grand Tasting Hall, 27726 iting Nurses Foundation to have to Raise Funds a malt shop, a classic car show state Route 706 E., Ashford. a Veterans Memorial Tree of and performances by CBA stu- The popular festival showcas- Life celebration at 2 p.m. today. The XII Step Club of Lewis dents. es hard-to-find artisanal wines This is a program to honor County’s Sober Fest Run will be The theme of the Sock Hop and microbrews from Washing- service members who have died. today, starting at 9 a.m. is “The Enchantment Under the ton state producers. This spring, At the celebration, the There will be 5k and 1.5-mile Sea,” which was the name of the the festival will feature wine and names, rank, branch of service, runs, and walkers are welcome. dance in the movie “Back to the chocolate pairing. years served and period served Registration and the start will Future.” To go along with this Washington wineries show- will be recorded on dog tags. be on the west side of the Yard theme, a DeLorean will be part These tags will be placed on a Birds Mall. of the car show, and attendees cased this year include Hood- sport Winery, Hoodsport; remembrance tree. The names Times and placement will be can enter to win a Back to the and information will then be available at the finish line. Future poster signed by actor Madsen Family Cellars, Olym- pia; Mill Lane Winery, Tenino; read and a candle lit in their Trophies will be presented to Christopher Lloyd, who played memory. the top male and female finish- Doc Brown in the movie. Mount St. Helens Cellars, Sil- verlake; Rainier Wine, Seattle; The program will also have ers in each race. Ribbons will Scatter Creek Winery, Tenino; special music, along with bene- be given to the top three com- Lions Club Fishing Stottle Winery, Lacey; Tulip Val- dictions and invocations by petitors in each age category. All ley Winery and Orchard, Mount chaplains. A wall will also be competitors’ numbers will be Derby Set for Today Vernon; and Waving Tree Win- available to post photos of the included in drawings. The racers The 56th Centralia Lions ery, Goldendale. For the first veterans. must be present at the drawings to win. Club Fishing Derby will be held time, the festival will also fea- The Veterans Tree will be on Registration will be 7-8:45 today at Borst Lake in Centralia. ture a cidery, Finnriver Farm & display at the museum until Me- a.m. Runners and walkers will Registration begins at 8 a.m. Cidery, Chimacum. morial Day. report to the start line at 8:45. Once again, there will be In the kitchen this year will Those who would like to prizes from Sunbird Shopping have a family member included The races start at 9 a.m. An be Winey Dogs, serving their awards ceremony will be in Center and Cabelas, and three red-wine infused, grilled hot in the event should call the mu- bicycles from the Riverside Fire seum at (360) 740-8875. There the XII Step Club. The regis- dogs for $5. This vendor is fea- tration fee the day of the race Authority. Hot dogs and milk tured at wine events across is a suggested $10 donation for will be served to all entrants. each veteran. is $15. The fee for high school Washington state. students wearing school colors Any child under age 14 is eli- Tickets can be purchased gible to enter. is $12.50. online at www.road-to-paradise. Arbor Day Work Party For more information, call The derby is a cooperative com. Advance tickets are avail- event with the state Department Is at Fort Borst Park Carl Bohlin, run director, at able for $20 through April 25. (360) 304-0621. of Fish and Wildlife and the Admission includes a souvenir An Arbor Day work party Centralia Parks Department. wine glass, 10 tasting tickets and will be 9-11 a.m. today at the Baked potato bar, 11:30 a.m.-2:30 For more information, call live entertainment. Additional Fort Borst Park Arboretum in p.m., Adna Grange, to raise funds for Arnold, (360) 748-7583; Jim, tasting tickets can be purchased Centralia. Adna Grange roof replacement, top- (360) 736-8766; or Paul, (360) for $1 each. After April 25, tick- Volunteers will be planting pings (sour cream, chives, bacon bits, 736-6981. broccoli, cheese sauce, ranch dressing, ets are $25 and can be purchased trees in the park or removing chili, butter), green salad, decaf and either online or onsite. litter and brush from along the regular coffee, tea, punch, milk, des- Ashford to Host Spring There is free entry into Fort Borst Park trails and rhodo- sert, adults $6, kids under 10 $5, (360) Mount Rainier National Park on dendron gardens. 740-1950 Wine & Brew Festival Friday, April 26. Those who would like to par- Games Day, traditional and modern board games, card games, 1 p.m., Matrix The fourth annual “Road to For participating lodging es- ticipate are asked to meet at the Coffeehouse, Chehalis, (360) 740-0492 Paradise” Mount Rainier Spring tablishments, or to book a room, One-Room Schoolhouse at the Wine & Brew Festival will be 2-8 visit www.mt-rainier.com. sound end of the park. please see CALENDAR, page Main 11

The Weather Almanac

5-Day Forecast for the Lewis County Area River Stages National Map Forecast map for April 27, 2013 Today Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Gauge Flood 24 hr. Height Stage Change 110s Chehalis at Mellen St. 100s 53.95 65.0 -0.08 90s Skookumchuck at Pearl St. H 80s H 74.43 85.0 -0.12 70s H Cowlitz at Packwood 60s 2.88 10.5 +0.06 50s Cowlitz at Randle Isolated Rain Few Showers Few Showers 40s L Partly Cloudy Mostly Sunny 7.66 18.0 +0.23 30s 64º 46º 62º 45º 56º 39º 60º 36º 65º 44º Cowlitz at Mayfield Dam 20s 6.62 ---- -1.65 10s

0s This map shows high temperatures, type of precipitation expected and Centralia Regional Weather Sun and Moon location of frontal systems at noon. L H Data reported from Centralia Sunrise today ...... 6:01 a.m. Cold Front Stationary Front Warm Front Low Pressure High Pressure Temperature Bellingham Brewster Sunset tonight ...... 8:17 p.m. Yesterday’s High ...... 68 70/42 Moonrise ...... 10:58 p.m. National Cities Yesterday’s Low ...... 39 58/46 Moonset ...... 7:21 a.m. Normal High ...... 64 Port Angeles Today Sun. Normal Low ...... 43 56/45 City Hi/Lo Wx Hi/Lo Wx Record High ...... 90 in 1947 Seattle Anchorage 45/26 mc 45/25 s Last New First Full Record Low ...... 29 in 1955 58/46 Boise 81/49 s 73/47 s Precipitation Olympia Ellensburg 5/2 5/9 5/17 5/24 Boston 63/45 s 69/46 s Yesterday ...... 0.00" 60/44 67/40 Dallas 78/59 t 82/59 s Month to date ...... 2.78" Tacoma Pollen Forecast Honolulu 87/70 s 84/71 s Normal month to date . . .3.06" Centralia 60/47 Las Vegas 90/68 s 95/71 s Year to date ...... 11.86" 64/46 Yakima Allergen Today Sunday Nashville 64/58 t 71/55 t Normal year to date . . . .20.01" Chehalis Trees Moderate Moderate Phoenix 96/68 s 97/68 s 72/42 Grass None None Longview 63/46 St. Louis 59/51 sh 67/49 mc WeArea Want Conditions Your Photos 65/46 Weeds Moderate Moderate Salt Lake City 73/53 s 76/47 s Vancouver Shown is today’s Mold None None San Francisco 69/51 mc 70/52 pc The Dalles weather. Temperatures Washington, DC 72/52 s 69/55 mc Send in your weather-relatedYesterday photo- Portland 70/48 are today’s highs and graphsCity to The ChronicleHi/Lo for ourPrcp. Voices 69/49 70/48 tonight’s lows. World Cities page. Send them to voices@chronline. com. Include name, date and descrip- tion of the photograph. Regional Cities Today Sun. Today Sun. City Hi/Lo Wx Hi/Lo Wx City Hi/Lo Wx Hi/Lo Wx Today Sun. Today Sun. Baghdad 91/64 s 94/67 s New Delhi 104/80 pc 102/81 pc City Hi/Lo Wx Hi/Lo Wx City Hi/Lo Wx Hi/Lo Wx Beijing 74/50 pc 64/52 sh Paris 54/46 mc 55/46 cl Weather (Wx): cl/cloudy; pc/partly cloudy; Bremerton 59/43 ra 57/41 ra Spokane 68/42 mc 63/45 s London 53/38 sh 55/44 mc Rio de Janeiro 82/66 s 82/67 s r/rain; rs/rain & snow; s/sunny; sh/showers; Ocean Shores 55/49 ra 53/49 ra Tri Cities 74/47 pc 73/48 s Mexico City 80/59 t 80/56 t Rome 66/58 sh 74/62 sh sn/snow; t/thunderstorms; w/windy Olympia 60/44 ra 58/44 ra Wenatchee 70/49 pc 66/49 s Moscow 64/46 sh 58/39 sh Sydney 77/58 s 82/60 s

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APRIL 18TH - 27TH ONLY! CH494111sl.ke 6 days a week, Sundays by appt. M CH494416bw.cg ens • Wom ens • C s! 360-978-6888 • 360-520-7858 hildrens • L f Color ots o Dr. Ronald Williams 525 N. Market Blvd. | Chehalis | 360-748-7178 shoestringvalleymedicalcare.com The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, April 27, 2013 • Main 3

**FANTASTIC SELECTION** **GIGANTIC SAVINGS** HUGE CFAC TRUCK AND SUV SALE **LOW OVERHEAD**

NOW NOW NOW $6,444 $7,444 $9,844 2001 FORD Was $8,990 1997 DODGE Was $8,990 1998 TOYOTA Was $10,990 F-150 S/CAB XLT RAM 1500 QUADCAB/4WD TACOMA X/CAB 4WD 5.4 V8, AUTOMATIC, FULLY LOADED LOADED SPORT EDITION, BIG TIRES & ALLOYS LOADED SR5, AUTOMATIC, SHARP AND CLEAN!! STK V0205A VIN:1FTRX17LX1NB43308 STK V0234A VIN:3B7HF13Z0VG778447 STK V0285 VIN:4TAWN72N8WZ043174

NOW NOW NOW $9,844 $8,844 $9,844 2000 TOYOTA Was $10,990 1995 JEEP Was $10,990 2004 GMC Was $12,990 TACOMA X/CAB 4WD WRANGLER SAHARA 4WD YUKON 4WD LOADED SR5, V6, 5/SPEED, EXCELLENT COND. LOADED HARDTOP, 5/SPEED, BLACK WHEELS LOADED SLE, 3RD SEAT, 20” CHROMES STK V0286 VIN:4TAWM72N8YZ636281 STK V0274 VIN:1J4FY49S8SP201583 STK V0161A VIN:1GKEK13Z74J296042

NOW NOW NOW $10,444 $10,744 $10,944 2001 FORD Was $12,990 2006 CHEVY Was $13,990 1998 DODGE Was $13,990 F-250SD CREWCAB CREWCAB LT/4WD RAM 3500 Q/CAB 4WD LOADED LEATHER LARIAT, TOW READY!! LEATHER,MOONROOF,DVD,Z71,LOADED!! LOADED LOW MILE DUALLY, 1 OF A KIND!! STK V0248 VIN:1FTNW20S31EB68334 STK V0242 VIN:2GCEK13TX61158046 STK B0224A VIN:1B7MF33W3WJ169742

NOW NOW NOW $11,644 $12,944 $13,444 2000 JEEP Was $13,990 2006 FORD Was $16,990 2006 CHEVY Was $15,990 WRANGLER SPORT 4WD F-150 S/CAB 4WD EXCAB Z71 4WD LOADED, LEVELED HARDTOP, 5/SPEED, DIALED!! LOADED FX-4, BUCKETS, BIG CHROMES & TIRE PKG! VORTEC V8, AUTOMATIC,AIR COND. STK V0246 VIN:1J4FA49SXYP726187 STK V0157A VIN:1FTPX14526NA68737 STK V0254 VIN:1GCEK19V46Z263939

NOW NOW NOW $14,944 $14,844 $15,744 2003 F-150 Was $18,990 2007 FORD Was $18,990 2005 CADILLAC Was $18,990 SUPERCREW LARIAT 4WD EXPLORER E.BAUER 4WD SRX AWD SUV LEATHER,MOONROOF,CANOPY,LOADED!! LEATHER LOADED W/ PWR 3RD SEAT TOO! LUXURY/PERF.PKG,PANORAMA ROOF,3RD SEAT STK V0249 VIN:1FTRW08L83KA63165 STK V0178 VIN:1FMEU74EX7UA95853 STK V0251 VIN:1GYEE637550181536

NOW NOW NOW $17,644 $17,944 $18,744 2001 DODGE Was $19,990 2005 TOYOTA Was $19,990 2006 CHEVY Was $22,990 RAM 3500 5.9 CUMMINS 4WD TUNDRA CREWCAB/4WD TRD CREWCAB 1500HD LT 4WD LOADED SLT W/5 SPEED,(6) NEW TIRES TOO!! LOADED SR5,AUTOMATIC,R/BOARDS,TOW LOADED VORTEC 6.0, AUTO, TOW READY!! STK V0247 VIN:1B7MF33631J238874 STK V0252 VIN:5TBDT44105S470884 STK V0199 VIN:1GCGK13U56F241068

NOW NOW NOW $18,844 $21,544 $22,844 2006 CHEVY Was $22,990 2005 CHEVY Was $22,990 2008 FORD Was $24,990 EXCAB LT Z71 4WD EXCAB 1500HD LT/4WD F-150 SUPERCREW XLT 4WD LEATHER LOADED W/ONLY 50,938 MILES!! LOADED LEATHER, LIFTED BLACK BEAUTY!! LOADED XLT PKG, 5.4V8, AUTO,SHARP!! STK V0182 VIN:1GCEK19B36Z168486 STK V0263A VIN:1GCGK13U05F848512 STK V0265 VIN:1FTPW14V98FA25805

NOW NOW NOW $24,944 $25,844 $28,544 2008 F-250SD Was $28,990 2008 F-150 Was $27,990 2006 DODGE Was $30,990 SUPERCAB FX4 4WD SUPERCREW XLT/4WD RAM 3500 5.9 CUMMINS 4WD LOADED 6.4 POWERSTROKE, CANOPY PRISTINE COND. CANOPY, ONLY 32049 MILES!! LOADED SLT CREWCAB LONGBOX,THE ONE!! STK V0190A VIN:1FTSX21R48EA38018 STK VO277 VIN:1FTRW14W58FA68913 STK V0267 VIN:3D7LX38C56G248084

748-3512 • Northwest Louisiana Ave. (Off Chamber Way • I-5, Exit 79) View Our Entire Growing Inventory - www.CFACcars.com OPEN Monday - Saturday 9-7, Sundays 10-5 CH495994sl.cg CUDL inancing available. All Sale Prices Are Plus Applicable Tax & License, Plus Dealer Documentary Service Fee of $150 May Be Added To Sale Price. Sale Prices End 5/3/2013 Main 4  The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, April 27, 2013 LOCAL Onalaska Mill Pond Renovation Starts With Parking Upgrade VISION: Nonprofit Onalaska Alliance Sees Carlisle Lake Becoming a Tourism Destination By Kyle Spurr [email protected] The vision to turn Carlisle Lake in Onalaska into a recre- ational tourism destination took a large step forward Thursday when Lakeside Industries, out of Centralia, paved the pot- hole-filled parking lot and boat launch at the local mill pond. The nonprofit Onalaska Al- liance, which took ownership of Carlisle Lake and surrounding property last June, has plans to renovate the mill pond with new trails and educational opportu- nities for the community. The plans begin with fix- ing the old, gravel parking lot, Onalaska Alliance President Omroa Bhagwandin said. “This is going to open the whole thing up and make it look very inviting for develop- ing tourism,” Bhagwandin said. “We want to develop this for rec- reation, fishing and walking and running trails.” Bhagwandin said the non- profit alliance was awarded about $136,000 earlier this year Kyle Spurr / [email protected] from the Lewis County Eco- Lakeside Industries, out of Centralia, paves the parking lot and boat ramp at Carlisle Lake in Onalaska Thursday afternoon as part of the irst step in renovating the mill nomic Development Council to pond. upgrade the parking lot for tour- ism development. Lewis County EDC Execu- ramp were expected to be ready tive Director Dick Larman said for today’s opening day of fish- the EDC sets aside money in its ing season, Bhagwandin said. As low As grant fund every year for tour- While the parking lot area yeArs ism development. Larman said is being upgraded, Bhagwandin the Onalaska Alliance deserved said, the group is putting togeth- 50strong the money for their contribu- er plans to make the walking AnniversAry CelebrAtion tions to their unincorporated and hiking trails more handicap % town. accessible and open year round. “They are doing some good The alliance already received APr $ work out there and I’m proud a $5,000 grant from the U.S. En- 0 UP to 750 of them given the fact that they vironmental Protection Agency, don’t have any governmental and Bhagwandin said the non- For 5 yeArs CUstoMer CAsh power as a nonprofit,” Larman profit needs about $10,000 more on All Models* on seleCt Models** said. to improve the entire trail area. Carol Wells, owner of Wells’ In the long term, Bhagwan- Winery in Onalaska, came out din said, he sees a new fire sta- to see the construction work tion and community center be- Thursday afternoon and said ing built by the mill pond. For she is looking forward to Carl- now, he said, the renovations isle Lake becoming more acces- start with fixing the parking lot sible. for fishing season. “The parking lot is a good “When you are in momentum place to start,” Wells said. “You you have to keep going,” Bhag- couldn’t even drive a car in here. wandin said. “And when things It was bad.” are happening, people want to The parking lot and boat get involved.” CH495505ca.cg News in Brief 300 S. Tower, Centralia • 736-0166 • 1-800-962-6826 www.powersportsnorthwest.com Wayman was sentenced to 24 We’re No Ordinary Dealer By The Chronicle As low as 0% ixed APR inancing for 60 months available through Shefield Financial, a Division of BB&T Financial, FSB. Payment example: 60 monthly payments of $16.67 for each $1,000 months confinement. inanced. Not all buyers will qualify. Higher rates apply for buyers with lower credit ratings. Check with Suzuki dealer for complete details. Special APR inance offer ends 5/31/2013. Vehicle Medical Emergency Way- price does not include tax, license and other fees. man, 37 at the Precedes Crash, Man’s time, physi- cally and sexu- Death on Interstate 5 ally assaulted A driver traveling south- a 26-year-old bound on Interstate 5 near Exit female. 72 at 6:30 a.m. Friday suffered Wayman a medical emergency and died is described as prior to crashing his Toyota a white male, James G. Wayman pickup truck into the median, 6-foot-1, 290 sex offender according to the Washington pounds with State Patrol. brown hair and The accident closed the left brown eyes. lane and shoulder for about For questions or concerns HAVE three hours Friday morning. regarding Wayman or any A state trooper, who first ar- other registered sex offenders LANDED! rived to the scene, found the in Thurston County, visit www. driver unresponsive, broke the co.thurston.wa.us/sheriff/ and CHAIN SAWS STARTING AT $17995 BLOWERS STARTING AT $14995 TRIMMERS STARTING AT $16995 passenger side window open click on “Sex Offender Watch,” and started to perform CPR. or call SOR Detectives at (360) State Patrol spokesman Will 786-5527 or (360) 754-2894. Finn said having a trooper per- FS 56 RC-E TRIMMER FREE form life saving measures to NOW JUST WAS a victim is not common, but Alcohol Purchase $249.95 $219 95 COMBO troopers are trained for it. Surveys Planned SNW-SRP “It’s not something that BG 56 C-E PACK happens everyday,” Finn said. HANDHELD BLOWER in Tenino, Rainier Versatile, straight-shaft “When we have a person that is WITH FS 56 RC-E PURCHASE By The Chronicle NOW JUST WAS trimmer with a unresponsive, we want to get $ 95 $199.95 $ low-emission, Includes them out of the vehicle. We are Since the passing of Initia- 179 SNW-SRP 20 fuel-eficient engine hearing tive 1183 approved private alco- protectors trained for it and ready for it.” Offer good through 7/7/13 at participating dealers STIHL Easy2Start™ and protective The male driver, whose iden- hol sales, the number of stores while supplies last. system makes starting glasses tity has not been release, was selling alcohol has almost qua- almost effortless $29.95 SNW-SRP value. transported to Providence Cen- drupled, making sales to mi- Free Combo Pack offer good Features powerful, fuel-eficient engine with purchase of select tralia Hospital where he was nors more difficult to monitor, trimmers and KM units through 7/7/13 at participating dealers according to the Tenino/Bu- All prices are SNW-SRP. Available at participating dealers while supplies last. © 2013 STIHL SNW13-242-108659-2 pronounced dead, according to while supplies last. the State Patrol. coda Community Coalition and The truck sustained about Rainier Community Cares. $1,000 in damage. As such, both local chapters of TOGETHER! will work with Centralia Chehalis Chehalis the Tenino Police Department to Madsen’s Shop & Supply Inc Service Saw / Workwears Inc. Washington Tractor Transient Level Two conduct alcohol purchase surveys. Sex Offender Registers The purpose of the surveys is 1408 South Gold Street #2 1320 Northwest State Avenue 127 Hamilton Road North to educate community business 360-736-1336 360-748-8238 360-748-9944 in Thurston County owners on the importance of re- ServiceSaw.net SumnerTractor.net A level two sex offender liv- ducing minors’ access to alcohol. I-5 exit #79 in Chehalis Formerly Barnett Implement ing as a transient recently regis- Surveys will be conducted

tered with the Thurston County between April 29 and May 3. CH495996cz.cg Sheriff’s Office. TOGETHER! is a local non- STIHL IS THE #1 SELLING BRAND OF James G. Wayman, 45, plead- profit organization dedicated to GASOLINE-POWERED HANDHELD OUTDOOR ed guilty in Thurston County engaging and mobilizing families, POWER EQUIPMENT IN AMERICA* Superior Court in 2005 to one schools and communities to ad- *“Number one selling brand” is based on syndicated Irwin Broh Research as well as independent consumer research of count of second-degree assault vance the health, safety and success 2009-2012 U.S. sales and market share data for the gasoline- and one count of third-degree of youth. For more information, powered handheld outdoor power equipment category STIHLdealers.com sexual motivation. visit www.thurstontogether.org combined sales to consumers and commercial landscapers. • Main 5 LOCAL The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, April 27, 2013 Cleanup of Hamilton-Labree Superfund Site to Begin Next Summer TREATMENT: EPA Workers Sampled Wells on Rice and Hamilton Roads This Week to Monitor Contamination By Kyle Spurr [email protected] The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency will begin cleanup on the Hamilton/Labree Superfund site near North Ham- ilton Road south of Chehalis late next summer, according to Proj- ect Manager Tamara Langton. The cleanup will be focused on a 10-acre part of the Super- fund site called the Hamilton Road Impact Area and take up to four years to complete, Langton said. “We considered all the pub- lic comments received,” Lang- ton said. “People were pretty supportive for what we have planned.” The EPA will use thermal heat treatment on the contami- nated soils and a biological treat- ment to break down and remove the contaminant tetrachloroeth- ene, known as PCE, from the groundwater. The cleanup will also reroute Berwick Creek around the con- tamination areas to help pro- tect fish and animals from pos-

sible negative impacts caused by Pete Caster / [email protected] cleanup activities. Hydrogeologist Erin Lynch, right, ills a bottle with water from a hose on John Spears’ property as fellow hydrogeologist Langton said she hopes to Renee Nordeen takes a reading of the sample in Chehalis on Wednesday. have a thorough cleanup plan signed off by EPA officials by next month allowing research to begin for the cleanup. April 26 - May 2 The Washington State Health Escape from Planet Earth Department first found contam- $3 • PG ination at the Hamilton Road 12:00pm & 3:00pm ( Sat & Sun) Impact Area, west of Interstate Jack the Giant Slayer 5, in 1993. It came from a spill or $3 • PG-13 direct release of 100 to 700 gal- 6:00pm & 12:30pm (Wed Early Bird Mat) lons of liquid PCE into the Ber- CH494467cz.cg wick Creek aquifer. Incredible Burt Wonderstone The exact date of the spill or $3 • PG-13 release is unknown but likely oc- 9:00pm curred before 1990, according to $$Two Dollar Tuesdays: All movies, minor with parent at or before 6:00pm an EPA report. Minor with parent before 7 pm only $3 All Ages • Ages 3 and under are FREE In 1999, the EPA found 64 112 N. Tower Ave. • Centralia drums of PCE buried under (360) 736-1634 • a building owned by the S.C. Breen Construction Co. The bar- rels were removed and disposed Thorbeckes of as hazardous waste. Summer-time The S.C. Breen Co. signed an order as a “potentially liable party.” It has paid for testing and studies of how to clean up the 2013 area. Camps Langton said there were nev- er any charges for the contami- Havin’ a Ball nation of the now Superfund Erin Lynch, a hydrogeologist with Ecology and Environment Inc., ills a bottle with water from a hose prior to taking test Camp Splash site located near the intersection samples on Wednesday in Chehalis. Over the Edge of North Hamilton Road and Labree Road. Swimming/Laser Tag Day Camp The EPA and Washington Right: Erin Lynch and Renee Nordeen, State Department of Ecology environmental scientists with Ecology Member: $40 pp Non-Member: $50 pp conducted an investigation, but and Environment Inc., test water on the source of the contamination Swim/Laser Tag Day Camp Johns Spears’ property in Chehalis on Member: $15 pp was never found. Wednesday afternoon. Non-Member: $20 pp PCE is a chemical used for dry cleaning, metal degreasing and other industrial processes. tify the size and direction of the To ensure PCE has not mi- PCE-contaminated groundwater grated downstream from the at the Superfund site to help de- Superfund site, the EPA sent termine future cleanup options. The sampling and testing will two contracting teams to Lewis STARTS County this week to sample cost the EPA about $28,000. JUNE 25th water from wells on properties The samples will be tested Come in and along Rice and Hamilton roads and the results should be avail- register today! outside of the Superfund site. able next month, EPA Hydroge- Centralia 360 736-1683 Residents inside the Super- ologist Marcia Knadle said. Chehalis 360 748-3744 fund site are now supplied water The same properties on Rice Rochester 360 273-0457 from the city of Chehalis water and Hamilton roads were tested www.thorbeckes.com line. in 2007 and no contamination The wells sampled this week was found. (10% off for siblings) Fees due at time of registration. Deadline for CH494048bw.cg are not hooked up to the Cheha- “We are not expecting to find registration is the Friday before each camp. lis water supply line. any contamination,” Knadle said. There is a limited number of campers per Langton said the sampling “But it is a good idea to keep an camp. We encourage early sign ups to secure effort will help the EPA iden- eye on those wells.” your spot. Valid for 2013 Camps Only.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES THE NEWSROOM Business, Education, Tourism, Religion, LAFROMBOISE COMMUNICATIONS, INC South Lewis County Communities Newstand weekday rate...... $1 For news tips, corrections or story ideas, please contact the appropriate person listed below. Amy Nile ...... 807-8235 PRESIDENT, COO The Chronicle is published Tuesday and Thursday evenings and Newstand weekend rate ...... $1 [email protected] Christine Fossett ...... 807-8200 Saturday mornings by Lafromboise Communications, Inc. Home delivery REGIONAL EXECUTIVE EDITOR Sports, News and Photography [email protected] One month ...... $12.90 Michael Wagar ...... 807-8234 MISSED OR LATE PAPER? 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Brian Watson ...... 807-8219 Police, Fire, Courts, Environment, Subscriptions are non-refundable but the printed subscrip- [email protected] FAX NUMBERS TO PLACE CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING East Lewis County Communities tions can be started and stopped for vacations or when Circulation Manager extended breaks in service are requested. Balances may Stephanie Schendel ...... 807-8208 Advertising Fax ...... 736-1568 Call 807-8203 or (800) 562-6084, ext. 1203, or visit [email protected] Anita Freeborn ...... 807-8243 Classified/Circulation Fax ...... 807-8258 www.chronline.com. be held on account or can be donated to Newspapers in Education. Centralia/Chehalis Government, Health, [email protected] Obituaries ...... 807-8203 Monday - Friday ...... 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. West and Central Lewis County Communities Specialty Publications Manager, Family, LIFE Newsroom Fax ...... 736-4796 Classified / Legals / Obituary Manager BACK ISSUES Kyle Spurr ...... 807-8239 Chantel Wilson ...... 807-8213 124th VOLUME, 118th ISSUE Amanda Curry ...... 736-3311 ext. 1277 [email protected] [email protected] Limited copies of back issues of The Chronicle are avail- THE CHRONICLE (USPS - 142260) [email protected] able at $1 per copy. Back issues greater than two weeks Lewis County Government, Politics, South Design Manager old are $2 per issue. Thurston County Communities and Oakville Kelli Erb ...... 807-8211 POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Chronicle, OFFICE LOCATION AND HOURS 321 N. Pearl St., Centralia, WA 98531. Lisa Broadt ...... 807-8237 [email protected] The Chronicle is published three times a week at 321 N. Pearl St., 321 N. Pearl St., Centralia [email protected] Centralia, WA, 98531-0580. Periodicals postage paid at: Centralia, Monday - Friday 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. WA. Main 6  The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, April 27, 2013 LOCAL Southwest Washington Dance Center to Celebrate 30th Anniversary PERFORMANCE: Nonprofit Dance Center Will Host ‘A Gala for the Arts’ in Corbet Theatre May 5 By Kyle Spurr [email protected] Ballet dancers at the Southwest Washington Dance Center in Che- halis have practiced multiple rou- tines for the dance center’s 30th anniversary party on Sunday, May 5, at 5 p.m. in Corbet Theatre on the Centralia College campus. Director Marcia Greenfield said the Southwest Washington Dance Ensemble and the creative movement dance class will both perform at the 30th anniver- sary gala. Greenfield said those in attendance can look forward to clever dances, including one titled, “Kung Fu Housewife.” A Gala for the Arts at Corbet Theatre will begin a with recep- tion with champagne, sparkling cider and appetizers in the lobby. There will also be a silent auction and raffle. Following the two dance per- formances, other acts will take the stage, including country singer Chris Guenther, piano players Robin Chadwick and Lynn Lewis, singing duo Shawn Peters and Pete Caster / [email protected] Rick Stockdale and the Adna High The Southwest Washington Dance Center Dance Ensemble practices on Wednesday evening in Chehalis. The dancers are School jazz and percussion bands. preparing for “A Gala for the Arts,” which will celebrate the 30-year anniversary of the Southwest Washington Dance Center All proceeds from the Gala on Sunday, May 5 at the Corbet Theatre in Centralia. The event will kick of with beverages and hors d’oerves at 5 p.m. and We do small will be shared by the Corbet the Gala performance will start at 6:30 p.m. The Gala performance will include the Dance Ensemble, local entertainers Chris Theatre Enhancement Fund and Guenther, Robin Chadwick and Lynn Lewis, Shawn Peters and Rick Stockdale, the Adna High School jazz and percussion jobs too! the SWDC Scholarship Fund. bands and the Centralia College Art Department. “In order to help out (the col- lege), we wanted to do this as a fundraiser," Greenfield said. "We wanted to designate some of the funds to go back to the theatre.” Tickets for the anniversary celebration are available online at 736-6322 www.swwdance.org or in person at the Southwest Washington Dance Center, Book ‘n’ Brush in Chehalis, Hall’s Drug and the Hanke House Presents in Centralia. Tickets are $25 per person and $20 for seniors. The Southwest Washington Dance Center was founded in Cooking Demos, Recipes, 1982 as the Chehalis Ballet Cen- ter by former professional dancer Prizes, Fun, Food, Shopping! Dean Speer, of Seattle. In 1995, director Hugh Bigney May 9th and the board of directors changed the name of the school to South- Doors open at 4pm west Washington Dance Center to Show begins at 7pm better reflect the geographical area that the dance center serves. GREAT WOLF LODGE “We are a nonprofit giving back Marisa Hall, 13, gets direction from modern dance instructor Danielle Brosco, as the Southwest Washington Dance Center Tickets available at to the community,” Greenfield Dance Ensemble practices on Wednesday evening in Chehalis. The dancers are preparing for “A Gala for the Arts” which will www.brownpapertickets.com said. “(The dance center) is a gift celebrate the 30-year anniversary of the Southwest Washington Dance Center on Sunday, May 5, at the Corbet Theatre in to the children in the community.” Centralia. See these photos and more at www.chronline.com. and at re:Design 425 N. Market Blvd. Chehalis, WA 98532

Local Candidates to Begin Filing For County, City Offices Soon CH493488sl.cg 360-740-5400 By The Chronicle auditor’s office. The filing fee is District 2 (Currently held by Robert A. (Bob) Wheeler) x An Advocate Agency Production Candidate filing for local po- not refundable. Matthew S. Trent); City coun- Pe Ell: City councilor, Posi- litical offices will begin soon. From May 20-22, there will cilor, District 3 (Currently held tion 1 (Currently held by Dolo- From April 29 to May 17, be a three-day special filing pe- by Dan Henderson); City coun- res A. Lee); City councilor, Po- mail-in declarations will be ac- riod. If no individual files for a cilor, District 4 (Currently held sition 2 (Currently held by Rick specific office in Lewis County by Bonnie Canaday); City coun- Clouse) cepted. Those interested must during the regular filing week of cilor, Position 2, At-Large (Cur- Toledo: City councilor, Po- submit a form, a signed oath May 13-17, a special three-day fil- rently held by John Elmore) sition 1 (Currently held by Guy and any associated filing fees. ing will be conducted in the au- Chehalis: City councilor A. Spratt); City councilor, Posi- Filings submitted by mail will family ditor’s office during normal busi- 1, At-Large (Currently held by tion 2 (Currently held by Steve dental care be retained for processing until ness hours. If no candidate files Dennis L. Dawes); City coun- Dobosh); City councilor, Posi- May 13, when filing opens for all for an office during the special cilor 2, At-Large (Currently held tion 5 (Currently held by Mike Presented by candidates. filing period, the office shall be by Chad Taylor); City councilor Thomas) Dr. John Pham In-person filing begins May lapsed, the office deemed strick- 3, At-Large (Currently held by Vader: City councilor, Posi- 13 at 8 a.m. and closes May 17 at GETTING INTO A en from the ballot, no purported Bob Spahr) tion 1 (Currently held by Andy LITTLE SCRAPE 4:30 p.m. Online filing will be- write-in votes counted, and no Morton: City councilor, Po- Wilson); City councilor, Posi- gin on May 13 at 9 a.m. and end In addition to brushing and candidate certified as elected. sition 2 (Currently held by Peppy tion 2 (Currently held by Lois M. lossing, dentists and hygienists on the May 17 at 4 p.m. Elizaga); City councilor, Posi- Wilson); City councilor, Position continue to promote daily tongue To file online, go to www. TO SEE WHO HAS filed, go to tion 3 (Currently held by Rich- 3 (Currently held by Rodney W. scraping. One of the primary lewiscountywa.gov/auditor/elec- beneits of scraping the top of the www.lewiscountywa.gov/audi- ard Vanderlip); City councilor, Allison) tongue with an instrument that tion and click on Online Can- tor/election and click on Can- Position 5 (Currently vacant) Winlock: Mayor (Currently looks like a small rake is fresher didate Filing. Candidates who didate Information and Offices Mossyrock: City councilor, held by Glen Cook); City coun- breath. Halitosis (bad-breath) choose to file electronically can problems often occur as a result of Open for Election to see offices, Position 1 (Currently held by cilor, Position 4 (Currently held a surplus of anaerobic bacteria in pay their filing fee online by incumbents and filing fees. James Karns); City councilor, by Dennis L. Korpi); City coun- the mouth, which emit malodorous credit card. Candidates for state Click on 2013 Candidate Filing Position 4 (Currently held by cilor, Position 5 (Currently held sulfur compounds. These bacteria offices must file with the Secre- thrive on protein found in plaque, to see up-to-date candidate fil- Coral Smith) by Pat Anderson) food debris, and dead cells. tary of State. ing. Napavine: City councilor, While brushing and rinsing with Candidate withdraws can be Position 1 (Currently held by FOR A FULL LIST of the county’s mouthwashes help eliminate these problem bacteria somewhat, filed electronically, by mail or in Open offices include: Linda DiRienzo); City councilor, 139 open positions, visit: https:// they do very little to get rid of the person and must be received no Centralia: City councilor, Position 2 (Currently held by weiapplets.sos.wa.gov/elec- anaerobic bacteria that tend to later than 4:30 p.m. May 20 in District 1 (Currently held by Aaron Brandt); City councilor, tions/OfficesOpenForElection/ gather in colonies at the back of the tongue. Scrapers remove the odor- the Elections Department of the Lee Coumbs); City councilor, Position 4 (Currently held by Index?countycode=LE causing, bacteria-laden coating that forms on the tongue. Proper brushing and lossing, a healthy diet, regular professional Due to Consolidation, Providence to Lay Off Employees in June cleanings, checkups, and ex-rays, can all help ensure many years of STREAMLINING: ployees from Providence Cen- Providence initially notified do not find new roles, the com- oral health. At TOWN CENTER tralia, 11 from Providence St. employees of the reorganization pany will offer them severance DENTAL, our goal is to help our patients reach their own unique Company Aims to Peter in Olympia and nine from in November 2011, then pro- packages based on their years of and highest levels of oral health. Make Registration, Southwest Washington Physi- vided specific information about service. All of our patients are individuals, Thomas said Providence’s and as such will achieve our goal cian Billing in Tumwater. the exact positions affected last in different ways and at different Records and Billing Providence Public Relations July. human resources department paces. No two patients are alike, More Efficient, Leading Manager Chris Thomas said the The company identified has been working for the last so no two treatment programs will 18 months to assist the affected be the same. Our ofice is located to Staff Cuts company previously notified 680 positions in Washington, at 1515 NW Louisiana Avenue, the workers that their roles were Oregon and Montana for con- employees, even offering help Chehalis. Please call 1-877-378- with resume writing and inter- 3384 to schedule an appointment. By Amy Nile changing or being eliminated as solidation. Nearly 250 of those viewing techniques. Our ofice is open Monday through [email protected] part of a consolidation of reg- workers have transferred to new Saturday. Walk-ins are welcome istration, medical records and positions within Providence and “Our human resources has and emergencies are always seen gone to great lengths to help the same day. Twenty-five Southwest billing functions. 200 have since taken other jobs. those employees and they’ll con- Afraid to visit the dentist? Washington employees at Provi- The reorganization could help Thomas said the company It’s okay! We cater to cowards! tinue to do that,” he said. dence Health & Services are los- reduce the cost of administration, is working to find the others, Ask about Nitrous Oxide and IV ••• Conscious Sedation. ing their jobs — including sev- reduce variation in service and including the five Providence Amy Nile: (360) 807-8235 P.S. Aside from helping to eral workers in Centralia. better coordinate the implemen- Centralia employees, positions reduce bad breath, tongue scraping twitter.com/AmyNileReports prevents dental decay by reducing Providence on Friday issued tation of an electronic health re- before the elimination of their www.facebook.com/ bacterial counts in the mouth. final 60-day notices to five em- cords system, Thomas said. jobs on June 28. If the employees AmyNileTheChronicle CH495681cz.db • Main 7 LOCAL The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, April 27, 2013 Tenino Councilor to Deny Claims in Property Lawsuit CONTROVERSY: Frank ney said his client will deny the city’s claims until more infor- Anderson Pleaded mation is provided. His Case in a Court According to Anderson, he has "denied each and every one Hearing Last Week of the plaintiffs causes of action, By Lisa Broadt claims for relief, and request for damages of any kind whatso- [email protected] ever." At a court hearing April 19, "I don't think some of the stuff an attorney representing Tenino they did was proper. That’s what Councilor Frank Anderson told we're going to argue in court," a judge there is insufficient evi- Anderson said in an interview dence in a lawsuit filed against Friday. "So far, it's been my opin- him by the city for three alleged ion against the city's opinion. nuisance properties. Now we're looking for a neu- In July, Tenino fined the tral party to make the decision councilor $127,000 for apparent whether or not we go to trial." city code violations. The fine and the lawsuit are Six months later, Tenino about more than clutter and a Code Enforcement Officer Ron broken down RV, Anderson said. Kemp filed a lawsuit against An- It's also a political battle initi- derson, as well as six other prop- ated by Kemp erty-owners, for their alleged "I believe Mr. Kemp has an nuisance properties. issue with me. I don't know why. In the lawsuit, the city asked I believe he has a political agen- Pete Caster / [email protected] the owners to bring their prop- da," the city councilor of almost In this photo taken on Feb. 1, Tenino City Councilman Frank Anderson stands in front of his house at 148 McArthur St. in erties up to standard; the suit three decades said. "Some folks Tenino. would be dropped for those who put information out there that did. The charges against Lola Rit- has not put me in the best light. The Chronicle that the lawsuit lated municipal code. fair, and several publicly voiced ter Bowen and Tom Haase have This has been going on now for did stem from Anderson's nui- “I had to make it a broad per- their frustration with the city subsequently been dismissed. over a year." sance parcels. But to be fair, he spective,” Kemp said. “If people for choosing legal action rather Anderson's case, however, As of February, Anderson and a contract city attorney, want to get angry, get angry at than a warning letter. will work its way through the owed the city $40,000 in back Bill Cameron, of Seattle, rode Frank Anderson.” ••• legal system. taxes. around the streets of Tenino to The other property own- Reporter Kyle Spurr contributed On Friday, Anderson's attor- Kemp, earlier this year, told find other properties that vio- ers, however, found it far from to this story. Community Partners Form Group to Pursue Tacoma Railway Line INTEREST: Work Group The lease agreement is valued at terest in owning the track so $80,000. it could expand the Chehalis Will Meet Wednesday to August would be the latest Steam Train rides and possible Create Detailed Proposal “This is a huge opportunity and I’m worried if Tacoma Rail would look at a connect with the Discover! Chil- we don’t jump on it then we will lose it in full.” purchase or lease proposal from dren’s Museum, a six-month pi- By Kyle Spurr another party, Tacoma Rail Su- lot project that began earlier this [email protected] perintendent Dale King said year in Chehalis. Larry McGee Tacoma Rail is also get- “The notion of an image of a A group of community part- Chehalis Renaissance member ting interest from Genesse & steam train tied in with a chil- ners agreed on Thursday to Wyoming Inc., which owns the dren’s museum would be ex- form a work group and continue Puget Sound & Pacific Railroad, citing for those who live here,” to explore the potential pur- ing. a detailed proposal for Tacoma as well as Western Washington Chehalis Renaissance member chase of a 20-mile stretch of Ta- “I don’t want to see this vision Rail. Railroad. Larry McGee said. “This is a coma Rail’s line from Centralia die,” Chehalis Mayor Tony Ket- MacReynold said the work The city of Chehalis, which huge opportunity and I’m wor- to Maytown for future develop- chum said. “I personally think group should have a proposal spearheaded the idea of pur- ried if we don’t jump on it then ment. the most tangible thing we have ready by May 30, when the com- chasing the railway, has an in- we will lose it in full.” The interested partners, that is priceless is we get to con- munity partners are scheduled which included representatives trol our destiny.” to meet again. from Lewis County, Chehalis, Gallon* A work group — made up Tacoma Rail, which is owned $ 9 *500+ Gallons Delivered Centralia, the Port of Centralia, ProPane 1.69 Price subject to change the Port of Chehalis, the Cheh- of Chehalis City Manager Mer- by the city of Tacoma and oper- alis-Centralia Railroad and the lin MacReynold, Chehalis City ated by Tacoma Public Utilities, Chehalis-Centralia Chamber of Councilor Daryl Lund, Chehalis first expressed interest in selling Commerce, questioned if the Renaissance Chair David Hartz the railway last year. portion of railway, valued at up and Chehalis-Centralia Rail- The 20-mile portion of track to $7 million, would be worth road & Museum Vice President up for sale is currently being Bill Deutscher — will meet at leased by Western Washington the investment. visit us @ www.apppropane.com The group ultimately decid- 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at Cheha- Railroad LLC for one year in Customer Tanks APP Tanks ed the purchase is worth explor- lis City Hall to begin compiling a deal that expires in October. 500 Gal.+ ...... $1.699 500 Gal.+ ...... $1.799 300 Gal.+ ...... $1.799 300 Gal.+ ...... $1.899 150 Gal.+ ...... $1.999 150 Gal.+ ...... $2.099 Special Pricing For Neighborhood-Group Chehalis School District to Provide Deliveries Commercial Customers Guaranteed Price Plans Locally Owned & Operated CH494462cz.cg Free All-Day Kindergarten Next Year Best Propane Value in the NW 1-800-929-5243 FUNDED: District Next year, between 150 and 200 ics and behavior of young learn- Visit Us At www.apppropane.com Chehalis students will have a ers, according to the district. Announces It Will Offer full-day kindergarten class. “It’s going to make a huge Free Program Regardless “We are realizing that this difference,” Hunt, an educator decision will al- for nearly 20 years, said. “Our of Legislature’s low us to reach building is ecstatic about it.” Education Budget out to families Additionally, he said, hav- Business loans who wish their ing the consistency of an all-day By Amy Nile children to at- program helps teachers meet [email protected] tend all-day students’ needs and focus on ready and kindergarten, academic interventions early. The Chehalis School District but can’t afford Parents can register chil- will be offering free all-day kin- it, “ Superinten- dren for kindergarten for the dergarten next year. WAITING. dent Ed Rothlin Bob Hunt 2013-2014 school year from now The district announced said in a press Cascade through June 13. Hunt encour- Friday that it will pay for the release. Elementary ages parents to register early be- program regardless of whether By institut- principal cause it gives the educators more or not the Legislature comes ing the all-day time to prepare. through with funding for all- kindergarten program for a wid- The Cascade Elementary day kindergarten. er range of students, the district School office is open from 8 a.m. “They’re going to find the may need additional classroom to 4 p.m. Monday through Fri- funding to do it,” said Bob Hunt, space. The Chehalis School day. For more information, call the principal at Cascade Ele- Board will address the issue (360) 807-7215. mentary School in Chehalis. “It’s through a long-term facilities ••• that important to serve the kids.” plan that will include a possible Amy Nile: (360) 807-8235 Chehalis currently has a school bond in the near future. twitter.com/AmyNileReports half-day kindergarten program Studies show that all-day www.facebook.com/ or a parent-paid full-day option. kindergarten improves academ- AmyNileTheChronicle

Local lending for all Lewis County Residents Lend your business needs.* Flood Relief Experience to NYC • SBA LOANS • COMMERCIAL LOANS DISASTER RELIEF: Toledo California and Arizona for the “You have a fairly intense ex- week-long trip. perience,” Klump said. “It can • LINES OF CREDIT and Chehalis Residents The group will stay at a be emotional ... But it’s always • CREDIT CARDS to Aid Superstorm church in Queens and work in rewarding.” • REAL ESTATE LOANS the Rockaway Beach neighbor- Klump said he and some of Sandy Cleanup the others in the group have as- hood, cleaning out houses that Great lending is just a call, By Amy Nile were flooded in the storm. sisted in local disasters as well, “It was hit pretty hard,” most notably after the flood of click or visit away. [email protected] Klump said of the area. 2007. TOLEDO — A Lewis Coun- Klump said he and some of “It’s not just an emotional ex- www.anchornetbank.com • 800.562.9744 ty group is leaving for New York the other group members, in- perience, it’s also very spiritual,” City this weekend to aid in Su- cluding the Carrs, have done di- the 64-year-old said. “We’re sharing God’s love with people. perstorm Sandy disaster relief saster relief previously in many It’s what keeps us going.” CH493260cz.cg efforts. locations across the country. ••• Toledo Presbyterian Church They traveled to Joplin, Mo., to Amy Nile: (360) 807-8235 Pastor Steve Klump will join assist tornado victims and vis- twitter.com/AmyNileReports Ralph and Joyce Carr, of Cheha- ited New Orleans in the wake of www.facebook.com/ lis, and four others from Oregon, Hurricane Katrina. AmyNileTheChronicle *Subject to credit approval Main 8 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, April 27, 2013

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 Eyman Targets Legislators, Taxes With Latest Initiative Since the 1990s, initiative Our Views House and Senate. three provisions of the initiative the general election ballot this guru Tim Eyman has success- But Eyman can put the pres- as listed above go away once November. And he only has fully had his anti-tax measures restrictions; the state Constitu- sure on the legislators. legislators pass the two-thirds- until the submission deadline passed by voters, only to have tion is clear that passing any bill His new initiative is three- for-taxes constitutional amend- of July 5. it overturned by a state Legis- only requires simple majority pronged: After one year, any ment and then place it on the We’re not so sure our state lature that does not want to be support from both the House new taxes would dissolve; an ballot. politicians are willing to listen governed by a two-thirds vote and Senate. annual statewide vote advising “I believe the Legislature is to the consistent voice of voters requirement to raise any taxes. legislators to pass an amend- going to feel it is better to say, On Wednesday, ever tena- who support the need for a su- After voters passed Eyman’s ment to the Constitution requir- ‘You know what, voters have permajority to raise taxes, even two-thirds vote requirement cious, Eyman unveiled his latest ing the two-thirds vote to raise earned the right to vote,” Ey- if the uncomfortable penalties last year, the initiative was sent initiative. It is aimed right at the any taxes; and any legislator or man said. of Eyman’s latest initiative be- to the state Supreme Court for Legislature. Eyman realizes now governor running for re-election Eyman called this the “Su- come law. review. he can’t via initiative get the would have his or her entire re- per Bowl” of anti-tax initiatives. But we’re willing to support The court ruled this past two-thirds requirement in place. cord of voting to raise taxes list- He’s going to need a good game, his strategy to slow the fast-pace February the supermajority He needs the Legislature to ed underneath their photograph as Eyman and his support- growth of state government. initiative was unconstitutional amend the constitution, which in the Voters’ Pamphlet. ers must submit more than We urge you to sign the ini- as only an amendment of the in itself requires a two-thirds The initiative also gives the 300,000 petition signatures to tiative when given the chance in state Constitution can add new vote of approval in both the legislators an out if passed. The get the initiative qualified for the coming seven weeks.

COMMENTARY: Musings From the Middle Fork Gender-Neutral Language Effort a Waste of Time Thank goodness. After six and she, him and her, boy and years of hard work by a group of girl? It would have been done some 40 code writers, we finally in about 10 minutes instead of have created gender-neutral lan- years and those code writers guage in our laws. could spend time writing code Well, for the most part. we could actually read and un- Washington Gov. Jay Inslee derstand. signed into law on Monday the What the story didn’t say final piece of a six-year effort to was what this cost. It also didn’t rewrite state laws using gender- say something else: What did neutral vocabulary, replacing they do with the word woman? terms such as “fisherman” and ••• “freshman” with “fisher” and If I remember correctly, “first-year student.” while the debate raged on over I guess this is really impor- same-sex marriage, we were as- tant work and sured that those who objected worth the obvi- on religious (First Amendment) ous costs, but I grounds would not be forced to fail to see it. violate their consciences. Turns “This was out it was baloney, just like the a much larger claim that the state would make Letters to the Editor effort than I millions of dollars off legalizing had envisioned. marijuana and that mole traps The hallmark of any com- suspect that our patent disre- Mankind wouldn’t be illegal under the To Continue, Youth munity is the generosity of gard for the sanctity of human By John McCroskey means man trapping initiative years ago. It Fair Needs Support its members in helping oth- life, as demonstrated by our and woman,” seems we can’t be told the entire ers. Thank you to all who have mass killing of innocent civil- said Democratic state Sen. truth and make an informed To the editor: On May 3, the Spring Youth helped and to those of you who ians in the nations mentioned Jeanne Kohl-Welles, Seattle. decision because we might not will help the Spring Youth Fair above, would create terrorists as Maybe it’s me, but what pass the nonsense if we do. Fair will begin. Over the more than 30 years the fair has ex- continue. “blow-back.” on Earth does that quote even Now, an Eastern Washing- Their suffering gets no mean? ton florist is being sued by our isted, hundreds if not thousands of young men and women have Janelle Williams round-the-clock coverage, no The new references include state’s attorney general because W. F. West High School presidential beating of the heart “journey-level plumber” instead she chose not to provide flower been able to show off their indi- forensics coach vidual interests. and certainly no outcry from an of “journeyman plumber,” arrangements for a same-sex enraged American public. “handwriting” in place of “pen- Exhibits vary from dogs and marriage, because of her rela- In fact, our biased media manship,” and “signal operator” cats to larger animals such as Many Americans tionship with Jesus Christ. purposely sanitizes the cover- for “signalman.” cattle and horses, but also in- Were there other options for Display Hypocrisy age and seldom reveals the true Some words like “airmen” the same-sex couple to get flow- clude art at both elementary and and “seaman” weren’t changed secondary levels and hobbies, To the editor: horrors of human carnage and ers? Probably, but then choosing Hypocrisy — “pretending to destruction we caused to these because of objections by the that route won’t further the science projects, computers and Washington Military Depart- photographs. The cost of entry be more virtuous or religious countries; all done under the cause or make a point. And than one really is.” A fitting guise of exporting democracy. ment. Other terms like “man there will be more points made. fees is very low, and most of the hole” and “man lock” won’t be adults involved are volunteers, description of many Ameri- What about the untold mil- Our religious objections, our cans and most politicians. The lions of destroyed families and changed because no common- First Amendment rights, are receiving no pay. worn out mantra “they hate us their pain and suffering? Are sense substitutes could easily be not as important as others. Our The major funding for the because of what we are” (imply- they less human because of found, according to the article. government must stamp out all fair comes from several sources ing a degree of noble character), their religion or skin color. Are No common sense substi- resistance based on conscience. — the Department of Agricul- or “what we stand for” (freedom we not collectively guilty by our tutes could be found? There is It must. ture, entry fees and donations. and democracy), is just another silence and indifference? Such so little of that in Olympia any- Years ago, I read somewhere Last year, the funding from the non-truth. hypocrisy. more. It’s a shame if this is what that my rights end where some- Dept of Agriculture arrived two That might have been true It’s worth recalling that our they wasted it on. one else’s begin. Today, clearly weeks after the fair, and the a decade ago when America government has lied and de- The story goes on to say that some have more rights than leadership team was concerned was a Christian and God-fear- ceived us about Vietnam, Iraq, nearly 3,500 Washington state others and our state will make about the future of the fair. This ing nation. No, they hate us for Libya and probably other mili- code sections, out of a total of sure they do. year, information is still uncer- what we’ve become and the de- tary engagements. They’ve use about 40,000, have been te- But whether or not this is tain about the funding. diously scrubbed of gender bias, a good business decision, I do The Spring Youth Fair lead- struction and heartbreak we’ve cluster bombs, a thousand times although most involve adding think she should have the right ership team has been committed wrought on so many Middle more destructive than what pronouns “she” and “her” to aug- to make it. from the beginning to provide Eastern nations. was used in Boston, and drones ment the existing “he” and “his.” Many businesses have signs a showcase for the youth of the I’m sickened over the hu- that have killed whole fami- Whoa, 3,500 out of 40,000? that say they have the right to area, but it could use your help. man tragedy inflicted in Bos- lies, wiped out wedding parties, Looks to me like they have refuse service to anyone. Appar- My forensics team and I have ton, and the true perpetrator(s), struck schools and caused car- years of busy work ahead with ently, they really don’t. been involved for almost 30 whoever they might turn out nage beyond belief. generations of code writers re- ••• years, and we know that we are to be, should suffer all that the I’ve not even mentioned the quired. John McCroskey was Lewis on our second generation of stu- law allows. The depth of an evil horrors caused by depleted ura- Couldn’t we have simply County sheriff from 1995 to 2005. dents involved in the fair. heart that could inflict such nium used in our munitions, added the disclaimer in big bold He lives outside Chehalis, and can If you would like to see this pain on other humans is incom- causing hundreds of deformed letters that anywhere a gender be contacted at musingsonthemid- worthwhile tradition continue, prehensible. births and premature deaths to term appeared it meant both he [email protected]. you can do two things. First, at- However, Americans seem to the multitudes infected. tend the fair. Second, consider a be blind to the carnage that our If we continue to tolerate donation to ensure that future military and rogue government our present foreign policies, the First Amendment Center Quote of the Day children can have the many ex- agents are guilty of inflicting tragedy in Boston may become a periences that the fair can pro- on untold millions of normal common occurrence. As Scrip- “Liberty, when it begins to take vide. Donations can be sent to citizens, including children, in ture states: “Whatsoever a man Spring Youth Fair, P.O. Box 1426, places such as Libya, Iraq, So- (nation) soweth that shall he root, is a plant of rapid growth.” Chehalis, WA 98532. If you are malia, Afghanistan, Pakistan, (they) reap.” at the fair on either May 3, 4 or Syria and Iran. George Washington 5, you can stop by the fair office This is taking place daily, not Dick Knolls 1st U.S. president, 1788 and make a donation. just sporadically. One would 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 321 N. Pearl, Centralia, WA 98531. E-mail letters can will make our opinion pages available for public n Regional Executive Editor Michael Wagar can ranted. Items submitted are subject to editing and be sent to [email protected]. discussion of vital issues and events affecting will become the property of this newspaper. Po- be reached at (360) 807-8234, or at (360) 458- the quality of life in Lewis County and adjoining 2681, or by e-mail at [email protected]. etry is not accepted. 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, April 27, 2013

COMMENTARY: Saturday’s Child COMMENTARY: Voice of Voie Death Comes to the Prince, The Merits of School but the Pauper Lives On Rankings Questionable I’ve been following some of compared to what upperclass- We kiddingly called our- the debate about Evaline School men had experienced in the selves the Prince and the Pauper. District’s recent “failing” grade. same classes. Annual field trips The Prince was Al Neuharth, The Chronicle featured the were cancelled indefinitely to the most influential journalist of issue in a story April 18. The make time for WASL-related the last half of the 20th century district was issued the grade on topics and concepts. and founder of USA Today. The the Washington Policy Center’s Extra-curricular classes were Pauper was Saturday’s Child, public school achievement index, cut short at times to squeeze in struggling along as a teacher in which assigns letter grades for another WASL lesson that we the Pacific Northwest. more than 2,000 educational in- “needed” to learn. The death of the Prince was stitutions across the state. When it finally came time told about in all the media last Is this one-size-fits-all ap- to take the WASL with my week after he fell in his beach proach to measuring educators classmates, the pressure was im- home in Cocoa Beach, Fla., and schools re- mense. We were expected to per- whimsically called Pumpkin ally effective? form when it came to the WASL Center. I went to a — and perform well. Entire Now it is small school areas of our school were roped time for his un- and feel that off to other students so that we likely survivor, I was well wouldn’t be distracted while we the Pauper, to Courtesy photo prepared for spent up to four hours on each write “-30-,” the Gordon Aadland, left, and Al Neuharth pose for a photograph in Neuharth’s college, though section of the test. one-time jour- Washington, D.C., oice in 1986. many criticize Each section came and went nalist ending to small schools ed about making SoDak Sports have me met at the airport with a By Brittany Voie — reading, writing, math — but a story. for their lack of better. That zippy little newspa- sedan chair carried by the gover- then came the science portion of We met dur- opportunities per was very popular with teen- nor of South Dakota and a bevy the WASL, which was a pilot test ing the happiest By Gordon Aadland and course offerings. agers and the sports crowd, but of recent Miss South Dakotas. at the time. of times, in the When I was in the first grade it closed down after two years Instead, my plane was met by We were shocked when we euphoria of peace and promise at Adna Elementary School, because it couldn’t get enough an old pickup driven by a man opened our test booklets. Most right after World War II. Both of we took the Iowa Test of Basic advertising revenue. of us — as sophomores — had us were South Dakota-born poor who looked like a pig farmer. In Skills. We were told that this was Today, that little inconse- taken middle school chemistry, kids, raised alone by German the back was a pig in a crate and a measure of how well teachers quential sports newspaper is in and had either physics or envi- mothers. My home town was some hay, with a lawn chair for were teaching us. the Library of Congress. ronmental science/biology under Sisseton, S.D.; his was the little me to sit in. I rode all the way In the fourth grade, we About 10 years ago, he re- our belts. Yet, all of us were test- town of Eureka, about a hundred to the Chamber meeting in the took our first Washington As- ceived a telephone call from a ed on high school level chemistry, miles west of there. back with the pig, where I was sessment of Student Learning We both were attending the banker in Sisseton, who intro- met by Al and a delegation of physics, biology and astronomy (WASL) test and were again told (astronomy wasn’t even a class University of South Dakota on duced himself as a friend of me, dignitaries, but not the governor that this was supposed to tell ad- the GI Bill. using the Midwestern pronun- nor the bevy of beauties. offered by our district). ministrators where teachers were I passed all required sections We met in the journalism ciation of my surname “Odd- We rode together in private falling short in their curriculums classrooms in Old Main and land.” That amused Al so much planes, buses with Al’s picture of the WASL and graduated with as compared to state averages. honors, along with half of my on the staff of the Volante, the he addressed all his mail to me emblazoned on the side, stretch By the time I was in seventh student newspaper. He became as Gordon Oddlund. limos, private train cars and a class. But interestingly, by the grade at Adna Middle School, time we actually graduated, the the editor; I was the humor After he appeared at Centra- station wagon advertising “So- the WASL was slated to be a test columnist. It was the beginning lia College with the Newscapade, Dak Sports — blankets the state.” WASL was no longer required to that would decide whether or not graduate. of a friendship that was to last a grateful Centralia city leader I visited him in his offices we would graduate high school. throughout our lives, putting wrote of her appreciation for in the nation’s capitol and in his I’m still bitter and feel And things dramatically cheated that I missed out on an unusual zest in the life of my being invited to a special recep- Newseum there. He has been changed. family for more than 50 years. tion for “the great Neurath.” to Centralia several times, in- so many traditional activities I Soon, what used to be our would have gotten to experience After the university, I became That gave me a chance to get cluding his hiding in the Henry required silent reading time be- if so much emphasis hadn’t been a teacher. He started a little even. I have a large file of cor- Kirk Library so he could be the came “WASL time.” We would placed on that test. I remember weekly tabloid newspaper on respondence addressed “From: surprise speaker at the dedica- sit with our entire class (about so little of my sophomore year peach-colored paper called So- the Great Neurath to Oddlund,” tion of the Aadland Esplanade at 40 students) and review algebra, because of the WASL. Dak Sports. He got me to write a which some journalist, writing Centralia College. grammar and other skills and So when I read the article humor column for him. his doctoral thesis, will puzzle But now he is in his grave in concepts that our educators For two years, each Wednes- over sometime. the still-frozen ground of Eu- believed we needed to review in about Evaline School District day he would come to the town Al loved the practical joke. reka, and I’m trying to get used order prepare us for the test. and it’s “failing” grade, I can’t where I taught to have the paper Among his best might have to writing about him in the past This became such a big help but wonder what the printed. I would meet him after come after he asked me to come tense. He was very much a man deal that our teachers planned downsides are of grading each school to have our usual Man- to Sioux Falls to be with him for of the present and the future. “WASL nights” and we began re- school — no matter their size or hattan for me and the extra-dry a few days while he was address- ••• viewing things that were specific curriculum offerings — on the martini for him and then dinner. ing a statewide meeting of the Gordon Aadland, Centralia, same scale. to the WASL test, more often ••• No, we didn’t discuss our Chamber of Commerce. was a longtime Centralia College than not, in all of our classes. dreams for journalism; we talk- I said I would if he would faculty member and publicist. By the time I was a sopho- Brittany Voie is The Chronicle’s senior media developer. She wel- more at Adna High School, the comes correspondence from the com- WASL hype was in full swing. munity by email at bvoie@chronline. Classes that I chose to take the com, on Facebook at www.facebook. year before, because of the ac- com/BrittanyVoieTheChronicle tivities and subject matter, now or on Twitter at www.twitter.com/ looked dramatically different as chronbvoie. Going on Vacation? Don’t Just Stop Your Papers, Donate Them To NIE!

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great eagerness. CH495995cz.cg Congratulations Kathy on this KATHY WOOD well-deserved recognition! Main 10  The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, April 27, 2013 Records Sirens, Court Records, Lotteries, Commodities

Death Notices 44-46-50-62-68-69-74-77-78-79 Sirens • GERTRUDE ANN WATKINS, 71, Oakville, cuts to his head. died Friday, April 26, at Providence Cen- Commodities CENTRALIA POLICE DEPARTmENT Vehicle Prowl tralia Hospital. Service details are pend- • Two toolboxes were re- Gas in Washington — $3.64 (AAA of Assault ing. Whiteside Family Mortuary, Elma, is Washington) ported stolen from a van parked ChEhALIS POLICE DEPARTmENT in charge of arrangements. Crude Oil — $92.90 per barrel (CME • Andrew J. Bowen, 25, Mor- in a carport on the 700 block of • BONNIE NOEL, 89, Packwood, died Group) ton, was arrested and booked South Pearl Street at 4:13 p.m. Counterfeiting Tuesday, April 23, at Morton General Gold — $1,463 (Monex) Hospital. No services are planned. Ar- Silver — $23.99 (Monex) for alleged fourth-degree assault Thursday. • Two counterfeit $20 bills rangements are under the direction of domestic violence at 9:37 a.m. Vehicle Accident with Injuries were discovered in Chehalis City Cattermole Funeral Home, Winlock. Hall on 350 N. Market Blvd. at Thursday on the 100 block of - Corrections • A 45-year-old Centra 4:42 p.m. Thursday. Virginia Drive. lia man driving a Chevrolet ••• ••• Lotteries Graffiti mischief S10 truck was rear-ended by By The Chronicle Staff The Chronicle seeks to be accurate a red Ford Expedition on the Washington’s Thursday Games and fair in all its reporting. If you find • Graffiti was found in a 700 block of West Main Street Please call news reporter Stepha- Match 4: 02-20-22-23 an error or believe a news item is incor- rect, please call the newsroom as soon bathroom on the 1600 block of at 11:57 a.m. Thursday. The nie Schendel with news tips. She can Daily Game: 2-3-8 as possible at 807-8224, between 8 a.m. South Gold Street at 11:13 a.m. man was transported to Prov- be reached at 807-8208 or sschen- Keno: 04-10-12-13-15-17-21-35-36-37- and 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Thursday. idence Centralia Hospital for [email protected].

Chehalis municipal Court In Loving Memory of Chehalis Municipal Court criminal cases, including sentenc- Alberta Frances Borovec es, fines, fees and findings of not September 22, 1929 - April 22, 2013 guilty or dismissals. In Loving

Held April 24 • Keith Louis Hamblin, 52, Chehalis, Memory of third-degree driving while license sus- pended, sentenced to 90 days in jail with 90 suspended, fined $600 with $300 sus- Marion pended, $103 in fees. • Marylou Leal, 20, Centralia, third- degree theft, dismissed with prejudice. Leonard • Katrina Michelle Smith, 28, Centralia, third-degree theft, sentenced to 364 days in jail with 364 suspended, fined Workman $800 with $400 suspended. • Tasean Estella M. Witherwax, 20, Spokane, (1) minor in possession and/or consumption, (2) disorderly conduct, (3) March 8, 1922 - March 18, 2013 violation of no contact/protection order, Marion Leonard Workman, In 1943, he married Betty sentenced to 364 days in jail with 362 sus- Alberta Frances passed cook), knitting, sewing, age 91, passed away March David, who passed away in pended, fined $800 with $400 suspend- away quietly at her home reading, and traveling. She 18, 2013 at his home in Yuma, 1993. ed on count 1, sentenced to 90 days in jail on Monday, April 22, worked for 32 years as a Ariz. Marion was born to In 1995, he married Dayle with 87 suspended, fined $600 with $300 suspended on count 2, sentenced to 364 2013 at the age of 83. She bookkeeper for Central George and Bertha (Preussler) Fletcher, his best friend. days in jail with 362 suspended, fined was born Sept. 22, 1929 Fuel Company while raising Workman on March 8, 1922 in Marion is survived by $800 with $400 suspended on count 3, in Onalaska, Wash., to her four children and also Riffe, Wash. his brother, Wayne (Bonnie) concurrent, $450 in fees. Raymond McChesney and served in the same capacity He grew up in the Riffe area, Workman of Napavine; two Opal (Adams) McChesney. as a volunteer with the graduated from Mossyrock sisters, Lillie Whisler of Oregon She is survived by her Chehalis-Centralia Railroad High School and worked in and Velta (Orland) Nelson of Centralia childhood sweetheart and Association for many years. the woods until joining the Toledo; his children, Leonard municipal Court husband of 67 years, Harold In later years, Alberta U.S. Army in January 1942 at (Edna) Workman of Morton Borovec; three sons, Kerry enjoyed chasing trains with the start of World War II. He and Eva (Mike) Carson of Centralia Municipal Court served in the South Paciic as Lacey; step-children, H. (Pauly) Borovec of Renton, her best friend and lifelong criminal cases, including sentenc- a military policeman and was Lee (Cheryl) Blankenship companion, Harold. She es, fines, fees and findings of not Wash., Carl (Debbie) awarded the Bronze Star in the of Olympia and Jana Birk, guilty or dismissals. Borovec of Bend, Ore. traveled throughout the Philippines. of Gasconade, Mo.; and a and Rick (Lori) Borovec United States by Amtrak (no Returning from the war, young lady who adopted him, Held Feb. 13 of Chehalis; one daughter, airplanes for this couple!) to Marion went back to the Phannarai Chatkul of Tacoma. • Dale W. Klatush III, 26, Oakville, third- Cindy (Don) Matson of many railroad conventions woods to earn a living and was Also, eight grandchildren, 12 degree driving while license suspended, Mukilteo, Wash.; siblings, gathering friends along the later hired by Lewis County as great-grandchildren, and 14 sentenced to 90 days in jail, with 90 days Jeanne Granger and Ray way. These travels brought a road grader operator, where great-great grandchildren. He suspended, fined $800 with $400 sus- (Joan) McChesney of them much joy and many he continued to work until was preceded in death by his pended, $103 in fees. Arizona, Elaine (Will) happy memories. She also retirement. Marion served 26 parents; a daughter, Brenda; • Michael Madtson, 20, Salkum, minor years with the Mossyrock Fire sisters, Alice, Susie and Ann; in possession and/or consumption, sen- Ulry of Olympia, Wash.; enjoyed many delightful tenced to 364 days in jail with 361 days seven grandchildren; four trips with Discovery Tours Dept., including eight years as and brothers, Frances (Fritz), suspended, fined $600 with $300 sus- great-grandchildren; and traveling all over the ire chief. He also served as Allen and David. pended, $300 in fees. numerous nieces and Northwest and beyond. a police oficer for the City of Memorial services will be • Rachel Lomedia, 26, Centralia, (1) nephews. A celebration of Alberta's Mossyrock, was a volunteer held May 18, 2013 at 1:00 third-degree driving while license sus- Alberta was a lifelong life will be held at 11:00 deputy for 40 years under eight p.m. at the Mossyrock High pended, (2) failurel to transfer title within resident of the greater a.m., Monday, April 29, different Lewis County Sheriffs School Multi-purpose room 45 days, sentenced to 90 days in jail with and was one of the people who at 295 Williams St. At 2:00 Chehalis area residing 2013 at the First Christian 90 days suspended, fined $600 with helped establish the Lewis p.m. there will be military (VFW $300 suspended on each count, $150 in in Onalaska, Napavine, Church in Chehalis. In County Search and Rescue Post 5439) and Mossyrock fees. Centralia and Rochester lieu of lowers memorials organization and Civil Defense ireighter honors at Klickitat • Michael Madtson, 20, Salkum, third- during her growing up may be made to the First program in Lewis County. He Cemetery. There will be a degree malicious mischief, sentenced to years. She married the Christian Church Memorial 364 days in jail with 364 days suspended, was Commander of the local dinner and continued time fined $600 with $300 suspended, $150 love of her life at the Fund, 111 NW Prindle VFW Post and a member of the for remembrance at the in fees. tender age of 16 and then St., Chehalis or the Lewis Mossyrock Grange. Music was Mossyrock High School Multi- • Anthony D. Conklin, 27, Centralia, resided in the same home, County Historical Museum, his passion and he enjoyed purpose room immediately fourth-degree assault, domestic vio- on Magnolia Drive, for 599 Front St. Chehalis WA writing music. He played guitar following graveside services. In lence, sentenced to 364 days in jail with the next 67 years. She was 98532. and other stringed instruments lieu of lowers, please donate 344 suspended, fined $1,200 with $600 active in the First Christian with a couple of local bands, to: Hospice of Yuma, 1824 suspended, $1,150 in fees. Church of Chehalis for To view the obituary, including the Cascade South 8th Ave., Yuma, AZ • Andrea Barrera, 30, Centralia, fourth- Mountain Boys, and was a 85364. degree assault, sentenced to 364 days in many years and she enjoyed please go to chronline.com/ jail with 364 days suspended, fined $1,000, cooking (she was a fabulous obituaries. caller for square dancing for 23 To view this obituary, please with $500 suspended, $150 in fees. years. go to chronline.com/obituaries. • Mark A. Silva, 32, Chehalis, third- degree malicious mischief, domestic vio- lence, sentenced to 364 days in jail, with 350 days suspended, fined $800 with $400 suspended, $900 in fees. In Memory of • Lisa A. Charles, 46, Centralia, violation of anti-harassment order, sentenced to Edward Glen Smethers 364 days in jail, with 364 suspended, fined $300 with $150 suspended, $150 in fees. brother, George of Ephrata, when he moved to Centralia, Chronicle. • Tyson Anderson, 22, Centralia, disor- Wash.; grandchildren, David he was employed by Russ In this last year his must derly conduct, sentenced to 90 days in jail with 80 days suspended, fined $800 Glen Smethers, Teresa Lee Lewis Plumbing of Centralia do commitments were family, with $400 suspended, $950 in fees. Agius, Kimberly Gomez, Rick and Helmer Verplank Write Your Life, and Saturday Plumbing of Chehalis. He afternoon Political Discussion • Scott R. Hotchkiss, 34, Centralia, Smethers, Joel Thompson third-degree driving while license sus- (JT) Smethers, Patrick joined Centralia Plumbing in Group downtown. pended, sentenced to 90 days in jail with William Edward Lynch; and 1954 and became co-owner Our family would like to 85 days suspended, fined $600 with 10 great- grandchildren. with Ava Wilson from 1956 thank the staff of Cooks Hill $300 suspended, $553 in fees. He graduated from until his retirement in 1981. Manor, Assured Hospice and • Tyson Anderson, 22, Centralia, third- Aberdeen High School in 1935. Ed was very active in Dr. Paul Williams for their degree driving while license suspended, After high school, he began the community. He helped loving care of our dad. sentenced to 90 days in jail with 86 days working in the woods cutting build and served on the A celebration of life will be suspended, fined $800 with $400 sus- Edward Glen Smethers pulp wood, continuing his board of directors for the held at the main lodge of the pended, $653 in fees. passed away at Centralia, logging career he moved to Mayield Lake Youth Camp Mayield Lake Youth Camp, Wash., on March 26, 2013 at Oregon. Wanting to get out for 47 years. He had been a Saturday, May 4, 2013 at 1:00 Held Feb. 19 the age of 95. Ed was born of the dangers of the woods, member of the Centralia Elks p.m. A reception and lunch • Wendy L. Payne, 47, Centralia, third- in St. Johns, Ariz., on July 9, he moved his family to Belfair and was active in the Lewis will take place at the Youth degree theft, sentenced to 364 days in 1917. He was the eldest child and went to work on housing County Democratic Party. Camp immediately following jail with 364 days suspended, fined $700 of Glen Dudley and Annabelle projects, where he learned He served on the Centralia the service. All friends and with $350 suspended. Smethers. the plumbing trade. He Civil Service Commission family are invited. • Siberia Z.M. Tuttle, 18, Portland, He was preceded in then moved to Cosmopolis for 20 years. He also helped In lieu of lowers, third-degree theft, sentenced to 364 death by his wife of 65 where he worked in the resurrect and maintain the memorial donations may be days in jail with 359 days suspended, years, Winifred Thompson Grays Harbor Shipyard Centralia outdoor pool, and made to the Mayield Lake fined $1,000 with $500 suspended, $400 pipe shop. While in the ship also served the Lewis County Youth Camp c/o Security in fees. Smethers; sisters, Edna Conley and Ola Cole; and yard he learned about the Fair management and board State Bank, PO. Box 1467, • Joseph A. Sasso, 26, Centralia, third- brother, John. Army Transport Service and where needed in various Chehalis, WA 98532. degree driving while license suspended, signed up during World War capacities. Condolences for the family sentenced to 90 days in jail with 90 days Ed is lovingly remembered by sons, Tedford Lee II where he inished as a First In his retirement, he may be sent to NE 7161 suspended, fined $800 with $400 sus- Engineer. During his service became a devoted member North Shore Road, Belfair, pended, $253 in fees. Smethers of Belfair, Wash., William Robert Smethers of his family was stationed in of the “Senior Write Your WA 98528. • Zachary Gunderson, 31, Centralia, Seattle. Upon leaving the Life” group. Ed was also unattended hit and run, sentenced to Malvern, Pa; and daughter, transport service he briely known for writing his many To view the obituary, please go to 90 days in jail with 90 days suspended, Sally Ann Lynch of Omaha, fined $500 with $250 suspended. Neb. He is survived by his worked for Boeing. In 1946, ‘letters to the editor’ in The chronline.com/obituaries. please see RECORDS, page Main 11 • Main 11 LOCAL The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, April 27, 2013 Bill Seeks Exemption to Non-Discrimination Law By Rachel La Corte BROWN SAID THE measure suit in response to a March 1 WHILE WASHINGTON voters legal- mentary on same-sex marriage. The Associated Press seeks to protect people or reli- incident in which Barronelle ized gay marriage in November, “The citizens of the state gious organizations from legal Stutzman refused to provide protections against discrimination clearly weighed in on that issue,” OLYMPIA — Several Re- persecution. “There’s a glaring flowers for Robert Ingersoll and based on sexual orientation were she said. “It’s intended to protect publican lawmakers filed a bill lack of protection for religion in Curt Freed’s wedding, despite codified in 2006, in one of the first religious freedoms.” Thursday seeking an exemption state law,” she said. the two men being longtime initial pushes to expand civil rights Democratic Sen. Ed Mur- to the state’s anti-discrimination Also signing on to the bill patrons of her shop — Arlene’s to the gay community in the state. ray, a gay lawmaker from Seattle laws just weeks after legal action were Sens. Janea Holmquist Flowers and Gifts in Richland, Under state law, it’s illegal for who sponsored the civil rights was taken against a Richland Newbry, Mike Hewitt, Jim which is in Brown’s legislative businesses to refuse to sell goods, expansion bill in 2006 as well as florist who denied service to a Honeyford, Don Benton, Bar- district. Previously, Washington merchandise and services to any the state’s gay marriage law, said gay couple for their upcoming bara Bailey, Mike Padden, John state Attorney General Bob Fer- person because of their sexual the proposal seeks to revisit long wedding. Braun, John Smith, Ann Rivers, guson filed a consumer protec- orientation. settled civil rights legislation, ar- The bill introduced by Sen. and Linda Evans Parlette. tion lawsuit in the case. Josh Friedes, a spokesman for guing that the nation has long Sharon Brown, R-Kennewick, The bill has not yet been re- Ferguson had sent a letter Equal Rights Washington, said moved beyond that discussion. would allow businesses the right ferred to a committee or sched- in March asking her to comply that the bill seeks to undermine “I don’t think we want to go to deny services or goods if they uled for a public hearing, and is with the law, but said Stutzman’s the state’s anti-discrimination laws into our civil rights laws and felt doing so was contrary to not likely to before the regular attorneys responded saying she “and it undermines our entire ap- decide who gets served and who their “sincerely held religious legislative session ends on Sun- would challenge any state action proach to ensuring the equality of doesn’t get served,” he said. beliefs, philosophical beliefs, or day. However, if a special session to enforce the law. all Washingtonians in commerce.” Joseph Backholm, executive matters of conscience.” is called, as expected, the bill Her attorney, Justin D. Bris- “It is discrimination, pure director of the Family Policy In- The measure would not ap- could be heard during that time. tol, has said he expects to take and simple,” he said. stitute of Washington, said that ply to the denial of services to the legal battle to federal court Brown argued that the bill is while he knows the bill is not people under a protected class EARLIER THIS MONTH, the and argue Stutzman’s refusal of not intended to undermine the likely to gain any traction in the under federal law, such as race, American Civil Liberties Union service based on the 1st Amend- law or the rights of gays and les- Legislature this year, he hopes it religion or disability. in Washington state filed a law- ment’s right to free speech. bians in the state and isn’t a com- sparks a discussion. Lewis County District Court Lewis County District Court third-degree driving while license sus- 90 days in jail with 75 suspended, fined delivery of drug paraphernalia, dis- • Jeffrey Ian Greenwood, 30, Seattle, criminal cases, including sen- pended, sentenced to 90 days in jail $600 on each count, $1,136 in fees. missed with prejudice. (1) possession of marijuana, less than tences, fines, fees, and findings of with 89 suspended, fined $600, $335 in • Joseph Roy Brown, 41, Winlock, driv- • Jeremy Larsen Osborn, 24, Graham, 40 grams, (2) use/delivery of drug para- fees. ing while license suspended, sentenced third-degree malicious mischief, physi- phernalia, both counts dismissed with not guilty or dismissals: • Justine Kelly Abbott, 22, Che- to 90 days in jail with 79 suspended, cal damage, dismissed with prejudice. prejudice. halis, third-degree driving while li- fined $600, $1,136 in fees. • Brian Danger Stabile, 33, Nordland, Held Feb. 15 • Aaron Jesse Payan, 31, Puyallup, cense suspended, dismissed without • Donna Sue Cline, 44, Tumwater, first-degree negligent driving, sen- (1) possession of marijuana, less than • Devin Lee Edens, 33, Chehalis, third- prejudice. driving while license suspended, sen- tenced to 90 days in jail with 90 sus- 40 grams, (2) use, deliver drug para- degree driving while license suspended, • Zoe Ann Hull, 49, Tokeland, driving tenced to 90 days in jail with 69 sus- pended, fined $600, $346 in fees. phernalia, both counts dismissed with sentenced to 90 days in jail with 90 sus- under the influence, sentenced to 364 pended, fined $600, $1,736 in fees. • Cole Rhose Shuler, 20, Bonney prejudice. pended, fined $600, $386 in fees. days in jail with 274 suspended, fined • Marty Joe Mullins, 48, Randle, two Lake, (1) first-degree negligent driving, • Paul Aaron Leggett, 27, Glenoma, • Donald James Sharp, 52, Centralia, $850, $2,786 in fees. counts of third-degree driving while li- (2) possession marijuana, less than 40 violation of burning permit, fined $600, third-degree driving while license sus- • Joshua Lewis Owen, 36, Prosser, cense suspended, sentenced to 90 days grams, sentenced to 90 days in jail with $283 in fees. pended, dismissed without prejudice. use/delivery of drug paraphernalia, dis- in jail with 89 suspended, fined $600 on 90 suspended, fined $600, on count 1, • David Floyd Potter, 51, Mossyrock, • Ronnal Joseph Ault, 23, Chehalis, missed with prejudice. each count, $1,071 in fees. count 2 dismissed with prejudice, $532 fourth-degree assault, dismissed with third-degree driving while license sus- • Jason Allen Pickett, 35, Centralia, • James Ketron Simon, 44, Randle, in fees. prejudice. pended, dismissed without prejudice. driving under the influence, sentenced third-degree driving while license sus- • Teague Downsbrough, 44, Onalas- • Robert Carey Sliger, 55, Elbe, (1) • John Peter Kennedy, 46, Seattle, to 364 days in jail with 362 suspended, pended, sentenced to 90 days in jail ka, third-degree driving while license fourth-degree assault, (2) interfering (1) possession of marijuana, 40 grams fined $750, $1,286 in fees. with 90 suspended, fined $600, $386 in suspended, sentenced to 90 days in jail with reporting domestic violence, sen- or less, (2) use/delivery of drug para- • Heather Leeann Smith, 38, Chehalis, fees. with 45 suspended, fined $600, $4,151 tenced to 365 days in jail with 343 sus- phernalia, both counts dismissed with third-degree driving while license sus- in fees. pended, fined $750 on each count, con- prejudice. pended, sentenced to 90 days in jail Held Feb. 21 current, $3,041 in fees. • Stephanie Valenciano, 25, Wapato, with 90 suspended, fined $600, $386 in • Nicolis Brian Gressett, 21, Mossy- Held Feb. 27 • Wilfred Carl Hansen Jr., 59, Mineral, third-degree driving while license sus- fees. rock, first-degree negligent driving, • Zachary Allen Iams, 22, Seattle, driv- reckless driving, sentenced to 364 days pended, sentenced to 90 days in jail • Stephanie L. Case, 24, Port Ange- in jail with 364 suspended, fined $750, with 90 suspended, fined $600, $386 in sentenced to 90 days in jail with 90 sus- ing under the influence, sentenced to les, fourth-degree assault, sentenced pended, fined $600, $146 in fees. 364 days in jail with 362 suspended, $729 in fees. fees. to 364 days in jail with 328 suspended, • Michael Rockland Raphael, 18, Cas- fined $750, $1,108 in fees. • Richard Allen Cohen, 45, Vancouver, • John Peter Kennedy, 46, Seattle, fined $750, $2,983 in fees. Wash., third-degree driving while li- third-degree driving while license sus- tle Rock, possession of marijuana less • Zachary Jay Stickney, 19, Buckley, • Richard M. Dunlap Jr., 63, Elma, ha- than 40 grams, sentenced to 90 days in minor in possession and/or consump- cense suspended, sentenced to 90 days pended, sentenced to 90 days in jail rassment, dismissed with prejudice. in jail with 30 suspended, fined $600, with 81 suspended, fined $600, $936 in jail with 89 suspended, fined $513, $472 tion, sentenced to 364 days in jail with • Robert Shawn Martin, 46, Winlock, $986 in fees. fees. in fees. 334 suspended, fined $750, $383 in fees. two counts of operating vehicle with- • Carlos Pedro Mato, 27, Centralia, • Jennifer Ann Haggard, 45, Onalaska, out ignition interlock, both counts dis- Held Feb. 22 third-degree driving while license sus- making false statement to public ser- Held Feb. 19 missed with prejudice. vant, dismissed with prejudice. • Jennifer A. Wildman, 34, Onalaska, pended, dismissed without prejudice. • Ronald McDougall, 45, Onalaska, • Shane Leroy Coleman, 36, Centralia, • Cathy Marie Myers, 48, Vader, first- third-degree driving while license sus- • Naomi L. Rossell, 39, Glenoma, (1) third-degree driving while license sus- third-degree malicious mischief, physi- degree negligent driving, sentenced to pended, sentenced to 90 days in jail driving under the influence, (2) reckless pended, sentenced to 90 days in jail cal damage, sentenced to 364 days in endangerment, sentenced to 364 days 90 days in jail with 90 suspended, fined with 87 suspended, fined $600, $146 in jail with 334 suspended, fined $500, with 89 suspended, fined $600, $575 in $600, $268 in fees. fees. in jail with 334 suspended, fined $750 fees. $1,290 in fees. on each count, concurrent, $1,520 in • John Ryan Tiede, 63, Winlock, first- • Michael Keith Ryan, 68, Onalaska, • Jeff Scott Gabbert, 49, Winlock, • Michael Wayne Burrow, 20, Centra- degree negligent driving, sentenced to lia, two counts of second-degree recre- fees. unlawful hydraulic project activities, fourth-degree assault, dismissed with • Maribeth Evelyn Secrest, 24, Toledo,90 days in jail with 90 suspended, fined dismissed with prejudice. prejudice. ational fishing, both counts dismissed $600, $254 in fees. with prejudice. third-degree driving while license sus- • Courtney Lee Sahlin, 23, Chehalis, • Christina Marie Harrison, 31, Kelso, pended, fined $600, $386 in fees. • Kurt Scott Vango, 49, Winlock, third- first-degree negligent driving, sen- • Niles Xavier Jones, 35, Toledo, third- driving under the influence, sentenced • Carrie Ann Morton, 39, Cottonwood, degree driving while license suspended, tenced to 90 days in jail with 90 sus- degree driving while license suspended, to 364 days in jail with 360 suspended, Calif., (1) second-degree criminal tres- sentenced to 90 days in jail with 90 sus- pended, fined $600, $146 in fees. dismissed with prejudice. fined $750, $949 in fees. pass, (2) third-degree malicious mischief, pended, fined $600, $386 in fees. • Sean David Leonard, 28, Toledo, • Dane Michael Ekstedt, 24, Winlock, • Albert Alvin Nollette, 64, Packwood, physical damage, sentenced to 90 days • Trudy Dee Barrett, 48, Seattle, vio- third-degree driving while license sus- driving under the influence, sentenced telephone harassment, dismissed with in jail with 73 suspended, fined $600 on lation of protection order, sentence pended, sentenced to 90 days in jail to 364 days in jail with 362 suspended, prejudice. count 1, count 2 dismissed with preju- to 364 days in jail with 347 suspended, with 90 suspended, fined $600, $386 in fined $750, $1,234 in fees. dice, $1,796 in fees. fined $750, $1,996 in fees. • Paul Allen Scott, 48, Yakima, fees. • Daniel Edward Kuntz, 26, Olympia, fourth-degree assault, dismissed with • Michael Aaron Nash, 35, Kent, (1) • Mukesh Kumar, 51, Seattle, issuing • Nikia Dawn Benson, 25, Winlock, (1) second-degree hunting big game, prejudice. possession of marijuana, less than 40 bad bank checks under $750, dismissed third-degree driving while license sus- (2) unlawful hunting on another’s prop- • Jonathan Michael Alcantara, 27, grams, (2) use/ delivery of drug para- with prejudice. pended, dismissed with prejudice. erty, sentenced to 364 days in jail with Vancouver, Wash., third-degree driving phernalia, both counts dismissed with • Michelle Price, 31, Toledo, fourth- 364 suspended, fined $750, $2,043 in while license suspended, sentenced to prejudice. degree assault, sentenced to 364 days fees on count 1, count 2 dismissed with Held Feb. 26 90 days in jail with 90 suspended, fined • Michael Jeffery Smith, 37, Raymond, in jail with 336 suspended, fined $750, prejudice. $600, $486 in fees. • Javier Lopez Barron, 18, Centralia, third-degree driving while license sus- $2,975 in fees. • Kelly Wayne Benfield, 43, Winlock, possession of marijuana, less that 40 pended, sentenced to 90 days in jail • Joseph Andrew Dearinger, 27, Roy, Held Feb. 20 two counts of third-degree driving grams, dismissed with prejudice. with 75 suspended, fined $600, $386 in possession of marijuana, dismissed • Carma R. Carey, 29, Surprise, Ariz., while license suspended, sentenced to • Austen James Lyons, 19, Ethel, use/ fees. with prejudice. Centralia Municipal Court

Continued from Main 10 to 364 days in jail with 363 days sus- ed, fined $800 with $400 suspended, fourth-degree assault, domestic vio- days in jail with 85 days suspended, fined pended, fined $5,000 with $4,362 sus- $200 in fees. lence, sentenced to 364 days in jail with $600 with $300 suspended, $600 in fees. • Andrew L. Mills, 30, Centralia, phys- pended, $3,578 in fees. Held Feb. 26 349 suspended, fined $1,000 with $500 • Rocky L. Reeves, 25, Centralia, (1) suspended, $150 in fees. ical control, sentenced to 364 days in • Teazna Padilla, 18, Centralia, disor- • Ronnie P. Wilson, 26, Centralia, third- possession of marijuana, (2) third-de- jail with 274 days suspended, fined derly conduct, sentenced to 90 days in degree driving while license suspended, • Joshua D. Blume, 32, Rochester, vio- gree driving while license suspended, $5,000 with $4,150 suspended, $5,028 jail with 88 days suspended, fined $600 sentenced to 90 days in jail with 75 days lation of protection order, sentenced to sentenced to 180 days in jail with 179 in fees. with $300 suspended, $100 in fees. 364 days in jail with 363 suspended, fined suspended, fined $1,000 with $500 sus- days suspended, fined $1,025 on count $1,000 with $400 suspended, $50 in fees. • Rachel L. Leighton, 28, Olympia, • Kenneth Vowell, 20, Centralia, reck- pended, $253 in fees. 1, sentenced to 90 days in jail with 90 driving under the influence, sentenced less driving, sentenced to 90 days in jail • Eric A. Meyn, 49, Rochester, disor- days suspended, fined $600 with $300 to 364 days in jail with 154 days sus- • Ronald Jennings, 32, Centralia, with 90 days suspended, fined $800 derly conduct, sentenced to 90 days in suspended on count 2, $253 in fees. pended, fined $5,000 with $3,332 sus- with $400 suspended, $253 in fees. third-degree malicious mischief, do- jail with 90 suspended, fined $800 with mestic violence, sentenced to 364 days • Thad Stelzer, 44, Centralia, making a pended, $8,178 in fees. • Aisha Z. McCollum, 37, Portland, $400 suspended. in jail with 356 days suspended, fined • Zachary S. Gunderson, 31, Centralia, third-degree theft, sentenced to 364 • Kalin E. Maxwell, 21, Centralia, driv- false statement, sentenced to 364 days driving under the influence, sentenced days in jail with 359 days suspended, $600 with $300 suspended, $550 in fees. ing under the influence, sentenced to in jail with 362 days suspended, fined to 364 days in jail with 274 days sus- fined $1,000 with $500 suspended, • Parvin R. Wirt, 64, Mossyrock, viola- 364 days in jail with 363 suspended, $800 with $400 suspended, $250 in fees. pended, fined $5,000 with $4,150 sus- $400 in fees. tion of no contact order, sentenced to fined $5,000 with $4,405 suspended, • Raeann Manners-Bell, 30, Chehalis, pended, $5,028 in fees. • Luke A. Roberlon, 37, Centralia, dis- 364 days in jail with 362 suspended, fined $3,428 in fees. third-degree theft, sentenced to 364 days • Amy D. Carrothers, 40, Rochester, orderly conduct, alford plea, sentenced $500 with $250 suspended, $100 in fees. • Brian M. Hull, 30, Chehalis, second- in jail with 357 days suspended, fined $800 driving under the influence, sentenced to 90 days in jail with 86 days suspend- • Aaron R. Gange, 23, Centralia, degree criminal trespass, sentenced to 90 with $400 suspended, $600 in fees. Calendar: Jazz Group to Close Lewis County Concerts Season; Support Groups Continued from Main 2 Ave., Centralia, (360) 807-0216 2:30 p.m. at Centralia College’s Tickets are available by call- County Courthouse, agenda available Yard, plant, bake, book and house- Corbet Theatre. ing (360) 623-8100 and leaving a at http://goo.gl/agwWM, (360) 740-1120 Crystal Gayle & Lee Greenwood, hold sale, 9 a.m.-3 p.m., Unity of Centra- A group of talented musi- message. Lucky Eagle Casino, tickets start at $40, lia, 800 S. Pearl St., Centralia on sale March 4 cians attending Arizona State Rock concert, Prophets of Addiction, Bingo, doors open 5 p.m., bingo Tuesday, April 30 Twin Mandolins: Jack Dwyer & Tim opening by ANA-KEENA and Unnatural University in 1983 formed a starts 6:30 p.m., Forest Grange, 3397 Bingo, Chehalis Moose Lodge, doors Connell, 8 p.m., Matrix Coffeehouse, Balance, 9 p.m., Hub Bar and Grill, Cen- musical ensemble whose artis- Jackson Highway, Chehalis Chehalis, $10, 740-0492 open at 4:30 p.m., game starts at 6:30 tralia, [email protected] tic focus centered around the “Wait Until Dark,” 2 p.m., Evergreen “Wait Until Dark,” 8 p.m., Evergreen p.m., food available, (360) 736-9030 Libraries musical traditions of early New Playhouse, Centralia, $10, tickets avail- Playhouse, Centralia, $15, tickets avail- Orleans jazz. Now, more than able at Book ‘n’ Brush, Chehalis; Santa Libraries able at Book ‘n’ Brush, Chehalis; Santa Alice’s Tea Party, all ages, 11 a.m., Lucia Coffee and Sterling Bank, Centra- 25 years later, the same core Children’s story time, 11 a.m., Lucia Coffee and Sterling Bank, Centra- crafts, movie, cake, tea party, Tenino lia; and brownpapertickets.com. lia; and brownpapertickets.com. members are still together and Centralia Broken Trail Band, country, 9 p.m.-1 have expanded their musical Organizations a.m., Scatter Creek Grill, Lucky Eagle Ca- palette to include over a half- Monday, April 29 sino, (360) 273-2000, ext. 301 Sunday, April 28 Senior Song Birds, 9:30 a.m., Moun- century of jazz styles from early tain View Baptist Church, (360) 273-3231 “Spiritual Experiences,” 10:30-11:30 New Orleans Dixieland and Burger Night, 5-7:30 p.m., Centralia a.m., Centralia Timberland Library, Jazz Group to Close Eagles, quarter-pound hamburgers, Pool tournament, 1 p.m., Twin Cities sponsored by Eckankar, (360) 943-2957 blues to big band swing and $1.50, other menu items, (360) 736-1146 Senior Center, (360) 748-0061 Hang gliding, Dog Mountain Frost- Lewis County popular standards. Free community dinner, 5:30-7 p.m., Music, 11 a.m., Twin Cities Senior bite Fly-In, east end of Riffe Lake, (253) The Strutters have present- Centralia United Methodist Church, Center, (360) 748-0061 380-9933 or (253) 380-3514 Concerts Season 506 S. Washington Ave., Centralia, (360) ed formal concerts, symphony Support Groups Lewis County ABATE scholarship The Side Street Strutters jazz pops performances and student 736-7311 fundraiser, $10 all-you-can-eat spa- Survivors of sexual assault/abuse, ghetti dinner 5-7 p.m., live auction 7-9 band will be giving the Lewis outreach programs in all 50 Public Agencies 5:30-7 p.m., 125 NW Chehalis Ave., Che- p.m., dance to DJ Crush 9 p.m.-midnight, County Concerts final perfor- states, seven European coun- Lewis County Commission, 10 a.m., halis, sponsored by Human Response Chehalis Moose Lodge, 1400 Grand mance of the season Sunday at tries, Canada and Mexico. BOCC board room, second floor, Lewis Network, (360) 748-6601 The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, April 27, 2013 • Main 12 Nation/World Nation in Brief Boston Suspect Is Moved; FBI Searches Landfill; World in Brief U.S. Economy Picks Death Toll From Up, But Taxes and Cuts Bombers’ Mother on Federal Terror Database Bangladesh Building By Eileen Sullivan and Michael Kunzelman Could Slow Growth The Associated Press Collapse Tops 300 WASHINGTON (AP) — Af- SAVAR, Bangladesh (AP) — ter nearly stalling in late 2012, BOSTON — Boston Mara- With time running out to save the American economy quick- thon bombing suspect Dzhoh- workers still trapped in a collapsed ened its pace early this year de- kar Tsarnaev was moved from garment factory building, rescuers spite deep government cutbacks. a hospital to a federal prison dug through mangled metal and The strongest consumer spend- medical center, while FBI agents concrete Friday and found more ing in two years fueled a 2.5 per- searched for evidence Friday in survivors — but also more corpses cent annual growth rate in the a landfill near the college he was that pushed the death toll past 300. January-March quarter. attending. Wailing, angry relatives The question is: Can it last? Tsarnaev, 19, was taken from fought with police who held Federal spending cuts, higher Beth Israel Deaconess Medical them back from the wrecked, Social Security taxes and cautious Center, where he was recovering eight-story Rana Plaza building, businesses are likely to weigh on from a gunshot wound to the as search-and-rescue operations the economy in coming months. throat and other injuries suf- went on more than two days af- Most economists say they fered during a getaway attempt, ter the structure crumbled. and transferred to the Federal Amid the cries for help and the think growth, as measured by The Associated Press the gross domestic product, is Medical Center Devens, about Musa Sadulayev / smell of decaying bodies, the res- slowing in the April-June quar- 40 miles from Boston, the U.S. The mother of the two Boston bombing suspects, Zubeidat Tsarnaeva, left, speaks cue of 18-year-old Mussamat Anna ter to an annual rate of about 2 Marshals Service said. The facil- at a news conference in Makhachkala, the southern Russian province of Dagestan, came at a high cost: Emergency percent. Many predict growth ity at a former Army base treats on Thursday. At right is her sister-in-law Maryam. crews cut off the garment worker’s will hover around that subpar federal prisoners. mangled right hand to pull her free level for the rest of the year. Also, FBI agents picked from the debris Thursday night. opportunities to thwart the religious militants. Friday’s Commerce Depart- through a landfill near the Uni- “First a machine fell over my versity of Massachusetts Dart- April 15 bombing that killed About six months earlier, the ment report on GDP showed that hand, and I was crushed under mouth, where Tsarnaev was a three people and wounded more FBI investigated mother and son, consumers stepped up spending the debris. ... Then the roof col- sophomore. FBI spokesman Jim than 260. also at Russia’s request, one of at an annual rate of 3.2 percent in lapsed over me,” she told an As- Martin would not say what in- the officials said. The FBI found the January-March quarter — the sociated Press cameraman from vestigators were looking for. TSARNAEV IS CHARGED with join- no ties to terrorism. Previously biggest such jump since the end of a hospital bed Friday. An aerial photo in Friday’s ing with his older brother, now U.S. officials had said only that 2010. Growth was also helped by More than 40 survivors were Boston Globe showed a line of dead, in setting off the shrapnel- the FBI investigated Tamerlan. businesses, which responded to found late Friday evening on some more than 20 investigators, all packed pressure-cooker bombs. the greater demand by rebuilding floors of the Rana Plaza, said fire dressed in white overalls and The brothers are ethnic Chech- IN AN INTERVIEW from Russia, service inspector Shafiqul Is- their stockpiles. And home con- yellow boots, picking over the ens from Russia who came to Tsarnaeva said Friday that she has struction rose further. lam, who searched the building. garbage with shovels or rakes. the United States about a decade never been linked to terrorism. Through holes in the structure, he ago with their parents. Investiga- “It’s all lies and hypocrisy,” she gave them water and juice packs U.S. Seeks Firm U.S. OFFICIALS, meanwhile, said tors have said it appears that the told The Associated Press from to combat dehydration in the sti- that the bombing suspects’ moth- brothers were angry about the U.S. Dagestan. “I’m sick and tired of fling heat and humidity. Evidence of Syrian er had been added to a federal ter- wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. all this nonsense that they make Chemical Weapons Use rorism database about 18 months Two government officials, up about me and my children. before the deadly attack — a dis- speaking on condition of ano- People know me as a regular per- 38 People Die WASHINGTON (AP) — Pro- closure that deepens the mystery nymity because they were not son, and I’ve never been mixed ceeding cautiously, President around the Tsarnaev family and authorized to speak publicly up in any criminal intentions, es- After Fire Quickly Barack Obama insisted on Friday marks the first time American au- about the investigation, said the pecially any linked to terrorism.” Sweeps Through that any use of chemical weapons thorities have acknowledged that CIA had Zubeidat Tsarnaeva’s Tsarnaeva faces shoplifting by Syria would change his “calcu- Zubeidat Tsarnaeva was under in- name added to the terror data- charges in the U.S. over the al- Psychiatric Hospital lus” about U.S. military involve- vestigation before the tragedy. base along with that of her son leged theft of more than $1,624 MOSCOW (AP) — A fire ment in the 2-year-old civil war The news is certain to fuel Tamerlan Tsarnaev after Rus- worth of women’s clothing from swept quickly through a psychiat- — but said too little was known questions about whether the sia contacted the agency in 2011 a Lord & Taylor department ric hospital outside Moscow early about a pair of likely sarin attacks Obama administration missed with concerns that the two were store in Natick, Mass., in 2012. Friday, killing 38 people, most of to order aggressive action now. them in their beds, officials said. The president’s public response The one-story brick-and- to the latest intelligence reflected Fallen Soldier Returns Home wood hospital building housed the lack of agreement in Washing- patients with severe mental dis- ton over whether to use America’s orders, Health Ministry officials military to intervene in the civil said. An emergency ministry war, — and if so, how. But lawmak- official said the fire started in a ers in both parties expressed con- wooden annex and then spread cern that inaction could embolden to the main brick building which Syrian President Bashar Assad and had wooden beams. perhaps other countries including The patients were under sed- North Korea and Iran. atives and most of them did not U.S. officials declared on wake up, Yuri Deshevykh of the Thursday that the Syrian govern- emergency situations ministry ment probably had used chemical told RIA Novosti. weapons twice in March, newly Investigators said 38 people, provocative acts in the civil war including 36 patients and two doc- that has killed more than 70,000 tors, have died. They said a nurse people and displaced hundreds managed to escape and save one of thousands more. The U.S. as- patient, while another patient got sessment followed similar con- out on his own. The emergency clusions from Britain, France, Is- services also posted a list of the pa- rael and Qatar — key allies eager tients indicating they ranged in age for a more aggressive response to from 20 to 76. Gumennaya told Syrian conflict. Russian news agencies that most of Obama, in his first comments the people died in their beds. about the new intelligence disclo- sure, said Friday, “For the Syrian government to utilize chemical At 95, Hitler’s Food weapons on its people crosses a Taster Talks of line that will change my calculus Jose Luis Magana / The Associated Press and how the United States ap- An Army team carries the transfer case containing the remains of Army Capt. Aaron R. Blanchard, of Washington, upon Paranoia, Poison Fears proaches these issues.” arrival at Dover Air Force Base, Del. on Thursday. The Department of Defense announced the death of Blanchard who, For Nazi Leader was supporting Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan. BERLIN (AP) — They were George Jones, Country feasts of sublime asparagus — Superstar Known For laced with fear. And for more than half a century, Margot ‘He Stopped Loving Her Possible 9/11 Plane Landing Gear Part Found in NYC Woelk kept her secret hidden Today,’ Has Died at 81 from the world, even from her By Jake Pearson husband. Then, a few months af- NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — The Associated Press ter her 95th birthday, she revealed When it comes to country music, the truth about her wartime role: George Jones was The Voice. NEW YORK — A rusted Adolf Hitler’s food taster. Other great singers have 5-foot-tall piece of landing gear Woelk, then in her mid- come and gone, but this fact re- believed to be from one of the twenties, spent two and a half mained inviolate until Jones died hijacked planes destroyed in years as one of 15 young women Friday at 81 in a Nashville hospi- the Sept. 11 attacks has been who sampled Hitler’s food to tal after a year of ill health. discovered wedged between a make sure it wasn’t poisoned “Today someone else has be- mosque site and a luxury high- before it was served to the Nazi come the greatest living singer of rise apartment building near the leader in his “Wolf’s Lair,” the traditional country music, but World Trade Center. heavily guarded command cen- there will never be another George The twisted metal part has ter in what is now Poland, where Jones,” said Bobby Braddock, the cables and levers on it and is he spent much of his time in the Country Music Hall of Fame song- about 3 feet wide and 1.5 feet final years of World War II. writer who provided Jones with 29 deep. It includes a clearly visible “He was a vegetarian. He never songs over the decades. “No one in Boeing Co. identification num- ate any meat during the entire time country music has influenced so ber, New York Police Depart- I was there,” Woelk said of the Nazi many other artists.” ment spokesman Paul Browne leader. “And Hitler was so paranoid He did it with that voice. Rich said Friday. that the British would poison him — New York City Police Department / The Associated Press and deep, strong enough to crack “The odds of this being that’s why he had 15 girls taste the A piece of landing gear that authorities believe belongs to one of the airliners that like a whip, but supple enough to wedged between there is amaz- food before he ate it himself.” crashed into the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001, was found wedged be- bring tears. It was so powerful, it ing,” Browne said, adding it was “The food was delicious, only tween a mosque and another building in New York on Friday. made Jones the first thoroughly not surprising that it went un- the best vegetables, asparagus, bell modern country superstar, com- discovered for more than a de- peppers, everything you can imag- plete with the substance abuse cade given the location. “It had at the same buildings, in years the American Airlines plane or ine. And always with a side of rice or problems and rich-and-famous to have fallen just the right way past. the United Airlines plane that pasta,” she recalled. “But this con- celebrity lifestyle that included to make it into that space.” Police detectives and Nation- slammed into the twin towers stant fear — we knew of all those mansions, multiple divorces and Browne said other World al Transportation Safety Board on Sept. 11, 2001, destroying the poisoning rumors and could never — to hear one fellow performer Trade Center wreckage had been investigators will determine towers and killing thousands of enjoy the food. Every day we feared tell it — fistfuls of cocaine. discovered nearby, possibly even whether the equipment is from people. it was going to be our last meal.” The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, April 27, 2013 • Main 13

CH494134cd.ke Main 14  The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, April 27, 2013 from front

Preparations: Hatchery’s $363,000 Budget Generates $9 Million in Revenue Continued from front on thursday, Summers donned and dumped the fish into a sub- situated 1,424 feet above sea- with an estimated 17 million waders and a hard hat and stepped marine-like tank. level. trout and kokanee, including 2.3 minnows in indoor incubators, into the raceway, a 100-foot con- They repeated the process Once there, he backed his catchable trout; 160,000 jumbo are later transferred to outdoor crete trough, which can hold tens until the tank was filled with truck up to the lake and opened trout, which weigh up to 11 raceways and then released into of thousands of fish. about 11,000 pounds of fish and a portal at the back. pounds apiece; 52,000 triploid the wild. Pushing a wide sieve, Sum- water. Mineral residents, gath- trout, which average 1.5 pounds According to Summers, the ered on a nearby dock, apiece; and millions of smaller Mossyrock Hatchery provides mers, 45, walked down the Once behind the wheel, Tro- not only recreational benefits raceway, and, at the far end, cor- che, 47, turned on an aeration watched as 3,000 fish shot trout that were stocked last year but also financial benefits. A ralled about 3,500 fish. system that provides oxygen to from the tank and swam away that have grown to catchable 2008 survey, he said, indicated Troche, standing on a plat- the captive fish. into the lake. size. the hatchery’s $363,000 operat- form above the raceway, handed “Because they’re so stressed Approximately 700 of the ing budget generated a $9 mil- down a large mesh basket. out,” Troche said, “their gills fish and wiLdLife crews state’s 7,000 lakes, ponds and lion economic impact, includ- Summers scooped up hun- will be heaving and they’ll run throughout Western Washing- reservoirs are stocked by the de- ing fishing licenses and taxes dreds of fish. Troche raised the out of air pretty quick.” ton this year have stocked lakes partment. collected on tackle, poles and basket, attached to a long metal In his 10-gear truck, Troche gas. arm, swung it toward his truck made the drive to Mineral Lake, mossyrock: All-Day Kindergarten a Priority Continued from front fer the program for next year but funding for it remains unclear. the distriCt has tapped into The House budget includes mossyroCk sChooL the fund balance, a safety ac- funding for Mossyrock’s all-day distriCt student count used for unforeseen, one- kindergarten but the Senate pro- enroLLment time expenses, to make the over- posal does not. all budget work for the past four Without state money, the October 2008 — 635 years without reducing staff. But, district has the option of using May 2009 — 624 Ernest said, it is not appropriate other funding for maintenance, October 2009 — 612 for the district to continue to do supplies and operating costs or May 2010 — 583 so. local levy dollars to support the October 2010 — 586 “Just as it is not appropriate program. May 2011 - 588 for individuals to consistently “All-day kindergarten is a October 2011 — 579 May 2012 — 560 use their savings account for priority for us, and we will do groceries or rent or other ongo- what we can to make this work,” Source: Washington State ing expenses,” Ernest wrote. “A Ernest wrote. “We don’t want Office of Superintendent of Pub- CH496360cz.cg fund balance is needed for fi- our little ones to be playing the lic Instruction nancial health for one-time un- game of catch up from the be- foreseen circumstances — not ginning of their educational ex- for ongoing expenses.” perience.” Becky Ecklund, the district’s “I wish I had a crystal ball to business manager, said she sequestration Cuts from the be able to accurately predict next doesn’t know how much money the federal government have year and years beyond,” Ernest the district needs to balance its also affected Mossyrock’s bot- wrote. “But since I don’t, we will budget because the Legislature tom line. The district decided have to protect the district and has yet to provide revenues. to pay off a $250,000 roofing budget conservatively.” bond 2 ½ years before it is due to ••• the fate of aLL-day kindergar- avoid paying $13,350 annually Amy Nile: (360) 807-8235 ten in Mossyrock also awaits a in interest that the federal gov- twitter.com/AmyNileReports decision from Olympia. ernment had been paying before www.facebook.com/ The district would like to of- the cuts. AmyNileTheChronicle flood: Outdated Flood Maps Part of Problem Continued from front “We had 40 businessmen sit- ting there,” Nolan said about a attend the hearing your clients,” Butler said. presentation made to the Master The Lewis County Planning Outdated maps — elevation Builders by Lewis County Com- Commission will hold a public standards currently are based munity Development. “After an hearing on flood damage on flood insurance maps from hour, we were still trying to fig- reduction at 6:30 p.m., May 14, CH496162cz.ke 1981 or the 1996 flood — are ure out what we wanted to do.” at White Pass High School in the root of the problem. Clients “There’s concern about addi- Randle tend to rely heavily on the maps; tional cost to homeowners,” An- surveyors and contractors often gela White, the Master Builders have trouble explaining just how government affairs director, said community member who has flawed they are. in an interview earlier this week. mixed feelings — particularly “I tell them, don’t hide from “But there’s an understanding about the impending changes to this. Protect yourself,” Butler that building homes higher is FEMA’s maps. th said. “We live in a very volatile better than having homes flood. On The Chronicle’s Face- basin.” Most contractors want to be re- book page, reader Aric Catron, 6 Annual Spring The freeboard standard, a garded as reputable and will do of Chehalis, said he’s sympa- safety regulation expressed in what’s best for the consumer.” thetic to the challenges FEMA Experience feet above a flood level that is re- faces. Chehalis Valley quired on new construction, has Lewis County has Long had “I’d say they are doing the 6 of become a dividing issue. The a love-hate relationship with best they can to meet their man- Washington’s current standard is a 1-foot free- FEMA. Wine Tour date with what resources they board above 1996 flood levels. No one knows this better Premium have,” Catron said in a post, “es- Saturday, May 4th 11-7 pm Up for debate — and currently than Bob Munyan, whose Cen- Wineries before the planning commis- tralia home was repaired by pecially when you consider the Sunday, May 5th 11-6 pm sheer physical size of their area sion for consideration — is an FEMA following the 1996 flood. • Agate Creek Cellars • Bateaux Cellars increase to a 3-foot freeboard. In the aftermath of the flood, of responsibility.” Maintaining a 1-foot free- Munyan recalled, he submitted Tom Hughes, however, said • Birchield Winery • Heymann Whinery board could, in the future, be his claim as well as three re- he blames both the federal agen- • Scatter Creek Winery particularly detrimental to the Passport quired forms. He did not receive cy and the citizens who have • Wells’ Winery Twin Cities. To truly understand a response. A month passed, and made imprudent decisions. $25 the benefits of 3 feet, the Plan- everybody on Southgate Drive “Something is … wrong with ning Commission must consider had received a check — except FEMA,” Hughes said in a post. 6 Chehalis Valley Wineries will open impending FEMA changes. for Munyan. “They are broke paying for things their doors for this 2-day event. The agency’s revised flood The retired cop began call- that people in most cases were maps are expected to expand ing people. He worked his way too cheap or lazy to prepare for. the floodway and the floodplain up the line of command, but was The increase in flood insurance A variety of wines and hors d’oevres significantly. Down the road, all always told the same thing: You shows the reality of the cost that are available for your enjoyment. of Chehalis and Centralia could need to fill out those forms. A the taxpayer has subsidized for be made floodway, a designa- local legislator helped him get Sponsor: years.” tion that prohibits rebuilding if a in touch with one of FEMA’s home is damaged more than 50 top directors. The director told Vickie Rohr, a Providence CH495651sl.db percent in a flood. Munyan he needed to fill out his Hospital employee, put it more “This stuff that’s coming, this forms. bluntly: “FEMA — scary and For more info visit www.chehalisvalleywinetour.com is real,” Butler said. “Don’t kid That was it. not really helpful.” yourselves.” “I told him that if I didn’t get Butler presented his testi- my check, my daughters would r T mony during a Planning Com- be crying on cue in front of the ala Fo he Ar mission public hearing on flood A G ts” news cameras, I’d bring out my “ rating 30 Ye damage prevention. shadow box of medals and tell Celeb ars Scott Nolan, of MDK Con- them about my time in the Navy. struction Inc., also addressed It wasn’t going to be pretty,” Mu- We Invite You To Our Anniversary! the commission on Tuesday. nyan recalled. Chehalis Ballet Center Southwest Washington Dance Center Nolan, who is the vice presi- Within a few days, a check 1982 - 1995 1995 - 2013 dent of the Olympia Master and the “most beautiful letter of Sunday, May 5th 2013 Builders, said local builders are apology” arrived on Munyan’s Corbet Theatre, Centralia College struggling to understand and door, he said. 5:00 pm reach a consensus on the issue. Munyan is not the only Champagne or Sparkling Cider & hors d’oerves Silent Auction and Rafle 6:30 pm GALA Performance *Proceeds from this Gala Beneit Have an Corbet Theatre Enhancements SWDC Scholarship Fund The Gala performance will include the SWDC Dance Ensemble, iPad? local entertainers Chris Guenther, Robin Chadwick & Lynn Lewis, Shawn Peters & Rick Stockdale, the Adna High School Jazz & CH495483bw.cg Percussion bands and the Centralia College Art Department. TICKETS: INFORMATION: $25.00 360.748.4789 app.chronline.com $20.00 Seniors The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, April 27, 2013 • Main 15

Columns, Celebrations, Voices Community Conversations

Voice of the People Births Engagements • JEnnifER anD TREVoR WilliaMS, Woodinville, twin girls, Rian Mar- ta Williams, 3 pounds, 8 ounces, and Ellie Ann Williams, 3 pounds, Tarin Bond and What articles would you like 7 ounces, April 5, Evergreen Hospital, Kirkland. Grandparents are Tyson Drevniak Gary and Kirsten Klein, Chehalis, and Roy and Leslie Williams, to see in the newspaper? Woodinville. • lacEy SEllERS anD chRiSTian RoSBach, Rochester, a boy, Paxton James Rosbach, April 10, Providence St. Peter Hospital, Olympia. Grandparents are Bette-Jo and David Garay, Tumwater; Patti Sellars, Lacey; and Joe and Sue Rosbach, Chehalis. Great-grandparents are Betty Schraeder, Centralia; Betty Taylor, Cornelius, Ore.; and Carol McElwee, Tacoma. • KRiSTEan RuDDEll, Centralia, a girl, Kayden Marie Ruddell, April 12, 6 pounds, 10 ounces, Providence Centralia Hospital. Grandpar- ents are Cindi and Chuck Nelson, Centralia. Great-grandparents are Carroll and Bill Woody, Centralia, and Greg and Bonnie Ruddell, Rochester. • JESSica GooDEll anD ZachaRy lonEy, Centralia, a girl, Hallie Lynn Loney, April 16, 7 pounds, 9 ounces, Providence Centralia Hospital. Grandparents are Amy Hansen, Robin Bennett and JT. Loney, all of Tyson Drevniak and Tarin Bond “Good news.” “I know what kind of Centralia. Great-grandparents are Melody Taylor and Shirley Ben- nett, both of Centralia. Tarin Bond and Tyson Drev- Ron Smith stories you have. I • Tiffani WhiTE anD TylER fEWKES, Olympia, a girl, Harper Addison niak, Winlock, have announced Toledo, retired military and state don’t think there’s Fewkes, April 16, 6 pounds, 12 ounces, Providence Centralia Hos- plans to be married Saturday, employee pital. Grandparents are Chris White, Olympia, and Linda White, May 11, at The Aerie ballroom, anything missing.” Rochester. Great-grandparents are Kris Taylor, Bucoda, and Mark Centralia. Fewkes, Prosser. Bond is a 2008 graduate of Steve Klump • MEliSSa ShuMaKER anD STEVEn JonES, Centralia, a boy, Micky Ste- Adna High School and 2012 Toledo, pastor ven Jones, April 16, 8 pounds, 14 ounces, Providence Centralia Hos- graduate of Tacoma Community pital. Grandparents are Sharon Jones, Centralia, and the late Kim College. She is a radiology tech- Jones, Curtis Scott, Vancouver, Wash., and Sandra Scott, Mineral. nician at Providence Centralia • ManDi DaViS-cRaMER anD chaD TucKER, Chehalis, a girl, Camille Hospital. Her parents are Timo- Georgia Tucker, April 16, 6 pounds, 2 ounces, Providence Centra- thy Bond, and Wendie and Casey lia Hospital. Grandparents are Della Davis, Danny and Chris Davis, Dotson, all of Adna. and Linda and Roger Rose, all of Chehalis. Great-grandparents are Drevniak is a 2005 graduate Jean Swann, Bellevue, and Beverly Caswell, Richland, Mo. of Pe Ell High School and 2008 • anTonia aDaMS anD MichaEl BiVinS, Chehalis, a boy, Anthony graduate of Centralia College. James Bivins, April 17, 7 pounds, 12 ounces, Providence Centralia He is a merchandiser for L&E Hospital. Grandparents are James and Jeanne Adams, Chehalis; Lin- Bottling, Olympia. His parents da Goolsby, Centralia; and Clinton Bivins, Centralia. are Tony and Stacey Drevniak, Pe Ell. • aShlEy SanDERS anD ZanE SMiTh, Chehalis, a boy, Mason Thomas Smith, April 17, 9 pounds, 2 ounces, Providence Centralia Hospital. To submit your engagements, e- Grandparents are Tamera and Richard Sanders, Burns, Ore., and mail [email protected] or send Robert Smith, Centralia. Great-grandparents are Judy and Royce mail to Engagements, The Chroni- “I like having local “I’d like to see Walls, Chehalis; Eunice Jacobson, Centralia; and the late Robert Ja- cle, 321 N. Pearl St., Centralia, WA news about local more stories about cobson. Great-great-grandmother is Ethel Turtle, Chehalis. 98531. • JESSica anD EMilio colin, Centralia, a boy, Jesus Emanuel Gabriel people and what Vision Toledo and Perete Colin, April 18, 7 pounds, 5 ounces, Providence Centralia Hospital. Grandparents are Jesus Colima, Mexico; Rovilla Howard, they’re doing. I like community groups.” Weiser, Idaho; Fidel Perete, Mexico state, Mexico; and Sylvia Colin, Mexico state, Mexico. hearing about people Jake Morgan • Toledo, writer JoSEPhinE DaViS anD JoSayh REiSS-coMBS, Winlock, a girl, Kimber- who are giving back lee Loraina Annilece Reiss-Combs, April 20, 8 pounds, 2 ounces, Providence Centralia Hospital. Grandparents are Deanna and Lee to their community.” Stahl, Winlock; Amy and Mark Letzkus, Chehalis; and Matt Reiss Di Morgan and Tawny Wright, Chehalis. Great-grandparents are Wilma and Toledo, co-owner Morgan Arts Centre Delvis Combs, Centralia, and Sharon and C.H. Romine, Sitka, Alas- ka. 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302 2nd Street • Morton 360-496-5999 VAN CLEVE FORD Toll Free: 1-877-619-2831 www.vancleveford.com Main 16 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, April 27, 2013 NORTHWEST The State’s Unusual Crusader for Stiffer DUI Laws PERSONAL HISTORY: Face of effort to legalize recreational pot. While many supported that I-502 sponsor Alison Hol- initiative, some activists thought an Effort to Strengthen comb, who met Goodman it was poorly thought out and DUI Laws Sought to through the Drug Policy Project, harmful to medical-marijuana said she is impressed by his abil- patients because of strict provi- Change Drug Laws ity to bring people together and sions related to driving while By Brian M. Rosenthal tackle complicated issues. high. Goodman said he learned Doug Hiatt, an attorney who The Seattle Times that at the Drug Policy Project represents medical-marijuana OLYMPIA — State Rep. and has used it since joining the patients, accused Goodman of Roger Goodman admits the two House in 2007 after winning a selling out and pandering to the biggest crusades of his political race for an open seat. public. career appear a bit contradictory. His first year in office, he More recently, Republicans Goodman spent the six years formed the impaired driver have been trying to discredit before joining the Legislature as working group, a collection of Goodman with allegations, the director of an organization prosecutors, judges, defense at- made by his estranged wife as seeking to change drug laws, in- torneys, ignition-interlock com- part of a still-pending divorce, cluding by the state regulation of panies, civil libertarians and that Goodman himself repeat- legal marijuana. more. edly drove while high on mari- He’s spent the six years since The group has written sev- juana with their children in the as the leader of an informal eral bills, including a measure car. working group dedicated to passed last year that doubled Goodman, while acknowl- stiffening drunken-driving laws. the prison sentence for vehicular edging that he smoked pot in “Some people have asked me homicide while intoxicated. the past, vehemently denied he about that,” the Kirkland Dem- Goodman represents the has ever driven while stoned, ocrat said from the wings of the Eastside’s 45th District, which saying it would be against every- House floor recently. “What I he describes as a swing district thing he has worked for in the have to explain is that it’s actu- that is trending liberal. Legislature. ally about effective regulation of Steve Ringman / The Seattle Times A progressive liberal, he has Fellow lawmakers noted intoxicants, whatever it is.” State Rep. Roger Goodman leads a working group on impaired driving. survived three close re-election Goodman has worked on the DUI laws have been ineffec- races, including a 2010 cam- DUI issue for several years — tive because they haven’t been Colleagues described Good- 1998 with his wife, a flight atten- paign in which he trailed on longer than some who are now tough enough, Goodman ex- man as thoughtful and produc- dant he met on an airplane. election night before winning by engaging amid public pressure. plained, while marijuana laws tive. He developed his interest in 1,500 votes. Earlier this year, a bill he have been ineffective because His seatmate, state Rep. Lar- criminal justice after getting a After that election, he an- sponsored to expand DUI they’ve been too tough, enabling ry Springer, called him a “de- job that year as executive direc- nounced a 2012 campaign for courts and restrict deferred sen- a black market to take control. voted policy wonk” and a “bill tor of the Washington State Sen- Congress in the redrawn 1st tencing cleared his committee, “It’s about bringing both to machine.” tencing Guidelines Commission. District being vacated by then- but died on the House floor. the center,” he said. Goodman sponsored 29 bills “I saw we were locking up congressman Inslee. Two weeks later, a repeat Goodman, a 52-year-old this year, about domestic vio- crack addicts for 10 years and let Goodman raised more than drunken driver slammed into a lawyer who acknowledges lence, gun control, scrap-metal child molesters out after a year,” $200,000, including tens of family crossing a street in Seat- smoking pot as recently as last theft and other issues. Five have Goodman said. “It was like, thousands from medical-mar- tle, killing two and injuring two fall and who received more than made it to the governor’s desk we’ve got to reshape our priori- ijuana dispensary owners and others. In the wake of that and $40,000 in contributions from for signature. ties.” national drug-policy groups. another fatal crash involving an the marijuana community over Goodman, who grew up in Goodman moved to the But he dropped out of the accused drunken driver, Inslee the past two years, is a major Rhode Island, said he knew as a King County Bar Association’s race in April 2012, saying he and other lawmakers started a player in one of the state’s big- teenager he wanted to be a poli- Drug Policy Project as director could not raise the cash to com- major push for action. gest anti-DUI pushes in years. tician. in 2001, working with groups pete in the crowded primary. The template? Goodman’s As the leader of the im- The ambitious student across the state to push what Democrat Suzan DelBene original bill, with additional paired-driving working group worked on the unsuccessful re- he called “more effective” drug eventually won the seat, while provisions to stiffen penalties and chairman of the House election campaign of President policy. Goodman won re-election to and expand the use of ignition- Public Safety Committee, which Carter and the equally unsuc- The group advocated for bet- the state House. interlock devices, which prevent oversees DUI policy, Goodman cessful presidential campaigns ter drug -abuse prevention and Political opponents have of- a car from starting if the driver is the public face of a proposed of Democrats Gary Hart and addiction-treatment programs, ten sought to use Goodman’s is drunk. crackdown organized by Gov. Mike Dukakis. and a reduction in criminal drug-policy views against him, The proposal’s fate remains Jay Inslee. He earned three degrees, penalties for drug offenses. but he said “it always backfires” uncertain as the Sunday ad- Not bad for someone who including a law degree from In 2005, it issued a resolution because “people have seen the journment date for the regular studied environmental law and George Washington University. calling for “the establishment of injustice and waste of the ‘War legislative session nears. But says he chose to focus on crimi- He bounced between several a state-level system of regulatory on Drugs.’ ” Goodman said he’s happy the is- nal justice issues only after real- jobs on Capitol Hill and served control” of some drugs. His standing in some parts sue is getting attention. izing there were already enough as chief of staff to former U.S. Goodman credits that with of the marijuana community “This is about life and death,” environmentalists in the state Rep. Rick Boucher of Virginia laying the groundwork for Ini- did take a hit, however, when he he said. “This is the most impor- House. before moving to Kirkland in tiative 502, last year’s successful endorsed Initiative 502. tant thing we can do.” CH495072bw.ke The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, April 27, 2013 • Sports 1

Sports editor: Aaron VanTuyl Tiger Booters Fall, 2-1, Phone number: 807-8229 / Sports 5 Sports e-mail: [email protected] to Aberdeen College Softball Knutz Slugs Three Homers as Centralia Sweeps Highline FIRST PLACE: Freshman with six RBIs, while teammate in the NWAACC, and the seven Katie Vanderpool was also 3 for homers she's hit in West Divi- Drives in 9 Runs in 9-4, 4. sion games leads the conference. 11-3 West Division Wins Hailey Givens and Krysta Maddi Klingberg hit a grand Anderson each added two hits slam in the Blazers' 5-run third Over Thunderbirds for the Blazers in the opener. inning. By The Chronicle Kalynn Randt went all seven Vanderpool, Givens and An- innings in the pitching circle, derson each added two hits, with Janice Knutz launched three holding the Thunderbirds to Vanderpool driving in 2 runs. home runs — including a grand seven hits with five . Givens allowed seven hits to slam — and Centralia swept Toledo product Brianna Vo- get the win in the second game, Highline, 9-4 and 11-3, on Fri- taw, playing for Highline, went 1 which ended after five innings day in NWAACC West Division for 3 in the opener. due to the 8-run mercy rule. softball action at Fort Borst Park. Knutz went 2 for 2 in the Centralia (9-11, 7-1 league) Knutz hit her 4-run shot in nightcap, hitting a 2-run homer will host South Puget Sound for the first inning of the opener, in the fourth inning and driving a doubleheader today. The Blaz- and knocked a 2-run shot in in 3 runs. The freshman from ers currently hold a one-game Brandon Hansen / [email protected] the third inning. She finished Rochester has hit nine home lead over Grays Harbor for first Centralia College’s Janice Knutz connects for one of her three home runs during a the first game 3 for 4 at the plate runs this season, which is third place in the West Division. sweep of Highline Friday in Centralia. 2A Baseball 2A Baseball W.F. West Repeats as EvCo Champs By The Chronicle ABERDEEN — W.F. West wrapped up the Evergreen 2A Conference baseball champion- ship for the second season in a row with a tight 2-1 win over the Bobcats here Friday. W.F. West entered the game with a 14-2 league record and had split its prior two games with Aberdeen. The Bearcats will now advance to the District 4 2A Baseball Tournament as the top seed, and host an opening-round game on Tuesday, May 7, against the No. 5 team from the EvCo — which will be either Black Hills or Capital. Brandon Hansen / [email protected] Brady Calkins hit a two-out Centralia’s Michael Stuart sends the ball into play during Evergreen 2A Conference play Friday against Capital at Ed Wheeler Field. RBI single in the first inning, and Elijah Johnson repeated the play in the second inning to produce what wound up being just enough run support for W.F. Tigers Fall Short on Senior Night West starter Keylen Steen. Steen pitched into the sixth, allowing a single run and work- CAPITAL OFFENSE: Cougars ing out of bases-loaded jams in Jump Out to an Early the second and third. Lead in 7-4 Win Over please see BEARCATS, page S5 Centralia By Aaron VanTuyl 2A Softball [email protected] The Tigers' Senior Night Graham Pitches was a big swing away from be- ing one to remember. Bearcats Past That big swing, though, Aberdeen didn't quite materialize. Capital Alex Costa By The Chronicle came on with two outs and the W.F. West pulled out a low- bases loaded in the bottom of scoring 3-2 Evergreen 2A Con- the seventh inning and struck ference victory over Aberdeen out the final batter of the game, on Friday in Chehalis, thanks to giving the Cougars a 7-4 Ever- some solid pitching by Ali Gra- green 2A Conference win at Ed ham and impressive hitting by Wheeler Field. the Reynolds sisters. The night was also a celebra- Brandon Hansen / “The story of the game was tion of the Tigers' 1993 State 3A [email protected] Ali’s pitching,” W.F. West coach championship team, which beat Former Centralia head baseball coach Randy Elam (far right) poses with members of the 1993 State 3A champion Tiger Mike Keen said. “She did a fan- Shoreline 4-0 in the title game. baseball team at Ed Wheeler Field on Friday, prior to Centralia’s Senior Night matchup against Capital. Elam threw out the tastic job of pitching today and The majority of the 1993 team irst pitch at the game. catcher Caitlin Reynolds did a was on hand and introduced, great job calling the game.” prior to the game, by former gars. Capital opened the game fun night — for the seniors, and "It seemed like they got a Graham went all seven in- coach Randy Elam. One player with 3 runs, highlighted by bringing the 1993 team back. little energy. As I told them, I'm nings, holding Aberdeen to three not present, however, was No. 5 a 2-run triple from Cameron We didn't get out ready to play not going to quit," Ashmore hits. Meanwhile, at the plate, hitter Lyle Overbay — who hit a Monda, who then scored on and fell behind." said. "We're going to keep fight- Caitlin Reynolds was 2 for 3 and triple and drove in a run for the a misplayed ground ball. The Ashmore was ejected follow- ing, and we're going to right the older sister Marissa Reynolds on Friday Cougars added a run in the ing a discussion with the home- ship." was 2 for 2. during a 6-4 win over Toronto. fourth to lead 4-0. plate umpire in the fourth in- Brandon Conradi doubled Aberdeen took the early lead "Sorry I couldn't be there," "Our start was not good. We ning, when a bunt down the to lead off the fifth and scored in the third inning by plating a Overbay said in a recorded mes- don't make excuses," Centralia third-base line was ruled fair on a triple from Joel Lantau, run, but the Bearcats answered sage for his old teammates and coach Rex Ashmore — an as- after pitcher Derek Putman had who then came in on a sacrifice back with a score of their own in the crowd. "My boss wouldn't sistant coach on the 1993 team picked the ball up. fly from Michael Stuart. Capi- the fourth to make it 1-1. give me the day off." — said. "It should have been a At that point the Tigers, hit- tal answered with 2 in the top The late starting time, how- great night for Centralia base- less through the first four in- please see SOFTBALL, page S5 ever, didn't slow down the Cou- ball, and it should have been a nings, woke up offensively. please see TIGERS, page S7

Got It The Final Word Centralia Col- lege catcher Thunder’s Westbrook Out, Needs Knee Surgery Maddi TV’s Best Bet OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — All-Star have an accurate timeline for his return Klingberg tracks down a point guard Russell Westbrook will have until after the procedure was done. No LA Angels at Seattle ly ball during surgery to repair cartilage in his right one would rule out Westbrook’s possible a sweep of knee and be out indefinitely, dealing a 6:10 p.m. return if Oklahoma City keeps advancing Highline on harsh blow to the Oklahoma City Thun- ROOT Friday at Fort in the playoffs, and All-Star teammate der’s championship chances. Borst Park. General manager Sam Presti said Fri- Kevin Durant only said his teammates day that the Thunder had not yet sched- “hope” Westbrook can play again this Brandon Hansen / [email protected] uled Westbrook’s surgery and would not postseason. Sports 2  The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, April 27, 2013 SPORTS

NFL Te’o Time in San Diego; Geno Smith Goes to Jets on Day 2 of NFL Draft NEW YORK (AP) — Manti gamble on him. in the Sun Belt Conference and "He impressed me so much After no running backs were Te'o and Geno Smith provided "We did a lot of work on Te'o really solidified his stock with in my office one on one, know- selected in the first round, five the sizzle previously missing and I've seen him for a number an excellent performance in the ing at this point in time what he were taken in the second. The from the NFL draft. of years," first-year general man- Senior Bowl. needs to do in his life," Cardinals number of linemen dropped to Te'o is headed to San Diego, ager Tom Telesco said. "He loves "He's got a passion for the first-year coach Bruce Arians five. Smith is a Jet, and Radio City football. He's passionate about it. game," coach Gus Bradley said. said. "I was really taken aback The presumed top-rated Music Hall shook with the kind He loves to practice. He loves to "He is very animated. He just en- a little bit. He knows what his running back, Eddie Lacy of of noise usually heard in stadi- play." joys it. He loves to play the game. problems are, he knows what he Alabama, went with the next- ums when they were selected. Two officials, each with a I think he's going to add to what has done to himself, but he also to-last selection of the round, to The theater rocked with two different team, said their clubs we have here and the attitude knows that someone will give Green Bay. picks within minutes of each passed on Te'o in the first round that we're looking for." him a chance, that he knows NCAA record-setting RB other Friday night. partly because of his off-field Arizona added some spice what he needs to make sure he Montee Ball of Wisconsin was Te'o, the Notre Dame All- issues. The men, speaking on to the third round by selecting succeeds." chosen by Denver. America linebacker, was chosen condition of anonymity because former LSU cornerback-kick Other notable second-round Tampa Bay's first pick this sixth in the second round by the team draft strategy is confiden- returner Tyrann Mathieu. The picks Friday were Tennessee year was defensive back John- Chargers, drawing a loud roar tial, said the decision was not Honey Badger was a 2011 Heis- wide receiver Justin Hunter by than Banks of Mississippi State from the fans. One spot later, just because of a disappointing man Trophy finalist that LSU the Titans, who traded up with at No. 43 overall. Washington, the Jets took the West Virginia combine performance or the quarterback, drawing a raucous linebacker's poor performance dismissed from the team last San Francisco; Stanford All- which traded it first-rounder reaction of cheers and boos. in the national title game. August for failing a drug test. He America tight end Zach Ertz by last year to draft Robert Griffin The big names had taken Te'o was the third linebacker was arrested in late October af- Philadelphia; and North Caro- III, went for defensive back Da- over from the bulk and beef of chosen in this draft. ter police said they found mari- lina's Gio Bernard, the first run- vid Amerson of North Carolina opening night, when 18 linemen "It's a perfect scenario. My juana at Mathieu's apartment. ning back chosen, by Cincinnati. State at No. 51. went in the first round. parents can come and watch, I N Te'o, who led the Fighting can go home, it's San Diego," OW OPEN Irish to the national champion- said Te'o, a native of Hawaii. ship game, was projected as a "We're all excited. I can't be any Centralia first-rounder last year. But his happier." poor performance in a rout at With the very next pick, the Physical Therapy the hands of Alabama, some Jets sent their QB situation spi- slow 40-yard dash times, and raling into further chaos. They a tabloid-ready hoax involving already have Mark Sanchez, • a fake girlfriend that became a who struggled last season but Newly Renovated,Spacious and Convenient national soap opera dropped his was brought back in great part Location with Easy Access stock. because of a prohibitive contract. • "I did expect to go in the first They still have Tim Tebow, who Locally Owned and Operated round," Te'o said. "But things almost certainly soon will be • Same Day/Next Day Appointments happened and all it did was give cut. They signed David Garrard, me more motivation." who hasn't played in the NFL • Flexible Scheduling When former Chargers since 2010. • Hours of Operation: defensive back Jim Hill was And now there is Smith, who Preferred Providers With All Major handed the card to make the an- waited futilely throughout the Insurance Plans Monday – Thursday: 7:00am-6:30pm nouncement by Commissioner first round, returned to the the- Friday: 8:00am-6:30pm Roger Goodell, he was told, ater Friday and was rewarded. Physical Therapists: "You're going to get a big cheer "It's extremely relieving. I when you announce this pick." withstood the test of time," he It was more a mix of surprise said. "It felt like forever in there." and recognition of the most If Smith thought that was talked-about player in the draft tough, wait until he enters the finally finding a landing spot at cauldron overseen by Jets coach No. 38 overall. Rex Ryan, where every move by N The Chargers traded up every QB on the roster is tab- with Arizona to grab Te'o, the loid-Internet fodder for days. Heisman Trophy runner-up. "I'm a competitor and I'm Te'o ran a 4.82-second 40-yard going to accept my role on the dash at the NFL combine, slow team, whatever is handed to Erin Buono, DPT Jason Buono, DPT, ATC for a linebacker. He did better me," Smith said, "but my job is at Notre Dame's pro day, but to compete day in and day out." NFL teams already had plenty Safety Johnathan Cyprien 360.736.5273 | www.centraliapt.com of football reasons to doubt his of Florida International was 1 1 1 8 V worthiness as a first-round pick. the first selection of the second iew Ave, Centralia, WA 98531 San Diego was willing to round. Cyprien was a standout CH495877sl.cg Mother’s Day Is Right Around The Corner On May 12th! Give your mother or grandmother the gift of local news! 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360-807-8203 or 360-736-3311! CH495207ac.ke • Sports 3 SPORTS The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, April 27, 2013

Thursday’s 2B Baseball Mossyrock Wins Third- Straight C2BL Title By The Chronicle MOSSYROCK — The Vikings sealed their third- straight Central 2B League championship here on Thursday, but the Trojans made them work for it. John Pomeroy pitched a complete-game no-hitter in Mossyrock’s 2-0 win in Game 1, and the Vikings held off Pe Ell for a 4-3 win in the nightcap. “Pe Ell played tough. They made really good plays, and in crucial situa- tions, where if one hit falls or one mistake’s made we break the game wide open,” Mossyrock coach Cole

Brandon Hansen / [email protected] Kanyer said. “They were Adna’s Marcus Hampton makes contact with the ball during Central 2B League baseball action against Napavine Thursday on the Pirates’ home ield. fundamental all day long and prevented that from happening.” The Trojans, however, Adna Sweeps Napavine, Moves Into Second had no answer to Pomeroy, the Oregon State Universi- By The Chronicle ty-bound right-hander. The senior struck out 16 and ADNA — The bats were Central 2B League Baseball Standings walked five. working overtime and, luckily “He was good. He was for Adna, the hits fell in the Pi- Team Record really, really tough today,” rates' favor as they picked up a Mossyrock 11-1 Pomeroy said. “He won us big doubleheader sweep of Cen- Adna 7-5 the game.” tral 2B League foe Napavine by Morton-WP 7-5 Pomeroy drove home scores of 12-4 and 10-3 here on Napavine 6-6 Thursday. Wahkiakum 5-7 Cody Shriver in the first It was the first time Adna Toutle Lake 5-7 inning with a sacrifice had swept a doubleheader since Onalaska 4-8 fly. Shriver went 2 for 4 in its first twinbill of the season — Pe Ell 3-9 the game, and Lucas Allen against Morton-White Pass — scored the Vikings’ second and the wins moved them into Tuesday’s Games run in the fifth inning on second place. (3 p.m. start; doubleheaders) an error. "It was two big wins for us Mossyrock at Adna The Trojans managed especially because we went so Pe Ell at Napavine six hits in a 4-3 loss in Morton-WP at Onalaska Game 2, with Austin Speck long in doubleheaders with no Toutle Lake at Wahkiakum sweeps," Adna coach Bryan going 3 for 3 with a triple. Zurfluh said. "I was excited for “That kid blew us up the kids and with (upcoming) Loggers Split at Toutle Lake at the plate today,” Kanyer Mossyrock and Napavine being said. the top two teams in the league TOUTLE LAKE — Onalas- Bryce Carlson went 2 could have easily dropped down ka blew past Toutle Lake in an for 2, and Pomeroy had two to sixth place." 8-3 win in Game 1, but a few er- hits with an RBI double in Napavine and Adna com- rors hurt the Loggers in a 12-8 the third inning. bined for 42 hits on the after- loss to wrap up a Central 2B The Vikings have a noon. In the first game, Bren- League baseball doubleheader four-game lead over the rest den Webster went 3 for 4 with a here Thursday. of the Central 2B League double to help lead the Pirates to "The first game was a re- with only a doubleheader a 12-4 win. ally good baseball game," Logger at Adna remaining on the Adna jumped out to a 4-1 coach Kyle Smarciarz said. "We schedule. The league title lead after one and that's how it had a strong pitching game as was nice, Kanyer pointed would stay until the fifth, when well as a good hitting game." out, but the team has higher the Pirates added 2 runs to Travis McMillion had one of goals for the rest of the sea- make it 6-1. Napavine would his best outings of the year, Sma- son. “You can’t minimize a answer back with 3 runs in the ciarz pointed out, walking just league championship. It’s final two frames but the Pirates two batters and allowing seven would match that with six runs still a huge accomplish- Brandon Hansen / [email protected] hits to get the win. of their own. Mike Smith was 2 ment,” he said, “but we’re for 4 for Adna. Adna’s Mike Smith tries to turn the double play over Napavine’s Jensen Lindsay "He was exceptional throw- looking for more than a Napavine got a 3 for 4 per- during Central 2B baseball action Thursday on the Pirates’ home ield. ing today and all hits against league championship.” formance with a double by Jor- him were grounders or pop-ups," Mossyrock (13-3, 11-1) den Hartley. Layne Hellem and Napavine (7-7 overall, 6-7 Dustin Matchett and Kylon Gil- Smarciarz said. is at Adna on Tuesday. Pe Brady Woodrum were both 2 for league) will host Pe Ell on the lispie each had three hits. Jacob Mager went 2 of 3 with Ell (3-9 league) will face 4. same day. Kolb took over on the mound two RBIs, for Onalaska, while Napavine on Tuesday. "It was a good game for us," in the seventh inning, was cred- Cody Bruton was 3 for 3 and Zurfluh said. "It was pretty even Kolb Wins Two as MWP Sweeps ited with the win, and went on to drove in 2 runs. Wyatt Smeall for the teams but we just kind of Mules toss a complete-game in MWP's had a pair of doubles and drove 1A Baseball got some breaks and everybody 2-0 win in the nightcap. in 2 runs for the winners. was hitting through the lineup." MORTON — The Timber- James Sword doubled and "We were swinging strong In the nightcap, Austin Mc- wolves scratched across a run in scored on a hit from Reynolds in today. We have struggled in Warriors Shoot Closkey went 4 for 4 with a the eighth inning to win Game 1, the third inning, and Matchett the past few weeks but we had and got a solid pitching perfor- double and a triple as the Pirates hit an RBI double in the sixth solid approaches and the plate Down Rockets mance from Rylon Kolb to win won 10-3. The Pirates trailed 3-2 inning for MWP's 2 runs. and that made a big difference," By The Chronicle heading into the bottom of the the nightcap of a 9-8, 2-0 sweep Kolb struck out seven and Smarciarz added. CASTLE ROCK — The War- fourth, but rallied for 5 runs and of Wahkiakum here Thursday Toutle Lake was able to capi- in Central 2B League baseball walked four while holding Wah- riors’ bats caught fire and helped never looked back. kiakum to two hits in Game 2. talize on a few Logger errors to Cole Young was 2 for 3 and action. crash land the Rockets, 17-4, in Wahkiakum's Gunnar Blix "He kept them off balance score 7 runs and take control in nonleague baseball action here Adna pitcher Cooper Zurfluh the fourth inning of Game 2. was 2 for 4. hit a grand slam in the fourth with his ," MWP Friday. "We had just one bad inning "Cooper has been pretty sol- inning of the opener, but MWP coach Keith Coleman said. "It's Rochester rapped out 13 hits id for us on the mound for not rallied to tie the game at 8 and probably one of his best outings tonight out of the fourteen total, and had four different players being in the pitching mix a lot," force extra innings. Brian Reyn- of the year." and in this game, it made the have multiple hits, scoring 10 Zurfluh said. "He just gutted it olds led off the eighth with a Morton-White Pass im- difference," Smarciarz said. runs in the fifth inning to force out and grinded through things." double down the left field line, proves to 9-8 overall and 7-5 Mager had three hits and the mercy rule. For Napavine, Cole Doughty moved to third in a fly ball by in C2BL action with the wins, Trevor Lawrence had an RBI “The game started off with us was 2 for 3, and JT Kaut was 3 Kolb, and scored on a ground while the losses dropped Wah- double for Onalaska, while Bru- being very lethargic,” Rochester for 3. ball by Kraig Lindh that ended kiakum to 5-7 in league play. ton went 2 for 2 in the nightcap. coach Jerry Striegel said. “We Adna (9-5 overall, 7-5 league) the game. Morton-White Pass will play at Onalaska (5-11, 4-8 in league) had a little discussion between hosts a doubleheader against Kolb and Lindh each had Onalaska on Tuesday to close will host Morton-White Pass on innings on how we needed to Mossyrock on Tuesday. two hits in the opener, while out the C2BL regular season. Tuesday. come out ready to play.” Dylan Fosnacht had four hits and four RBIs to lead the War- Thursday’s 1A Baseball riors. Jason Dickerson had two hits and three RBIs, while Wy- att Singer had three hits and two Rochester, Tenino Swap Blowouts to Split Doubleheader RBIs. Brian Ranger notched a By The Chronicle secutive hits to plate 2 runs in held Rochester scoreless the rest kota Bellrose had a triple and a hit with two RBIs and catcher ROCHESTER — Rochester the first inning. of the way. Dustin Wilson got double for Tenino. Dakota Deal stroke two base opened the doubleheader with Dylan Fosnacht and Domi- the win for Rochester, tossing "This game was the story of hits. a 11-3 win, but Tenino bounced nic Angwood each had three all seven innings and allowing two different teams and two dif- Lucas Eastman came in to back with a 13-2 victory here singles for the Game 1 winners. eight hits. ferent games," Striegel noted. pitch in the second inning and Thursday in SWW 1A League Jordan Columbo picked up two The second game, from a box Kolton McKitrick pitched all went the rest of the game, giv- Evergreen Division baseball ac- RBIs while knocking two singles score standpoint, was similar, but seven innings for Tenino and ing up just 1 unearned run and tion. and a double, and Dakota Deal with Tenino coming out ahead. limited Rochester to five hits. striking out two. Rochester led 5-1 after three added an RBI double. Dustin "They were the ones to jump Tenino piled up 16 hits behind “He doesn’t see a lot of innings of work in the opener. Wilson also drove in 2 runs. out early and kept piling on the him, while the Warriors defense mound time so it’s good to see "We just got things going in Devante Harris hit a 2-run runs," Striegel said. committed seven errors. him do well,” Striegel said. the first and were able to keep homer for Tenino in the fifth Harris had four hits with Rochester (10-7 in league) Rochester (10-7 league, 11-7 adding on the runs," Warrior inning, and Zack Chamberlain three doubles in the second will host Montesano on Tuesday. overall) will host Montesano on coach Jerry Striegel said, noting took over on the mound for the game, while Chamberlain went Tenino (8-6 league) will play at Tuesday in the Warriors final that his club notched four con- Beavers in the fourth inning and 3 for 3 and drove in 3 runs. Da- Elma on Tuesday. home game of the season. Sports 4 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, April 27, 2013 SPORTS

Thursday’s 2B Softball

Brandon Hansen / [email protected] Napavine’s Sage Atkins slides past the tag of Adna’s Alexa Bond during Central 2B fastpitch action Thursday on the Tigers’ home field. Napavine Slugs Past Adna for Second By The Chronicle ADNA — Napavine slugged Central 2B League three home runs in Game 1 and Baseball Standings slowed down Adna in Game 2 Team Record for a 7-5, 6-3 sweep of the Pirates Toutle Lake 12-0 here Thursday in Central 2B Napavine 10-2 League softball action. Adna 8-4 The rematch of last year's Pe Ell 7-5 third/fourth place State 2B Morton-WP 5-7 tournament game was also for Onalaska 3-9 the No. 2 seed out of the C2BL Mossyrock 3-9 into the District 4 Softball Tour- Wahkiakum 0-12 nament. The teams went into Thursday's twinbill tied with 8-2 Tuesday’s Games league records, behind unde- (3 p.m. start; doubleheaders) feated Toutle Lake. Mossyrock at Adna Pe Ell at Napavine Napavine's Brittany Mitchell Morton-WP at Onalaska hit a 2-run homer in the eighth Toutle Lake at Wahkiakum inning to lift the Tigers to a win in Game 1. Adna loaded the bas- es up in the bottom of the eighth, The Loggers committed four er- but couldn't score the requisite 2 runs to keep the game going. rors in the game. Taylor White homered in the "Gabby threw the best game seventh inning for the Tigers to she has had all year," Onalaska force extra innings. coach Ken Ulery said. "We Napavine's Mackenzie Ol- Brandon Hansen / [email protected] kind of proved to ourselves that Napavine’s Alexa Peters reacts to a home run by teammate Mackenzie Olson during Central 2B fastpitch action against Adna son had two hits with a second- we can put it together, we just Thursday on the Pirates’ home field. inning home run, with Teryn couldn't string enough hits to- Pannette and Mitchell each fin- gether. We put the ball in play, ished with two hits. Massingham each had hits for while Christine Robbins and sweep Mossyrock, 12-1 and 17- Alexa Peters tossed all though." Adna. Jade Lundy were each 3 for 4. 2, here Thursday in Central 2B Nicole Duryea went 1 for 3 eight innings to get the win for Dotson, at third base, and Taylor Brooks pitched all but League softball action. with a double. Napavine. shortstop Alexa Bond both 1/3 of an inning for the winners, Kayla Capps hit a 3-run Adna's Kendra Stajduhar played well, and the Pirate in- allowing just one hit. homer to lead Pe Ell in the first In the nightcap, Onalaska had two hits, with a triple, for field turned a pair of double "We were pretty focused," game, while Kelsie Moorcroft trailed just 3-2 heading into Adna, while Josey Sandrini and plays, Raschke pointed out. MWP coach Darin Allen said, had a triple and two of the Vi- the bottom of the fourth before Tabitha Dowell each added dou- "They don't strike out," he "and doing what we needed to do kings' four hits. committing six errors and al- bles for the Pirates. Shanay Dot- said of Napavine. "They hit the to get the W." Mattie Miller homered for lowing 12 runs in the 15-2 loss. son also had a pair of hits. ball and put it in play. To only Whitney Elledge went 3 for 3 Pe Ell in Game 2 and recorded Adna coach Mike Raschke Colee Masciola pitched in relief have one error in 15 innings, we in MWP's 13-4 win in the night- the win in both games. Shayne but the defense gave Toutle Lake was happy with his team's per- did something right." cap, while Madison McCoy and Fried was 1 for 1 for Mossyrock. formance in the opener, which Adna (11-5, 8-4 league) will Kelly each went 2 for 4. The Vikings wrap up the plenty of opportunities. featured no Pirate errors. close C2BL regular-season play Brooks, Robbins and Madi- regular season at Adna on Tues- "She probably threw some of "We're doing the little things at home with Mossyrock on son Nichols all pitched for MWP. day, while Pe Ell (7-5 league) the best that she's thrown," Ulery right," he said. "There's a couple Tuesday. Napavine (10-2 league) "They did a good job, and it takes on Napavine the same day. said. "She's getting ground balls times we've left some runners in will host Pe Ell on Tuesday. was nice to Madison Nichols get like we needed." scoring position, so we're still an inning of work," Allen said. having trouble coming up with Ducks Drop Onalaska Autumn Durand was 2 for MWP Drops Mules Twice "She came in and did a good job. 2 while Karlee Hutchison was 2 the key hit." It was nice getting to play a lot of TOUTLE LAKE — Errors for 3. Napavine scored 5 in the top MORTON — The Timber- the girls in the second game." nicked up Onalaska, which was of the second inning and held wolves picked up an easy pair of Morton-White Pass (9-7, 5-7 swept by Toutle Lake in a Cen- "I'm really proud of my girls," on from there for a 6-3 win in Central 2B League softball wins, league) will wrap up its Central tral 2B League doubleheader Ulery said. "There are some the late game. 16-3 and 13-4, over Wahkiakum 2B League campaign at Onalas- here on Thursday by scores of things they're working on and White hit a pair of doubles here Thursday, pounding out 25 ka on Tuesday. 3-0 and 15-2. we're starting to put it together." for the Tigers, while Peters and hits over 12 innings of work. In the 3-0 loss, Toutle Lake Onalaska (3-9 league) hosts Demi Sahlinger each added two Morton-White Pass scored 9 scored all 3 runs off a triple hits. runs in the second inning and Trojans Thump Vikings Twice in the third inning. Starting Morton-White Pass on Tuesday, Sandrini hit a double, and coasted to a 16-3 win in the MOSSYROCK — The de- Logger pitcher Gabby Wright while Toutle Lake improves to Stajduhar, Cheyenne Gilbertson, opener. Ashley Kelly and Dar- fending State 2B champs pound- held the Ducks to five hits and 12-0 in league and has wrapped Emma Brattain and Savannah ian Atkinson were each 2 for 2, ed out 21 hits in 10 innings to walked just two in the game. up the C2BL title. Sports Briefs Thursday’s 2A Girls Golf Chehalis LL Hosting Dinner Volcano Soccer Tryouts Bearcat Golfers Win Big at Home Against Aberdeen By The Chronicle By The Chronicle By The Chronicle per hole, in relation to par. that they're going to get this Chehalis Little League Base- Lewis County's select soccer ball will hold a fund-raising din- club, Volcano Soccer, is holding W.F. West's girls came Hannah Cooley scored season, but they're certainly ner and silent auction on May 10. tryouts for the 2013 season. up big in a practice match 23 points and shot a 50 on getting a smile on their face." Newaukum's South course. Tickets are $20 apiece of $35 Boys and girls in the U10- against Aberdeen on Thurs- Aberdeen, he added, was per couple. The event begins U12 divisions try out May 6-7; Aimee Sennes shot a 52 for 20 day at Newaukum Valley Golf playing without a few of its with a cocktail hour at 6 p.m. U13-U15 try out May 13-14; and Course, topping the Bobcats points, and Lauren Clark shot regular varsity golfers. and dinner at 7, at the Washing- U16-U18 will try out May 20-21. 69-21 using the Stableford a 58 for 14 points. W.F. West (2-1, 1-1 Ever- ton Hotel in downtown Chehalis. All tryouts will run from 6 to scoring system. "The girls are beginning to Contact Chehalis Little 7:30 p.m. at Stan Hedwall Park green 2A Conference play) The Stableford system light things up," Bearcat coach League president Kelly Wichert in Chehalis. To pre-register, visit rewards players with points Bruce Thompson said. "These will host Black Hills on Tues- at (360) 269-8812 or email che- www.volcanosoccer.com or con- based on their performance, might not be the lowest scores day. [email protected] for tact club president Christopher tickets. Van Clifford at (360) 520-4485. • Sports 5 SPORTS The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, April 27, 2013

2A Girls Tennis 1A Boys Soccer Bearcats Fall Warriors Make the Most of Trip With 10-0 Win at Forks to Capital, 5-1 By The Chronicle said. “We worked on some goal in the 39th minute, with Chambers. scored By The Chronicle FORKS — Rochester was things against them and it’s Austin Howell feeding him in the 66th minute on a feed The Bearcats had to shuffle the one doing the biting in just one of those things where the ball. from Aguilar, and then Cham- you have to do some different After halftime, Noah Al- their lineup without their No. Forks, defeating their SWW bers wrapped up the scored on 1A Evergreen Division foe 10-0 things.” thauser scored seven minutes 1 singles player and ended up a diving header, again assisted falling 5-1 to Capital in Ever- here on Friday night behind a Aguilar scored in the 7th in on a Castillo assist. Castillo green 2A Conference tennis ac- hat trick by Fernando Aguilar. minute, assisted by Jona- followed that up with a goal of by Aguilar. tion here on Friday. W.F. West’s The Warriors are now 11-2 on than Castillo. Eight minutes his own in the 49th minute on Rochester will host league Isabel Vander Stoep and Stevie the season and can take the later, Luis Garcia scored on an assist from Jonathan Rivas. foe Montesano at home on Heitzman remain undefeated in league title if they win their fi- a header thanks to an assist In the 52nd minute, Howell Tuesday — and, with a win, No. 3 doubles action after down- nal two games. from Danny Arellano. Agui- scored on an assist from Agui- will have the league title on the ing the Cougars’ Olivia Wooden- “Almost every single goal lar wrapped up his hat trick lar. Twelve minutes later, Mi- burg and Jada Peirson 6-1, 6-4. had an assist so that was good,” with an unassisted goal in the chael Althauser put it home line when it faces Hoquiam on “We had a different lineup Rochester coach Brian Ziese 28th minute and then another thanks to a pass from Michael Thursday. with our No. 1 player at a state choir concert,” W.F. West coach Jack State said. “Hannah Cum- 2A Boys Soccer mings did a good job at No. 3 singles in her first varsity action ever. She played very well.” Cummings challenged her opponent, but fell to Natalia Schelnder 6-3, 6-3. W.F. West will host Tumwa- ter on Monday. 2A Track & Field Three Tigers Win Events at Panther Invite By The Chronicle WASHOUGAL — Centra- lia had 13 personal records and had three event winners at the Panther Invitational here on Friday. Centralia's Carry Larsen won the 1600 meter run (5 minutes, 34.34 seconds) for the girls, while Trevor Baumann won the javelin (152 feet, 11 inches) and Oscar Jackson won the triple jump for the boys (41-02.25). "It was a very pleasant meet and the weather was great," Cen- tralia coach Tim Penman said. "I don't think the kids were quite use to it yet." Nathan Winkle took second in the triple jump (40-08.0) and Penman added he liked the per- sonal records by Emily Klick- man and Kaitlynn Johns in the Brandon Hansen / [email protected] throws events. Centralia’s Christian Corona battles for the ball during Evergreen 2A Conference action against Aberdeen Friday night at Tiger Stadium in Centralia. Aberdeen won 2-1. Centralia will compete next Wednesday at the Last Chance Meet at Tumwater High School. Prince’s Goal Not Enough for Tigers Against Aberdeen By The Chronicle First-place Evergreen 2A Bearcats Conference team Aberdeen scored the final two goals of the Continued from Sports 1 game to get past Centralia, 2-1, on Friday at Tiger Stadium. Anthony Painter took over in Prince Gundersen put his the sixth inning and closed out team on top in the 52nd min- the game without allowing a run. ute with an assist by Christian Tanner Gueller added a dou- Corona. The Bobcats, however, ble for the winners. notched goals in the 60th and The win marked the second 67th minute for the victory. consecutive EvCo title for W.F. "The goal and the combina- West, and the first under first- tion from Prince and Chris- year head coach Tommy Elder. tian was good and the whole "It's a lot of credit to our kids. play was really good," Centralia They played really well up to this coach Sue Parke said. "We con- point in the season," Elder said. trolled the ball on the ground "They've worked extremely hard, like we wanted to but if we made and they have high expectations a mistake in the middle they hit for themselves." it up to Juanito Lopez and he'd Elder also thanked his coach- have a chance at goal." ing staff for its work. Lopez scored both of Aber- W.F. West (16-3, 15-2 league) deen's goals on breakaways. will close out the regular season "That's his mission objective at Black Hills on Tuesday. every time," Parke said. "That's

what he does and he's really Brandon Hansen / [email protected] good at it. He's really fast and ex- Centralia’s Prince Gundersen battles for the ball during Evergreen 2A Conference action against Aberdeen Friday night at cels with the ball." Tiger Stadium in Centralia. Aberdeen won 2-1. Softball Centralia (10-4 overall, 7-4 league) outshot Aberdeen 22- Continued from Sports 1 12, and currently sits in third fell to Capital 5-0 in Evergreen ting together passes.” Bearcats need to win their final place in the conference standing. 2A Conference action here on Capital scored in the sixth The Tigers will play at rival W.F. game and have River Ridge lose W.F. West took the lead with minute and had a 2-0 halftime West on Tuesday. Thursday. 2 runs in the fifth, and while Ab- “We never got on our feet,” lead. They scored again in the its final two to advance to the erdeen scored a run in the sixth, W.F. West coach Tino Sanchez 49th minute and notched an- postseason. Graham shut the door to cement W.F. West Falls to Capital said. “We just got ourselves in a other in the 69th before W.F. the victory. whole and we couldn’t get our- West had an own goal. The loss W.F. West will host rival The Bearcats (12-1 league, OLYMPIA — The Bearcats 13-1 overall) will host Black Hills couldn’t get things in gear and selves out of it. We weren’t put- drops W.F. West to 5-6, and the Centralia on Tuesday. on Tuesday. NFL Tigers Drop Aberdeen Centralia picked up a key Ev- Falcons First-Rounder Desmond Trufant to Wear No. 21 ergreen 2A Conference softball win at home on Thursday, top- FLOWERY BRANCH, Ga. follow in a guy’s footsteps like General manager Thomas skills and work ethic. ping Aberdeen 7-3. (AP) — Desmond Trufant will that. It’s an honor to wear it and Dimitroff said the trade was “What I mean by that is not The Tigers got two hits each be wearing No. 21 for the Fal- an honor to be here in general. based on information gathered only his on-field abilities but from Mackenzie Wasson and cons. It’s pretty cool. I can’t wait to put in two years of scouting Trufant. also his off-field abilities, the That’s the same number it on.” “We’ve monitored and fol- Payton Pocklington, leading way he carries himself, his ap- 4-2 after two innings and never worn by another cornerback, The Falcons traded up in the lowed closely Desmond’s career,” looking back. Deion Sanders, when the future first round on Thursday night Dimitroff said. “As we started proach to the game, his serious- Erika Brower came on to Hall of Famer played his first to make Trufant the No. 22 getting closer and closer to be- ness about getting better all the pitch in the second inning and five seasons in Atlanta. pick overall. Atlanta swapped ing able to pull the tag off the time and working on his craft,” recorded the win. Trufant, a four-year starter at the 30th selection and gave up board, we started getting a little Dimitroff said. The Tigers were scheduled Washington, said Friday it will its third- and six-round picks, bit more excited about the idea Trufant (6-0, 190) was timed be an honor to wear the number. while acquiring a 2015 seventh- of having him as part of this to play at Capital on Friday, but at 4.38 seconds in the 40-yard the game was postponed due to “l knew that was Deion Sand- round pick from the Rams. football team.” a lack of officials. Centralia (8-4 ers’ number when he was here,” For Friday’s news conference, Dimitroff said he sees Tru- dash during the combine after league) will host Tumwater on Trufant said. “He was a great Trufant posed with a No. 1 jer- fant as a “full package type of starting 47 of 50 games at Wash- Tuesday. player and I would just love to sey as the first-round pick. player” with ideal character, ington.

Sports 6 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, April 27, 2013 SPORTS

Scoreboard PREP Tabitha Dowell, Sam Rolfe (2), Savan- x-Wednesday, May 1: Atlanta at Indi- NHL Sports on the Air nah Massingham (6) and Emma Brat- ana, TBA Local Schedules tain x-Friday, May 3: Indiana at Atlanta, Standings SATURDAY, April 27 TBA SATURDAY, April 27 EASTERN CONFERENCE At Mossyrock x-Sunday, May 5: Atlanta at Indiana, MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL College Baseball Atlantic Division Centralia at Pierce, 1 p.m. Game 1 TBA 9:30 a.m. GP W L OT Pts College Softball TROJANS 12, VIKINGS 1 (6 inn.) FOX — Atlanta at Detroit South Puget Sound at Centralia, 2 Pe Ell 503 04 — 12 8 0 Chicago 2 , Brooklyn 1 z-Pittsburgh 47 35 12 0 70 p.m. Mossyrock 000 01 — 1 4 3 Saturday, April 20: Brooklyn 106, x-N.Y. Islanders48 24 17 7 55 6:10 p.m. Track & Field Batteries: Pe Ell — Mattie Miller Chicago 89 x-N.Y. Rangers47 25 18 4 54 ROOT — L.A. Angels at Seattle W.F. West at Castle Rock, noon and Kayla Hoke; Mossyrock — Autumn Monday, April 22: Chicago 90, New Jersey 47 19 18 10 48 Brooklyn 82 NBA PLAYOFFS Morton-White Pass, Mossyrock at Moorcroft and Kelsie Moorcroft Philadelphia 47 22 22 3 47 Thursday, April 25: Chicago 79, BCS Invite (Sammamish), 10:30 a.m. Northeast Division 11 a.m. Game 2 Brooklyn 76 Rochester at Woodland Invite, 10 x-Boston 46 28 13 5 61 TNT — Brooklyn at Chicago a.m. TROJANS 17, VIKINGS 2 (4 inn.) Saturday, April 27: Brooklyn at Chi- Pe Ell 284 3 — 17 13 1 cago, 11 a.m. x-Montreal 47 28 14 5 61 1:30 p.m. SUNDAY, April 28 Mossyrock 200 0 — 2 4 4 x-Monday, April 29: Chicago at x-Toronto 47 26 16 5 57 TNT — LA Clippers at Memphis College Baseball Batteries: Pe Ell — Mattie Miller, Brooklyn, TBA x-Ottawa 46 24 16 6 54 5 p.m. Pierce at Centralia, 1 p.m. Lexi Brooks (3) and Bailey Lusk; Mossy- x-Thursday, May 2: Brooklyn at Chi- Buffalo 48 21 21 6 48 rock — Calli Hensch, Sara Smith (4) cago, TBA Southeast Division ESPN — Indiana at Atlanta x-Saturday, May 4: Chicago at Brook- MONDAY, April 29 and Tori Nelson y-Washington 47 26 18 3 55 7:30 p.m. lyn, TBA Softball Winnipeg 48 24 21 3 51 At Morton ESPN — Oklahoma City at Houston Ocosta at Tenino, 4 p.m. Carolina 47 19 24 4 42 Game 1 WESTERN CONFERENCE NFL FOOTBALL Boys Golf Tampa Bay 47 18 25 4 40 Three Rivers Christian, North Beach T-WOLVES 16, MULES 3 (5 inn.) Oklahoma City 2, Houston 0 Florida 47 14 27 6 34 9 a.m. at Adna, 3:30 p.m. Wahkiakum 002 01 — 3 3 1 Sunday, April 21: Oklahoma City 120, Girls Tennis Morton-WP 392 2x — 16 13 0 Houston 91 WESTERN CONFERENCE ESPN — The NFL draft Black Hills at Centralia, 3:30 p.m. Batteries: Wahkiakum — Weg- Wednesday, April 24: Oklahoma Central Division PRO GOLF Tumwater at W.F. West, 3:30 p.m. dahl and Boyce; Morton-White Pass City 105, Houston 102 GP W L OT Pts Saturday, April 27: Oklahoma City at 10 a.m. Castle Rock at Tenino, 3:30 p.m. — Taylor Brooks, Madison McCoy (3), z-Chicago 47 36 6 5 77 Taylor Brooks (3) and Darian Atkinson Houston, 6:30 p.m. CBS — Liberty Mutual Legends of Golf Monday, April 29: Oklahoma City at x-St. Louis 47 28 17 2 58 Local Results Detroit 47 23 16 8 54 Noon Game 2 Houston, TBA Thursday’s Results Columbus 47 23 17 7 53 GOLF — North Texas LPGA Shootout Baseball TIMBERWOLVES 13, MULES 4 x-Wednesday, May 1: Houston at Nashville 47 16 22 9 41 At Aberdeen Wahkiakum 000 040 0 — 4 5 3 Oklahoma City, TBA Noon BOBCATS 7, TIGERS 4 Morton-WP 181 300 0 — 13 12 0 x-Friday, May 3: Oklahoma City at Northwest Division Houston, TBA CBS — PGA Zurich Classic of New Orleans Centralia 030 010 0 — 4 11 2 Batteries: Wahkiakum — Budd, y-Vancouver 47 26 14 7 59 x-Sunday, May 5: Houston at Okla- Aberdeen 103 003 0 — 7 11 0 Wegdahl (3) and Boyce; Morton-White Minnesota 47 25 19 3 53 AUTO RACING homa City, TBA Batteries: Centralia — Ty Hous- Pass — Taylor Brooks, Christine Rob- Edmonton 47 18 22 7 43 Noon den, Jordan Wood (6) and Joe Blaser; bins (3), Madison Nichols (5), Robbins Calgary 48 19 25 4 42 San Antonio 3, L.A. Lakers 0 ESPN2 — NHRA Spring Nationals qualifying Aberdeen — Collin Nord and Ashton (6) and Darian Atkinson Sunday, April 21: San Antonio 91, Colorado 47 16 24 7 39 4 p.m. Williamson Pacific Division Girls Golf L.A. Lakers 79 Wednesday, April 24: San Antonio y-Anaheim 47 30 11 6 66 FOX — NASCAR Sprint Cup Richmond 400 At Morton At Newaukum Valley Golf Course 102, L.A. Lakers 91 NHL HOCKEY Game 1 W.F. WEST 69, ABERDEEN 21 x-Los Angeles 47 26 16 5 57 Friday, April 26: San Antonio 120, T-WOLVES 9, MULES 8 (8 inn.) W.F. West — Hannah Cooley 23, Ai- x-San Jose 47 25 15 7 57 Noon L.A. Lakers 89 Wahkiakum 020 510 00 — 8 12 2 mee Sennes 20, Lauren Clark 14, Amber Phoenix 47 20 18 9 49 Sunday, April 28: San Antonio at L.A. NBC — New Jersey at N.Y. Rangers Morton-WP 102 230 01 — 9 14 2 Johnson 8, Emily Burton 4 Dallas 47 22 21 4 48 Lakers, 4 p.m. 4 p.m. Batteries: Wahkiakum — Lars Aberdeen — Hailey Meirs 2, Dakota NOTE: Two points for a win, one point x-Tuesday, April 30: L.A. Lakers at Blix and Mitch Dault; Morton-White Mullikin 10, Samantha Samson 1, Vicki NBCSN — Detroit at Dallas San Antonio, TBA for overtime loss. Pass — Zach Counts, Zach Hanson (5), Eliason 3, Lauren Tangvald 2, Alicia x-Thursday, May 2: San Antonio at 7:30 p.m. Rylon Kolb (7) and Brian Reynolds Morris 4 L.A. Lakers, TBA x-clinched playoff spot NBCSN — San Jose at Los Angeles x-Saturday, May 4: L.A. Lakers at San y-clinched division Game 2 Friday’s Results Antonio, TBA MLS SOCCER T-WOLVES 2, MULES 0 Baseball z-clinched conference 1 p.m. Wahkiakum 000 000 0 — 0 2 0 At Aberdeen Golden State 2 , Denver 1 Morton-WP 001 001 x — 2 4 2 BEARCATS 2, BOBCATS 1 Saturday’s Games NBCSN — Chicago at Montreal Saturday, April 20: Denver 97, Gold- Batteries: Wahkiakum — Gunnar W.F. West 110 000 0 — 2 7 0 New Jersey at N.Y. Rangers, 12 p.m. en State 95 9:30 p.m. Blix and Mitch Dault; Morton-White Aberdeen 000 100 0 — 1 5 2 Detroit at Dallas, 4 p.m. Batteries: W.F. West — Keylen Tuesday, April 23: Golden State 131, ROOT — Portland at Kansas City Pass — Rylon Kolb and Brian Reynolds Nashville at Columbus, 4 p.m. Steen, Anthony Painter (6) and Tanner Denver 117 COLLEGE BASEBALL Friday, April 26: Golden State 110, Florida at Tampa Bay, 4 p.m. At Rochester Gueller, Steen (6); Aberdeen — Reilly Denver 108 Boston at Washington, 4 p.m. 2 p.m. WARRIORS 11, BEAVERS 3 Fairchild and Ashton Williamson Sunday, April 28: Denver at Golden Rochester 203 600 0 — 11 12 2 Philadelphia at Ottawa, 4 p.m. PAC-12 — Stanford at Oregon State, 6:30 p.m. Tenino 001 020 0 — 3 8 2 At Centralia Montreal at Toronto, 4 p.m. x-Tuesday, April 30: Golden State at 7 p.m. Batteries: Rochester — Dustin COUGARS 7, TIGERS 4 Minnesota at Colorado, 4:30 p.m. Denver, TBA CSNNW — Mississippi St. at Vanderbilt Wilson and Dakota Deal; Tenino — Ben Capital 300 102 1 — 7 13 1 Carolina at Pittsburgh, 4:30 p.m. x-Thursday, May 2: Denver at Golden Peterson, Zeb Chamberlain (4), Zack Centralia 000 021 1 — 4 5 3 Chicago at St. Louis, 5 p.m. TRACK & FIELD Batteries State, TBA Chamberlain (4) and Zack Chamber- : Capital — Dane Klenk, Phoenix at Anaheim, 7 p.m. 10 a.m. Joe Conley (7), Alex Costa (7) and x-Saturday, May 4: Golden State at lain, Terran Gilbreath(4) Vancouver at Edmonton, 7 p.m. Cameron Monda; Centralia — Derek Denver, TBA NBC — The Penn Relays San Jose at Los Angeles, 7:30 p.m. At Rochester Putman, Brandon Conradi (6) and Joe 5 p.m. L.A. Clippers 2, Memphis 1 BEAVERS 13, WARRIORS 2 Blaser Saturday, April 20: L.A. Clippers 112, ESPN2 — Drake Relays Tenino 202 423 — 13 16 2 Memphia 91 Rochester 101 000 — 2 5 7 At Castle Rock COLLEGE SOFTBALL Monday, April 22: L.A. Clippers 93, Batteries: Tenino — Kolton McK- WARRIORS 17, ROCKETS 4 Memphis 91 GOLF 7 p.m. itrick and Zack Chamberlain; Rochester Rochester 100 6(10) — 17 13 1 Thursday, April 25: Memphis 94, L.A. PAC-12 — California at Arizona St. — Dominic Angwood, Dylan Fosnacht Castle Rock 300 10x — 4 3 2 Clippers 82 PGA Tour (3), Jordan Columbo (5) and Dustin Batteries: Rochester — Jordan Co- FedEx Cup Standings EXTREME SPORTS lombo, Lucas Eastman (2) and Dakota Saturday, April 27: L.A. Clippers at Wilson 1. Tiger Woods 1,740 1 p.m. Deal; Castle Rock — Carson Horton, Memphis, 1:30 p.m. x-Tuesday, April 30: Memphis at L.A. 2. Brandt Snedeker 1,397 At Adna Levi Rassmussen (2), Riley Grothen (3), ABC — X Games Clippers, TBA 3. 1,069 Game 1 Carson Horton (5) and Voelker, Shaun x-Friday, May 3: L.A. Clippers at HORSE RACING PIRATES 12, TIGERS 4 Godinho(3) 4. 915 Memphis, TBA 5. Adam Scott 870 2 p.m. Napavine 100 021 0 — 4 10 1 x-Sunday, May 5: Memphis at L.A. Girls Tennis 6. Graeme McDowell 838 CSNNW — Emerald Downs Live Adna 400 233 0 — 12 10 1 Clippers, TBA Batteries: Adna — Lane Wasson At Chehalis 7. 813 SOCCER and Jack Herring; Napavine — Cole CAPITAL 5, W.F. WEST 1 8. Dustin Johnson 810 SINGLES 4:30 a.m. Doughty, Jensen Lindsay (5), Julian Ro- 9. 795 driguez (6) and Brady Woodrum 1. Lauren McCann (C) def. Lauren ESPN2 — Manchester City vs. West Ham Wade, 6-1, 6-0 MLB 10. Russell Henley 775 11. Webb Simpson 759 United Game 2 2. Bailey Yost (C) def. Tess Cum- Major League Baseball Standings 12. Charles Howell III 744 MOTORSPORTS PIRATES 10, TIGERS 3 mings, 6-2, 6-1 American League Napavine 210 000 0 — 3 10 3 3. Natalie Schelnder (C) def. Han- EAST W L PCT GB 13. Jason Day 715 6:30 p.m. Adna 101 530 x — 10 12 1 nah Cummings, 6-3, 6-3 Boston 16 7 .696 — 14. Billy Horschel 705 SPEED — Supercross Series Batteries: Adna — Cooper Baltimore 14 9 .609 2 15. 693 Zurfluh and Jack Herring; Napavine - DOUBLES New York 13 9 .591 2½ 16. Brian Gay 684 David Grace, Jensen Lindsay (5) and 1. Daniel Tabor/Alexis Gjurusic Tampa Bay 10 13 .435 6 17. Keegan Bradley 674 SUNDAY, April 28 (C) def. Julie Spencer and Katie Han- Brady Woodrum Toronto 9 15 .375 7½ 18. Chris Kirk 636 kins, 6-1, 6-3 MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL CENTRAL 19. Bill Haas 633 At Mossyrock 2. Anna Rosen/Soo Yon (C) def. Kansas City 11 8 .579 — 10 a.m. 20. Michael Thompson 623 Game 1 Arianne Woodland/Morgan Dunson Detroit 11 10 .524 1 TBS — Toronto at N.Y. Yankees VIKINGS 2, TROJANS 0 6-2, 6-0 Minnesota 9 10 .474 2 21. John Merrick 613 Pe Ell 000 000 0 — 0 0 3 3. Isabel Vander Stoep/Stevie Chicago 10 12 .455 2½ 22. Jimmy Walker 595 1:10 p.m. Mossyrock 100 010 0 — 2 7 1 Heitzman (W) def. Olivia Wooden- Cleveland 8 11 .421 3 23. Justin Rose 573 ROOT — L.A. Angels at Seattle Batteries: Pe Ell — Austin Ar- burg/Jada Peirson 6-1, 6-4 WEST 24. Martin Laird 563 5 p.m. rington and Andy Pickens; Mossyrock Texas 16 7 .696 — 25. D.A. Points 554 ESPN — Atlanta at Detroit — John Pomeroy and Nick Couch Oakland 13 11 .542 3½ 26. Tim Clark 541 Los Angeles 9 13 .409 6½ 27. Josh Teater 499 NBA PLAYOFFS Game 2 Seattle 9 16 .360 8 28. Freddie Jacobson 496 10 a.m. VIKINGS 4, TROJANS 3 COLLEGE Houston 7 16 .304 9 Pe Ell 001 101 0 — 3 6 2 29. Boo Weekley 487 ABC — New York at Boston NWAACC Softball National League Mossyrock 102 100 x — 4 7 4 30. Angel Cabrera 478 Friday’s Results EAST W L PCT GB 12:30 p.m. Batteries: Pe Ell — Derrick Justice 31. Cameron Tringale 476 At Centralia Atlanta 15 7 .682 — and Andy Pickens; Mossyrock — Lucas 31. Brendon de Jonge 476 ABC — Miami at Milwaukee Game 1 Washington 12 11 .522 3½ Allen, Cody Shriver (6) and Nick Couch, LADY BLAZERS 9, T-BIRDS 4 New York 10 11 .476 4½ 33. Rory McIlroy 469 4 p.m. Lucas Allen (6) Philadelphia 10 14 .417 6 Highline 000 102 1 — 4 7 2 34. 468 TNT — San Antonio at LA Lakers Miami 5 18 .217 10½ Centralia 402 003 x — 9 13 0 35. Rickie Fowler 463 At Toutle Lake CENTRAL 6:30 p.m. Batteries: Highline — Andrus and 36. Robert Garrigus 448 Game 1 St. Louis 14 8 .636 — Carlson; Centralia — Kalynn Randt 37. Scott Brown 446 TNT — Denver at Golden State LOGGERS 8, DUCKS 3 Pittsburgh 13 10 .565 1½ and Maddi Klingberg PRO GOLF Onalaska 005 300 0 — 8 7 2 Cincinnati 13 11 .542 2 38. Luke Donald 445 Toutle Lake 010 002 0 — 3 7 4 Milwaukee 11 10 .524 2½ 39. Scott Piercy 436 10 a.m. Game 2 Batteries: Onalaska — Travis Mc- Chicago 8 14 .364 6 40. Luke Guthrie 426 LADY BLAZERS 11, T-BIRDS 3 GOLF — PGA Zurich Classic of New Orleans Million and Cody Bruton; Toutle Lake WEST Highline 201 00 — 3 7 2 — Nusbaum and Brown Colorado 15 8 .652 — 10 a.m. Centralia 005 33 — 11 13 1 Arizona 13 10 .565 2 Batteries: Highline — Marbet and CBS — Liberty Mutual Legends of Golf Game 2 San Francisco 13 10 .565 2 Babcock; Centralia — Hailey Givens Noon DUCKS 12, LOGGERS 8 Los Angeles 11 11 .500 3½ NASCAR and Maddi Klingberg Onalaska 000 303 2 — 8 9 5 San Diego 7 15 .318 7½ GOLF — North Texas LPGA Shootout SprintCup Standings Toutle Lake 030 711 0 — 12 13 0 Driver Pts. Noon Batteries: Onalaska — Jacob Mag- Saturday’s Games CBS — PGA Zurich Classic of New Orleans er, Trevor Lawrence (3), Chase Smith NBA Atlanta at Detroit 10:05 a.m. 1. Jimmie Johnson 311 (4) and Cody Bruton, Wyatt Smeall (4); Cincinnati at Washington 10:05 a.m. 2. Kasey Kahne 274 COLLEGE TENNIS Toutle Lake — Olver, Wherry (7), Mor- NBA Playoff Glance Philadelphia at NY Mets 10:05 a.m. 3. Brad Keselowski 273 10 a.m. ton (7) and Brown All Times PDT Toronto at NY Yankees 1:05 p.m. 4. Greg Biffle 264 PAC-12 — Women, PAC-12 Championships FIRST ROUND Baltimore at Oakland 1:05 p.m. 5. Dale Earnhardt Jr. 263 Softball (x-if necessary) Texas at Minnesota 1:10 p.m. 6. Carl Edwards 262 SOCCER At Centralia (Best-of-7) Pittsburgh at St. Louis 1:15 p.m. 7. Kyle Busch 257 2 p.m. TIGERS 7, BOBCATS 3 EASTERN CONFERENCE Houston at Boston 4:10 p.m. Aberdeen 200 000 1 — 3 5 2 Miami 3, Milwaukee 0 Tampa Bay at Chi White Sox 4:10 p.m. 8. Clint Bowyer 247 ESPN2 — Atlas at Puebla Centralia 022 120 0 — 7 7 1 Sunday, April 21: Miami 110, Mil- Cleveland at Kansas City 4:10 p.m. 9. Paul Menard 240 COLLEGE SOFTBALL Batteries: Aberdeen — Utto-Galar- waukee 87 Chicago Cubs at Miami 4:10 p.m. 10. Jamie McMurray 227 neau, Donovan (4) and Timmons; Tuesday, April 23: Miami 98, Mil- Colorado at Arizona 5:10 p.m. 11. Kevin Harvick 224 1 p.m. Centralia — Wasson, Brower (2) and Sy waukee 86 San Francisco at San Diego 5:40 p.m. 12. Aric Almirola 222 PAC-12 — Utah at Stanford Braaten Thursday, April 25: Miami 104, Mil- LA Angels at Seattle 6:10 p.m. 13. Martin Truex Jr. 204 3 p.m. waukee 91 Milwaukee at LA Dodgers 6:10 p.m. 14. Matt Kenseth 202 At Toutle Lake Sunday, April 28: Miami at Milwau- PAC-12 — California at Arizona St. 15. Jeff Gordon 202 Game 1 kee, 12:30 p.m. Sunday’s Games AUTO RACING 16. Mark Martin 201 DUCKS 3, LOGGERS 0 x-Tuesday, April 30: Milwaukee at Toronto at NY Yankees 10 a.m. 11 a.m. Onalaska 000 000 0 — 0 4 4 Miami, TBA Philadelphia at NY Mets 10 a.m. 17. Ryan Newman 200 Toutle Lake 003 000 0 — 3 x x x-Thursday, May 2: Miami at Mil- Chicago Cubs at Miami 10 a.m. 18. Ricky Stenhouse Jr. 196 ESPN2 — NHRA Spring Nationals qualifying Batteries: Onalaska — Gabby waukee, TBA Houston at Boston 10:30 a.m. 19. Marcos Ambrose 193 COLLEGE BASEBALL Wright and Nicole Duryea; Toutle Lake x-Saturday, May 4: Milwaukee at Mi- Cincinnati at Washington 10:30 a.m. 20. Joey Logano 187 Noon — Deffenbaugh and Iverson ami, TBA Tampa Bay at Chicago White Sox, 11 a.m. 21. Tony Stewart 181 Texas at Minnesota 11 a.m. 22. Kurt Busch 180 ESPN — South Carolina at LSU Game 2 New York 3, Boston 0 Cleveland at Kansas City 11 a.m. 23. Jeff Burton 178 7 p.m. DUCKS 15, LOGGERS 2 Saturday, April 20: New York 85, Pittsburgh at St. Louis 11 a.m. 24. Casey Mears 169 Onalaska 100 100 — 2 8 6 Boston 78 Baltimore at Oakland 1 p.m. CSNNW — Arkansas at Georgia Toutle Lake 102 12x — 15 x x Tuesday, April 23: New York 87, Bos- LA Angels at Seattle 1 p.m. 25. Danica Patrick 154 EQUESTRIAN Batteries: Onalaska — Gabby ton 71 Milwaukee at LA Dodgers 1 p.m. 26. Denny Hamlin 145 1 p.m. Wright, Colee Masciola (4) and Duryea; Friday, April 26: New York 90, Bos- San Francisco at San Diego 1 p.m. 27. Juan Pablo Montoya 142 Toutle Lake — Deffenbaugh and Iver- ton 76 Colorado at Arizona 1 p.m. 28. Bobby Labonte 127 NBC — Rolex Championships son Sunday, April 28: New York at Bos- Atlanta at Detroit 5 p.m. 29. Dave Blaney 124 ton, 10 a.m. Cleveland at Kansas City 5 p.m. 30. J.J. Yeley 123 MONDAY, April 29 At Adna x-Wednesday, May 1: Boston at New 31. David Ragan 121 Game 1 York, TBA Monday’s Games MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 32. David Reutimann 116 TIGERS 7, PIRATES 5 (8 inn.) x-Friday, May 3: New York at Boston, Washington at Atlanta 4 p.m. 4 p.m. Napavine 010 210 12 — 7 12 1 TBA Houston at NY Yankees 4 p.m. 33. David Gilliland 114 Adna 100 004 00 — 5 9 0 x-Sunday, May 5: Boston at New Minnesota at Detroit 4 p.m. 34. David Stremme 101 ESPN — Washington at Atlanta Batteries: Napavine — Alexa Pe- York, TBA NY Mets at Miami 4 p.m. 35. Travis Kvapil 93 7:10 p.m. ters and Karley Bornstein; Adna — Sam San Diego at Chicago Cubs 5 p.m. 36. AJ Allmendinger 92 ROOT — Baltimore at Seattle Rolfe, Savannah Massingham (5) and Indiana 2, Atlanta 0 Cleveland at Kansas City 5 p.m. 37. Landon Cassill 75 Emma Brattain Sunday, April 21: Indiana 107, At- Pittsburgh at Milwaukee 5 p.m. 38. Michael McDowell 44 NBA PLAYOFFS lanta 90 Cincinnati at St. Louis 5 p.m. 39. Terry Labonte 37 4 p.m. Game 2 Wednesday, April 24: Indiana 113, San Francisco at Arizona 6:40 p.m. 40. Scott Speed 35 TIGERS 6, PIRATES 3 Atlanta 98 LA Angels at Oakland 7 p.m. TNT — Chicago at Brooklyn Napavine 051 000 0 — 6 10 3 Saturday, April 27: Indiana at Atlan- Baltimore at Seattle 7 p.m. 41. Ken Schrader 29 6:30 p.m. Adna 120 000 0 — 3 5 1 ta, 4 p.m. Colorado at LA Dodgers 7 p.m. 42. Timmy Hill 24 TNT — Oklahoma City at Houston Batteries: Napavine — Mackenzie Monday, April 29: Indiana at Atlanta, 43. Michael Waltrip 23 Olson and Karley Bornstein; Adna — TBA 44. Scott Riggs 6 • Sports 7 SPORTS The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, April 27, 2013

Thursday’s Prep Track & Field Chehalis 9s Win at Onalaska Pe Ell’s Brooks-Johnson Wins Four at Naselle By The Chronicle atch and Karissa Callahan. Cal- NASELLE — The Comet In- lahan, Jessie VonBargen, Chloe vite’s rule limiting teams to two Manning and Melyssa Nocis athletes per event meant Pe Ell’s won the 4x400 relay, while Em- Alissa Brooks-Johnson got to try ily Ivie won the javelin (94-7) for a few new events here on Thurs- the Pirates. day. Rachel LaBrasca won the The end result, though, was long jump (14-10) and ran a leg the same. of the winning 4x100 relay with Brooks-Johnson ran the 100 Josie Dekoker, Emily Potter and meters and the 400 for the first Kristin Hickey for Napavine. time this season and won both Adna will run at Raymond events, as well as finishing first on Thursday, while Onalaska in the 200 and the 100 hurdles. and Tenino will run at Elma the Her times in the 100 and 400 same day. were the fastest in the state’s 2B ranks, giving the decorated se- Fosnacht Wins Two for Warriors nior the top mark in seven dif- HOQUIAM — Rochester’s ferent events. Kenna Fosnacht won the 1600 Teammate Sami-Jo Robin- meters and the 800 here in a son won the triple jump and the SWW 1A League track meet. long jump, and took second in Fosnacht covered the 1600 the 100 hurdles and the javelin. in 5 minutes, 44 seconds, and Chris Moore / Courtesy Photo The Trojan girls finished third won the 800 in 2:36.46, both of as a team, behind Willapa Valley The Chehalis 9-year-old baseball team went 4-0 last weekend to win the Onalaska tournament, beating Winlock and which were season-best times. Onalaska’s Team 1 in pool play, and then beating Onalaska’s Team 2 in the semiinals and topping Winlock, 13-9, in the and South Bend. Kaylin Fosnacht was second in The Trojan boys finished championship. Coaches in the back row, from left, are Joe Rosbach, Jared Rocky, Jack Froschauer and Chris Moore. the 800, and the sisters also ran Players in the front row, from left, are Seth Hof, Larklin Dennis, Darren Gray, Cole Froschauer, and Tukker Rosbach. In fifth in the 10-team meet, with on the second-place 4x400 team Josh Schulz taking second in the the middle row, from left, are Charlie Mallonee, Colton Rocky, Drayson Hilkemenier, Korbin Dennis, William Niemi and with Lupe Vazquez and Yeshi Logan Moore. long jump and triple jump and Bochsler. third in the high jump. Dakota Karlee Pearson won the 400 Russell finished third in the 300 and was second in the 200, as hurdles and fourth in the 110 well as running the 4x200 with hurdles, and Isaac Speer fin- Vazquez, Sharon Smith, and ished fourth in the 100 and 400. Anna Vazquez that placed sec- Pe Ell will run at the 53rd- ond in a team-best 1:49.3. annual Shelton Invitational on On the boys side, Ryan Bax- Saturday. ter won the 3200 with a person- al-best 11:11.5 and was third in Ony’s Bottoms Wins Twice at the 1600. Angel Vazquez won Rainier the 200 and was fourth in the 100. RAINIER — Onalaska’s Ste- Cody Triana ran a personal- phen Bottoms won two races record 15.64 in the 110 hurdles, here Thursday in an eight-team, and took second in the 300 hur- 1A-2B track meet. dles. Bottoms won the 400 meters Kendra Sanford and Triana in 52.67 seconds, and took the were both invited to run the 1600 in 4:22.25. Teammate Josh hurdles at the Shelton Invite on Hunt won the 3200 in 11:11.57, Saturday. The full Warrior team and the Loggers finished third will run at Elma on Thursday. as a team. Napavine’s Kody Robertson won the shot put (44-4), while Aguilar Wins TJ for Toledo at CR teammate Bailey Robertson won CASTLE ROCK — Toledo’s the javelin (144-10) to help the Danny Aguilar won the triple

Tigers to a second-place team jump with a leap of 37 feet, 9.75 Brandon Hansen / [email protected] finish, behind only Montesano. inches here Thursday in a five- A Capital batter tries to run it out to irst base after striking out during Evergreen 2A Conference baseball action Friday at Ed Also for the Tigers, Michael team SWW 1A League track Wheeler Field. Centralia catcher Joe Blaser threw him out. Giessler and Kevin Kim tied to meet. win the pole vault (10-6), and Aguilar also took second in to 7-4 — but the Tigers were un- back-to-back losses to rival W.F. Kohty Newcomb won the long the high jump and long jump, Tigers able to move the runners, or the West, but took a 3-1 lead after jump (17-7). and finished third in the 200 scoreboard, again. two innings. Winlock’s Chance Fisher meters. Continued from Sports 1 It was the final regular-sea- "This game went pretty well won the high jump at 5-6. Toledo’s Daniel Echtle was son home game for Centralia for us," Tiger coach Rex Ash- The Tenino girls tied with second in both hurdle races, of the sixth, taking advantage seniors Stuart, Putman, Con- of two hit batters and a dropped more said. "Even after a rough Rainier at 105.5 points for first Ashton Fraser was second in the radi, Lantau, Justin Reyna, Jus- past couple of days, our guys got place, with Adna a close third third strike that kept the inning 3200 and Kodi Cline was second tice Tasby, Chuck McKeever and after it." (100.5). Jaclyn Huber led the way in the discus. alive and plated another run to Levi Studeman. Aberdeen proceeded to plate for the Beaver girls with a win Brooke Mikel, Amanda push the lead to 6-3. Centralia (9-9, 8-9 league) in the 300 hurdles (49.27) sec- Navolynski, Sally Martin and The Tigers answered with a will face Tumwater on Tuesday 3 runs in the third, and stayed in onds, while Tenino got second- Courtney Moore teamed up to run in the bottom of the sixth, to close out the regular season. control the rest of the way. place finishes from its 4x100 win the 4x100 relay for the In- when Ty Housden doubled, The Tigers will enter the Dis- "This was a real nice baseball and 4x200 relay teams, Kath- dian girls in 59.74 seconds. Mar- moved to third on a passed ball trict 4 2A Baseball Tournament game. There was a ton of inten- ryn Armstrong (high jump) and tin took second in the 1600 and and scored on Chuck McKeev- as the No. 4 seed, and will play sity on both sides," Ashmore Keilah Dowies (200). third in the 400, as well, and er's sacrifice fly. at the Greater St. Helens 2A said. "One play made the differ- Adna’s Regyn Gaffney won Moore was fourth in the 100 and Capital pushed its final run League champion Mark Morris ence that allowed Aberdeen to the 100 (12.52) and ran a leg of the long jump. across in the seventh, on an RBI on Tuesday, May 7, to open the take over. Besides that, our guys the winning 4x100 team with Toledo will run at Kalama on single from Monda, but Conradi postseason. performed well." Genevieve Carney, Emma Ve- Thursday. — pitching in relief — was able to Joe Blaser went 2 for 4 for leave the bases loaded and end Centralia, while Chuck McK- the threat with a groundball to Tigers Fall at Aberdeen Thursday’s 1A Boys Soccer first base. ABERDEEN — The Tigers, eever went 3 for 4 with an RBI. Derek Putman led off the playing their third game in as Patrick Neely went 2 for 3 and bottom of the seventh with a many days, were still looking for drove in a run, and Joel Lantau Garibay Scores Twice for United single, and two batters later Lan- their first win of the week after a added an RBI for the Tigers. By The Chronicle Neither team scored in the tau added a single. Stuart drew a 7-4 loss to Aberdeen here Thurs- Centralia managed 11 hits LA CENTER — Toledo- first 5-minute overtime period, walk to load the bases, and Joe day in Evergreen 2A Conference off of Aberdeen's big left-handed Winlock freshman Adair Garib- but Garibay knocked in a pen- Blaser hit a fielder's choice that baseball action. pitcher Collin Nord, with just ay scored in the second overtime alty shot with 50 seconds left in scored Putman and cut the lead Centralia was coming off four strikeouts. to give United a 2-1 win over La the second sudden-death over- Center here Thursday in SWW time to end the game. Thursday’s 2B Boys Golf 1A League Trico Division boys "Hopefully we will begin soccer action. coming out a little stronger, a "We have been starting our little faster, but I am happy with Wagner Leads Adna Golfers With a 47 at Riverside the win," Malunat said. games out a little slower," War- By The Chronicle with firm, fast greens, Pirate fore season end." hawk coach Horst Malunat said. Malunat also cited sopho- "They always make it stressful for more Raul Plancarte for his hard Adna's Nolan Wagner shot a coach Alan Browning said, but Medalist honors went to the coach, but keep it exciting." work. 47 to pace a trio of Pirate golfers he was happy with his team's Wahkiakum's Austin Good, La Center scored in the 30th Toledo-Winlock (7-7, 7-5 in in a 2B boys match at Riverside work. who shot a 45. minute, and United was quiet league) will play at Castle Rock Golf Course on Thursday. "Nolan and John just keep Adna will hit the road to until Garibay found the back of on Tuesday. John Kruger shot a 49 for knocking on the door to be the face Three Rivers Christian the net in the 70th minute on an Note: United’s JV won and Adna, and Jake Ferrier fired a 63. match medalist," he said. "I hope and North Beach on Monday at assist from Juan Gutierrez. remained undefeated. Riverside was playing tough they get to achieve that goal be- Three Rivers Golf Course.

iPad Users - We have an app for you! chronline.com Sports 8  The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, April 27, 2013 SPORTS

MLB

Ted S. Warren / The Associated Press ’ Mike Trout is forced at second as second baseman Robert Andino throws for the double play in the third inning of a baseball game, Friday in Seattle. Conger, Trumbo Homer to Power Angels Over Seattle SEATTLE (AP) — Hank for a 5-0 lead, chasing Harang fourth to give him a career-high A pair of singles by Brendan Notes: OF Michael Saunders Conger and Mark Trumbo each before the fourth. 15-game hit streak, longest in Ryan and Jason Bay in the fifth (right AC joint) joined Triple-A hit two-run homers and C.J. Peter Bourjos opened the the majors this season. He is bat- was followed by one-out walk to Tacoma in Las Vegas Friday for Wilson worked out of a pair of game with a single followed by ting .393 during the streak with Morales, loading up more trou- a rehab assignment. “The earli- bases-loaded jams to help give Mike Trout’s hit. Bourjos took seven doubles, three home runs ble for Wilson. But he got Morse est (return) would be Monday,” the Los Angeles Angels a 6-3 third and scored on Albert Pu- and 11 RBI. on an infield popup and struck Mariners manager Eric Wedge victory over the Seattle Mari- jols’ sacrifice fly to center. The Mariners’ had two out Smoak. ners Friday night. Conger connected in the sec- prime opportunities to unravel The Mariners finally scored said. “We’ll see how he feels.” Wilson ond inning, his first home run, Wilson, loading the bases in a pair of runs in the sixth. Mariners’ prized prospect, LHP (2-0) went 5 and Trumbo hit his third in the both the fourth and fifth with Shoppach singled and Andino Danny Hultzen, has been diag- 1-3 innings, third. less than two outs. They man- doubled. Chavez hit a sac-fly to nosed with a strained left rotator allowing sev- The scoring outburst ended aged just one run. center, scoring Shoppach and cuff and tendinitis. He will rest en hits and the Mariners’ 18-0 scoring run Seager and Kendrys Morales ending Wilson’s evening. and rehab for two weeks. Jason three runs. over the Angels that included opened the fourth with singles Ryan then greeted reliever Bay, hitting .220, started as the He walked Thursday’s 6-0 victory and a and Michael Morse earned Sean Burnett with a first-pitch leadoff hitter for the first time two and 12-0 decision on the final game a nine-pitch walk to load the squeeze bunt, scoring Andino to in his 10-year career. ... With struck out a season-high nine. of 2012. bases with no outs. After Justin make it 5-3. Erick Aybar and Alberto Calla- Ernesto Frieri pitched the The Mariners still have not Smoak struck out, Kelly Shop- The Angels scored in the sev- spo on the DL, Angels manager ninth for his third save in three won consecutive games since pach was hit by a pitch, forc- enth on Pujols’ second sac-fly. chances. the season’s first two games. ing in a run. He has been hit 55 The Mariners had a final Mike Scioscia said, “what’s miss- The Angels would not let They were 1-for-12 with runners times in his career, the second two-out chance in the eighth ing is the balance they give you. Mariners’ starter Aaron Harang in scoring position and left 15 time with the bases loaded. but Smoak was thrown out at They’re both switch-hitters. We (0-3) settle in. They scored in runners stranded. Wilson then struck out Rob- the plate on pinch-hitter Dustin didn’t match up as well (Thurs- each of the first three innings Kyle Seager singled in the ert Andino and Endy Chavez. Ackley’s infield single. day) as we could have.” NFL Seattle Takes RB Christine Michael With 62nd Pick RENTON, Wash. (AP) — of the draft with another run- Irvin with the 12th overall pick up two additional selections many picks, the trade that we John Schneider threw in another ning back to add depth after and drafting Russell Wilson in and will have 10 picks on the made, we’re going in very op- surprise at a position where the they released Leon Washington the third round. This time it was final day. In recent seasons, the timistically that we’re going to Seattle Seahawks appeared set. during the offseason. Seattle led the pick of Michael. Seahawks have found starters come out with some good stuff,” With the NFL in rushes last season “You can’t go through drafts Richard Sherman, Kam Chan- linebacker with 536 attempts. and be passing on talents cellor and K.J. Wright on the last Carroll said. “There are some and the line “We want this position loaded like Michael,” Schneider said. day of the draft. terrific kids in the draft at this of scrim- up. So the chance to get another “When you start doing that, in “This has been a great area of point. We’ve worked very hard mage seem- good, strong, tough guy like we my opinion, is when you start the draft for us and to have this on this aspect of the draft again.” ing to be Seattle’s priorities, the did just adds to the theme we’re making mistakes. While it may Seahawks went for Texas A&M trying to present as a team,” Se- not look like a glaring need, we running back Christine Michael attle coach Pete Carroll said. run the ball so much we did with the 62nd overall selection, Michael saw limited ac- have a hole.” the final pick in the second tion his senior season with the While getting Michael could round of the NFL draft on Fri- Aggies, but still rushed for 12 be considered a luxury, getting day night. touchdowns. With the coaching help for the defensive line was a The selection was another change at Texas A&M between necessity. In Hill, the Seahawks eye-catching move by Schneider, his junior and senior years, and feel they found a defensive line- the Seahawks general manager. a change in offensive styles, Mi- man who has a quick first step Seattle picked up a speedy, bruis- chael had fewer chances. and an ability to provide pres- ing back who played sparingly There were also reports of sure from the interior. The de- as a senior, joining Marshawn Michael getting in trouble with fensive line was a point of em- Lynch and Robert Turbin. When new Aggies coach Kevin Sum- phasis in free agency with the asked which NFL running back lin and oversleeping at the NFL Seahawks signing defensive end he tries to emulate, Michael said, combine when he was fighting Cliff Avril, and defensive tack- “Marshawn Lynch.” illness and taking medication. les Tony McDaniel and Michael “I just want to go into the “Like I mentioned in all of my Bennett, and Hill brings a little league and do it for my fam- interviews, the coaching change more versatility to the group. ily, my daughter, and just to be was definitely a difficult situa- “He’s different than the guys something I can’t even imag- tion for me ... but it was worth that we have. He’s got real nice ine myself being,” Michael said. it,” Michael said. “I lived and quickness, an ability to get on “Just to be a powerful guy, a lead- I learned from it. The coach- the edge and get in the backfield er, and be a young player com- ing change there was definitely and penetrate. He’s a really good ing in with confidence and just some adversity I had to over- effort guy,” Carroll said. “Be- help contribute.” come and I did. I grew up a lot cause he’s different he’ll be right Seattle filled depth on the learning from that stuff.” in the rotation and we’ll see how defensive line by selecting Penn Both his sophomore and ju- it fits.” State defensive tackle Jordan nior seasons were cut short by Hill was a first-team all-Big Hill with the 87th overall pick in injuries. He rushed for 899 yards Ten selection as a senior at Penn the third round. in nine games as a junior in 2011 State when he had 64 tackles, 4.5 The Seahawks held the 56th before suffering a torn ACL. A sacks and an interception. Hill overall selection but traded with year earlier, Michael suffered a started every game in his junior Baltimore to drop back six spots broken leg and was limited to and senior seasons and played and also picked up additional eight games. Still, he finished in 45 total over four seasons at fifth- and sixth-round selec- his college career at Texas A&M Penn State. tions. The 62nd overall pick was averaging 5.28 yards per carry “I’m a versatile player,” Hill the latest selection in Seattle’s and scored 34 touchdowns in said. “I’m not just a guy who can draft history. just 40 games. pass rush. I can stop the run.” Ted S. Warren / The Associated Press While it may not have ap- Going against convention Seattle hopes to again capi- The Seattle Seahawks NFL football draft pick, running back Christine Michael from peared to be a need with Lynch has become little surprise with talize on the final day of the Texas A&M, is shown on the big screen as the Los Angeles Angels take batting and Turbin already in place, Schneider in charge. Last year it draft. Thanks to the trade with practice prior to a baseball game against the Seattle Mariners, Friday in Seattle. Schneider did want to come out was taking defensive end Bruce Baltimore, the Seahawks picked The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, April 27, 2013 Life

Beautiful

A hardy fuchsia is seen hanging from Blooms a plant box in DeGoedes Bulb Farm Made Easy greenhouse in Mossyrock. FUCHSIAS: Local Group Offers Plant Sale and Education By Carrina Stanton For The Chronicle At Shoestring Valley Nursery in Cinebar, Mel Kortlever grows about 600 of the total 15,000 variet- ies of fuchsias. He said when it comes to summer's blooming beauties, the showy fuchsia is one of his personal fa- vorites. “They are one of the easiest plants to grow, al- though a lot of people might argue with that,” Kort- lever said. “But fuchsias are also beautiful and there is a lot of variation, which is what I like about them.” Kortlever is a member of the Lewis County Fuch- sia Fanciers. The community organization dedicated to fuchsias will hold its annual plant sale May 4 at the Centralia Factory Outlets in the walkway near Ed- die Bauer. The sale will feature thousands of 4-inch plant starts in both hardy and non-hardy varieties of fuchsias as well as about 20 hanging baskets that will be in bloom and ready for Mother's Day. Kortlever, who will bring about 600-700 plants to the IF YOU GO sale said there will be about about 100-120 What: Fuchsia Fanciers Plant Sale varieties available. Pete Caster / [email protected] When: May 4, 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. The 32 active Mel Kortlever, co-owner of Shoestring Valley Nursery, stands among a greenhouse of various types of fuchsias at the Where: Centralia Factory Outlets, members of the nursery in Cinebar. There are over 15,000 varities of fuchsias and Kortlever, a long-standing member with the Lewis in the walkway near Eddie Bauer Fuchsia Fanciers cel- County Fuchisa Fanciers, grows over 600 of them. Cost: Free admission to the public, ebrated their 20th plants for sale year as a club this Info: Will Gibbs; (360) 983-3354 month. Besides the Demonstrations: annual plan sale, the Fanciers can usually Hardy fuchsias; 10 a.m. - noon, be seen around the Container Plantings; 1 p.m. - 3 p.m. community with dis- plays and demonstra- tions at the Southwest Washington Fair. They also maintain a hardy fuchsia garden that is located in Borst Park between the Cen- tralia Thorbecke's parking lot and public kitchen #2. “The kids like to ride their bicycles through and destroy the signs and the plants so there's always a challenge there,” said Club President Will Gibbs of Mossyrock. Gibbs joined the Fuchsia Fanciers about seven years ago after having been a member of a similar club in Seattle. He said his fascination with fuchsias began much like many people's, when he tried but failed to grow them successfully. Today, he has about 55 hardy fuchsias planted along his home's fence line, some of which can get 7-feet tall at the height of the growing season. Gibbs said when he first began, there were only three clubs in the Puget Sound area and there are now 14, which attests to the flowering plant's popularity.

please see FUSHIA, page Life 2 Ralph Steiger, Boistfort, center, helps with spring cleaning at the Fuchsia Garden at Fort Borst Park in Centralia. Lewis County Fuchsia Fanciers, which celebrated its 20th anniversary earlier this month, run the garden which comes to life in June.

Mel Kortlever holds a White King Fuchsia at his nursery. The White King blooms from early summer to early fall. Shirley Swenson, Centralia, clips branches of a fuchsia plant at the Fuchsia garden. Life 2  The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, April 27, 2013 LIFE

Fushia: Keep Roots Cool and Moist Continued from Life 1 work well in flower beds and are relatively cold hardy. “They're easy to grow, they're “They're inexpensive so if you not expensive plants and once buy one you want to try in the they start to bloom they'll yard and you lose it, it's not a bloom for months,” Gibbs said. huge deal,” Gibbs said. Gibbs said one of the most But just as many people want attractive parts about fuchsias, fuchsias for a spectacular and besides their beautiful blooms colorful hanging basket. Just in white, pink or purple, is their three or four 4-inch starts are long growing season. Trail- enough make a very full hang- ing varieties, those most com- ing basket. Kortlever said many monly found in hanging baskets, home gardeners do not know bloom from about May until that they need to pinch back well into October and Novem- the new growth on their plants ber and sometimes even later at least once or twice to stimu- than that. Hardy varieties may late the plants to grow more not bloom until about July but full. Much like stimulating ba- can also keep their blooms well sil plants to branch, he said you into the late fall or even early should pinch the young plants winter. back to two sets of leaves. The Fuchsia varieties are often plants at the May 4 sale will identified as being either single, have been pinched at least once, which contain four corollas, or he added. petals, per flower, or double, “Every time you pinch it you Pete Caster / [email protected] which is anything larger than will get at least two and up to Mel Kortlever, holds a planted White King Fuchsia at his nursery in Cinebar. that. Gibbs explained that while four branches and you double single fuchsia flowers may not the blossoms,” Kortlever said. be as showy as the doubles, Fuchsias of all varieties like roots stay cool.” fuchsias to die. “They are loved to Fanciers plant sale is a good place those plants tend to produce to have afternoon shade so Fuchsias like for their roots death or ignored.” to start. From 10 a.m. - noon more flowers. a spot on the east side of the to be moist and cool so watering And because they are such there will be free presentations “You can have lots of singles house for morning sun is ideal, containers every day is a must, vigorous flowering plants, fuch- on hardy fuchsias and from 1 but they'll be smaller than the Gibbs said. This is especially Kortlever noted. He said if you sias also need regular feedings. big, fluffy doubles,” Gibbs said. important for fuchsias planted want to know if your container Mix one tablespoon of fertilizer p.m - 3 p.m. presentations on If your fuchsia is red and in a container as they can much is moist enough, lift it. It should to one gallon of water and add container plantings. But there purple and grows in a more up- more easily dry out. feel heavy, if it feels light it needs once a week. Or, mix the same will be Fuchsia Fanciers on hand right manner rather than trail- “The trick to growing a more water. But be careful not to solution at one-quarter strength all day to answer any questions ing, chances are it is the hardy container plant is you need overwater, he cautioned, and do and put it on each time you water. or point shoppers to the infor- variety. Gibbs said the most to protect the container from not place a dish under your con- “The extra food will cover up a mation they need for fuchsia suc- common question he gets from hot sun,” Gibbs said. “They'll tainers as fuchsias do not like to lot of neglect,” Kortlever said. home gardeners is whether or dry out quickly and the roots have “wet feet”. Once you get a handle on how cess. not the fuchsia they purchased will get warm and they don't “Most likely they are either too to care for fuchsias, you may find “There will be plenty of is hardy enough to plant in their like that. That's why they do so dry or too wet,” Kortlever said they are very easy, Kortlever said. knowledgeable people there,” yard. He said many varieties well in the ground because the of the most common reasons for And visiting the May 4 Fuchsia Kortlever said. Baking Like a Plants Plus French Housewife “that’s us” By Lauren Chattman past 80 years. • Bedding Plants Are Here Newsday In the summer, I’m always looking for dessert recipes nice • 20% Of Trees And Seeds I learned to bake by follow- enough to serve to company but • 50¢ Vegetable/Herb Starts ing the recipes in “Joy of Cook- quick enough to throw together ing.” So I’m in my comfort zone if I want to spend most of my • $14.99 Ocean Forest with blondies, gingersnaps and time at the beach. Strawberry apple crisp. But what kind of season is upon us, so with my baker would I have become if I very first box of local berries I had grown up in Paris instead of decided to audition Mathiot’s New Jersey, and my first cook- Strawberry Frangipane for a books had been “I Know How place in my summer dessert (Eve Bishop / Newsday CH493518sl.cg to Cook” and “I Know How to rotation. If your mother isn’t This classic French dessert has just four ingredients: Berries, egg yolks, sugar, and Make Pastries,” both by Ginette French and you didn’t go to cu- almonds. Mathiot? linary school, you probably have Recently, I had a chance to never heard of frangipane. This 360-996-4219 find out, when a copy of “The you how to smooth the rather recipe doesn’t specify the size is a real shame. Frangipane is stiff batter into the molds or of the pan you’ll need (I found 2726 Jackson Hwy., Chehalis Art of French Baking,” a com- a deliciously rich and flavorful email: [email protected] pilation of recipes from both of how many cakes you’ll wind up batter made from egg yolks, sug- with (I got 24). The Frangipane Mathiot’s classic books, landed ar and ground almonds. When please see BAKE, page Life 8 on my kitchen counter. Ma- scraped into a tart pan and dot- thiot, then a 25-year-old home ted with strawberries, it bakes COMPLETE SERVICE economics teacher, published into a cakelike tart that is easy SPRING INTO SAVINGS! FROM CONSULTATION “I Know How to Cook” in 1932 to make but a little more elegant TO INSTALLATION! (the first edition of “Joy of Cook- in presentation than the straw- ALL BLINDS! ing” debuted in 1931). It went berry cobbler I have relied on it 25-40% OFF Offer Expires 4/30/13 on to sell 5 million copies, be- in the past. The More You Buy The More You Save! coming the French housewife’s I love this book, but I’m glad WE CARRY THE FINEST BRANDS LIKE HUNTER DOUGLAS kitchen bible. Dipping into the I came upon it after I’d baked AND SIGNATURE SERIES BY BUDGET BLINDS! new book, I was curious to see my way through Fannie Farmer You’ll be surprised by our range of quality products, including custom shutters and soft window treatments! what kinds of after-school treats and Betty Crocker. Mathiot’s CH494424cz.db and simple desserts the real style is to streamline rather than www.BudgetBlinds.com/Longview facebook.com/BudgetBlindsLongview housewives of Paris have been overexplain. Her Madeleines routinely whipping up for the recipe, for example, doesn’t tell CALL US FOR A FREE CONSULTATION TODAY • (360) 577-6517

“Jubilee” “Cherokee” “Matt” “Nelson” Jubilee is a very pretty 1 1/2 yr. old Cherokee is about 5 years old, and is Matt is about 3 1/2 years old, and Nelson is a volunteer favorite! He is calico tabby. She was in foster care a quiet kitty, that likes the cat condo. was found as a stray. He was about 6 years old, and is a big boy! for awhile because she was pregnant She has very pretty green eyes, and shy at irst, but now enjoys being Classic round tomcat face, but a real when found as a stray. Now ready for gorgeous hair. She is waiting patiently petted and visiting with people. sweetheart! He loves his kennel bed, adoption, she loves to cuddle and be for the right person to take her home! His green eyes are stunning! but would really love a house to rule petted! #9526 #9529 Ready to go today! #9596 over! #9572

Lewis County Animal Shelter Pets of the Week Thanks to all the generous people that have been helping us out with donations! We love our great community!!!

Send monetary donations to: The Shelter is always in need of donations. Still several sponsored cats, so adoption Lewis County Animal Shelter fee is $30 & up Items we can still use are: plain cat litter (cheap, non-scoopable), canned 560 Centralia-Alpha Road kitten food, 45 gallon garbage bags, latex gloves for cleaning, and HP ink #951 and 950, P.O. Box 367 for our printer.

Chehalis, WA 98532 Please put an I.D. tag on your pets and remember to get them spayed or neutered! CH494473cz.db 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 3

The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, April 27, 2013 • Life 3

Saturday, April 27, 2013 • Life 3 Past Lends Perspective to UpcomingThe Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday,Project April 27, 2013 DECADES LONG SUPPORT: Chehalis Outdoor Swimming Pool Proponents Span Half a Century, Giving Back to the Community

Building the Chehalis Outdoor committee member, sided with Community Swimming Pool has the steel pool option because of become an effort that has spanned recent earthquake activity. Due to generations in the the 1949 earthquake, Wood said, last half century. many community members were It all started with adamant that the pool must be able one very important to withstand disasters. question proposed “That’s why they wanted a to community substance that would really last,” residents in 1955. Wood said, noting the durable Chehalins today concrete option eventually bested face a very similar the steel choice. “The pool is still question as they workable because of it.” are being asked By Amy Nile By 1959, W.B. Graham and Sons [email protected] to support a $2.2 had built the pool, which opened in million fundraising Chehalis’ Recreation Park. effort to renovate the 54-year-old pool The pool’s opening celebration facilities. included songs, a synchronized Ten years after the state gave the city swimming performance, and of Chehalis the property for the pool speeches. Stan Hedwall, the park in 1945, an Adventure in Cooperation superintendent, led the efforts to group surveyed Chehalis residents, prepare the space. asking people to rate the importance George R. Thompson, the city of community priorities. The group’s commissioner of finance, presided leadership included Gail Shaw, Kenneth over the dedication ceremonies and Chase and Ray Melhart. then Mayor Walter B. Graham Sr. The first community priority the accepted the pool for the city. 1955 survey found was industrial Speakers at the event included park development and jobs. The second was board members Earl Ferguson, Fremont water resources and flooding issues, Burrows and Tom Wood, in addition to followed by an outdoor swimming city commissioners George Bickle and pool. Committees were set up as a Robert McGandy. result of the questionaire. Tom Smith, a then Chehalis High “Then it became an issue of could School teacher and athletic coach, who the city of Chehalis afford to do it,” said was looking for a summer job became Lowell Wood, a 1958 Chehalis High the first outdoor community pool School graduate, who now visits his director. hometown regularly from his Florida “Tom was instrumental. He was our residence to help raise money to restore mentor,” said Hotsko, a former student the pool. “There was a movement of Smith. “I thought that was a great fit.” among the kids because we wanted a Smith, who is now 89 years old, pool.” said he enjoyed working with the staff, But, in 1956, Chehalis voters which included Dick Huber, who took rejected a $175,000 bond proposal to care of pool maintenance and worked build a pool with a retractable roof. as a lifeguard and “This swim teacher. community was “Everybody important to me,” Chehalis High needs to know how Jim Vander Stoep, to swim, it’s very who chaired the School Students important,” Smith, original pool bond a teacher of more committee recalled. March in Support than three decades “It seemed like this said. would be a nice One of the feature to add.” of Pool in 1957 primary reasons Vander Stoep’s Chehalins wanted efforts did not end - Followed by a pool, Smith there. said, was to keep In 1957, a Voter Approval of the kids from community group swimming in the recommended $125,000 Bond river. Occasionally, building a 5,000 Smith said, kids square-foot would drown or L-design steel pool in Chehalis, after get injuries diving off bridges. studying aquatic centers for two years. Once the pool was built, it not only “There were lots of people in the benefited the kids, Smith said, but the community involved,” said Connie adults as well. Bode, the fundraising chair for today’s Chehalis Foundation pool renovation Lorraine Hoster organized and taught an adult swim class. Even effort. The Chronicle, file photos Smith’s wife, Peggy, got involved by Chehalis High School students even Adventures in Cooperation photos from 1958. If you have additional information on these marched in support of a pool. Ken participating in the 1960 water ballet. photographs, or have some of your own from the early days of the Chehalis Community Pool, Hotsko, who was then student body “It was kind of Hawaiian themed,” send us an email at [email protected]. president, led the 1957 youth effort. Peggy recalled, noting she and the other water ballerinas donned hats with Following the student “So it was really wonderful when flowers affixed to the top. seeking that same community support demonstration, voters approved a they opened the pool,” she said. to complete fundraising efforts for the $125,000 bond, which financed the Peggy, who raised five children in The Smiths, who still live in Chehalis $2.2 renovation, which would preserve outdoor swimming pool. Chehalis, said the community pool was very important to housewives of the day. today, said the pool has continually the pool facilities for future generations. Wood, who also participated in benefited the community throughout the 1957 student rally, said the project “Before they had the pool the “There’s a lot of people who grew mothers had to drive the kids to the last five decades. encountered its first major issue in the Wood, also former student of Tom up in Chehalis that have wanted to give design process when there was debate Centralia,” the now 88-year-old said. Smith, said many people have worked back because of what this community over whether to build a steel or cement Peggy said she had to load three kids into her station wagon and drive to the hard to build and maintain the pool gave us,” Wood said. pool. ••• Shaw, an original recreation Pearl Street Pool every morning for two over the years. weeks during swimming lessons. The Chehalis Foundation is now Amy Nile: (360) 807-8235 CAN TODAY’S COMMUNITY PULL TOGETHER ONCE AGAIN? Read More about The Chehalis Pool Renovation Project on Saturday, May 4, 2013

Chehalis Outdoor Community Swimming Pool Historical Timeline By The Chronicle

1945 The state gives the 1956 Chehalis voters reject a 1959 W.B. Graham and 2013 Pool opens 2013 Construction for city of Chehalis the property for $175,000 bond proposal to build a pool Sons install the pool, which opens June 15 through Aug. 30 pool renovations is expected the outdoor community pool. with a retractable roof Jim Vander Stoep in Chehalis’ Recreation Park. Tom for normal summer use. to begin in the fall. chairs the original pool bond committee. Smith becomes first pool director. 1945 2014

1955 Adventure in Cooperation 1957 A community group recommends building a 5,000 square- 2012 The Chehalis 2014 The new pool group surveys Chehalis residents and foot L-design steel pool, after studying splash centers for two years. Foundation starts collecting facilities are expected to identifies pool as one of the community’s Chehalis High School students march in support of a pool. donations for a $2.2 million open in June. top priorities. Following the demonstration, voters approve a $125,000 bond to renovation pool project. finance the outdoor swimming pool. Life 4  The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, April 27, 2013 Faith Religion, Church News Exploring Grief as a Bridge to Healing

By Carolyn Click instrumental in organizing the Slowly, as the stranger draws ways have a relationship with people need to be more patient The State (Columbia, S.C.) lecture series. them out about the terrible “what was lost or who was lost.” and immerse themselves in The 3,400-acre Berkeley events in Jerusalem and Jesus Sometimes, she said, it is thera- healing. County, S.C., monastery, home provides his own interpreta- peutic to write a letter to your- Norman Cookson, of Gar- MONCKS CORNER, S.C. — to 15 monks who work and live tion, the disciples come to real- self that will explain or seek den City, S.C., attended the There is no way we humans can in silence, has long been a place ize that Christ’s suffering and forgiveness, express love or lay seminar with his wife, Joan, exit this life without experienc- of contemplation and prayer to death represent the fulfillment out what, in hindsight, might and realized that loss accompa- ing a considerable share of grief visitors, whether they come for of ancient scriptures. have been done differently. nies every stage of life. and loss. an afternoon to experience a “What does Christ do? He The Rev. Cathy Jamieson- “I always looked at grief as But Sister Ann Billard be- walk through the Mepkin gar- begins to re-weave the story,” Ogg, — on a five-day Mep- being death, but she brings out lieves there are lessons that dens or stay for a longer retreat. Sister Ann said. kin retreat, said she gleaned that all the losses in your life grief can teach people as they Founded in 1949 on a for- As they walk with the wisdom that she hopes to use is all grief-encountered, and I age, whether they grieve the mer rice plantation donated stranger, the disciples begin to not only for herself but for her never looked at it in that way,” loss of loved ones or mourn by publisher Henry Luce and accept the reality of their loss, church, Trinity United Meth- he said. “There are times in the passage of time and dimin- his wife, Clare Boothe Luce, experience the pain, and then odist Church in Blythewood, your life when you are grieving ished dreams. the Roman Catholic monks at adjust to the “new now.” When S.C., which is hosting a grief and you don’t even know it is “Grief holds a richness of Mepkin Abbey belong to the they invite Christ to stay with seminar beginning in May. grief.” possibilities,” she said. “Grief worldwide Order of Cister- them and share a meal, sud- In today’s fast-paced society, ••• is not the end point, it is the cians of the Strict Observance, denly “their eyes were opened” “I think there is sense that we’ve To inquire about Mepkin Ab- bridge.” commonly known as Trappists. and they rushed with renewed rushed through the grief pro- bey retreats, email Brother Guerric Sister Ann, a member of the They adhere to the rules of St. vigor to tell Jesus’ other follow- cess,” Jamieson-Ogg said, when Heckel at [email protected]. Sisters of Charity of Our Lady Benedict of Nursia, the 5th- ers that the prophesy was true of Mercy in Charleston, S.C., century monk who called for a and that Jesus was alive. Concrete & leads seminars on grief and life devoted to prayer, contem- Too often, Sister Ann said, loss, part of her lecture series plation and simple work. people cannot embrace a new Pervious Concrete on “Discerning the Call of the On Thursday, as she painted energy because they are stuck, Commercial & Residential Second Half of Life.” a path to confront unresolved believing if they grieve alone The Trappist monks at the grief and loss, Sister Ann drew or just stay busy that time will Window Replacement Roman Catholic monastery her audience into the biblical take away the sorrow. Some- Aging & Accessibility have sensed a need for such story of the risen Christ on times, people cover the hurt of Construction discernment among those who the road to Emmaus as a way death of parents and children, come to Mepkin to participate to navigate through change. physical problems or health is- New Construction in retreats and seek solace in Christ comes in the form of sues by withdrawing from oth- the pastoral setting. As more a stranger to two disciples in ers or abusing alcohol or drugs and more South Carolinians the passage recounted in Luke to hide their pain. But that can-

live into their 80s and 90s, they 24:13-35. He listens intently not lead to true resolution until want to help people find a clear as they pour out the story of meaning can be found in the and vibrant spiritual path to the cruel death of Jesus on the loss. those years. cross. “In re-investing in the new 1807 Cooks Hill Rd. • Centralia, WA 98531 CH493511sl.cg “It is so important but we Being able to tell the story of reality, we say goodbye to what 360-736-2500 can’t do this alone,” said Broth- death or loss “is very important was,” she said, although she www.jensenhallconstruction.com er Guerric Heckel, — who was in the grief process,” she said. stressed that people will al- License# JENSEHC947NU usiness Card Listings

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Church News Many Voices Community Dinner on Thursdays Orphanage, Church, School & etc.) To receive information Medical Clinic in Marose, Hai- on these ministries, please call Rejoicing at WPC at Centralia United First Christian Church of ti, as they have no electric grid (360) 736-9981 or visit www. Chehalis has just begun a new in Marose and no refrigeration centraliachurch.org. The Chancel Choir at West- Methodist Church program for the community, minster Presbyterian Church in for medicine or food. Items to “Club Mom.” Club Mom is Chehalis will perform a special Centralia United Methodist bid on include: paintings, golf hosted every Thursday from 10 arrangement of “Joshua Fit the Church will serve a dinner for packages, quilts, tools and tool Harrison Square Battle of Jericho” this Sunday the community at 5:30 p.m. on a.m. to 1 p.m. at the church at rental, a driver’s ed course, and Youth Sponsoring during both services. Monday April 29. There is no 111 NW Prindle St. in Down- much more. For more informa- charge for the meal and all are town Chehalis. Club Mom is tion, please call (360) 736-6133 Breakfast Fundraiser welcome. For more informa- designed for mothers and chil- ext. 2. Gospel Jubilee at tion, please call Carol at (360) dren up to five years of age to at Applebee’s provide opportunities for play 736-7311. The Youth of Harrison Calvary Assembly dates, a children’s clothing ex- Dessert Banquet of God change, crafts for the moms, Square Presbyterian Church is “A Course in Miracles” at Centralia Church sponsoring a fundraiser break- Calvary Assembly of God snacks, and other support and Series Study at service as needed. Moms and of the Nazarene fast from 8 a.m. – 10 a.m. on will be hosting the Twin City May 4 at the Chehalis Apple- Gospel Jubilee at 6 p.m. on their children are welcome A dessert banquet honoring Unity Church bee’s for a mission trip this Sunday, May 19 The special to drop in and stay for a little student ministry graduates in guest will be The Masters Sing- John Davis of Unity Church while, or they can come for the the Class of 2013 will be held in summer. Tickets are $10 each. ers from Shelton, Washington. will be leading a new series whole time. Friendly moms the Goodwin Chapel on Thurs- To buy tickets or for more in- This is a free concert. Refresh- of study, “A Course in Mira- and children’s workers from day evening, May 2nd, at 8:00 formation, please call (360) ments will be served after the cles”. The meaning and practi- the church will be on hand to p.m. To be a part of this eve- 736-9996. event. For more information, cal use of the curriculum will provide hospitality. For more ning of celebrations, please con- please call Carl Hendrix at be explored using music based information, please call (360) tact (360) 736-9981. (360) 736-0788. on the course, reading of the 748-3702. Craft Fair at St. text and discussion. Ministries at Timothy Episcopal The group will be meeting Auctions at Cooks Talent Show at at 7 p.m. the first, second and Centralia Church Church Centralia United fourth Thursdays upstairs at Hill Community to 800 S. Pearl, Centralia. All are of the Nazarene Spring in Bloom Craft Fair with handcrafted items and Methodist Church welcome and there is no charge. Support Orphanage Numerous ministries take Centralia United Methodist For more information, Silent, live and Dessert Auc- place at the church throughout more will take place on Sat- Church will hold a talent show please call (360) 330-5259 or tions will be held at 5:30 p.m. the week (Ladies Bible Stud- urday, May 4 from 9 a.m. – 3 at 7 p.m. on Saturday, April visit www.acim.org. on Saturday, May 4. 100% of ies, Mothers of Preschoolers, p.m. at St. Timothy Episcopal 27. A dessert potluck in Sim- Church Offers Ministry the funds raised will go toward Grateful Girlfriends—a cancer Church in Chehalis. For more mons Hall will follow the show purchasing a solar electric sys- support group, Cub Scouts and information, please contact and all are welcome. for Moms in Chehalis tem for the Good Shepherd Boy Scouts, Prayer Meeting, Nancy at (360) 748-6510.

APOSTOLIC Victory Baptist Church Cooks Hill Community Church First Christian Church NON-DENOMINATIONAL Landmark-Sovereign Grace 2400 Cooks Hill Road, Centralia, Centralia, (Independent), 1215 W. Main. The Apostolic Faith Church 196 NW Cascade Ave., Chehalis, Rev. Jack 617 N.W. West. Street, Chehalis, Sunday Pastor Mitch Dietz. Sunday 736-7655. www.centraliachristian.org. Sunday Chasteen, Pastor. Sun. School 9:30, Service Morning Worship 10:40 am, Pastor Mark mornings: Worship Services at 9am Morning: 1st Worship: 9-10:15am (nursery & 11:00, Evening Service 6 pm, Midweek Service Fenison, 295-0824. & 10:30am (Sign Language preschool), 2nd Worship: 10:30-11:45am (Sunday One Church. Two Locations. Wed. 7:30 pm. 748-4811. Translation available at 10:30am) , School for all ages). servicio en Español 10:30am, LIFE CENTER ASSEMBLY OF GOD INDEPENDENT BAPTIST Classes (adults, youth & children) and Nursery ETHEL CAMPUS: - 100 Oyler Road, on Bethel Church at 10:30am. Wednesday Evenings: Youth Group Highway 12, Sunday 9 a.m., “Following Christ, Loving People, at 6:00pm (grades 6-12). Call the church for Wednesday youth 7 p.m. Restoring Hope” more information at 736-6133 or check out our First Christian Church CENTRALIA CAMPUS: - 201 N. Rock Sunday I-5 Exit 72 - Napavine website at www.cookshillcc.org. Chehalis, Morning worship 10:45 am. Sunday 10:30 a.m. Phone 748-0119. school 9:30 am, Special needs Adults Ministry Wednesday youth 7:00 p.m. Centralia Bible Baptist CONSERVATIVE BAPTIST Mon. 7 pm, Youth meetings, call for times. www.yourlifecenter.com On the web: www.bethel-church.com 802 S. Gold St., Centralia, WA 98531. Christian Fellowship of Winlock Small group fellowships. Tom Bradshaw, 360-736-5898 or 360-978-4216 Kyle Rasmussen, Lead Pastor (360) 669-0113 Saturday Evening Contemporary Worship Service: 10:45 am-12:15 pm. Sunday Minister, 111 N.W. Prindle, 748-3702. Dynamic worship. Friendly people. www.centraliabbc.org School for all ages 9-10:15 am. Nursery care Service: 6:30 pm. Valley of Blessing Ministries Casual dress. Pastor: Tim Shellenberger available. Adult Sunday School class. Children’s Something for every age. Sunday Services: Sunday Worship: 11:00am 243 Hwy. 12 Chehalis, 266-8164. Pastor Encounter energetic full band: 9:00 am. Church, nursery care, available. Pastor Terry Quarterly Family Life Weeks (education tracks) Sunday Evening: 5:30pm Sundberg, Youth Pastor David Martin. Michael Fontenot. Services: Sunday 10 am. The Edge - loud, guitar driven music: Thurs. Prayer 6:30 pm, Worship 7:30 pm. We for the whole family. Wednesday in the Word: 7:00pm 785-4280. 630 Cemetery Rd., Winlock. 10:45 am. Nursery care provided for all services offer home groups, men & ladies bible studies. Classes for children are offered at all services. Trinity Christian Fellowship Call for details. Wednesday night programs Faith Baptist Church - 740-0263 123 Brockway Rd., Chehalis, for all ages at 7:00 pm. 436 Coal Creek, Chehalis, www.fbc-wa.org just 1/2 mile north of WA. 6 via Sunday School (all ages) 9:30 am Chilvers Rd., 748-1886. Adult LUTHERAN Calvary Assembly of God Children’s Church/Morning Worship 10:30am Immanuel Lutheran Church- ELCA 302 E. Main, Centralia. Sun. School: 9:30 am. Bible Class at 9:45 am. Worship Service at 11:00 NEW BEGINNINGS CHURCH Sunday 6 pm, Thursday Bible Study 7pm am. Come as you are; everyone is welcome. 1209 N. Scheuber Rd., Centralia. To be like 603 NW St. Helens Ave. Morning Service 10:45 am. Evening Service 6 Jesus ... meeting needs. Senior Pastor, Rev. pm. Midweek-Survey of The Bible: Wednesday Mountain View Baptist Church PO Box 1164 Chehalis, WA. 98532 Paul R. Hermansen; and Youth Director, Scott (360) 748-7831 www.go2newbc.com 7 pm. Communion and missions emphasis first Napavine Baptist Church 1201 Belmont, Centralia. (1 block west of I-5 Hess. Sunday schedule: Praise Worship Service Sunday of each month. Dr. Earl R. Nordby NapavineBaptist.com • 262-3861 interchange on Harrison, right on Belmont) Pastor Ken Rieper 9am, Sunday School and Adult Education Sunday school begins at 9:30 am Pastor 736-7799 (Corner of Gold and Main 736-1139. Sunday School (all ages) 9:45 am. 10:15am - 11am, Traditional Liturgical Worship Streets) Sunday Services: 8:30 & 11 am. and 6 pm. Worship & Celebration 10:30 am CALVARY CHAPEL 11 am, Fellowship & Coffee 10am and 12pm, Wednesday SUMMIT 6:30-8 pm Destiny Christian Center Calvary Chapel AWANA (Sept-May). Hub City Youth Group 6:30pm - 8pm. Contact 413 N. Tower Ave. in Historic Downtown 2502 Seward Ave., Centralia. Sunday School: information: (360) 736-9270, Centralia. SUNDAY: Sunday Service 10:30am, 11 am. Sunday Service 9 am & 11 am. EVANGELICAL CHURCH [email protected], PENTECOSTAL CHURCHES 748-3569 WEDNESDAY: Adult Bible Study 7:00 pm., The Wednesday Bible Study and Prayer: 7 pm. An Adna Evangelical Church, Jesus Name Pentecostal Church of Loving God, Each Other, & the World, and www.ilccentralia.org. Movement Youth Service 7pm. Information and in-depth, verse by verse study of God’s word. Chehalis, 1582 Bishop Rd., Chehalis. Sunday Sunday: Bible Classes 10:00 am, Peace Lutheran Church & Preschool Pastoral Staff available at 736-6443. Webpage: 360-827-3291. Chehalis–LCMS, Bishop Rd. & Jackson Hwy. Services: Prayer 9:45 am & 6:15 pm, Services: www.lifeatdestiny.com Worship 11:00 am, 10 am & 6:30pm. Wed. Services: Prayer 7:15 Midweek Small Groups call for times. Sun. School 9:30 am. Worship Svc. 8:00 am & Jackson Prairie Assembly of God 10:45 am. Rev. Daniel Freeman 748-4108. pm Service 7:30 pm. Anchor Youth Nite: Fri. CATHOLIC 115 Dieckman Rd., Chehalis 7:30 pm. Elder Bishop Burgess, Pastor “Building community with people like you” St. Joseph Church Steve Bergland, Pastor St. John’s Lutheran Church-ELCA 262-9533, 4224 Jackson Hwy., (Mary’s Corner) Shannon Burgess. (360) 748-4977 682 S.W. Cascade, Chehalis. 2190 Jackson Highway, Chehalis. Sunday website: www.jnpc.org Chehalis. Sunday School for all ages: 9:30am. Masses, Sat.- 5:00pm. Sat., Sun.- 10:30am. EVANGELICAL FREE Worship 8:30 a.m. and 11:00 a.m., Sunday Sunday Morning Worship: 10:30am. Sunday Mass in Spanish: Sun.- 1:00pm Central Bible Evangelical Free Church School 9:45 a.m. Coffee/ fellowship follows the Prayer: 5pm. Sunday Evening Focus: 6:30 pm Reconciliation: Sat. 3:30-4:30. or by appt. 2333 Sandra Ave. Centralia, WA 98531. 360- service. The Rev. Rando Faro, Pastor. Office PRESBYTERIAN w/contemporary worship. Wednesday Evening Father Tim Ilgen. 748-4953. 736-2061. Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Morning hours Monday - Thursday, 9:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. Family Night: 7pm. Adult Bible Study, Youth & St. Mary’s Catholic Church Worship 10:30 a.m. Nursery provided. Evening Phone: (360) 748-4741. Children. Worship Intern: Kara Morris, Youth Worship, Sunday, 6:00 p.m., AWANA- Website: www.stjohnschehalis.net. Pastor: Jared Hunt. Lead Pastor Bill Morris. 225 N. Washington, Centralia. Masses: Harrison Square Presbyterian Church Saturday 5:00 pm, Sunday 8:30 am. Sacrament Wednesday, 6:00 pm, White Cross (ladies) meet St. Marks Lutheran Church-LCMC Web: jacksonprairielife.com on 2nd Thursday, 10 am. Home Bible 1227 Harrison Ave., Centralia. Pastor: Rev. Jim of Reconciliation: Saturday 3:30-4:30 pm. or by 10,000 Highway 12, Rochester. Saturday, Dunson. Sundays: Education for all ages at Napavine Assembly of God appt. Father Tim Ilgen. 736-4356. Fellowships meet during the week. Please call Informal Worship: 7:00 pm; Sunday, Pastor Will Karch - 414 SE 2nd, Napavine. for times and locations. 10:00 am. Traditional service at 9:00 am and Contemporary Worship: 8:30 am; Traditional Contemporary Service at 11:00am 262-0285. Sunday Services, Sunday School: Worship: 11:00 am. Fellowship follows each 9:30am, Morning Worship: 10:30 am. Evening CHRISTIAN SCIENCE EPISCOPAL Phone: (360) 736-9996. service. Education hour: 9:45 am. Pastors: Greg E-mail: [email protected] Service: 6pm. Wednesday: Bible Study: 7pm. First Church of Christ St. Timothy Episcopal Church Wightman and Lauren Macan-Wightman. Scientist, 89 NE Park St., Chehalis, Sunday Web: www.harrisonsquarepc.com Royal Rangers & Missionettes Sundays: Holy Eucharist at 10:00 am; also, Church phone: 273-9571. Web: School & Service 10:30 am, Wed. Service 7:00 Oakville Assembly of God 8:00am Holy Eucharist on the first Sunday of www.lutheransonline.com/stmarksrochesterwa Westminster Presbyterian Church pm. Nursery provided. Reading room hrs., Tues. each month. Child care available at 10:00 am 349 N. Market Blvd., 273-8116 Your Family Church! Sunday -ELCA & Thurs. 11am - 1pm (Except holidays). Wednesdays: noon Holy Eucharist and Prayers St. Paul Evangelical Lutheran Church Chehalis. Rev. Dr. Joyce Celebration Service 10 am, Sunday evening 379 State Rt. 505, Winlock, WA 98596.Sunday for Healing. For more information, contact the Emery, Transitional Pastor. service 6 pm. Wednesday, Kingdom Quest 4yrs School 9:30 am., Worship Service 10:30 am, church office 748-8232. St. Timothy Parish is Sunday Services: Traditional - 5th grade, Youth 6th - 12th grade, Adult Bible CHURCH OF GOD coffee and fellowship follow Sunday Worship. located at 1826 S.W. Snively Avenue (corner of Worship: Sunday Worship Service at 9:00 am, Study, 7pm. Onalaska First Church of God Pastor: Rev. Angela Renecker. For more info call Onalaska Assembly of God Corner of Hwy. 508 & 3rd Ave. 18th and Snively), Chehalis. Modern Service 10:30 am, with children’s the church office 360-785-3507 church and nursery at both services. Adult 137 Leonard Rd., Onalaska , 978-4978. Sunday (360) 978-4161 www.stpaullutheranwinlock.org www.onalaskachurchofgod.com FOURSQUARE Sunday School follows the 10:30 am service. School 9:45 am, Sunday worship services 10:45 Chehalis Foursquare Church am, Monday Boy's Club Meeting (ages 7-17) Where Your Experience With Christ Makes Family Ministry Weds. 6:13 pm. For details, visit 990 NW State Ave., Chehalis. Pastor Armin METHODIST www.chehaliswpc.org 6:30 pm, Tuesday 10 am Ladies Bible Study and You a Member. Kast. Sunday Service: 10 am., with kids Sunday School: 9:45 am; Morning Worship: 8:15 Centralia United Methodist Church or call 748-0091 Prayer, Wednesday family night: College & Sunday School, nursery provided. Wed. am and 11:00 am,, Wednesday: Soup and 506 S. Washington. Rev. Tom Peterson. Career 6:30 pm, (adult Bible study, boys’ & girls’ Night Prayer: 6:30-7:30 pm. Women’s and programs) 7pm. sandwiches at 6:00 pm, Bible Study at 6:30 pm Worship: 11:00 am. Classes for all ages: Men’s Bible Study. Everyone is welcome, 9:30 am. All Welcome! 736-7311. SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST God accepts you the way you are Seventh-day Adventist, Centralia Vader Assembly of God come as you are. (360) 748-4746 www.centraliaumc.com 302 6th St., Vader. Pastor: Tracy Durham. Ser- and so do we 1607 Military Rd., 736-4262. Sabbath School vices: Sundays 10:30 am & 6 pm., Wednesdays INDEPENDENT Chehalis United Methodist Church 9:30 am, Church Service 11:00 am. Wed. Prayer 7 pm. (360) 295-3756 16 S. Market Blvd., Chehalis. Pastor: Tara Roberts. Meeting 7:00 pm. Pastor Ira Bartolome CHURCH OF CHRIST Centralia Bible Chapel Fall schedule: Worship Service begins at 10:50 am 209 N. Pearl St., Christ-centered, Bible-based Seventh Day Adventist, Chehalis BAPTIST Centralia, Sunday Bible Study: 9:30 am, 10:30 with KELA broadcast at 11:30 am. Sunday School ministry. Family Bible Hour & Sunday School, 120 Chilvers Rd, (2 miles west on Hwy. 6 at Exit Dayspring Baptist Church, SBC Worship Sunday: 2 pm. Wed. Bible Study: 7 pm, for all ages begins at 9:30 am. 11:00 am. Midweek prayer meeting, 6:45 pm. 77). 748-4330. Pastor David Glenn. Service on 2088 Jackson Hwy., Chehalis. Care Groups for Thurs. Ladies’ Class: 10 am Info. 736-9798. All are welcome, childcare is available during the Wednesday, followed by Bible study at 7:30 pm. Saturdays, Sabbath School 9:30 am, Worship all ages begins at 9:30 am. Celebration Worship Corner of Plum & Buckner. Worship Service. Church office 360-748-7334 For more information, LeRoy Junker, 807-4633; Service 11:00 am. begins at 10:45 am. Come visit our newly 300 St. Helens St., Toledo, Welcomes Toledo, John Martin, 736-4001. Winlock United Methodist Church revived group of Christians.. Pastor Chris You! 10 am Sun. Bible Study, 11 am Worship. 6 107 SW Benton Ave., Winlock, WA. Rev. Vonda UNITY Kruger 748-3401 pm Sun. Worship, 6 pm Wed. Bible Study, 11 McFadden. Worship Service 9:00 am., Dryad Community Baptist Church am Tues. Adult Bible Class. (bag lunch at 12 Fellowship: 10:00 am Open Hearts, Open 112 Olive Street, Dryad, Wa.,Bible Study for all noon) Evangelist John Minds, Open Doors ages: 10:00 am. Morning Worship: 11:00 am. Gadberry, 274-8570 Adult Discipleship 6:00 pm. 360-245-3383. Home~Church Pastor Reverend Timothy "Buck" Garner, Prophetic/Apostolic Ministry CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE Center for Positive Living. COMMUNITY CHURCH Newaukum Public Golf Course Area Loving Deeply, Serving Boldly A spiritual community open to seekers and 509-230-6393, Associate Pastor: Paul Justice, believers on all paths to God. Sunday Service 736-6981 Friday 7:00 PM - Ph: 748-1838 Sunday Family Worship takes place at 9:15 77 Newaukum Golf Dr. a.m. followed by Learning Groups at 11:00 a.m. 10:00 am. 800 S. Pearl, Centralia. 330-5259. First Baptist Church www.unitycentralia.com 748-8628. 1866 S. Market Blvd., Chehalis. Leaders: Mike and Betty Kitchen Exciting ministries throughout the week for all Sunday Morning Worship Services 9:15 and Centralia Community Church Napavine - Highland Park age groups with nursery care provided. Our 11:00 am. Sunday School for all ages 9:15 am. A community with people just like you! Monday 7:00 PM - Ph: 262-9146 church is a place to make new friends, a place Children's Church 11:00 am. Awana Club Sunday Services at 9:00 am (acoustic) & 222 Maple Ave NW, sp #25 to worship, learn and grow, a place to share -Sunday 4:30 pm. Youth Group for 6-12 grade 10:30 am. Nursery care provided for both Leaders: Jim and Lavern Haslett life's blessings, and a place to find students: Wednesday evenings at 6:45 pm. services Classes for all ages also offered. Email: [email protected] encouragement when weathering a storm. God gave you a Gift - it's time to use it! Grace Baptist Church Great programs throughout the week! Everyone is welcome!! Pastor Dave Bach Sunday School 9:45 am, Morning Worship 11:00 Pastor Mark Fast, 3320 Borst Ave. Faith Temple Word of Life 1119 W. First Street in Centralia, 736-9981. am. We meet in homes 3 Sunday evenings per (across from Centralia High School) (360) 519 W. Cherry In Centralia. If you need a miracle, come. Pastor Larry Radach, 748-7916. Sunday School

736-7606 / www.cccog.com. CH494477cz.ke month. For locations and times, call the church. 10:15 am, morning worship, 11:00 am, Sunday evening We meet on the 5th Sunday at the church at 6:00 pm. Wednesday Bible study 7:00 pm. Old- 6:00 pm. Wednesday at 7 pm, Nursing Home fashioned preaching & prayer for the sick. Everyone Ministries. 19136 Loganberry S.W., Rochester. welcome. 330-2667 or 748-7916. 273-9240. Life 6  The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, April 27, 2013 LIFE

Lewis County History of — est. 1845 —

The Road to Paradise

Submitted by Dan Duffy for Our Hometowns Beginning in 1903 the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers constructed a road to Paradise on Mount Rainier. In 1911 the road is suiciently completed for the use of wagons and automobiles. President William H. Taft traveled to Paradise Lodge in the irst auto to reach the area. The auto had to be towed by horses for the last several miles. Included in that travel were the touring buses and cars such as those seen in this photo. They were called the original mass transit system at Mount Rainier National Park and carried thousands of tourists to the mountain each year.

Store Carefully Fills West Malting company form Prescriptions Ford’s Prairie’s industrial back- Washington In 1891 the 1883 Drug Store, bone.” Chehalis, Washington Territory, state advertised in The Lewis County Smith Highlights Fort Borst HISTORY Bee. Park Improvements “You will find a carefully se- In 1960 Mr. Otis Smith, care- HistoryLink.org $25 OFF lected stock of pure drugs and taker of the Fort Borst Park, patent medicates (medicines), also, perfume and perfume cas- proudly showed community Women Win When you buy a front or rear brake job! es, toilet articles, school books, leaders the improvement work (Passenger and light trucks only. Expires 4/30/13) done in the park. School Suffrage stationery, etc. etc.,” the newspa- On March 27, 1890, Governor per wrote. “Prescriptions care- The community kitchen, built by the Works Progress Ad- Elisha P. Ferry signs the WWW.LESSCHWAB.COM fully filled. H.J. Brooks, Drug- School Suffrage Act into law. gist.” ministration during the 1930s, was painted. The act enfranchises women There was no cost to use the to vote in local school district Chehalis Is Dirty kitchen, as well as no reserva- elections, but not for state or county superintendents. In 1910 the Chehalis Bee- tions needed. However, there Nugget called Chehalis “one of was a cost to use the two electric Nathan Wright the dirtiest cities in the north- ranges, as they both had time Mark Witham Public Manager Manager west.” clocks. The ranges were donated CH494024sl.ke “We dislike to say this, but by Mr. and Mrs. Waldo Roberts. Accommodations Act Centralia Chehalis it is a fact,” the newspaper con- Smith pointed out the round 1211 Harrison 36 N. Market tinued. “There is no excuse for fireplace in the kitchen was con- Takes Effect 736-6603 748-0295 such a condition and the quicker sidered very unique. On March 27, 1890, the it is remedied, the better it will Public Accommodations Act be for the city. becomes effective, upon adop- “As a matter of fact, the Steam Power tion of the Washington State city should own a team which Generator Predicted Constitution. This law en- should be used once a week for In 1961, at the Centralia titles all citizens to civil and hauling away garbage from all Chamber of Commerce, A.B. legal rights, including access parts of town and piled and Martin, presidential assistant for to accommodations at inns, burned on a dumping ground the Washington Water Power theaters, and restaurants. The which should be prepared right Co., Spokane, spoke on steam right to use all public convey- away. There is plenty of work for generation using coal deposits. ances on land or water is to be To Get Your Coupon Listed Here a team to do for the city when A report on the exploration of denied to no one. Any infrac- Call 736-3311 For More Information not actively engaged in carting 14,700 acres in southern Thur- tion of this law is punishable away rubbish should this plan ston and Lewis counties led to by a fine or imprisonment. In 1895, the Washington State be followed. The council should the optimism of a steam gener- Residential/Commercial Landscape Installation Legislature removes the pen- take this matter up and definite- ating plant being built. alties from the law, effectively Water Features Sprinklers ly settle it at once.” “He (Martin) said surveys Edging Beauty Bark show the area has some 70 mil- nullifying it. Pruning Yard Cleanup Fords Prairie Sees lion tons of strip coal and an Industry Growth equal amount of other depos- A Falling Log Thatching Lawn Mowing During this week in April its sufficient to operate a steam Retaining Walls Decoration Rock 1935, The Centralia Daily generator for 50 years,” The Dai- Crushes a Monohon Licensed • Bonded Insured • Free Estimates CH494463cz.cg Chronicle was celebrating the ly Chronicle wrote. Sawmill Employee Francisco ~ Owner LEWISCL912M3 industrial growth on Fords PH: 360-740-5734 CELL: 360-520-0077 Prairie. On March 27, 1907, Chris- New Chief Arrives in Centralia tian Nelson, a 37-year-old “First loading of a Union NEW CUSTOMERS 10% OFF Norwegian sawyer work- Pacific freight car on the new In 2006, as the fire depart- ments of Centralia and Lewis ing at the Monohon sawmill, siding at Ford’s Prairie, ‘Cen- is crushed under a falling tralia’s Little Pittsburgh,’ was County Fire District 12 com- bined, Jim Walkowski, 37, began log. He dies 15 minutes later. completed yesterday by the St. Monohon was a mill town lo- Helens Incubator Company. A his position as fire chief. Walkowski, formerly the fire cated in eastern King County shipment of incubators, includ- on the southeastern shore of chief on Bainbridge Island, took Beer Pairing with the Brewers! ing two of the company’s new Lake Sammamish. Mammoths, destined for Cali- a $12,000 pay cut to come to $ fornia and Idaho, filled the first Centralia. 2.00 oFF

car. Lee Coumbs, chair of the Kingdome in Seattle Thursday Night Beer Pairing Item CH493526sl.ke “The Linscott Manufactur- Joint Board on Fire and Life Opens to a Crowd Exp. 5-2-13 • Cash Value 1/20th Of A Cent • Limit One Coupon Per Visit Per Customer ing company shipped 15,000 Safety, swore the new chief in, (360) 736-7760 handles this week and the new while interim Fire Chief Rich- Of 54,000 5945 Prather road | Centralia, Wa 98531 ard Small provided advice — Retail location FoR Dick’s BRewing company chair stock factory built by E.J. On March 27, 1976, the HouRs: Mon., Tue., Wed. • 9:30-5:00|Thur., Fri. • 9:30-9:00|SaT. • 9:30-5:00 Schanck and L.F. Carver went “Keep the pressure on, but take King County Multipurpose through its first run of alder yes- care not to bend the willow so Domed Stadium, otherwise terday. These concerns and the far it breaks.” known as the Kingdome, opens to a crowd of 54,000 celebrants. The Kingdome All 22 is located in SoDo, south of ¢ REMEMBER, downtown Seattle. The open- 50 off ing ceremonies coincide with he Chronicle the nation’s bicentennial, and Oz. Beers oice is open include a number of perfor- Monday - Friday, mances including square CH494720sl.cg M&K Town Store 8:00am - 5:00pm dancing, barbershop sing- (except for national holidays). ing, and log rolling. During 996-4451 its first year of operation, the 515 N. Market Blvd. Chehalis Kingdome receives more than Cash Value 1/20th Of A Cent Expires 5/3/2013 2,425,000 visitors. • Life 7 LIFE The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, April 27, 2013

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

Crossword

Celebrity Cipher Today’s clue: W equals F

“EYU WDAAK EYMAI GVSDE YGLMAI GBB EYMN

NS-OGBBUR NDOOUNN MN EYGE VUYMAR

ME MN G OUPEGMA YSPPMVBU UZCEMAUNN.”

— NGZ NYUCGPR

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: “There are only two things worth aiming for, good music and a clean conscience.” — Paul Hindemith © 2013 by NEA, Inc.

Southwest Washington FamilySouthwest Washington

TIPS FOR TIDINESS specC110922.db HowHow to controlcontro kid ltt clutter l NOT FIT TO HIT Curb aggressive Family behavior On Newsstands Now! BATHROOM BASICS PottyPott training 101 y tra inin g 101 Come into The Chronicle and pick up your copy of Southwest PUCKER UP! Pick Up Your TurnTurn lemonslemon Washington Family. Each month we feature high quality articles a $weet$weets treat treatinto...into... Free Copy! focusing on parenting, family activities and local events! TOP JOBS GENERAL NOW HIRING Will train. Kellogg’s Cleaners, 816 W. Main, Centralia. MECHANIC 360-736-3285 Large equipment diesel mechanic needed. Pay DOE. Call for details, 360-262-9383 TRADES Rigging slinger and chokersetter. Experience required. Competitive wages. DRIVERS Steady work. Insurance available after 90 days & vacation. Mandatory drug Wanted, non-CDL driver. Must have clean driving record. Loader/Skid Steer screen. Please call 360-740-2465, Monday - Friday, 9am-6pm only, leave experience required. 360-748-3772 message. DRIVERS GAS STATION ATTENDANT Now hiring! Drivers, Roof Loader wanted for local deliveries. Full beneits, Please apply in person weekdays between 9am-3pm at 104 Avery Rd W, 401K, vacation, Class B CDL required, drug free workplace. Call Troy at Chehalis, WA 98532. 360-534-9496. LABORER DRIVERS We are seeking a full-time Laborer at our Onalaska, WA location. This DRIVE A BIG “W”! Have you noticed those late model blue Macks with the individual will be required to handle our products while complying with big white W on top? That’s us and we’re growing! We have (CDL- A) driving all MSHA/OSHA regulations. Individual will maintain a safe working positions available in Oregon (Troutdale, Willamina, Eugene, Roseburg) and environment in compliance with all regulations and company policies. The Washington (Randle, Hoquiam, Tumwater, Tacoma) AND all of our drivers individual must possess the ability to read and interpret product bulletins, are HOME DAILY. Walsh Trucking is family owned and operated, is the safety rules, operating and maintenance instructions and procedure Northwest’s largest transporter of wood residuals and has been doing so manuals, and the ability to add, subtract, multiply and divide in all units of for over 50 years. We require minimum 1 year experience with good MVR. measure. Repetitive lifting of 40-60 lbs. units. Candidate must be at least 21 Steady work, family wage, beneits, 401k, paid training. Complete an online years of age and possess reliable transportation and valid driver’s license. application at www.walshtruckingco.com or call Paul at 253-474-9880. Must meet requirements of all State & Federal explosive laws. Please forward resume to Austin Powder Company, Email: DRIVERS [email protected]. or Fax: (216) 591-1568 AA/EOE Local Class A, Company & Owner Operators. Must have 1 year experience with doubles endorsement. Sign On Bonus EDUCATIONAL Excellent wage & beneits. Robert 800-241-2415 Evaline TA needed. Begin 9/3/13. Please mail resumes to 111 Schoolhouse www.markettransport.com. Rd, Winlock, WA 98596. Ends 3/3/13. FLAGGER FLAGGER PUD RESTAURANT/CLUBS No. 1 of Lewis County is seeking applications for part-time laggers for our Newaukum Valley Golf Course is seeking part time cart boy & cook/waitress Chehalis Operations Departments. Current lagging certiication required. bartender. Apply: 153 Newaukum Golf Dr., Chehalis or fax 360-748-6427. Rate of pay is $16.58 per hour. Please submit a copy of your lagging certiication card along with a completed employment application available LEAD CARPENTER/HOME REMODELER at www.lcpud.org to our Chehalis ofice location at 321 NW Paciic Avenue, Bar-None Construction is looking for a quality Lead Carpenter/Home Chehalis, WA 98532 by Friday, April 26, 2013 at 5:00 p.m. EOE Remodeler (7-10 years experience). Starting pay DOE, fax resume to 360- 807-4934. Life 8  The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, April 27, 2013 LIFE

Bake: A Little More Savoir Faire Continued from Life 2 1 cup superfine sugar 1 ½ cups whole or slivered a 9-inch tart pan with removable almonds, finely ground in a bottom to be just right). But food processor if you have mastered simple American recipes and want to ½ teaspoon pure vanilla extract produce cakes and cookies with 1/8 teaspoon salt a little more savoir faire, “The 1 pound small strawberries, Art of French Baking” may be washed, dried and hulled the book for you. Confectioners’ sugar for dusting (optional) STRAWBERRY FRANGIPANE Directions: (Adapted from “The Art of French 1. Preheat oven to 375 Baking” by Ginette Mathiot) degrees. Grease a 9-inch tart pan and place on a baking sheet. I added a dash of vanilla and a pinch of salt to Mathiot’s recipe. 2. In the bottom of a double If you don’t have superfine sugar, boiler or in a medium-size use granulated sugar and give saucepan, bring 2 inches of it a whirl (about 1 minute) in water to a bare simmer. In the a food processor fitted with a top of the boiler, or in a stainless- metal blade. Serve slices (the steel bowl big enough to rest tart gets a bit messy when sliced, on top of the saucepan, whisk because of its crisp top crust and Eve Bishop / Newsday together the yolks and sugar. If moist interior) with whipped This classic French dessert has just four ingredients: Berries, egg yolks, sugar, and almonds. using saucepan, set bowl over cream. the pan without letting it touch Ingredients: 3. Smooth frangipane into Bake until crust is golden Dust with confectioners’ the water. Whisk constantly prepared pan. Arrange brown and batter is set, sugar if desired, and serve Butter, for greasing the baking until mixture is pale, tripled in strawberries, pressing them about 30 minutes. Transfer warm, or let cool completely dish volume, and just warm. Fold in into frangipane so they are to a wire rack and let cool before serving. 5 large egg yolks almonds, vanilla and salt. mostly submerged in batter. to warm room temperature. Makes 6 to 8 servings ADVICE: Dear Abby Teenager’s Dating Game Plan Begins With Proving Maturity DEAR ABBY: I am a 13-year- proven to them you can handle I am financially dependent on better about yourself, you will be had sent them to me from afar. old girl and my parents won’t responsibility, carry out school him. I have two adult children better able to decide what to do The card read: “Feel Better Soon! let me date. I assignments and chores, be hon- who don’t live near me. Most of about your unhappy marriage. From the Ladies at the Pink believe I am est with them and keep your the people I know are through Smock.” mature for my word. It will also depend upon the church, and they are all great DEAR ABBY: After being di- Abby, that has to be the most age and won’t do whether they know the boy in supporters of my husband. agnosed with multiple sclerosis thoughtful thing a stranger has anything fool- question, and whether HE is I feel trapped, and I don’t last year, I moved 900 miles from ever done for me, and I wanted ish. I don’t know responsible enough to be trusted know how to fix my life at this home. Shortly after the move, to share it. I am so touched! — why my parents with their most precious posses- point. Have you any suggestions? my dog had to be put to sleep. RACHEL IN SANFORD, N.C. are being like sion, which is you. — TRAPPED ON THE EAST Because of all the stress, my M.S. DEAR RACHEL: Your let- this. Please give COAST flared up and I was admitted to ter is an example of what strong me some ad- DEAR ABBY: I have been DEAR TRAPPED: You will the hospital. medicine an act of kindness can vice on how to By Abigail Van Buren married for 27 years to a man have to do it in stages. The first After my third day there be. I don’t know which hospital persuade them. who is a church pastor. We have should be to talk with a licensed I was lonely, so I went to the the Pink Smock is in, but who- — REALLY READY IN NEW had to move every six to eight therapist who is not associated gift shop (the Pink Smock) and ever runs it should know what an HAMPSHIRE years, partly because he was with the church. It will help you bought myself some pretty asset those caring women in the DEAR REALLY READY: Al- repeatedly unfaithful. We have to clarify your thinking and flowers and knick-knacks as a gift shop are. Kudos to them, and though you think you are ready gone through his alcoholism, become more emotionally stabi- pick-me-up. While I was paying I hope you are doing much better to start dating, your parents will gambling and womanizing, and lized. for them, the ladies behind the now. have to make the ultimate deci- my two suicide attempts. We Next, continue looking for counter asked me if I needed a ••• sion on when you enter the “dat- have been trying to work things full-time employment. If neces- card for the flowers. I explained Dear Abby is written by Abigail ing game.” Their decision will out, but I suspect that he’s back sary, start by volunteering. It I was buying them for myself be- Van Buren, also known as Jeanne most likely be based on whether to his old ways. will help to widen your circle of cause I was alone. Phillips, and was founded by her you have demonstrated the be- I work part-time, but haven’t acquaintances and perhaps lead After I returned to my room, mother, Pauline Phillips. Write Dear ginnings of emotional maturity. been able to find a full-time job to a job. about an hour later more flow- Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Here’s how: You need to have after our most recent move, so Then, once you are feeling ers arrived. I thought my mom Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

Start on Puzzle Page One on page Life 7. Answers to Sudoku Puzzle Two the 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: F equals U

“M ZNRY NCPNOI SYCMYRYH ZYCGMWU OXFB

DYCCXP JNW MI GBXDMKNSCY MW YRYBO

IYWIY, GYBIXWNCCO NWH SXKKXJ CMWY.”

— JNBMX GFEX

SOLUTION TO PUZZLE ON PAGE LIFE 7: “The funny thing about having all this so-called success is that behind it is a certain horrible emptiness.” — Sam Shepard © 2013 by NEA, Inc. COMICS The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Saturday, April 27, 2013 • 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, April 27, 2013 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