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Mid-Week Edition
Thursday, June 7, 2018
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DeathsWhitworth, Loma R., 88,
CentraliaMcCormick, Bobby Britton,
85, RandleMounce, Harry James, 88,
Mineral
The Chronicle, Serving The Greater
Lewis County Area Since 1889Wolf Haven
Tenino Area Sanctuary Acquires Montana Nonprofit / Main 3
Bucoda Crash
Driver Charged With Vehicular Assault After Crash/ Main 5
10:00AM - 2:00PM
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JUNE 9JOIN US SATURDAYCELEBRATING 42 YEARS
Serving our communities since 1889 — www.chronline.com
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The Chronicle’s All-Area SoftballVadala, Music Headline Local Team / Sports
By The Chronicle
The Riverside Fire Authority is estimating 11 people have been displaced after a fire at an eight-unit Centralia apartment building early Wednes-day morning.
The fire was reported at 3:20 a.m. Wednesday at the Tall Firs apartment complex in the 1000 block of North Scheuber Road. The fire was located in one of the eight-apartment units, RFA Chief Mike Kytta told The Chronicle.
“Right now all eight are being considered not habitable,” he said.
The American Red Cross was on scene Wednesay helping the residents of the units. One family was not
By Alex Brown
Following last year’s polariz-ing, drawn-out legal battle over the fate of a dog, Lewis County is moving to create a citizen panel
to decide the fate of future ani-mals that are deemed dangerous.
“We ran into some trouble (and) I felt like I made the wrong decision,” said Public Health and Social Services Di-rector Danette York. “Of course
that was a fiasco.”York was referring, of
course, to the case of Hank, a Staffordshire terrier mix who became a cause célèbre for dog lovers and animal rights activists far and wide. Hank,
first known as Tank, had been designated as dangerous in 2016 by York’s office after be-ing accused of killing two goats and injuring a horse
BOUNDARIES: 20-30 Percent of Students to Change Schools
By Katie Hayes
One month after Centralia School District broke ground on new construction at Fords Prairie Elementary School, parents gath-ered in the school’s gym this week to voice frustration that their children may not actually get to attend classes at the new facility.
The Fords Prai-rie PTO’s monthly meeting on Tues-day evening had a packed house with Superintendent Mark Davalos pres-ent to answer ques-tions.
“We can’t get any direct answers from the district,” said Monica Laufenberg, who has four children in the district. Laufenberg said before the meeting that many par-ents felt lied to, a sentiment that
County Looks to Create Dangerous Animal Panel After Hank ‘Fiasco’
Hankplease see FIASCO, page Main 11
Centralia Parents Voice Concerns Over School Boundary Changes
please see CHANGES, page Main 11
Mark Davalos
superintendent
Fire Destroys Building at Centralia Apartment Complex
Jared Wenzelburger / [email protected]
Fire crews work to put out a fire at the Tall Firs Apartments early Wednesday morning in Centralia.
please see FIRE, page Main 11
Firefighters
use hoses
and extin-
guishers
to put out
hot spots
on the
roof of a
building in
the Tall Firs
Apartment
complex.
HOME • CONSTRUCTION • BUSINESSLOCAL, HELPFUL!CHEHALIS
714 W. Main Street 360.740.0770
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Saturday
Few Showers
61° 47°
Monday
Few Showers
68° 48°
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2:17 a.m.Moonrise
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1:55 p.m.Moonset
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9:02 p.m.Sunset tonight
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5:18 a.m.Sunrise today
Today Fri.
City Hi/Lo Wx Hi/Lo Wx
Bremerton 67/53 mc 63/51 ra
Ocean Shores 60/54 cl 59/52 ra
Olympia 71/51 mc 65/49 ra
Today Fri.
City Hi/Lo Wx Hi/Lo Wx
Anchorage 57/47 mc 59/49 sh
Boise 84/57 mc 85/59 s
Boston 70/56 mc 78/63 pc
Dallas 96/77 pc 95/76 pc
Honolulu 85/71 sh 88/73 sh
Las Vegas 99/73 s 101/75 s
Nashville 90/69 s 91/72 s
Phoenix 106/76 s 107/78 s
St. Louis 93/72 pc 91/73 mc
Salt Lake City 90/63 s 88/65 s
San Francisco 60/52 pc 65/54 pc
Washington, DC 78/65 pc 84/72 pc
Today Fri.
City Hi/Lo Wx Hi/Lo Wx
New Delhi 103/85 s 103/87 s
Paris 70/61 ra 72/63 ra
Rio de Janeiro 70/62 ra 66/64 ra
Rome 77/59 mc 74/60 ra
Sydney 64/51 mc 61/53 ra
Allergen Today Friday
Trees Low None
Grass Very High High
Weeds None None
Mold None None
GaugeHeight
FloodStage
24 hr.Change
Chehalis at Mellen St.
49.07 65.0 +0.06
Skookumchuck at Pearl St.
73.14 85.0 +0.01
Cowlitz at Packwood
2.39 10.5 -0.08
Cowlitz at Randle
6.52 18.0 -0.19
Cowlitz below Mayfield Dam
11.50 -- +0.00
Yesterday
City Hi/Lo Prcp.
Today Fri.
City Hi/Lo Wx Hi/Lo Wx
Baghdad 111/82 s 111/84 s
Beijing 87/73 ra 86/64 mc
London 73/53 ra 70/55 pc
Mexico City 67/52 ra 66/49 ra
Moscow 57/39 pc 58/55 ra
Today Fri.
City Hi/Lo Wx Hi/Lo Wx
Spokane 81/55 mc 77/57 pc
Tri Cities 87/57 pc 84/59 pc
Wenatchee 84/57 pc 79/56 pc
New
6/13
First
6/20
Full
6/28
Last
7/6
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69Normal High
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 98 in 2003Record High
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.00"Yesterday
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.44"Normal month to date
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24.71"Normal year to date
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23.63"Year to date
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.06"Month to date
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 in 1919Record Low
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46Normal Low
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46Yesterday's Low
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74Yesterday's High
Data reported from Centralia
Temperature
Precipitation
Sunday
Few Showers
64° 49°
Friday
Scattered Rain
65° 49°
Today
Mostly Cloudy
71° 51°
5-Day Forecast for the Lewis County Area
Regional Weather
Bellingham67/54
Brewster85/55
Centralia71/51
Chehalis71/51
Ellensburg80/52
Longview73/50
Olympia71/51
Port Angeles60/50
Portland75/53
Seattle72/55
Tacoma69/54
The Dalles78/54
Vancouver75/51
Yakima85/54
Shown is today's
weather. Temperatures
are today's highs and
tonight's lows.
Almanac Sun and Moon
Regional Cities
National Cities
World Cities
National Map
Forecast map for June 7, 2018
Area Conditions
Weather (Wx): cl/cloudy; mc/mostly cloudy; pc/partly cloudy; r/rain; rs/rain & snow; s/sunny; sh/showers; sn/snow;
ss/snow showers; t/thunderstorms
Pollen Forecast
River Stages
Main 2 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, June 7, 2018PAGE TWO
The Weather Almanac
We Want Your Photos
Send in your weather-related photo-graphs to The Chronicle for our Voices page. Send them to [email protected]. Include name, date and descrip-tion of the photograph.
Get It All
In One Place!Local News & So Much More
In Print & Online!
The Chronicle • Chronline.com
CalendarCommunity
Back in TimeA Look
Photos from Our HometownsThursday, June 7
Cougar Squares dance club of Toledo fall square dance lesson, Napavine El-ementary School, 7 p.m.
Art Conversations, 10:30 a.m., White Pass Historical Museum, 12990 U.S. High-way 12, Packwood, 360-494-4422
Libraries
PageTurners Book Discussion, for adults, “The Underground Railroad,: by Colson Whitehead, noon, Chehalis
Game Day for Teens, 3:30 p.m., Chehalis
The Knitting Circle, for teens and adults, 4 p.m., Salkum
Organizations
Chehalis Basin Board, 9 a.m., VR Lee Community Building, 221 SW Third Street, Chehalis
Chehalis-Centralia Cribbage Club, 6:30 p.m., Chehalis Moose Lodge, 1400 Grand Ave., Centralia, 360-485-2852
S.T.O.P. and Swim, 7 p.m., Fort Borst Park, Kitchen 1, Centralia, 360-269-3827 or 360-736-4163
Centralia Chehalis Vintage Auto Club, 7:30 p.m., Ribeye Restaurant, Napavine I-5 exit, 360-748-7390
Lewis County Voiture 83 of the 40 & 8, 6 p.m. dinner, 7 p.m. meeting, Cheha-lis Eagles, 1993 S. Market Blvd., Chehalis, 360-266-7055
Support Groups
NAMI Lewis County Connections, recovery support group for adults with mental illness, 2-3:30 p.m., Mary Room, Centralia United Methodist Church, 506 S. Washington Ave., 253-468-7435
Mind, Body, Spirit: Self-Care Group, 10 a.m., Mossyrock Outreach Center, provid-ed by Diane Hurley, 360-496-3591
GriefShare, a recovery group for those who have lost a loved one, 7-8:30 p.m., Mountain View Baptist Church, 1201 Bel-mont Ave., Centralia, $10, 360-827-2172
Friday, June 8Oregon Trail music and dancing, open
mic with Sidekicks Band, 7 p.m., Cowlitz Prairie Grange, 5184 Jackson Hwy., To-ledo, 360-864-2023
Pinochle tournament, 1 p.m., Twin Cit-ies Senior Center
Karaoke, with Jimmy Abbott, 7:30 p.m., Chehalis Eagles, 1993 S. Market Blvd. Chehalis, 360-748-7241
Community Farmers Market, 4-7 p.m., Boistfort Street, Chehalis, 360-740-1295
Capstone 2018, 1-3:30 p.m., TransAlta Commons, Centralia College, oral pre-sentations noon-1 p.m. and 1 p.m.-2 p.m., poster and project displays 1-3:30 p.m. in banquet room, 360-623-8417
American Legion Auxiliary Plans Reorganization Meeting
American Legion Auxiliary Unit 101 of Winlock will be meet-
ing at noon Friday at the Coun-try House Restaurant, 404 State Highway 506, Toledo (Interstate 5 exit 59).
The purpose of this meeting is to reorganize and rejuvenate the auxiliary. Current members, and those eligible for membership, are welcome to attend.
Membership is open to moth-ers, wives, daughters, sisters, grand-daughters, great-granddaughters or grandmothers of members of the American Legion, or of deceased veterans who honorably served in any branch of the U.S. Armed Forces during war eras.
For more information, contact Wendy Carolan, 360-785-0929 or [email protected].
Public Agencies
Great Rivers BHO Governing Board meeting, 10 a.m.- 12 p.m., Lewis County Historic Courthouse, Commissioners Hearing room (2nd floor), 351 NW North St., Chehalis, Wa 98532
Libraries
Early Explorers: Play Date, for children birth-6 years, 10:30 a.m., Winlock
Hora de cuentos en Español, for children age 3-third grade, 10:30 a.m., Centralia
Organizations
Skookumchuck I.O.O.F. Lodge 129, 7:30 p.m., Bucoda Odd Fellows Commu-nity Center, 101 E. Seventh St., second floor, Bucoda, 360-736-6717
Lewis County Writers Guild, 5 p.m., Station Coffee Bar & Bistro, Centralia, http://lewiscountywriters.wordpress.com/
A Girl & A Gun, 6:30 p.m., Centralia Rifle Club, 908 Johnson Road, Centralia, bring ammo, firearm, eye and ear protection, www.agirlandagun.org, 360-978-4338
Support Groups
H.O.P.E., all addictions, 7:30-9 p.m., Heritage Baptist Church of Tenino, 1315 Sussex Ave. E., Tenino, 360-480-0592, [email protected]
Celebrate Recovery, dinner 6 p.m., large group 7 p.m., small groups 8 p.m., Grace Foursquare Church, 3030 Borst Ave., Centralia, 360-736-0778, www.gracefoursquarechurch.com
Friday Night Live, Narcotics Anony-mous, 7-9 p.m., Dayspring Baptist Church Fellowship Hall, 2088 Jackson Highway, Chehalis, 360-508-6495
Saturday, June 9
Sunbirds to Celebrate 42nd Anniversary
The Sunbird Shopping Center will be celebrating its 42nd anni-versary 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Saturday.
please see CALENDAR, page Main 11
Submitted by Allen Ray Erickson for ‘Our Hometowns, Volume 1’
This photo of the Gesler-McNiven Co. Furniture store and truck was taken in August 1963, on the company’s 50th an-
niversary. This photo is from Volume 1 of ‘Our Hometowns: A historical photo album of Greater Lewis County,’ and can
be purchased at The Chronicle, Book ‘n’ Brush and the Lewis County Historical Museum.
Photo submitted by Darla and Gary Matchett for ‘Our Hometowns, Volume 1’
Jim Yoke stands in front of the Brook Haynes Cafe in Packwood in this photo believed to have been taken in 1945. Yoke
was 100 years old at the time, according to Darla and Gary Matchett, who submitted this photo for The Chronicle’s
‘Our Hometowns, Volume 1.’ The little boy in the photo is J.C. Hakes and the cafe in front of which both are standing
burned in the 1970s when Bob Baker’s Packwood Mercantile also burned, taking the cafe with it. The Chronicle has produced three books titled ‘Our Hometowns: A Historical Photo Album of Greater Lewis County.’ The books contain hundreds of photographs dating in some cases to the late 1800s.
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The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, June 7, 2018 • Main 3LOCAL
EXPANSION: Tenino Sanctuary Director on Six-Month Assignment to Montana Location
By Will Rubin
Tenino-based Wolf Haven In-ternational completed paperwork this week to absorb the McCleery Buffalo Wolf Foundation located in Bridger, Montana — along with its more than two-dozen wolves and 378 acres of land.
Foundation managers Ed and Terry Wheeler donated the orga-nization’s assets, the land located an hour southwest of Billings and more than 30 captive buf-falo wolves, also known as Great Plains wolves, to Wolf Haven so it can better care for the animals with an eye toward the future.
The Washington nonprofit has rescued 250 animals during its 36 years of operation. Its lead-ers decided that acquiring the McCleery foundation made too much sense to turn down.
“We got in contact with them over a year ago through a vet-erinarian we work with who had been contacted by them,” Wolf Haven Executive Director Diane Gallegos said. “They were look-ing for a solution for the wolves to stay where they are. Through our conversations, it became clear that it was a good solution for them and for our mission.”
Gallegos visited the Montana property soon after getting in touch with the Wheelers. Wendy Spencer, the sanctuary direc-tor for Wolf Haven, is on a six-month assignment there to get a better sense of what the wolves there need and to make some modifications to allow for safer care of the animals.
“We’re going to see how it goes,” Spencer said. “Maybe it becomes a permanent move. I’m off the grid on 400 acres. The views are amazing and wildlife out the windows. The biggest ad-justment is having to look out for rattlesnakes.”
Wolf Haven plans to oper-ate the McCleery location as a satellite sanctuary to allow the remaining wolves to live out their lives. The animals will be cryogenically preserved after death. Breeding programs will be stopped as soon as possible.
The property in Bridger also comes with a house, an unspeci-fied number of outbuildings and enclosures for the wolves. Dr. E. H. McCleery founded his name-
sake nonprofit in 1920. He pur-chased more than 20 wild buf-falo wolves during the ensuing decade and housed them on land in Kane, Pennsylvania.
Jack Lynch, McCleery’s as-sistant, assumed control of the foundation after McCleery’s death. The Wheelers have run the operation since 2016.
The sanctuary in Montana will remain closed to the public for the foreseeable future. Gal-legos said the Wolf Haven board of directors is planning to have a strategic planning retreat next year to discuss a long-term plan for the land and facilities.
She expects the organization to explore the possibility of hold-ing Mexican wolves there like they do in Tenino as part of a captive breeding program.
“There aren’t any wild Mexi-can wolves in Montana and there won’t be any,” Gallegos said. “It would depend on if the local Fish and Wildlife people approve a breeding program, but I would anticipate that approval.”
Wolf Haven Acquires Montana Buffalo Wolf Nonprofit
Courtesy Photo
A wolf is shown in its enclosure at the McCleery Buffalo Wolf Foundation located in Bridger, Montana, recently absorbed into Wolf Haven International, of Tenino.
Wolves are shown in their enclosure at the McCleery Buffalo Wolf Foundation located in Bridger, Montana, recently absorbed
into Wolf Haven International, of Tenino.
By Alex Brown
Last year, 673 Lewis County kids received care at Seattle Chil-dren’s Hospital.
The local families who made those agonizing trips up I-5 didn’t have to worry about pay-ing for their visits, because the hospital’s uncompensated care fund ensures coverage for those who can’t afford treatment. In all, the fund covered $1,022,420 in care for Lewis County patients in 2017, and some locals want the community to help bolster those efforts.
“They provided over a million dollars of care for our kids,” said Kaci Jones, a member of the Che-halis-based Adaline Coffman Guild. “The least we can do is try and help them with that.”
The Guild was established in 1940 to raise funds to care for local kids who need to visit the
hospital, and its annual gala in December and other events have raised about $500,000 since its inception. This year, the Guild is supplementing the formal gala with a bike ride fundraiser.
“We want to do more fund-raisers, but we want to have fun doing it,” Jones said. “There are so many ways that we can help these kids that don’t involve you having to get dressed up.”
In that spirit, the Guild is planning its Bike to Brews Ben-efit for July 21, a six-mile bike ride around the community that will start and end at Dick’s Brew-ing. For a $40 registration, riders will be guaranteed a beer and a T-shirt, plus the knowledge that their entry will go toward care for local kids.
“We have the most giving, loving community that I’ve ever been a part of,” Jones said. “I’ve never seen a community work so hard to take care of its own
people.”The event is open to those 21
and older, and will start at Dick’s Brewing at 9 a.m. The brewery is opening early for the event. The circuit will take riders past Fort Borst Park, the Olympic Club, Yard Birds, the Lewis County Historical Museum and the Riv-erside Golf Course, before re-turning to the brewery.
Registration is open at ada-linecoffman.org. Jones didn’t have an estimate for an expected turnout, but she was hopeful the streets will again be jam-packed with riders the weekend after the Seattle-to-Portland Bicycle Clas-sic rolls through town. This time, locals shouldn’t be annoyed with the traffic.
“I would love to blow this out of the water,” she said. “I would love to have so many people sign up that we have to get the city in-volved. … This is us. These are our people, and they’re doing it
for our kids.”The Guild is also looking to
collect stories of local families who are getting care at the hospi-tal and of adults who went there for treatment as kids. Members hope people will turn out to the event to share their experiences. Stories may also be sent to the Guild at [email protected].
IF YOU GO: BIKE TO BREWS
Starts 9 a.m. July 21 at Dick’s Brewing Company, 3516 Galvin Road, Centralia
Entry Fee — $40Must be 21 or older
Charity Plans Bike Event for Local Kids Who Need Care at Seattle Children’s Hospital
News in Brief
Centralia Motorcyclist Arrested After Hitting Boy at IntersectionBy The Chronicle
An 8-year-old boy received non-life-threatening injuries af-ter being struck Monday by an allegedly intoxicated motorcy-clist at a Centralia intersection.
Wade E. Evans, 60, of Centra-lia, was arrested on suspicion of vehicular assault. He was alleg-edly intoxicated while operating the motorcycle, according to the Centralia Police Department.
Evans made his first appear-ance on one count of vehicular assault, a class B felony, Tuesday in Lewis County Superior Court.
He was granted $50,000 bail.The incident was reported
at 5:57 p.m. Monday in the 400 block of West Main Street.
According to court docu-ments, the boy was with his mother at the time of the inci-dent, and when police arrived he was “breathing, crying and bleeding from his head.”
Wade told police at the scene that he hit the child while pass-ing on the right side of traffic stopped at the intersection. He was very emotional and con-cerned about the child, accord-ing to court documents.
The responding officer re-ported smelling alcohol on Wade’s breath and Wade admit-ted to drinking “two beers.”
A breath test shows a blood-
alcohol level of .118, above the legal limit of .08.
Both Wade and the boy were transported to Centralia Provi-dence Hospital. According to court documents, the boy suffered a “pulmonary contusion in the right lung, a fractured right clav-icle and a minimally compressed right temporal bone skull fracture.”
Police noted the injuries are not life threatening. Wade was booked into the Lewis County Jail after being medically cleared.
in The Chronicle
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Main 4 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, June 7, 2018
The number of deadly wrecks nationally has skyrock-eted by 14 percent to 40,327 from 2014-2016, the largest two year hike in 53 years.
“One way to help protect your family from an injury or fatality is using the proper safety restraints,” said Peter Ab-barno, partner with Althauser Rayan Abbarno. “One study by the CDC indicated more than 618,000 children ages 0-12 rode in vehicles without the use of a child safety seat restraint at least some of the time. That trend needs to change!” Unfortunately not all accidents or injuries can be prevented.
Another startling statistic is that one out of every six driv-ers in the state of Washington is uninsured. “The National Highway Transportation Safety Board recently estimated that the average claim for medical costs in a personal injury auto collision is more than $15,000 with little recourse without an attorney,” said Todd Rayan, partner with Althauser Rayan Abbarno. “Even with insurance, victims of automobile collisions often need to hire an attorney to protect their rights and receive fair compensation.”
Here are 6 things you should do if you are involved in an au-tomobile collision:
1. Call Law Enforcement
The at-fault driver may dis-pute their role in the collision leaving an injured motorist or passenger struggling to prove their innocence. Law enforce-ment is not required to prepare an accident report in every case; therefore, call law enforcement in the event of a collision and ask that they take statements and prepare a report. You don’t always know the extent of vehi-cle damage or injuries until days later, and sometimes memories fade, so you should make a com-plete record of the incident at the time that it happens.
2. Exchange Information
Be sure to exchange driver’s license, insurance and registra-
tion information with the other automobiles involved in the col-lision. “Too often we are track-ing down information about other drivers, cars and witness-es,” said Abbarno.
3. Get More Information
Take photographs of the au-tomobiles and scene, and get the name and contact information for any witnesses to the colli-sion. More and more insurance companies are denying liability
or trying to assign contributory fault to the innocent victim. Witness information is invalu-able in many cases. Even without witnesses, experienced personal injury attorneys know how to get information. “Newer vehi-cles have Event Data Recorders (EDR),” said Rayan. “Our expe-rience with these EDRs make a huge difference in cases because they record information about the collision that can prove or disprove facts of the case.”
4. Seek Medical Attention
Many health insurance poli-cies specifically exclude cover-age for injuries suffered in car collisions. That’s a huge hole in your insurance considering that roughly a quarter of all acci-dental deaths in America result from road wrecks. “Unfortu-nately for the injured victim of an automobile crash, some in-surance require full reimburse-ment before the victim sees a dime, like ERISA plans,” said
Rayan. “We help the victims and their families to be made whole and work to protect the rights and benefits for our clients.”
5. Report the Collision to Your Insurance
While you have no obliga-tion to speak with the insur-ance company of the at-fault driver, you do have an obliga-tion to cooperate with your in-surance company to provide basic information about the col-lision. “Speaking with the other driver’s insurance company will not help your case,” said Rayan.
“We advise our clients to not speak with the at-fault driver’s insurance company until such time as they are finished treat-ing or ready to make a formal demand for damages.”
6. Call Althauser Rayan Abbarno for a Free Consultation
Althauser Rayan Abbarno’s
injury attorneys offer free con-sultations to victims of auto-mobile collisions. “We want victims of automobile collisions to focus on their health,” said Abbarno. “We want to provide as much information about the process, so that potential clients can make informed decisions about their health and case.” Al-thauser Rayan Abbarno also of-fers free glove box injury cards to anyone wishing to pick it up at their Centralia and Olympia offices.
Althauser Rayan Abbarno, LLP is honored to assist their clients in a wide range of legal matters; including personal in-jury and worker’s compensation. Their experienced and knowl-edgeable attorneys are trial-ready and prepared to fight for your rights and benefits.
Contact Althauser Rayan Abbarno at (360) 736-1301 to schedule a FREE consultation. For more information, visit their website at CentraliaLaw.com.
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about Althauser Rayan Abbarno’s legal services, their attorneys, or their service in the community, visit them on Facebook, online at CentraliaLaw.com or call their Centra-lia or Olympia offices at (360)736-1301.
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‘DYSFUNCTIONAL’: No Candidates File for Open Position, Remaining Commissioners Don’t Talk
By Alex Brown
Lewis County’s Water-Sewer District 5 needs a new commis-sioner. No one wants the job. The two remaining commissioners are stalemated in what one com-missioner called a “dysfunction-al” conflict. No one is sure what to do next.
“Its very unprecedented to have a place where nobody has applied,” said Lewis County Commissioner Edna Fund. “If nobody applies, you can’t just place somebody. That’s a mys-tery.”
The tiny district in Onalas-ka has only 29 voters, all in the Birchfield subdivision, and the county is sending notices to each of them in a desperate attempt to find a candidate. Two of them, of course, are already serving, and one resigned in February.
The open spot was vacated by Steven Nikolich, who won the seat in November after a coin
flip broke an 11-11 tie with Jim-my Hilliard. Hilliard’s wife Deb-orah holds one of the other com-missioner posts, which she also won via coin flip in November. The third commissioner, Virgil Fox, said Nikolich resigned out of frustration over the Hilliards’ ongoing lawsuit against the dis-trict.
Attempts to reach Nikolich were unsuccessful.
According to Fund, the mat-ter only fell to the county after the two remaining board mem-bers went 90 days without ap-pointing a replacement on their own. Fox, who stepped down as the water system’s manager in January but remained on the board, said he and Deborah Hill-iard are unable to be productive.
“We have a totally dysfunc-tional board that we're asking the county to straighten out,” he said.
“I have tried three times to call a
special meeting to try to discuss, iron out, rectify some of our dif-ferences. Three times Commis-sioner Hilliard refused to meet. ... In regular meetings, I have refused to bring anything up, be-cause anything I bring up is a big donnybrook. I think it's better to do nothing than to fight.”
A message with the Hilliards was not returned as of press time.
Given the already limited candidate pool, the contentious nature of the current office-holders further detracts from the likelihood of finding a third commissioner. According to Fund, the county has until June 15 to find a recruit, and so far it’s found no interest.
“Because of the controversy and the difference of opinion, some people just don't want to get involved,” Fund said.
Fox said he’s asked the county or state to take over the district,
given the unlikelihood of finding a workable solution within the district. The district falls within the Birchfield gated community designed by Fox, which has not lived up to the lofty ambitions of its initial plan. The mostly empty area includes the few residents who make up Water-Sewer Dis-trict 5.
A 2012 state audit found the district $500,000 in debt and de-termined that Fox had exempted himself from $80,000 in water and sewer payments. He also kept water rates untenably low to promote the sale of his lots, the audit found. Fox has maintained that mistakes were made due to a lack of understanding of the law
— not due to corruption.County Prosecutor Jonathan
Meyer met with county commis-sioners this week to discuss what will happen if no recruit emerges. There’s still no obvious answer. Officials can’t just force a third member to join.
“We can't create indentured servants,” Meyer said. “We would kind of be at a loss.”
To the best of his knowledge, Meyer said, the commission would have to just continue ab-sent a member — even if the two remaining members can’t work together.
County Struggles to Resolve Vacancy in Water-Sewer District 5
“We have a totally dysfunctional board that we’re asking the county to straighten out.”
Virgil Fox
district commissioner
By The Chronicle
A Bucoda driver was arrested Monday night after a single-vehicle crash in Centralia that seriously injured the man’s pas-senger, who was ejected approxi-mately 20 feet from the vehicle, according to the Lewis County Sheriff ’s Office.
Devin C. Hoyt, 24, of Bucoda, was arrested on suspicion of ve-hicular assault and referred to prosecutors on suspicion of driv-ing under the influence.
Hoyt made his first appear-ance Tuesday afternoon in Lewis County Superior Court on a charge of vehicular assault, a class B felony. He was granted $50,000 bail and appointed a de-fense attorney. His next hearing is scheduled for June 14.
According to the sheriff’s of-fice, the crash occurred at about 11 p.m. Monday night in the 400 block of Teitzel Road in Centralia.
Hoyt, who reported the crash, reportedly did not know exactly where he was, according to the sheriff ’s office.
Hoyt was reportedly driving the 1997 Jeep Cherokee which rolled and ended up in a field.
He had minor injuries but his passenger, identified as a 45-year-old Bucoda man, was seriously injured when he was ejected from the SUV. Aid per-sonnel found him about 20 feet
into the field, according to the sheriff ’s office.
“After observing the scene, it was determined the vehicle had left the roadway down a large, steep embankment and rolled several times, ejecting the pas-senger from the vehicle,” accord-ing to court documents.
The older man was hoisted out of the field using a rope-res-cue method, according to court documents. He was initially transported to Providence Cen-tralia Hospital before being tak-en to Harborview Medical Cen-ter in Seattle in stable condition. The man sustained “multiple
fractures and internal injuries.”Hoyt reportedly admitted to
drinking and driving and was arrested and booked into the Lewis County Jail.
Deputies obtained a warrant for a sample of Hoyt’s blood, which will be sent to a lab for testing.
Bucoda Man Faces Vehicular Assault Charge After DUI Crash
Jared Wenzelburger / [email protected]
Emergency crews use ropes and ties to help carry an injured man up an embankment late Monday night near 163 Teitzel
Road.
News in Brief
Chehalis Basin Board to Meet in ChehalisBy The Chronicle
The Chehalis Basin Board will meet at 9 a.m. Thursday in Chehalis.
The meeting will take place at 221 Southwest Third Street, the VR Lee Building at Recreation Park.
Agenda items include a brief-ing on a cost estimate of the North Shore levee project and reports on landowner outreach for restorative flood protection and on aquatic species restora-tion plans.
For more information, go to www.chehalis.basin.strategy.com.
To see the agenda, go to https://www.ezview.wa.gov/Por-tals/_1962/Documents/Chehalis/CBB%20agenda.060718.pdf.
Chehalis Issues Construction Notice for North Market BoulevardBy The Chronicle
Chehalis residents can expect construction on the downtown portion of North Market Boule-vard on June 13 and 14, the city said in a release.
Workers will be conducting “much needed” pavement resur-facing on the street that includes grind and inlay, striping and traf-fic control. The work is scheduled to be conducted from 7 p.m. to 7 a.m. on those evenings, which will require nightly road closures.
The city is advising residents to expect delays and take al-ternate routes. Businesses will remain opening while construc-tion is underway. The project is funded by the Transportation
Benefit District sales tax passed by voters last year.
Washougal Woman Arrested for Allegedly Drunkenly Ramming Ex’s CarBy The Chronicle
A Washougal woman was ar-
rested in Centralia late Monday night after she allegedly “repeat-edly rammed her ex-husband’s parked, unoccupied vehicle while intoxicated,” according to the Centralia Police Department.
Lauren Harter, 49, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence and third-degree mali-cious mischief. The incident was reported at 10:23 p.m. Monday in the 1500 block of Lewis Street.
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Main 6 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, June 7, 2018
RecordsCENTRALIA POLICE DEPARTMENT
Teens Cited for Stealing Drinks
• At 11:22 a.m. on Monday, police responded to the 800 block of Eshom Road and cited nine high school students on suspicion of third-degree theft. They were accused of stealing drinks from a machine. They are being forwarded for possible charges to Lewis County Juve-nile Court.
80-Year-Old Woman Cited for Kicking Husband
• At 4:39 p.m. on Monday, police responded to the 300 block of North Oak Street for a report of an assault. Leah P. Brit-ton, 80, of Centralia, was arrest-ed on suspicion of fourth-degree assault, domestic violence. She was accused of kicking her hus-band on the leg because he was on the telephone.
Shoplifter Reported
• At 7:56 p.m. on Monday, police received a report of a shoplifter in the 1300 block of Lum Road. A female suspect al-legedly stole merchandise and
fled. No suspect was located.
Man Arrested After Dispute
• At 8:31 p.m. on Monday, police responded to a report of a dispute in the 700 block of North Tower Avenue. Jose P. Escamilla-Orellana, 25, of Cen-tralia, was arrested on suspicion of unlawful imprisonment, but the Lewis County Prosecutor’s Office declined to file charges Tuesday.
K9 Finds Man Wanted on Warrant
• At 10:13 a.m. on Tuesday, police responded to the 200 block of North Ash Street and attempted to arrest a man want-ed on an outstanding warrant. Lance J. Myhre, 40, of Chehalis, was arrested on suspicion of re-sisting arrest after being found by a police K9 hiding near a set of railroad tracks.
Bank Card Stolen
• At 11:57 a.m. on Tuesday, a victim reported a bank card sto-len at the intersection of Maple and Gold Streets in Centralia.
Vehicle Hits Building
• At 1:19 p.m. on Tuesday, police received a report of a ve-hicle hitting a building in the 1600 block of South Gold Street.
Centralia Suspect Booked on Harassment Charge
• At 2:41 p.m. on Tuesday, police arrested Keith J. Hill, 35, of Centralia, on suspicion of fel-ony harassment. He was accused of threatening to kill a woman. The Lewis County Prosecutor’s Office declined to file felony charges Wednesday morning.
Hit and Run
• At 3:08 p.m. on Tuesday, a hit and run was reported at the intersection of Fourth and E streets in Centralia.
Juveniles Booked on Marijuana Charges
• At 6:54 p.m. on Tuesday, police responded to the 300 block of South Cedar Street and arrested two juveniles on suspi-cion of possession of marijuana.
In addition, Jesus A. Gomez-Martinez, 20, of Centralia, was issued a summons on an out-standing warrant.
CHEHALIS POLICE DEPARTMENTDisorderly Conduct Reported
at Park
• At 4:46 p.m. on Monday, police received a report of a dis-orderly camper at Stan Hedwall Park in the 1500 block of Rice Road in Chehalis. The man was reportedly throwing items and behaving erratically. No arrests were made.
Assault Suspect Arrested
• At 8:51 p.m. on Monday, police responded to a report of an assault near the intersection of Chehalis Avenue and Cen-ter Street. A person reported a man was hit the face bleeding from nose and mouth and was “passed out cold on the side-walk.” The suspect reportedly ran. The victim was later taken to the hospital for non-life-threatening injuries, including a swollen lip and a cut requiring stitches, according to the police
department. Brent T. Brooks, 31, of Chehalis, was arrested on sus-picion of second-degree assault.
Theft Reported
• At 9:31 a.m. on Tuesday, a third-degree theft was reported in the 1600 block of Northwest Louisiana Avenue.
Lewis County Jail Statistics
• As of Wednesday morning, the Lewis County Jail had a to-tal system population of 246 in-mates, with 211 in general popu-lation, 34 in the Work Ethic and Restitution Center and one on work release. Of general popu-lation inmates, 174 were men and 37 women and of WERC inmates, 32 were men and two women. A total of 41 inmates were booked through contracts with agencies outside Lewis County.
•••By The Chronicle Staff
Please call Editor Natalie John-son with news tips. She can be reached at 807-8235 or [email protected].
Sirens, Court Records,Death Notices
Death Notices• LOMA R. WHITWORTH, 88, Centralia, died
Thursday, May 31, at home. No services are scheduled at this time. Arrange-ments are under the care of Newell-Ho-erling’s Mortuary, Centralia.
• BOBBY BRITTON McCORMICK, 85, Randle, died, Saturday, May 26, at Morton Gen-eral Hospital. A service will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at Tahoma National Cem-etery, Kent. Arrangements are under the care of Brown Mortuary Service, Morton.
• HARRY JAMES MOUNCE, 88, Mineral, died Sunday, June 3, at home. A memorial service will be at noon, Saturday, June 23, at Mineral Lake Lodge. Arrangements are under the care of Brown Mortuary Service, Morton.
Corrections•••
The Chronicle seeks to be accu-rate and fair in all its reporting. If you find an error or believe a news item is incorrect, please call the newsroom as soon as possible at 807-8224, be-tween 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Sirens
News in Brief
AG's Office Petitions to Keep Thurston County Sex Offender Behind BarsBy Abby Spegman
The Olympian
The Washington state Attor-ney General's Office filed a peti-tion Friday in Thurston County Superior Court to prevent a sex offender from being released, al-leging that he is mentally ill and sexually dangerous.
Randy R. Smith, 59, was con-victed of first-degree rape of a child in 1990 and first-degree voyeurism in 2013, both in Thur-ston County.
The 2013 conviction consti-tutes a recent overt act under the state's Sexually Violent Predator Act.
Smith was scheduled to be re-leased Monday.
Instead, he is being held until a hearing on the petition, sched-uled for Wednesday. If a judge finds probable cause, Smith would be sent to the state's Mc-Neil Island Special Commitment Center until a trial to determine if he meets the criteria for a sexu-ally violent predator.
State law allows the Attorney General's Office to petition for the civil commitment of violent sex offenders it says are likely to engage in predatory acts of sexu-al violence if released because of a mental abnormality or person-ality disorder.
In 1990, Washington became the first state in the country to pass such a law permitting the involuntary civil commitment of sex offenders after they served their criminal sentences.
Graham Man Saw His Ex With Her New Boyfriend and Attacked HimBy Rolf Boone
The Olympian
A 33-year-old Graham man was arrested after he reacted violently when he spotted his ex-girlfriend with a new boyfriend Sunday morning, according to the Thurston County Sheriff ’s Office.
The man saw his ex-girl-friend with her new partner in a car about 6 a.m. Sunday in the 20000 block of Sorenson Road Southeast in Thurston County. Sheriff ’s deputies say he attacked the new boyfriend with a ham-mer and a Taser, and damaged the vehicle and poured gasoline over it in an attempt to burn it.
The 33-year-old man was taken into custody about 6:30 a.m. He faces several charges, ac-cording to a Thurston County jail log, including violation of a protection order/domestic vio-lence; second-degree malicious mischief; violation of a protec-tion order with assault; first-degree domestic violence/arson; and fourth-degree assault.
Thief Steals iPod Containing Cherished Photos, Playlists Made by Teen’s Late MomBy Meredith Spelbring
The News Tribune
A night that was supposed to be fun ended on a sad note for an Issaquah teen.
Her family is asking for the return of a backpack that was
stolen from a car while 14-year-old Lorelai Dunn was at the Ma-roon 5 concert Wednesday eve-ning at the Tacoma Dome.
Notebooks and a laptop were stolen, but the family is missing one item in particular — Dunn’s iPod.
It was given to her as a gift from her mother, who died from cancer several years ago. The iPod contains playlists her moth-er made for her daughter, as well as irreplaceable photos, the fam-ily said.
“We lost a lot there with the nice backpack and the computer and all of that, but really all we care about is this old iPod be-cause of the pictures and it is just something that can’t be replaced,” said Anne Germino, Dunn’s aunt.
This kind of loss is not one the family is completely unfa-miliar with. Dunn comes from a blended family where both sides have lost a parent to cancer. Pho-tos of another deceased family member were lost in an accident earlier in the year.
“Something that was supposed to be fun and a special outing just really didn’t turn out well,” Germino said of the concert her niece attended. “We are just ask-ing to try and get the word out. If anybody has it, no questions asked, we will take it back.”
The family is using #find-lorealisipod on social media to spread the message.
In addition to the fifth gener-ation, pink iPod, the black, North Face backpack contained a Sur-face 3 Pro with a blue keyboard.
Anyone with information on the iPod and other stolen items was asked to contact Laura Ger-mino Dunn at [email protected].
Teen Shot in Chest by Friend Initially Blames StrangersThe Yakima Herald-Republic
A 14-year-old boy is in the hospital Monday night after Ya-kima County sheriff ’s deputies say his friend, also 14 years old, accidentally shot him with a fire-arm.
Deputies got a call about 7:40 p.m. reporting a gunshot victim at a house in the 6900 block of Ahtanum Road, according to a sheriff ’s office news release. The caller said there were two juve-nile males at his home.
The victim suffered a minor gunshot wound through his left wrist and into his chest, deputies said. Considering the location of his injuries, deputies say he’s lucky to be alive.
The boy was expected to be discharged from a local hospital late Monday night, the release said.
Deputies recovered the fire-arm, which they say was un-secured at the home while all adults were away during the day.
“This incident is a reminder to all firearm owners that proper securing of firearms is essential to prevent accidents of this na-ture,” the release said.
The victim initially reported that strangers drove up to his friend’s home and shot him while he was standing in the driveway, fleeing in a vehicle af-terward, the release said.
Deputies say the friend said he was in the house when the victim was shot in the alleged drive-by and that they had fled to a neighbor’s house because they didn’t have a phone at home.
After further questioning, deputies say the victim told them that his friend had accidentally shot him in his friend’s home. This was confirmed by the friend, the release said.
Deputies say criminal charg-es may be filed after the investi-gation is completed.
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Billie Miller passed away May 26, 2018, at Sharon Care Center. She was born March 11, 1923, in Bernice, Okla., to William and Beatrice (Stewart) Fluke.
Billie’s family moved to Washington in 1928. She attended grade school in Raymond, Wash., and graduated from Pe Ell High School in 1941.
She married Fielden B. Miller Dec. 20, 1941. They had two children, Ken in 1943, and Donna in 1949. After 64 years of marriage, Fielden died in 2006.
In addition to her husband,
she was preceded in death by her parents; sister, Imogene Neal; and brothers, Dale and Don Fluke.
She is survived by her son and daughter-in-law, Ken and Pat Miller; daughter, Donna Miller; grandchildren, Pete (Renee) McGhee, Kelly (Kelly) Crawford, Ronna McGhee, Heather (Brendan) Grutz and Wade Hislop; seven great-grandchildren, Zachary, Megan, Katie, Avery, Morgan, Lauren and Lainey; sisters-in-law, Thelma Fluken and Patsy Daigle; brother and sister-in-law, Dan & Susan Miller; and several nieces and nephews.
Billie was a terrific cook, who loved to tease and joke. She was a wonderful mother and grandmother.
A graveside service will be held at 11 a.m., Saturday, June 9, 2018, at the Doty Dryad Cemetery. Refreshments will be served at the Dryad Fire Hall.
To view the obituary, please go to chronline.com/obituaries.
Billie Miller
Nation/WorldNation in Brief
Kate Spade’s Suicide Sparked by Husband Seeking Divorce: ReportTribune News Services
Designer Kate Spade’s battle with depression — which led to her apparent suicide Tuesday — was fueled by her husband’s desire for a divorce, according to a report.
Her husband, Andy Spade, had moved out of their Upper East Side home, was living at a nearby apartment and wanted a divorce, according to TMZ. The two married in 1994 and have a 13-year-old girl together.
Spade, 55, considered one of the world’s most famous design-ers and known for her signature sleek handbags, died Tuesday after hanging herself with a scarf in her bedroom.
She left a note telling her daughter that her death was not the teen’s fault. She also instruct-ed her daughter to seek answers from her father.
A police source said “troubles at home” fueled Spade’s decision to take her own life.
Trump Accuses Media of Spreading ‘Unfair’ and ‘Vicious’ Rumors About the First Lady’s AbsenceTribune News Services
President Donald Trump blasted “the Fake News Media” in two tweets early Wednesday for fanning speculation about first lady Melania Trump, who hasn’t been seen in public for more than three weeks following a medical procedure last month.
“The Fake News Media has been so unfair, and vicious, to my wife and our great First Lady, Me-lania,” Trump tweeted. “During her recovery from surgery they re-ported everything from near death, to facelift, to left the W.H. (and me) for N.Y. or Virginia, to abuse. All Fake, she is doing really well!”
He followed that up with a second tweet, claiming that some reporters saw Melania Trump headed to a White House meeting and withheld the in-formation to propel conspiracy theories about her health.
“ ... Four reporters spotted Melania in the White House last week walking merrily along to a meeting,” the second tweet be-gan. “They never reported the sighting because it would hurt the sick narrative that she was living in a different part of the world, was really ill, or whatever. Fake News is really bad!”
However, that sighting was noted in some news accounts, while the speculation that Trump cited in his initial tweet was not widely reported in mainstream news media. Such rumors were rampant on social media.
Kim Kardashian West’s White House Visit Leads to Clemency for Alice JohnsonTribune News Services
President Donald Trump on Wednesday commuted the sen-tence of Alice Johnson, a woman serving a life sentence for a non-violent drug offense whose cause was championed last week by Kim Kardashian West during a visit to the Oval Office.
Johnson, 63, was convicted and sentenced to life without parole in 1996 for her role in a cocaine-traf-ficking operation in Tennessee.
“Ms. Johnson has accepted re-sponsibility for her past behavior and has been a model prisoner over the past two decades,” the White House said in a statement.
“While this Administration will always be very tough on crime, it believes that those who have paid their debt to society and worked hard to better them-selves while in prison deserve a second chance.”
The commutation, which was also supported by White House senior adviser Jared Kushner, is the second act of clemency Trump has issued in the last six days, and more may be in the offing, White House officials say.
World in Brief
New US Ambassador to Germany Irks Politicians at Home and AbroadTribune News Services
For the second time in barely a week, a U.S. ambassador has man-aged to anger lawmakers in his as-signed country as well as in Wash-ington with political statements critics called inappropriate.
Richard Grenell, who was con-firmed last month as U.S. ambas-sador to Germany, sparked the latest spat when he told an inter-viewer that he hoped to “empow-er” conservative political forces throughout Europe.
He also praised visiting Aus-trian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz, who rules with Austria’s far-right Freedom Party, as a “rock star” and met with him. It is unusual for a U.S. ambassador to entertain the leader of a country where he is not posted.
Grenell’s comments sparked anger in Berlin and in Washing-ton.
Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, D-N.H., a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said it was as unacceptable for a U.S. ambas-sador to attempt to interfere in an-other country’s political affairs as it would be for a foreign power to meddle here.
“An ambassador’s most critical responsibility is to advance our national interests by developing relationships and trust with their host country,” she said. If Grenell won’t refrain from political state-ments, she said, the administra-tion should recall him.
US Sets up Task Force to Investigate Diplomatic Health Incidents in Cuba and ChinaTribune News Services
The State Department has set up a task force that will direct a multi-agency response to myste-rious health incidents that have caused symptoms ranging from concussions to hearing loss in U.S. diplomats who were stationed in Cuba and China.
To date, 24 diplomats and family members who worked at the U.S. Embassy in Havana have been medically confirmed as suf-fering from a range of symptoms that seem to be associated with a high-pitched sound and other au-ditory sensations.
One U.S. government em-ployee in China was recently con-firmed as suffering from similar symptoms.
Although some State Depart-ment officials have characterized the health incidents in Cuba as
“attacks,” Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said in a statement Tues-day that “the precise nature of the injuries suffered by the affected personnel, and whether a com-mon cause exists for all cases, has not yet been established.”
As early as November 2016, some diplomats stationed in Ha-vana said they heard strange nois-es in their homes that were accom-panied by the onset of symptoms. Similar incidents were reported through August 2017, prompt-ing the United States to withdraw about two-thirds of the staff from its embassy last September.
As part of its response, the United States also expelled 17 Cu-ban diplomats from Washington, and issued a travel alert for U.S. visitors to the island. Until further notice, family members cannot accompany the skeletal staff that remains at the Havana embassy. While the United States hasn’t directly blamed Cuba for the in-cidents, it says it does hold the Ca-ribbean nation responsible for not protecting its diplomats while they were on Cuban soil.
In the Chinese case, a single U.S. government employee sta-tioned in Guangzhou in southern China experienced “subtle and vague, but abnormal, sensations of sound and pressure.” That em-ployee was later diagnosed with
“mild traumatic brain injury,” the same diagnosis that some of the diplomats stationed in Cuba re-ceived.
There has been no drawdown of diplomatic personnel in China in the wake of the incident.
By Steven T. Dennis
Bloomberg News
Several Senate Republicans are warning Donald Trump against obstructing justice or pardoning himself, even as they continue to say there’s no evi-dence to support allegations the president’s team colluded with Russia in the 2016 elections.
“I’d advise everybody from the president to the people op-erating the elevator, don’t ob-struct justice,” said Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, who was one of the House managers of the impeachment proceedings against President Bill Clinton.
Sen. Jerry Moran of Kansas, who voted to impeach Clinton for obstruction, also said presi-dential obstruction is impeach-able. “A president can obstruct justice,” he told reporters.
Trump’s lawyers wrote a memo in January to special counsel Robert Mueller arguing that the president wouldn’t be obstructing justice even if he orders the inves-
tigation into his own campaign to end, or issues pardons. That memo was leaked to The New York Times over the weekend. On Monday, Trump also wrote on Twitter that he has an “absolute right” to pardon himself.
Trump’s lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, echoed the president’s argument in a CNN appearance Monday night. “The pardon power is com-plete and there is no limitation on it,” the former New York mayor said, adding that “it would be sui-cide to pardon yourself.”
Most Republicans say there isn’t any evidence yet that Trump did anything illegal or impeach-able.
But Graham said the dan-gling of pardons in the Water-gate investigation was part of the impeachment articles considered against President Richard Nixon before he resigned.
“We do know that Nixon, one of the subsets of impeachment was improper use of pardoning authority, that that was seemed
to be an abuse of office. What you are talking about is abuse of office here. You are the chief law enforcement officer of the land, but that doesn’t make you above the law itself,” Graham said.
Graham said he didn’t under-stand why the president or his lawyers were making these argu-ments.
“I don’t know why we’re talk-ing about it, honestly,” he said, noting a planned North Korea summit, pending immigration legislation and other pressing issues. “I do know politically it would be a disaster” for the presi-dent to pardon himself.
Senate Judiciary Chairman Chuck Grassley of Iowa, one of many Republicans who voted to convict Clinton in 1999 on a charge of obstruction of justice, didn’t sound impressed when asked about the legal theory a president could not obstruct jus-tice because he is the chief law enforcement officer and would be obstructing himself.
Trump Wants Kim to Commit to Disarmament TimetableBy Jennifer Jacobs
Bloomberg News
The White House wants North Korean leader Kim Jong Un to commit to a timetable to surrender his country’s nuclear arsenal when he meets President Donald Trump next week in Singapore, a high-stakes sum-mit that could last as long as two days — or just minutes.
Trump has been advised not to offer Kim any concessions, as the White House seeks to put the onus on the North Koreans to make the summit a success, one U.S. official said. The presi-dent is determined to walk out of the meeting if it doesn’t go well, two officials said. Alternatively, Trump is toying with the idea of offering Kim a follow-up sum-mit at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Florida — perhaps in the fall — if the two men hit it off.
Other than announcing that the two leaders will first meet at 9 a.m. Singapore time June 12 at the Capella Hotel on Singapore’s Sentosa Island, the White House has described no schedule for the summit. If the first meeting goes well, there will be further events that day and perhaps even on June 13.
Trump will be joined in Sin-gapore by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, chief of staff John Kelly and national security ad-viser John Bolton. The U.S. del-egation also tentatively includes the CIA’s top Korea expert, An-drew Kim; the National Security Council’s point person on Ko-rea, Allison Hooker; and White House deputy chief of staff Joe Hagin, who has negotiated much
of the groundwork for the sum-mit with the North Koreans.
Notably absent from Trump’s delegation: Vice President Mike Pence, who will remain in the U.S., and Defense Secretary James Mattis. Mattis said Sun-day at a defense conference in Singapore that North Korea will win relief from crippling U.S. economic sanctions “only when it demonstrates verifiable and ir-reversible steps to denucleariza-tion.”
North Korea has publicly bristled at U.S. officials’ insis-tence that it must agree to dis-arm before receiving anything in return, instead calling for a step-by-step approach to ridding the Korean Peninsula of nuclear weapons. Trump has indicated flexibility in his approach, al-though it’s still unclear what a path to denuclearization would look like.
Pompeo, who has traveled to Pyongyang twice since March, has prepared Trump for the sum-mit in about 8-10 hours of brief-ings per week for several weeks, two U.S. officials said. The CIA’s Kim has usually joined him. On Tuesday, former Sens. Sam Nunn and Richard Lugar briefed Trump and Pence on their les-sons learned co-sponsoring a law aimed at securing and disman-tling nuclear weapons after the fall of the Soviet Union.
Typically, the president’s preparations for meetings with foreign leaders are shaped by several administration officials and result in a pair of briefing books, one person familiar with the process said. One, on cus-toms and protocol, primarily is
assembled by the State Depart-ment and shared with much of the U.S. delegation. The other is a more exclusive document for the president that includes a bi-ography of the foreign leader as-sembled by the U.S. intelligence community. It also sometimes includes memos from individual Cabinet members with their pri-vate assessments of the leader.
Trump’s aides consider him ready for a summit in which the White House believes he holds an advantage — while 12 hours ahead of Washington, Singapore is a Westernized metropolis and will be the farthest Kim Jong Un has traveled since taking charge of his country in 2011.
U.S. officials believe Kim is extremely worried about security at the summit and is fearful of assassination attempts, accord-ing to two people familiar with the matter.
Frustrated after the North Koreans cut off communications for about five days last month and snubbed Hagin at a pre-paratory meeting in Singapore, Trump canceled the summit on May 24. Talks resumed, however, and Kim dispatched an envoy — his spy chief Kim Yong Chol — to Washington on Friday to de-liver a letter to Trump.
The letter, handwritten by Kim Jong Un in Korean, ex-pressed the dictator’s desire for the summit. Trump said later that day that the Singapore meet-ing was back on. Kim Yong Chol also brought Trump a gift, and Trump reciprocated with a gift for Kim Jong Un. White House officials declined to describe ei-ther present.
Key Senate Republicans Warn Trump on Obstruction and Pardon Powers
The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, June 7, 2018 • Main 7
Olivier Douliery / Abaca Press
President Donald Trump, second from right, walks with Kim Yong Chol, left, former North Korean military intelligence chief
and one of leader Kim Jong Un’s closest aides, outside the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, D.C., on Friday,
June 1.
By The Chronicle Editorial Board
It’s already June, believe it or not. Summer is only a few short weeks away, and schools are just about to let students out for a long season in the sun.
For the past few days, it’s seemed summer weather is only grudgingly creeping into Southwest Washington, but we’ve already been treated to a handful of warm, sunny days — perfect for heading out to your favorite swimming or fishing hole, whether it’s Offut or Deep Lake in South Thurston County, the Cowlitz or Chehalis rivers or east county’s Mayfield Lake.
The water is a respite from
the heat, but spring and early summer are some of the most dangerous times to get in the water, Lewis County Coroner Warren McLeod cautioned.
Fueled by snowmelt from the Cascades, most bodies of water in Washington are still icy cold, regardless of how warm the air is.
It doesn’t take long for even the best swimmers to get into trouble in those conditions, he said.
“It’s called cold water syn-drome,” he said. “Hypothermia can take 30 minutes. That cold water shock, the initial shock makes you gasp, so water gets
in your mouth, and you start to flail.”
Add in to the mix that many people around the water — such as those fishing or boating — are fully clothed, and exhaustion sets in quickly.
“That’s two strikes against them,” McLeod said. “It shocks the whole system. It starts all sorts of physical conditions you have no control over.”
The situation is even more dangerous when you add alcohol to the mix, and alcohol seems to be involved more often than not in accidents on the water.
More than two years ago, McLeod spearheaded the ef-fort to create the Lewis County
Drowning Prevention Coalition, which now includes his office, the Lewis County Sheriff’s Of-fice, Lewis County Public Health and Social Services and Lewis County Fire Districts 3, 5, and 6.
“As the coroner, I’m commit-ted to developing community partnerships to reduce prevent-able deaths,” he said.
The coalition works with area schools and distributes educational materials with the help of grant funding. Recently, it’s sponsored events including
“Wear Your Lifejacket to Work Day,” coupons for 25 percent off lifejackets and a kids’ art contest to create a logo for the coalition.
Their main goal, McLeod
said, is to spread the message that all people “in, on or around” the water should wear life jack-ets that fit and are Coast-Guard approved, with no exceptions.
That means kids at fishing derbies, kayakers and swimmers cooling off in the river alike should be wearing life jackets, he said.
Here at The Chronicle, we’ve reported on tragedies of every kind over the years, but few are as easy to prevent as drowning.
This year, we urge you to enjoy your time on the water, but do it responsibly. Follow the Drowning Prevention Coalition’s advice and wear a life jacket. Don’t leave your safety to chance.
Columnists, Our Views, Letters to the Editor
Drowning Is Easy to Prevent — Be Careful on the Water Our Views
OpinionMain 8 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, June 7, 2018
The notes to myself keep piling up. Some involve local activities, others concern my own problems. Here’s the latest dilemma — a decision must be made, if it hasn’t already been made by the time you read this.
I like to cook with chives, so I’ve planted some in my small 65-square foot vegetable gar-den. Chives multiply by dropping copi-ous quantities of seeds from the flowers on each tiny stalk. It was when I fetched my gar-den shears to eliminate those flowers that I spied the presence of honey bees feeding on them.
It’s been reported by many sources that honey bees are de-clining in number. So here’s my dilemma: do I stop the spread of what is already an abundance of chives or do I act in favor of the bees? Then again, I can’t help but wonder how chive honey would taste if I left everything alone.
I recently wrote about our relatively small community working together on a project — installing the first lights on Ed Wheeler baseball field in Borst Park back in 1980. Details of the installation had faded from memory over the years. Fortu-nately, a former neighbor from across the alley, Brian Vetch, filled me in on most of them.
Many people donated time and labor to the project and here are some of the stories.
First of all, the Centralia City Light employees were ac-tive throughout the procedure, as were those of the city parks department.
The local coal-mining firm, WIDCO, furnished labor. In fact, Brian — then a first-year apprentice — worked with the company manager, Richard Mc-Carthy, wiring service panels and working on underground installation.
Don Geraci did volunteer troubleshooting and repairing of the used pole-mounted equip-ment before the poles were set upright. When all was finished, Centralia athletes could play baseball at night for the first time. And it was all done with-out asking for a state grant.
So don’t try to tell me that small towns and “the old days” weren’t better than today in
many respects.The late (and great) Chroni-
cle columnist Gordon Aadland often mentioned growing up in the tiny community of Sisseton, South Dakota. I’m sure I wrote previously that my grandmother and her four sisters grew up on a farm near Westphalia, Nebraska. I may be wrong, but I somehow have it in mind that Westphalia was once the county seat. The 2010 census lists it as having a population of 68, bringing to mind the many communities here in Lewis County that aren’t even a wide spot in the road anymore.
On another note, are we get-ting too afraid to call a rose a rose?
How prim, proper and silly can the English language get? Perhaps, we should call it the American language instead. Anyway, on TV recently I heard a missing leg referred to as “a limb deficiency!” I don’t make these things up.
Here’s a quote from Mark Twain, “Common sense wins out over unbridled outrage.” A good thought, but difficult to adhere to when we consider current events in our beloved country.
And along the same line, an-other quote, this one from Nor-man Mailer: “Know and believe are two different things.” And I think that’s a good place to end this.
•••Bill Moeller is a former enter-
tainer, mayor, bookstore owner, city council member, paratrooper and pilot living in Centralia. He can be reached at [email protected].
By Bill Moeller
A Community Pulls Together, and Other Tales
COMMENTARY: I Was Just Thinking ...
Richard Lafromboise, Publisher, 1966-1968J.R. Lafromboise, President, 1968-2011Jenifer Lafromboise Falcon, Chairman
Michael Wagar, President and Publisher
Editorial Mission Statementn We will strive to be the voice of reason for the
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on key local issues. We will work to be fair at all
times and to provide a balance of opinions. We
will make our opinion pages available for public
discussion of vital issues and events affecting
the quality of life in Lewis County and adjoining
regions. When necessary, we will be willing to
take a tough, definitive stance on a controver-
sial issue.
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Here’s a switch! Rather than closing another pulp and paper mill, a new one is under con-struction right here in Washing-ton.
Columbia Pulp’s plant on the Snake River will use a new technology that pulls cellulose out of the abundant straw left over from wheat and alfalfa har-vests. The $184 million plant near Dayton is scheduled to open later this year. Tradition-ally, pulp comes from wood either grown specifically for paper making or as byprod-ucts from sawmills.
When fully operational, it will add 100 full-time jobs in Columbia County, which the Washington State Employment Security Dept., reports currently has roughly 4,000 citizens and 1,800 jobs.
Those family-wage jobs are important to rural Washington where the unemployment rate is double, and at times triple, that of Seattle.
Columbia will take 250,000 tons of straw to pulp for paper products such as tissue, paper towels and disposable cups, car-tons and plates which are bio-degradable and, unlike plastic alternatives, break down more rapidly in the environment.
Rather than burning the straw in wheat fields, the new fa-cility will generate between $10 and $15 per ton in new revenue for growers. In total, the eco-nomic benefit is estimated at $70 million a year.
With its new mill, Columbia Pulp is embarking on a scaled-up, multimillion-dollar field test of a technology that uses less en-ergy and none of the chemicals of legacy pulp-and-paper mills, the Seattle Times reported last July.
Columbia’s technology was developed by Renton-based Sustainable Fiber Technologies from research that started at the University of Washington.
Making pulp from straw is not new. For the last half cen-tury, Shandong Tranlin Paper Co. in Shandong Province has been perfecting ways to take convert straw to pulp for manu-facturing paper used in printing, tableware, food wrapping and tissue. Shandong Tranlin is also converting waste liquids into fertilizers.
In the U.S., Kimberly Clark started blending 20 percent straw from Midwestern wheat fields into its “GreenHarvest” tissue and toweling lines. It is part of a strategy to augment pulp from recycled paper. The company expects recycled paper supplies to continue to decline because of wireless transactions and increasing online reading materials.
Additionally, there is in-creased competition for pulp as online retail shipments grow. RISI Technology Channels reports that corrugated and paperboard box demand in the U.S. is forecasted to increase 2.6 percent this year to $39.4 billion primarily due to rebound in manufacturing output and con-tinued expansion of the overall economy.
That rebound has a Taiwan-ese company, “npulp,” which
uses wheat straw to make cor-rugated paper and packaging materials to look at Kansas as a source of pulping raw materials.
Columbia Pulp is a welcome addition to Dayton. In 2004, its only major employer, Seneca Foods, closed its massive aspara-gus canning plant which was billed as the world’s largest. That facility employed 50 full-time and 2,000 seasonal workers and provided growers with $15 million in annual revenue. A combination of lower foreign labor costs and the removal of the tariff on imported canned asparagus from Peru doomed the plant.
The Columbia Pulp project is a win-win for the environment and the economy. It is welcomed in job-starved rural Washington.
In a Washington Business Magazine interview, Port of Columbia Manager Jennie Dick-inson said in her almost 20 years of economic development, she had never been to a permit hear-ing where there wasn’t at least one person speaking against the project.
And we had zero.With our oceans and land-
fills overflowing with plastic bottles, bags and food wrapping, pulping straw may be a game changer. If nothing else, it of-fers consumers more choices of products which don’t persist in the waste stream.
•••Don C. Brunell is a business
analyst, writer and columnist. He recently retired as president of the Association of Washington Business, the state’s oldest and largest business organization, and now lives in Van-couver. He can be contacted at [email protected].
By Don C. Brunell
Straw Pulp Looks Like a Win-Win and a Game-Changer
COMMENTARY: Back to Business
The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, June 7, 2018 • Main 9LOCAL
RETAIL: Company Considers Retail Development on 16 Acres
By Alex Brown
Chehalis city councilors met Tuesday with a representative from Rich Development, which is eyeing 16 acres of land at the Chehalis-Centralia Airport that the city has been eager to lease.
“The critical path is the retail-ers,” said Greg Vena, a senior vice president at the company. “It’s not the governmental approval, it’s not the design of the project.”
Vena said he was working on behalf of a pair of potential ten-ants, though he couldn’t disclose which companies might have interest in the site. If the plan moves forward, Rich would fill out the area with other compa-nies that want to be part of the development.
“Once we have an agreement, that’s when the machine starts of outreach,” he said. “It really is a momentum thing. … We want to touch every retailer and restaurant that’s active and see where the interest is.”
He also asked the councilors to follow up with feedback on potential businesses or uses that might be a good fit at the site.
Although the council did not discuss lease terms or spe-cific businesses with Vena, he did provide examples of projects the San Pedro, California-based company has been involved in, such as multi-tenant retail build-ings in Bellingham and Spokane.
In a closed executive session following the discussion, coun-cilors agreed to continue work-ing with the developer to see if a concrete lease agreement can be reached.
“We told staff to go ahead and follow up and see what can be brought to the council in a public vote,” said Mayor Dennis Dawes.
The three tracts Rich De-velopment is pursuing make up part of the 130 acres of mostly unused airport land the city is looking to develop. Much of the land has been out of use since the
airport abandoned its crosswind runway in the 1970s.
Councilors received a plan in April drafted by WHPacific, including possible uses for the airport parcels. The 16 acres cur-rently under consideration are part of the “Upper Terrace” por-tion of the plan, sitting on the west side of I-5 between Dutch Bros. Coffee and I-5 Toyota. Due to the location’s proximity to the
interstate, it’s perhaps the most valuable of the airport sites.
Any lease funds received from an agreement would go into the city’s airport fund, though Che-halis would take additional rev-enues such as sales tax from busi-nesses on the site into its general fund.
Vena assured council mem-bers that the developer’s plan is robust, even if it can’t make the
details public. In general, Rich Development doesn’t start a proj-ect until it has 70 percent of the site’s tenancy in place, he said.
“We’re a pretty conservative group,” Vena said. “We don’t like to buy land before we have it figured out, or most of it figured out.”
The company initially got involved when a potential ten-ant asked it to pursue the Kmart building nearby. When they lost out on the bid, Vena said, “I started looking on Google Earth and looking at the lay of the land.”
One of the encouraging signs for developers is the success of the nearby Walmart, which Vena said has brought in eye-popping revenues. The nearby sites, he said, could have the potential for clothing stores, pet suppliers, arts and crafts, electronics and
beauty retailers.“All the categories I think
would be interested in here,” he said.
Mayor Pro-tem Terry Harris said Chehalis has the need for a 24-hour restaurant, while Dawes said the city does not want to be in conflict with the outlet stores in Centralia.
“If we have something that’s a different niche, people can come here for that niche,” he said.
In an interview after the meeting, Dawes said he’s opti-mistic something can be worked out, but he’s also been through more than a few development proposals that didn’t end up hap-pening.
“I don’t tend to get too excited,” he said. “I’m hopeful we should know something one way or an-other fairly soon.”
Chehalis Hears From Potential Airport Site Developer
Jared Wenzelburger / [email protected]
Greg Vena, senior vice president of Rich Development, talks during a public meeting Tuesday afternoon at the Chehalis–Centralia Airport.
“It really is a momentum thing. … We want to touch every retailer and restaurant that’s
active and see where the interest is.”
Greg Vena
senior vice president of Rich Development
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By Alex Brown
Lewis County commission-ers scrapped a plan Monday that would have required drug com-panies to create a secure medi-cine return program in the coun-ty, citing additional feedback they’d received about a similar pending statewide mandate.
The proposed county ordi-nance came after the state Leg-islature passed a bill requiring a statewide take-back program starting in 2020. That bill also stipulated that county-specific programs needed to be in place by June 6 of this year in order to be phased into that effort.
County officials took that as a go-ahead to put a Lewis Coun-
ty mandate in place, but were contacted by Sen. John Braun, R-Centralia, who said that was not the intent of the bill.
“We didn't realize that our legislators felt like this was a negotiation in good faith,” said Public Health and Social Servic-es Director Danette York.
In essence, pharmaceutical companies worked with legisla-tors on the statewide plan, with the goal of avoiding county-by-county return mandates. Lewis County would have become the seventh to require such a program.
“Now there’s six different counties that are doing it six dif-ferent ways,” said Commissioner Edna Fund. “The drug folks are not happy about it, because they were assured that when this was
passed and becoming law in 2020, that it would be just one big group doing things the same way.”
Although Lewis County still had the legal standing to put its own program in place, officials opted to respect the work of the Legislature and not undermine the assurances lawmakers gave when getting drug companies on board. Instead, the county will wait for the statewide pro-gram to be phased in.
“Part of those negotiations were that [drug companies] agreed to do this in the hope that they wouldn't have to do it for each individual county,” said York. “They were asking us not to do that, because it was just go-ing to cause them more work.”
County Nixes Medicine Return Mandate, Citing Statewide Effort
Jared Wenzelburger / [email protected]
Officer Steven Summers keeps a look-out as Heather Camoza, evidence specialist,
empties a box full of prescription medicine into a large paper bag held by Rose
Kent, police records tech and evidence assistant, Monday afternoon in downtown
Centralia.
By The Chronicle
The state Department of Health recently released a set of health care professionals who were sanctioned with official ac-tions in April and May. In West-ern Washington, actions were taken toward health care work-ers in Lewis, Thurston, Pacific and Pierce counties.
This is a sampling of the complete list provided by the Department of Health:
Pierce County
Kellie LaRae Hudson had her registered nursing assistant credential suspended for at least five years by the secretary of health. In 2017 Hudson pleaded guilty to a federal charge of So-cial Security fraud — represen-tative payee fraud. Hudson, who was employed as a financial manager for vulnerable adults, admitted to writing and forg-ing checks from the checkbooks of clients under her supervision
and then using the money to her own advantage. She was ordered to pay restitution total-ing $15,984.32 to five vulnerable adults. Hudson is now banned from caring for, or having un-supervised access to vulnerable adults.
Arland Decastro Abbot had his massage therapist credential suspended for at least five years by the secretary of health. Ab-bot was disciplined after a cli-ent reported to police that he had touched her inappropriately
during a massage. King County Superior Court issued a sexual protection order against Abbot in 2017 and he was also charged with indecent liberties.
Therese Postyeni was or-dered by the secretary of health to cease and desist from practic-ing massage without a license. Postyeni was also fined $5,000 after admitting to practicing massage without a license.
Lewis County
Mandy Leigh Williams, a
certified nursing assistant, was charged with unprofessional conduct by the Nursing As-sistant Program. Williams was convicted of third-degree as-sault earlier this year.
Thurston County
Elijah Lee Taylor had his registered nursing credential indefinitely suspended by the secretary of health. Taylor was found to have neglected a vul-nerable adult under his care and is no longer permitted to be em-ployed in care for, or having un-supervised access to vulnerable adults.
Pacific County
Joseph William Rogerson had his medical assistant cre-dential suspended indefinitely by the secretary of health after he failed to comply with a re-quirement to enroll in a sub-stance abuse monitoring pro-gram.
The Health Systems Qual-ity Assurance Division works with boards, commissions and advisory committees in order to set licensing standards for more than 80 health care professions, ranging from medical doctors to veterinarians.
Health care workers charged with unprofessional conduct have 20 days to respond to the Department of Health in writ-ing in order to trigger a settle-ment process.
Information about health care providers is available on the DOH website at doh.wa.gov. Visitors to the website should click on the “How Do I” sec-tion for more information. The site includes detailed informa-tion about the license status of health care workers, including the expiration and renewal date of their credential, disciplinary actions and copies of legal docu-ments issued after July 1998. The information is also available by calling 360-236-4700.
Nursing Assistant Suspended for Financially Fleecing Five Old Folks of $16,000
News in Brief
Free Fishing Weekend on the LineBy The Chronicle
Anglers will be able to cast a line without purchasing a li-cense in coming days thanks to Free Fishing Weekend. The an-nual event, which coincides with National Get Outdoors Day, is offered by the Washington De-partment of Fish and Wildlife in order to help expose a new school of anglers and shellfish gatherers to those sports free of charge.
Additionally, participants will not need to purchase a Columbia River salmon and steelhead endorsement. The Columbia River endorsement is typically required to fish for salmon and steelhead on the mighty river as well as its many tributaries. Similarly, a two-pole endorsement will not be re-quired to fish with two poles in select waters where that tactic is allowed.
Free Fishing Weekend will also allow visitors to access many state lands free of charge, without purchasing a day pass or Discover Pass. Access to the nearly 700 WDFW managed water-access sites will be free of charge along with entrance to Washington State Parks. How-ever, a Discover Pass will be re-quired at Department of Natu-ral Resources sites.
"If you haven't fished in Washington, or want to intro-duce fishing to someone new to the sport, this is the weekend to get out there," said Steve Thies-feld, WDFW inland fish pro-gram manager, in a press release.
That release noted that there are numerous species to fish for this time of year. Lingcod are biting on the coast, while bass, crappie, perch and other warm-water fish are waking up in lakes and ponds across the state. On the Columbia River, summer steelhead are starting to make a strong push, as are shad near the dams.
The WDFW recommends that anglers check out the new Fish Washington application before heading out. That fish specific information can also be found on the WDFW web-site, and provides the lowdown on lowland lake fishing, alpine lake fishing, and marine water opportunities. The site also has information on recent hatch-
ery fish stocking efforts at area ponds and lakes.
Anglers who try their luck on Free Fishing Weekend will also be eligible to participate in the WDFW’s 2018 Trout Fishing Derby. Prior to the start of low-land lake season 1,000 hatchery fish marked with a green identi-fier tag were stocked across the state. Those tags can be turned in to the WDFW in exchange for an assortment of prizes.
Anglers are required to abide by all other fishing regulations during Free Fishing Weekend.
USFS Waives Recreation Fees for National Get Outdoors DayBy The Chronicle
Entrance fees to National Forests and other public lands will be waived on Saturday in recognition of National Get Outdoors Day. That annual cel-ebration of the great outdoors is intended to encourage Ameri-cans, particularly the young and disadvantaged, to participate in healthy and active outdoors ac-tivities.
“The Pacific Northwest is blessed with incredible natural beauty and world-class recre-ation opportunities,” said Re-gional Forester Jim Peña, in a press release. “Whatever your interest or skill level, there’s something for everyone, so get outdoors and enjoy your public lands!”
On Saturday, fees will be waived at picnic areas, boat launches, trailheads and visi-tors centers, among other areas. However, concession operations will still charge fees and charges will still apply for camping, cab-in rentals, heritage expeditions and other permits.
The USFS manages more than 2,400 developed recre-ation sites in the Pacific North-west Region. Those sites include more than 24,000 miles of trails, 51 Wild and Scenic Rivers, and two national monuments. As much as 98 percent of those forest and grasslands can be accessed free of charge all year long, as well as about two-thirds of the developed recreation sites.
After Saturday, there will still be three Forest Service free-days remaining this year. Those opportunities will be offered on Sep. 22 for National Public
Lands Day, and on Nov. 11-12 in honor of Veterans Day Weekend.
Retired Yakima Police Officer Dies in House Fire Blamed on SmokingBy The Yakima Herald-Republic
A retired Yakima police ser-geant remembered for his intel-ligence and humor died Sunday evening after a fire at his Selah area home.
Sixty-six-year-old Mark Peck Sr. served 27 years with the po-lice department before retiring in 2002.
Firefighters arriving at his Pomona Road home north of Selah about 6:30 p.m. Sunday were told someone was possibly still inside the burning build-ing. He was removed from the home, but pronounced dead at the scene after attempts to re-vive him failed, according to firefighters.
Yakima County Coroner Jack Hawkins said Peck died of smoke inhalation in what inves-tigators are calling an accidental fire they believe was caused by smoking.
On Monday morning, Jer-emy Peck, 41, and Mark Peck Jr., 38, recalled their father as they salvaged property from the home along the Yakima River that saw three generations grow up.
Their parents divorced when the boys were young. So, week-ends meant time spent with their father, hunting, fishing and time outdoors.
One of Jeremy’s favorite memories of his father came from floating the river when the weather was warm. The boys and their father would put their rafts in upriver and float back to the Pomona Road home.
“He always loved nature and being in the country,” Jer-emy said. “He also had a lot of friends. He was very much a people person.”
Among those friends was Joe Scherschlight, a Yakima po-lice patrol officer who had been Mark’s detective partner.
“I can tell you Mark had an extremely high IQ. He was a member of Mensa,” he said. “He was a very, very smart cop. He was your friend and he never held anything against you.”
That intelligence and atti-tude led to many confessions from criminals, something Scherschlight could only de-scribe as having a “knack” for police work. And when Mark was investigating burglar-ies, burglaries in Yakima went down, he said.
But Mark wasn’t just success-ful at “catching the bad guys,” he also had a sense of teasing hu-mor, but was always there for his fellow officers and those he su-pervised, said Scherschlight.
Scherschlight remembers when he called for backup while chasing a suspect and, even though he was a sergeant, Mark showed up to help.
“He apprehended the guy and I ended up in the hospital, but (Mark) came by and made sure everything was good with me,” he said.
Peck worked in the Yakima Police Department from Febru-ary 1975 to May 2002 in the pa-trol division and as a detective, a
member of the SWAT team and a traffic sergeant.
In 1998, one of his sons, Kris, was fatally stabbed during a par-ty at a Wenas area campground. His assailant was convicted of first-degree manslaughter and sentenced to 11 years in prison.
Scherschlight said Peck tried to act tough, but he withdrew a bit after the death of Kris. He believes Peck retired when he did — when he hit age 50 and was eligible for retirement — be-cause he was so affected by his son’s death.
“That took a lot out of him,” he said. “You couldn’t always tell. He never acted like it both-ered him, but I know it did.”
in The Chronicle
Saturday
Church
News
The event will feature give-aways, factory reps, free pressure gauge testing, free cake and cof-fee, drawings to win free prizes and 25-cent hot dogs and Pepsi.
Club Mom Children’s Clothing Bank and Exchange, 1-3 p.m., Centra-lia Christian Church, 1215 W. Main St., 360-736-7655
Karaoke, with Lou Morales, 7:30 p.m., Chehalis Eagles, 1993 S. Market Blvd.
Chehalis, 360-748-7241
Dress for Success, Reliable Enterprises, 11 a.m.-2 p.m., New Life Thrift Store, 1757 N. National Ave., Chehalis, 360-736-9558, ext. 149
Coach Train Excursions to Milburn, 1 and 3 p.m., Chehalis-Centralia Rail-road & Museum, 1101 SW Sylvenus St., Chehalis, steamtrainride.com, 360-748-9593
Riverview Train Excursion to Ruth, 5 p.m., Chehalis-Centralia Railroad & Mu-seum, 1101 SW Sylvenus St., Chehalis, steamtrainride.com, 360-748-9593
Steam Train Ride and Museum Visit, 11 a.m., 2:15 p.m., Mt. Rainier Railroad, Elbe, 888-STEAM-11
Open garden, 11 a.m.-1 p.m., 4162 Jackson Highway, Chehalis
Open Mic Gospel of song, testimony or instrument, 5 p.m., Ethel/Silvercreek Grange, 1624 Hw. 12, Ethel, 360-791-7467
Borst Open House and topic dis-cussion, 1:30-3:30 p.m., located in the back of Borst Park, Centralia, guides will be available to answer questions, 360-748-4362
Tenino Farmers Market, 10 a.m.-3 p.m., Olympia Street South, (701) 552-3032
Monthly Pancake Breakfast, 7-10 a.m., Toledo Senior Center, 150 Coal St., To-ledo, $5, open to all, 360-864-2112, pro-ceeds go to Toledo Senior Center
Northwest Vintage Chevrolet Meet, featuring all vintage Chevrolet cars, 4 p.m., parking lot at the end of Market Boulevard next to the theater, Chehalis
Fee Free Day, Washington State Parks,
National Get Outdoors Day
Saturday Night Fireside, featur-ing Douglas Taylor, 7-10 p.m., outside Mountain Goat Coffee, 105 Main St. E., Packwood
Commencement Cat Club Cat Show, 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Blue Pavilion, Southwest Washington Fairgrounds
“Life of the Party,” 7 p.m., Roxy Theater, Morton, rated PG-13, adults $9, students and seniors $8, 360-496-0541
Libraries
Maker Station Madness, for children grades 1-6, all day, Oakville
Build & Play Saturday, for children age 3-sixth grade, 10:30 a.m., Centralia
The Healing Tale: How Stories Can
Move Us Beyond Shame, event canceled
Organizations
Prairie Steppers Square and Round Dance Club, 7-8 p.m. Plus, 8-10:30 p.m. Mainstream, potluck at break, Oakview Grange, Centralia, 360-736-5172 or 360-273-4884
Gluten Intolerance Group of Lewis County, 10 a.m., Providence Centralia Hospital chapel conference room, 509-230-6394, [email protected], http://goo.gl/bWXTmr
Support Groups
Alzheimer’s caregiver support group, 10:30 a.m-noon, Centralia First United Methodist Church, 506 S. Washington Ave., Centralia, 360-628-4980
CalendarContinued from page Main 2
The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, June 7, 2018 • Main 11FROM THE FRONT PAGE
along with another dog, who was never found by authori-ties — its owners later said it was whisked away to an out-of-state family member.
However, county staff came to believe Tank was not dan-gerous, and York and Animal Shelter manager Amy Hanson changed his name to Hank and adopted him out to an unsus-pecting family, who soon fell in love with him.
When the switch was discov-ered by county officials, Hank was again seized and York and Hanson briefly faced crimi-nal charges that were later dis-missed. After the long-running, high-profile saga that played out over several courtrooms, Hank’s new family was able to bring him home last October,
sparing him from the euthani-zation initially ordered.
Although county code makes the Public Health direc-tor responsible to determine dangerous animal designations, York has ceded that role after the uproar over Hank to an ani-mal control expert from Thur-ston County who handles cases under contract. The contractor situation costs the county $250 plus mileage expenses for each hearing; York said there have been about six in the past eight months.
Creating the citizen panel is designed to provide a more long-term solution.
“The underlying issue of it was I just didn't feel like I was qualified to do that kind of work,” York said. “I don't have any animal expertise. … [Con-tracting] is expensive, and there’s no budget for it.”
The proposed panel — known as a the Dangerous Ani-
mal Decisions Board — would be tasked with determining whether potentially dangerous animals meet that designation and must be euthanized.
The county identifies such animals as those that have “in-flicted severe injury on a human being without provocation” or killed a domestic animal or live-stock.
“It's a good step in the right direction to have citizens who have an interest in this area be on this panel,” said County Commissioner Edna Fund.
The DAD Board would be made up of five members cho-sen by county commissioners from a “broad range of local opinion, experience and exper-tise with regard to animals and animal ownership.” Only three of the five volunteers would need to be present to establish a quorum for any given hear-ing, which may make the role less demanding in time periods
where there are several hearings. York said the county averages a little more than one dangerous animal hearing a month.
“We have a lot of people in Lewis County who are both ani-mal experts and have an interest in them. What we were hoping was that we would find some of those,” York said. “It would save the county funding, but give us what we think would be a bet-ter outcome because we would have three minds considering one case.”
Fund said she was not overly concerned about finding quali-fied and willing candidates, despite the fact that board members might be exposing themselves to some of the pub-lic backlash that emerged in the Hank case — especially in instances where they need to be the “bad guy” and order an animal put down. Leaving the decision to multiple people and better outlining the guidelines
will help eliminate that pressure, she said.
“With Hank/Tank, we had thousands of people involved in that,” Fund said. “I would think we would be able to recruit in-terested citizens who would get training. … I think from read-ing through the document, it looks like it spells things out more clearly, and I think it will be a better process for every-body.”
York presented the proposed changes to county commission-ers Monday and said she re-ceived a favorable response.
The language will require a public hearing and a commis-sion vote before it takes effect, which will likely happen in a month or two.
The proposal also expedites the process by which owners can appeal decisions to District Court, so animals don’t linger in the shelter while their fate hangs in the balance.
FiascoContinued from the front page
repeatedly echoed throughout Davalos’ hour-long Q&A with parents.
After the district completes construction on its two new el-ementary schools — which will replace Fords Prairie and Jeffer-son Lincoln — all five elemen-tary schools are switching to a K-6 model.
“They are telling kids if you go to Fords Prairie, you will get a new school,” Laufenberg said.
“That’s not true.” Currently, Centralia School
District has three residency zones in the district, which de-termine which school a child will attend.
However, when the five ele-mentary schools switch to a K-6 model, boundary lines will shift from three zones to five zones, moving between 20 and 30 per-cent of students from one school to another.
Laufenberg was one of about
10 parents who voiced concerns at a packed PTO meeting on Tuesday evening.
“There are some of us who have purchased our homes with the idea our kids were going to a certain school,” said one mother, whose son attends Edison.
There are five elementary schools in Centralia School District — Edison, Fords Prai-rie, Jefferson Lincoln, Oakview and Washington. Edison, Fords Prairie and Jefferson Lincoln house K-3, while Oakview and Washington house fourth through sixth grades.
“Three-fifths of our popula-tion are not going to be in those new schools,” Davalos said after the meeting. “They are going to be at the other three. We’re not doing that to punish them. It’s happening as a result of we are improving two schools, hope-fully all other three in the future. There’s no malinent there. It’s just a result of finally (making) a decision to make improve-ments.”
In total, there are 1,930 kin-dergarten through sixth grade
students in the district.“We will divide that among
five schools,” Davalos said. “We know that the two new schools will hold anywhere from 425 to 450 (students). We’re not going to try to pack each school to its full capacity. We are going to try to leave a little room for some flexibility. That will tell us how many spaces we get to use at the other three (schools), too.”
Davalos said he will not know how many students the other three elementary schools will hold until September, when a boundary committee begins its work.
“We are still in conversation about what we want to set as a target for each school,” Davalos said. “We have to determine where to put special ed pro-grams, childcare classrooms, so that might change how many kids we put in school a, b, or c, based on other programs that we put there.”
Davalos said the boundary committee will “probably” con-sist of at least one parent and one teacher from each of the five
geographical areas and the five principals. The committee will start its work in September and finish by December.
“We will make recommenda-tions for the board to approve boundaries in January (2019),” Davalos said. “But by then, peo-ple will have seen what those rec-ommendations are going to be.”
This shift is part of a $74 mil-lion bond that passed in 2017 to replace Fords Prairie and Jeffer-son Lincoln with two new K-6 facilities and to give Centralia High School a full, like-new re-model.
“We hope, knowing those projections for the next five to ten years, that those boundaries will last for some time,” Davalos said. “[The district hopes] that they won’t be boundaries that will be changed in a couple of years. They will be boundaries for the next five or ten years.”
In addition to concerns over boundary lines, parents ex-pressed hesitance over kinder-garten and sixth-grade students playing on the same playground or using the same bathrooms. A
common suggestion was to keep the new elementary schools as K-3 facilities.
“Even though that prob-ably could be a discussion, I doubt that that would hap-pen,” Davalos said. “We are so far along in our design and in groundbreaking that to go back and start changing classrooms and bathrooms and the rest of that is going to be costly. We are probably, if not already, well past that line of no return, almost there. This decision has been alive for more than a year now. This is probably a little late to think about changing that.”
Davalos said that although kindergarten and sixth grade students will be in the same building, they will not interact on the playground.
In addition, students in the new facilities will be separated by floors, with K-3 on the first floor and fourth through sixth grade on the second floor. In Edison, Oakview and Washing-ton, students will be separated by wings.
ChangesContinued from the front page
home and another resident left soon after the fire was reported,
Kytta said. No injuries were re-ported and it appears all pets made it out alive, he said.
“We are investigating it now just trying to find the origin and cause,” Kytta said.
Neighboring Grace Four-square Church opened its doors to shelter residents who evacu-ated.
“Those folks were wonderful,” Kytta said.
Along with the RFA, the Chehalis Fire Department, Lew-is County Fire District 6 and West Thurston Regional Fire Authority also responded.
Kytta noted that this is the
second fire in an apartment complex in Centralia so far this year.
“This is quite concerning that that’s two so far this year in our jurisdiction,” he said.
FireContinued from the front page
Jared Wenzelburger / [email protected]
Fire crews work to put out a fire at the Tall Firs Apartments early Wednesday morning in Centralia.
Main 12 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, June 7, 2018
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The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, June 7, 2018 • Sports 1
LEWISCOUNTYSPORTS.COM
LEWIS COUNTY Follow Us Online!
FACEBOOK.COM/LCSports
Sports editor: Matt Baide
Phone number: 807-8227
e-mail: [email protected]
WHITE PICKED BY DODGERS
W.F. West Senior Pitcher Selected in 14th RoundSee More on Sports 5 >>
ALSO INSIDE...Outdoors columnist Jordan Nailon’s
weekly Hunting & Fishing Report:
SEE SPORTS 6
CHECK OUT ONLINE...Photo galleries from the 2017-18
prep sports season can be found at
LEWISCOUNTYSPORTS.COM
THE SPOKEN WORD“I’ve played since I was about five and now
I’m done.”
ASHLEE VADALA,
CO-MVP OF ALL-AREA SOFTBALL
HUSKIES TAKE SECOND
<< Florida State Defeats UW ... See More on S4
Prep Softball
MATT BAIDE / [email protected]
The Chronicle’s 2018 All-Area Softball Team poses for a photo at Fort Borst Park in Centralia on Tuesday. Front Row (L to R): Onalaska’s Alicia Vint, Onalaska’s Amy Henderson, Napavine’s Maddie Thompson,
Napavine’s Abbi Music, Napavine’s Ada Williams, Rochester’s Hunter Hahn and Rochester’s Delaney Glazer. Back Row: W.F. West’s Paetynn Lopez, W.F. West’s Olivia Dean, W.F. West’s Ashlyn Whalen, W.F. West’s
Ashlee Vadala, Pe Ell-Willapa Valley’s Britney Patrick, Pe Ell-Willapa Valley’s Sid Pollard and Adna’s Haley Rainey. Not pictured: Winlock’s Cheleena Squibb.
MATT BAIDE / [email protected]
Napavine’s Abbi Music (left) and W.F. West’s Ashlee Vadala pose for a photo on Tuesday in Centralia as the Co-MVP’s of The Chronicle’s 2018 All-Area Softball Team.
The Chronicle’s 2018 All-Area Softball Team
Dual Threat’s Vadala, Music Lead All-Area Softball TeamBIG BATS: Home Run Power From Seven Different Schools Represented on All-Area Team
By Matt Baide
Lewis County had anoth-er solid year in softball with Napavine finishing in second, W.F. West and Pe Ell-Willapa Valley placed third and Adna earned fourth at the state tour-nament.
In a season filled with home runs and strikeouts, W.F. West’s Ashlee Vadala and Napavine’s Abbi Music are Co-MVP’s of The Chronicle’s 2018 All-Area Soft-ball team.
Vadala was a senior leader for the third-place Bearcats this sea-son.
“It was a really fun season. It didn’t finish as we wanted but it felt good to go out on a win at the same time,” Vadala said. “Over-all, I was just really thankful for my teammates and we had a re-ally good time.”
In the circle, Vadala was 18-3 with a 2.43 ERA in 118 innings pitched in all 28 games this sea-son, including the playoffs. She struck out 146 batters and only had 37 walks.
At the plate, she hit .562 in the cleanup spot in the batting or-der. She had 59 hits, including 13 doubles and 10 home runs. She scored 26 runs and had a team-high 46 RBIs as she hangs up her
please see SOFTBALL, page S8
Sports 2 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, June 7, 2018SPORTS
LEWISCOUNTYSPORTS.COM
SCOREBOARDPrepsLocal Prep Schedules
THURSDAY, June 7
Legion Baseball
Rural Baseball Inc. Dirtbags vs. ILWU (DH),
at Hoquiam, 5:30 p.m.
Centralia Titus-Will vs. Black Hills, At Ed
Wheeler Field, 6 p.m.
Local Results
Wednesday’s Results
At Olympia
I-5 TOYOTA 12, CAPITAL 5
I-5 Toyota 220 205 1 — 12 16 3
Capital 010 400 0 — 5 7 2
Batteries: I-5 Toyota — Dakota Hawkins,
Tyson Guerrero (5) and Adrian Boites, Kyle
Trout (4); Capital — Johnson, Dawson (3),
Cleveringa (7) and Galvin
At Chehalis
I-5 RENEGADES 5, TITUS-WILL 1
Titus-Will 100 000 0 — 1 1 2
Renegades 000 230 X — 5 8 2
Batteries: Titus-Will — Jackson Hull and
Cameron Erickson; Renegades — Tanner
Vaughn, Kaleb Rashoff (6) and Rashoff,
Vaughn (6)
At Lacey
RIVER RIDGE 4, ROCHESTER 1
Rochester 000 001 0 — 1 3 2
River Ridge 000 040 X — 4 5 0
Batteries: Rochester — Jared Winters
and Nick Moceri; River Ridge — Flynn and
Brewer
Tuesday’s Results
At Centralia
Game 1
HAKS 4, TITUS WILL 1
Timberline 000 301 0 — 4 8 2
Titus Will 000 000 1 — 1 3 2
Batteries: Timberline — N/A; Titus Will —
Cameron Cabrera, Benito Valencia (6) and
Sawyer Vogel, Chris Kirner (5)
Game 2
TITUS WILL 4, HAKS 1
Timberline 000 10X X — 1 3 1
Titus WIll 000 13X X — 4 8 3
Batteries: Timberline — N/A; Titus Will —
Jeremy Wood and Cameron Erickson
NBAPlayoff Glance
NBA FINALS
Golden State 3, Cleveland 0
Thursday, May 31: Golden State 124, Cleve-
land 114 (OT)
Sunday, June 3: Golden State 122, Cleveland
103
Wednesday, June 6: Golden State 110,
Cleveland 102
Friday, June 8: Golden State at Cleveland, 6
p.m.
x-Monday, June 11: Cleveland at Golden
State, 6 p.m.
x-Thursday, June 14: Golden State at Cleve-
land, 6 p.m.
x-Sunday, June 17: Cleveland at Golden
State, 5 p.m.
NHLNational Hockey League
Playoff Glance
STANLEY CUP FINAL
(Best-of-7; x-if necessary)
Washington 3, Vegas 1
Monday, May 28: Vegas 5, Washington 4
Wednesday, May 30: Washington 3, Vegas 2
Saturday, June 2: Washington 3, Vegas 1
Monday, June 4: Washington 6, Vegas 2
x-Thursday, June 7: Vegas at Washington
x-Sunday, June 10: Washington at Vegas
x-Wednesday, June 13: Washington at Vegas
MLBAmerican League
East Division
W L Pct GB
Boston 43 19 .694 —
New York 40 18 .690 1
Tampa Bay 28 32 .467 14
Toronto 26 35 .426 16.5
Baltimore 19 41 .317 23
Central Division
Cleveland 32 28 .533 —
Detroit 29 34 .460 4.5
Minnesota 26 32 .448 5
Kansas City 21 40 .344 11.5
Chicago 20 39 .339 11.5
West Division
Seattle 38 23 .623 —
Houston 38 25 .603 1
Los Angeles 34 28 .548 4.5
Oakland 31 31 .500 7.5
Texas 27 37 .422 12.5
National League
East Division
Washington 35 25 .583 —
Atlanta 36 26 .581 —
Philadelphia 32 27 .542 3.5
New York 27 32 .458 7.5
Miami 22 39 .361 13.5
Central Division
Milwaukee 37 25 .597 —
Chicago 34 24 .586 1
St. Louis 32 27 .542 3.5
Pittsburgh 31 30 .508 5.5
Cincinnati 21 41 .339 16
West Division
Arizona 32 29 .525 —
Colorado 32 29 .525 —
San Francisco 31 31 .500 1.5
Los Angeles 30 31 .492 2
San Diego 29 35 .453 4.5
Wednesday’s Results
Houston 7, Seattle 5
Washington 11, Tampa Bay 2
Cleveland 3, Milwaukee 1
Baltimore 1, NY Mets 0
San Diego 3, Atlanta 1
San Francisco 5, Arizona 4
Pittsburgh 11, LA Dodgers 9
NY Yankees 3, Toronto 0
Boston 7, Detroit 1
Colorado 6, Cincinnati 3
Texas 8, Oakland 2
Chicago Cubs 7, Philadelphia 5
Chicago White Sox 5, Minnesota 2
Miami 11, St. Louis 3
Thursday’s Games
Colorado at Cincinnati, 9:35 a.m.
LA Dodgers at Pittsburgh, 9:35 a.m.
Chicago White Sox at Minnesota, 10:10 a.m.
Miami at St. Louis, 10:15 a.m.
Philadelphia at Chicago Cubs, 11:20 a.m.
Detroit at Boston, 4 p.m.
Baltimore at Toronto, 4:07 p.m.
Seattle at Tampa Bay, 4:10 p.m.
Houston at Texas, 5:05 p.m.
Kansas City at Oakland, 7:05 p.m.
MLB Leaders
American League
Batting Average
1. Mookie Betts, BOS .359
2. Jean Segura, SEA .339
3. Nicholas Castellanos, DET .333
4. Jose Altuve, HOU .332
5. Andrelton Simmons, LAA .330
Home Runs
1. J.D. Martinez, BOS 20
2. Mike Trout, LAA 19
2. Jose Ramirez, CLE 19
4. Manny Machado, BAL 18
5. Joey Gallo, TEX 17
RBIs
1. J.D. Martinez, BOS 52
2. Manny Machado, BAL 49
3. Khris Davis, OAK 44
4. Mitch Haniger, SEA 43
4. Jose Ramirez, CLE 43
Wins
1. Corey Kluber, CLE 9
1. Luis Severino, NYY 9
3. Rick Porcello, BOS 8
4. Justin Verlander, HOU 7
4. Carlos Carrasco, CLE 7
ERA
1. Justin Verlander, HOU 1.24
2. Corey Kluber, CLE 1.96
3. Luis Severino, NYY 2.20
3. Gerrit Cole, HOU 2.20
5. Blake Snell, TB 2.36
Saves
1. Edwin Diaz, SEA 21
2. Craig Kimbrel, BOS 19
3. Aroldis Chapman, NYY 15
3. Shane Greene, DET 15
5. Keone Kela, TEX 14
THURSDAY, June 7MLB Baseball9:30 a.m. MLB — L.A. Dodgers at Pittsburgh or Colorado at Cincinnati4 p.m. ESPN — Detroit at Boston4:10 p.m. ROOT — Seattle at Tampa BayNHL Stanley Cup Finals5 p.m. NBC — Game 5, (If nec.), Washington at VegasWNBA basketball7:30 p.m. ESPN2 — Seattle at Los AngelesInternational SoccerNoon FS1 — Men, Friendly, England vs. Costa Rica6 p.m. FS1 — Women, Friendly, United States vs. ChinaGolf1:30 a.m. GOLF — European PGA Tour, Shot Clock Mas-ters6 a.m. GOLF — European PGA Tour, Shot Clock Mas-ters10 a.m. GOLF — Web.com Tour, Rustoleum Champion-ship1 p.m. GOLF — PGA Tour, FedEx St. Jude ClassicTennis8 a.m. NBC — French Open, women’s semifinalsMixed Martial Arts7 p.m. NBCSN — PFL, MMA Night in AmericaDiving1 p.m. NBCSN — FINA World Cup, 10-meter women’s synchro finals*Cycling11 p.m. NBCSN —UCI World Tour, Criterium du Dau-phine, Stage 4*Track and Field11 a.m. NBCSN — IAAF Diamond League4 p.m. ESPN — NCAA Men’s and Women’s Outdoor Championships
FRIDAY, JUNE 8MLB Baseball11 a.m. MLB — Pittsburgh at Chicago Cubs4 p.m. MLB — N.Y. Yankees at N.Y. Mets or San Fran-cisco at Washington4:10 p.m. ROOT — Seattle at Tampa BayNBA Finals6 p.m. ABC — Game 4, Golden St. at ClevelandGolf1:30 a.m. GOLF — European PGA Tour, Shot Clock Mas-ters6 a.m. GOLF — European PGA Tour, Shot Clock Mas-ters8:30 a.m. FS1 — USGA, Curtis Cup, U.S. vs. Great Britain and Ireland8:30 a.m. GOLF — Web.com Tour, Rustoleum Champion-ship10:30 a.m. GOLF — LPGA Tour, ShopRite LPGA Classic1 p.m. GOLF — PGA Tour, FedEx St. Jude Classic2 p.m. FS1 — USGA, Curtis Cup, U.S. vs. Great Britain and Ireland4 p.m. GOLF — Champions Tour, Principal Charity Clas-sic*Auto Racing
8:30 a.m. FS2 — NASCAR Monster Series, FireKeepers Casino 400 prac.10 a.m. FS2 — NASCAR Xfinity Series, LTi Printing 250 prac.Noon FS1 — NASCAR Xfinity Series, LTi Printing 250 prac.1 p.m. FS1 — NASCAR Monster Series, FireKeepers Casino 400 qual.1 p.m. NBCSN — IndyCar, DXC Technology 600 qual.2:30 p.m. FS2 — NASCAR Truck Series, Rattlesnake 400, qual.6 p.m. FS1 — NASCAR Truck Series, Rattlesnake 400NCAA baseball8 a.m.ESPN2 — Tournament Super Regionals, TBA11 a.m. ESPN2 — Tournament Super Regionals, TBA2 p.m. ESPN2 — Tournament Super Regionals, TBA5 p.m. ESPN2 — Tournament Super Regionals, TBAHorse racing2 p.m. NBCSN — Belmont Stakes AccessDiving9 a.m. NBCSN — FINA World Cup, 10-meter men’s synchro finals *Cycling11 p.m. NBCSN — UCI World Tour, Criterium du Dau-phine, Stage 5*Swimming5 p.m. NBCSN — TYR Pro SeriesTennis8 a.m. NBC — French Open, men’s semifinalsNCAA Track and Field5:30 p.m. ESPN — Men’s and Women’s Outdoor Champi-onshipsBoxing9:30 p.m. ESPN2 — De La Hoya vs. Salgado, jr. feather-weights* SATURDAY, JUNE 9MLB Baseball9 a.m. MLB — San Francisco at Washington or Milwau-kee at Philadelphia1 p.m. MLB — Chicago White Sox at Boston or Cleve-land at Detroit1:10 p.m. ROOT — Seattle at Tampa Bay4 p.m. FOX — Houston at Texas, N.Y. Yankees at N.Y. Mets or Arizona at Colorado7 p.m. MLB — Atlanta at L.A. Dodgers (in prog.)SoccerNoon ESPN — Men, International friendly, France vs. United States2 p.m. ESPN — MLS, N.Y. Red Bulls at Columbus4 p.m. JOEtv — MLS, D.C. United at SeattleWNBA basketball11 a.m. NBA — Minnesota at ConnecticutGolf1:30 a.m. GOLF — European PGA Tour, Shot Clock Mas-ters4:30 a.m. GOLF — European PGA Tour, Shot Clock Mas-ters8:30 a.m. FS1 — USGA, Curtis Cup, United States vs. Great
Britian and Ireland10 a.m. GOLF — PGA Tour, Fed Ex St. Jude ClassicNoon CBS — PGA Tour, FedEx St. Jude ClassicNoon GOLF — LPGA Tour, ShopRite LPGA Classic2 p.m. FS1 — USGA, Curtis Cup, United States vs. Great Britian and Ireland2 p.m. GOLF — Web.com Tour, Rustoleum Champion-ship4 p.m. GOLF — Champions Tour, Principal Charity Clas-sic*Auto Racing6 a.m. FS1 — NASCAR Monster Series, FireKeepers Casino 400, prac.7 a.m. FS1 — NASCAR Xfinity Series, LTi Printing 250, qual.7:55 a.m. ESPN2 — Formula One, Canadian Grand Prix, prac.9 a.m. FS2 — NASCAR Monster Series, Firekeepers Casino 400 prac.10:30 a.m. FOX — NASCAR Xfinity Series, LTi Printing 25010:55 a.m. ESPNEWS — Formula One, Canadian Grand Prix, qual.11:30 a.m. FS1 — NHRA, Virginia Nationals qual.*5:30 p.m. NBCSN — IndyCar, DXC Technolgy 600NCAA Baseball9 a.m. ESPN — Tournament Super Regionals, TBA9 a.m. ESPN2 — Tournament Super Regionals, TBANoon ESPN2 — Tournament Super Regionals, TBANoon ESPNU — Tournament Super Regionals, TBA3:30 p.m. ESPN2 — Tournament Super Regionals, TBA3:30 p.m. ESPNU — Tournament Super Regionals, TBA6:30 p.m. ESPN — Tournament Super Regionals, TBA6:30 p.m. ESPN2 — Tournament Super Regionals, TBAHorse Racing11 a.m. NBCSN — Belmont Stakes Prep1 p.m. NBC — Belmont StakesSwimming8:30 p.m. NBCSN — TYR Pro Series*Tennis6 a.m. NBC — French Open, women’s finalDiving10 p.m. NBCSN — FINA World Cup, 3-meter women’s final*Cycling11 p.m. NBCSN — UCI World Tour, Criterium du Dau-phine, Stage 6*Mixed Martial Arts5 p.m. FS1 — UFC 225, prelimsTrack and FieldNoon NBC — IAAF Diamond League*4 p.m. ESPN — NCAA Men’s and women’s Outdoor ChampionshipsBoxing7 p.m. SHO — Santa Cruz vs. Mares, WBA Superfeath-erweight title
SPORTS ON THE AIR
The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, June 7, 2018 • Sports 3SPORTS
NHL
By Geoff Baker
The Seattle Times
Wayne Hicks took a rather unorthodox route to becom-ing the only Washington-born hockey player to have his name engraved on the Stanley Cup.
He could soon have company, as former Stanwood resident and Everett minor-hockey graduate T.J. Oshie of the Washington Capitals tries to replicate Hicks’ feat of 57 years ago.
Oshie’s team leads the Vegas Golden Knights 2-1 in the best-of-seven finals with Game 4 on Monday in D.C. For now, Hicks remains alone in this state’s hockey history books.
“I didn’t expect it, but that’s how these things often hap-pen,” Hicks, now 81 and living in Scottsdale, Ariz., told me of his unusual Stanley Cup journey.
Born in Aberdeen to Ameri-can parents, Hicks — for rea-sons he can’t remember much
— moved to Canada with his family as a toddler and eventu-ally got signed as a 16-year-old by the Chicago Blackhawks. He played six years of junior and minor professional hockey be-fore making his NHL debut for a lone playoff game with Chicago in 1959-60. One year later, hav-ing played a single NHL regular-season game as well, Hicks got a playoff call-up at age 23 that changed his life.
The Blackhawks had upset the five-time-defending Stanley Cup champion Montreal Cana-diens in the semifinals and led 3-2 in their Stanley Cup cham-
pionship series against the De-troit Red Wings. But Chicago had paid a hefty price in a Game 5 victory when star right wing Murray Balfour — of the famed Million Dollar Line alongside Bobby Hull and Bill Hay — broke an arm crashing into the net.
With Game 6 looming in Detroit, the Blackhawks phoned Hicks, who had completed his season with their Buffalo Bisons affiliate in the American Hockey League.
“I got the call, and my wife and I drove from Buffalo to De-troit for the game,” Hicks said of the seven-hour, 260-mile jour-ney.
Walking into the Olympia Stadium arena in front of a hos-tile crowd was somewhat surreal.
“It was interesting,” he said. “There was a lot of tension.”
Detroit carried a 1-0 lead into intermission. Blackhawks coach Rudy Pilous then deliv-ered a rather infamous dressing-room pep talk, in which he later recalled telling his players that
“tonight’s game was worth $1,000 to the winner, and the loser gets nothing.”
From there, the Blackhawks took over, scoring a short-hand-ed equalizer to silence the crowd. They went ahead soon after and never looked back, winning 5-1.
Hicks has since seen YouTube video of him celebrating with teammates after the final horn sounded. “It shows me with the Cup and the coach,” he said.
He soon learned anybody
playing even one finals game gets engraved on the Cup -- the oldest North American pro sports trophy at 125 years and the only one containing names of every championship team’s players, coaches and executives.
“My son’s got a big framed pic-ture of it,” Hicks said. “You can do that. Get a big blown up Cup picture with all the teams’ names on it. And we’ve also got minia-ture Cups as well with the names on it.”
Hicks later became the first American-born player with the Philadelphia Flyers in a 115-game career that ended in 1967-68.
As obscure as his route from Washington to the Cup was, even players growing up in this state rarely reach the NHL the con-ventional way. Oshie is Washing-ton’s most successful NHL player, notching 187 goals and 277 as-sists over 10 seasons.
But his more formative hock-ey years were in Minnesota after his parents separated, and he moved there with his father at age 15. Oshie’s cousin, a former NHL journeyman named Henry Boucha, mentored him, and he became a teenage standout in the nation’s biggest high-school-hockey hotbed.
There’s hope that if the NHL
expands to Seattle, more rinks will be built locally and young-sters will see a clearer path to the pros. Oshie used to drive with his parents an hour each way from Stanwood to Mountlake Terrace for ice time.
Hicks has seen hockey grow in the Phoenix area since the Arizona Coyotes relocated from Winnipeg in 1996. His son, Alex, a former NHL player with Pitts-burgh, is now an assistant coach with the fledgling NCAA Divi-sion I hockey team at Arizona State.
Arizona has produced three NHL players since the Coyotes arrived compared with one prior.
Hicks said few begrudged him getting his name on the Cup after just three NHL games. By comparison, Oshie played 665 regular-season games and his teammate, Alex Ovechkin, ap-peared in 1,003 before even mak-ing the finals.
The Blackhawks in 2011 in-vited Hicks to their 50thanniver-sary celebration of the 1960-61 title. He says they “treated him like royalty” for three days.
“Everybody just says ‘Holy crap! that just about never, ever happens,’ “ Hicks said. “You look at the teams now, there’s only like five of them that have won the last 20 years. It’s all based on timing.”
And for hockey in Washing-ton, the timing finally might be right for some fresh Cup engrav-ings now and for years down the road.
Capitals’ T.J. Oshie in Rare Company for Hockey Players From Washington
Dirk Shadd / Tampa Bay Times
Tampa Bay Lightning center Anthony Cirelli (71), right, and Washington Capitals
right wing T.J. Oshie (77) tangle in the crease as Capitals goaltender Braden Holtby
(70) and defenseman Brooks Orpik (44) watch the puck during the third period in
Game 6 of the Eastern Conference final of the Stanley Cup Playoffs Monday, May
21, 2018 in Washington D.C.
NBA
By Marla Ridenour
Akron Beacon Journal
CLEVELAND — To open Tyronn Lue’s pregame news con-ference, a reporter from Japan asked the Cavaliers coach who would be the key player in Game 3 of the NBA Finals.
Lue repeated the question, surprised but not stumped. He responded with the obvious re-ply, the one he will give as long as he’s coaching the greatest player on the planet.
“LeBron James, I guess,” Lue said, laughing.
That answer may not be good for much longer as the clock tick-ing down on James’ impending free agency may have only 48 minutes remaining.
The Warriors put the Cavs in a 3-0 Finals hole with a 110-102 victory Wednesday night at Quicken Loans Arena.
The Cavs will try to stave off elimination against the defend-ing champions in Friday night’s Game 4 at the Q. No team in league history has won the title when dropping the first three games.
For most of the game, an hon-est answer would have been any-body but James. Save for January, James has been the Cavs’ model of consistency, about the only player Lue didn’t have to worry about, even with the challenges coaching him brings.
Some would have named J.R. Smith, some Kevin Love, some Rodney Hood, getting a second chance after falling out of the rotation after he declined to go in for mop-up duty in Game 4 against the Raptors in the East semifinals.
For 45 minutes in Game 3, any of those would have been the right answer.
All season, the Cavs have played their best when the situa-
tion is dire. That was no different as the Cavs responded with their best effort of the series and one of their best in the playoffs.
Yet the outcome may have been more demoralizing than the crazy, Game 1 overtime loss at Oracle Arena. The Cavs did what they thought they had to do and it still wasn’t enough.
The key turned out to be Kev-in Durant. The All-Star was un-stoppable, pouring in 43 points with 13 rebounds and seven assists. He made 15-of-23 field goals, including 6-of-9 3-point-ers, and 7-of-7 free throws.
He picked up the slack and more as Stephen Curry went
3-for-16 from the field for 11 points, with five rebounds and six assists, and Klay Thompson made 4-of-11 for 10 points.
James recorded his fourth triple-double of the postseason, his 10th in the NBA Finals and 23rd of his playoff career with 33 points, 10 rebounds and 11 as-sists in 47 minutes. But he strug-gled with his shot in the second half and finished 13-of-28 from the field, 1-of-6 from long range.
James tweaked his right ankle, the same one that Larry Nance Jr. hit in Game 6 against the Boston Celtics in the semifinals, with 7:30 left in the second quarter. James limped around the court
briefly, then tied his shoe tighter and played on.
Coming in, the Warriors had outscored opponents by 133 points in the third quarter his postseason. The Cavs had fared better than most, with a minus-3 differential in two games. But on this night the Warriors stayed true to form, starting the period with a 17-6 run as they took their first lead of the game at the 9:57 mark.
But after the Warriors opened a five-point lead, the Cavs cut it to two to start the final period. It was a nail-biting battle the rest of the way.
For the Cavs, so much was
encouraging from the start, es-pecially the performance of Hood, who scored 15 points with six rebounds in 26 minutes. He found ways to get open at the top of the key and showed confi-dence in his floater.
Hood exited the doghouse and played the best game of his life _ at least in terms of magni-tude. His performance rivaled that of Jeff Green’s in Game 7 of the Celtics series, when Green was practically brought to tears after a 19-point, eight-rebound effort when Love was out with a concussion.
Love and Smith both made their first 3-point attempts, usu-ally crucial for their confidence. Ramping up his aggressiveness, Love posted a double-double in the first half with 15 points and 10 rebounds and finished with 20 and 13, respectively. Smith added 13 points and four re-bounds.
The way the Cavs played had to make them proud, especially bouncing back from a heart-breaking loss in Game 1 and a 19-point setback in Game 2. They looked like a balanced team, plac-ing four players in double figures, which has been rare this season. They were aggressive and physi-cal. Hood made his coach’s faith in him pay off. Curry seemed to-tally psyched out by his shooting woes until he hit two huge bas-kets, one a 3-pointer, in the final three minutes. The Cavs claimed a 47-37 edge on the boards.
The Cavs came back from a 2-0 deficit against the Warriors in the 2016 Finals and against the Celtics in the East finals. They proved they still know how. But 3-0 may be too much, even for James.
Their keys to the game came through and they still came up short.
Cavs’ Keys to Game Come Through and They Still Come Up Short as Warriors Poised to Repeat
Nhat V. Meyer / Bay Area News Group
Golden State Warriors head coach Steve Kerr watches the television monitor after a foul was called against his team during
Game 3 of NBA Western Conference finals against the Houston Rockets on May 20, 2018, at Oracle Arena in Oakland, Calif.
(Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group/TNS)
MLB
Aaron Judge’s Two-Run Homer in the 13th Wins for YankeesBy Tribune News Services
TORONTO — Sonny Gray, quite simply, was the best he’s been as a Yankee.
The right-hander, who has confounded Yankees fans and the Yankees themselves with his inconsistency since being acquired before last July’s trade deadline, retired the first 12 hit-ters he faced Wednesday night, en route to eight shutout innings.
And Aaron Judge made sure the outing didn’t go to waste, crushing a two-run homer in the
13th inning to help the Yankees to a 3-0 victory over the Blue Jays at Rogers Centre.
The Yankees, who start a three-game series at the Mets on Friday night, improved to 31-9 since their 9-9 start to the season.
Gray, featuring a superb fast-ball, slider and curveball combi-nation, allowed two hits and zero walks. The 28-year-old, who came in 4-4 with a 5.50 ERA but 2-2 with a 3.67 ERA in five road starts, struck out eight, matching his season high, established here April 1.
The night marked the first time in 25 starts with the Yan-kees, including the postseason, that Gray did not allow a run.
But Gray’s counterpart, right-hander Sam Gaviglio was nearly as good, though the Yankees did get some scoring chances against him over seven scoreless innings. Gaviglio, who stranded six, al-lowed three hits and three walks, striking out four. The Yankees went 0-for-4 with runners in scoring position against the 28-year-old, who was making his first career appearance against the Yankees. Before Judge’s hom-er, the Yankees were 0-for-8 with RISP and had stranded eight.
Brett Gardner singled with one out in the 13th off right-hander Joe Biagini, bringing Judge to the plate. The right fielder, 2-for-23 to that point on
this trip, pounced on a hanging 1-and-2 curveball and sent it over the left-center field wall for his 17th homer. Giancarlo Stanton added his 14th homer, a two-out laser to left, to make it 3-0.
Aroldis Chapman allowed a one-out double to Kendrys Mo-rales in the bottom half but still picked up his 15th save.
Before the 13th was all frus-tration for an offense that ap-peared as if it would be shut out for the first time this season.
Miguel Andujar, the MLB leader among rookies with 29 extra-base hits, made it 30 with a leadoff double in the 10th against Tyler Clippard on a 1-and-0 changeup. But Austin Romine
struck out, Gleyber Torres flied to left and lefty Tim Mayza got Gardner to line out to left.
Stanton worked a two-out walk in the 11th against John Axford and two wild pitches put him on third. Gary Sanchez struck out, however, extending his recent stretch to 4-for-41 that has dropped his average to .202.
After Gray needed just six pitches to get through a perfect bottom of the first, the Yankees put their first runner in scoring position in the second. Stanton led off with a walk and went to second on Sanchez’s ground-out. Didi Gregorius’ groundout moved Stanton to third and An-dujar walked.
Sports 4 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, June 7, 2018SPORTS
College Softball
Huskies Fall Short in Women’s College World Series, But There’s Still Plenty to CelebrateBy Matt Calkins
The Seattle Times
OKLAHOMA CITY – The first reaction for any Huskies fan is that their team just got de-stroyed.
There was nothing elegant about that 8-3 loss to Florida State on Tuesday. Nothing pret-ty about that Women’s College World Series defeat. Nothing for players to console themselves with after a 2-0 sweep in the best-of-three final.
But if you’re able to zoom out for a second — if you’re willing to step back from the micro and look at the macro, you have to admit it: That was one hell of a run.
“It was a long road getting Washington back here, and I’m super proud of the achievement,” said Huskies softball coach Heather Tarr. “I remember my junior year. We lost to Arizona, and it leaves you with a bitter feeling. This feeling is different for what they were able to do throughout their entire journey.”
Perhaps that reeks of Polly-anna-inspired spin, but there is something to Tarr’s words. Be-fore the Huskies’ season began, they lost starting catcher Mor-ganne Flores to a torn ACL.
Demoralizing? In theory. But the Huskies’ surge to the coun-try’s No. 1 ranking via its season-opening 28-game win streak suggested otherwise.
Suddenly the Dawgs were the envy of the nation — the golden (and purple) children of the soft-ball world. Were they ever going
to fall?Actually, yeah. In fact, they
did it quite often toward the end of the regular season.
A six-game losing streak at the hands of UCLA and Oregon in April recalibrated the expec-tations for this program. Maybe those demolitions through the first part of the year were simply the byproduct of inferior compe-tition.
National-championship threats don’t lose a half-dozen times straight, do they?
Actually, yeah. In fact, before falling in Game 1 of the WCWS final Monday, the Huskies never lost again.
This is why UW jumping out to a 3-0 lead in the first inning Tuesday felt like a restoration of order. That 1-0 loss the night be-fore was for dramatic purposes only. A title would feel more fit-ting if the Huskies had to take two straight to win it, and that’s what was going to happen.
Until it was clear that it wasn’t.Florida State came back with
eight unanswered runs, seven of which came off Washington starter Taran Alvelo. The Semi-noles cut the deficit to one in the first thanks to a two-run home run by Anna Shelnutt. They add-ed three more in the second, and three more in the fifth as Eliza-
beth Mason and Jessie Warren each went deep.
Before Tuesday, Washington had only nine games in which it allowed three runs or more, and had never allowed more than seven. So as Florida State left OKC with a title and a trophy, it made sure not to leave any doubt.
You’d think such a result would leave the Huskies dev-astated, but based on the post-game news conference, that didn’t seem to be the case. Yes. they were emotional — particu-larly Alvelo — but they were also cracking each other up before any of the questions rolled in.
Maybe the defeat hadn’t quite
hit them yet. Maybe they figured laughs were the best way to fend off the pain.
Whatever it was, any tears shed seemed to have more to do with the seniors departure than it did falling just short of a sec-ond national title.
“It’s always been a dream to play at OKC, and to get back and play Husky softball, it’s been the most incredible journey. I feel blessed and lucky,” said Huskies senior third baseman Taylor Van Zee.
“This journey really has been a dream come true for all of us,” added sophomore shortstop Sis Bates. “These seniors have left a legacy that has gone on forever.”
The Husky that had the hard-est time sleeping Tuesday likely was Alvelo. She said her biggest regret was not doing her part for the seniors, who had always done their part for her.
She’s being hard on herself. The Huskies had no chance of getting this far without her, and Alvelo plans to come back to Oklahoma City next season.
“I said that last year, and look what happened,” she said.
Perhaps the Huskies will be back. Perhaps they’ll walk away with a title, too. In the meantime, they should be proud of what they achieved.
They didn’t have the chance to mob each other on the field Tuesday like Florida State did, but that doesn’t mean there wasn’t a lot to celebrate.
Dean Rutz / The Seattle Times
Coach Heather Tarr congratulates Gabbie Plain.
MLB
By Andy Buhler
The Columbian
Two days ago he finished his last high school final. Today he’s a pro baseball player.
The Seattle Mariners selected King’s Way Christian pitcher Damon Casetta-Stubbs in the 11th round of the MLB Draft on
Wednesday morning, making the high school senior the high-est drafted player out of Clark County this year.
The right-handed pitcher said he will sign for $325,000 — well above what the pick was worth
— and forgo his college eligibil-ity. He was committed to Seattle University.
Next week he will report to the AZL Mariners in Peoria, Ariz., the organization’s rookie league team.
Casetta-Stubbs helped lead the class 1A Knights to back-to-back state championship appear-ances each of the last two sea-sons, winning in 2017. It was the school’s first program title.
Now he’s the program’s first drafted player in its four-year history.
The Knights made it back to the state title game this season thanks in part to Casetta-Stubbs’ four hit, one walk and 12 strike-out complete game shutout of Cashmere in the 1A state semi-finals.
He stands tall at 6-foot-4, weighs 215 pounds and had his fastball clocked as high as 97 miles per hour this season. Ca-setta-Stubbs said he’s made the biggest improvement as a pitcher in the past six months. He saw his fastball go from 88 to 97 miles per hour.
Mariners Draft King’s Way’s Casetta-Stubbs in 11th Round
By TJ Cotterill
The News Tribune
So much significance — that’s the low-hanging fruit from this night in Houston.
The Seattle Mariners already entered the city leading the reigning World Series champi-ons by a game in the American League West standings, then they get two games against the Astros in early June hoping to show the doubters of the world that they’re ready to kick that 16-year playoff drought to the curb.
The Mariners entered Tues-day with a plus-17 run differen-tial and 15 games over .500. The Astros had a plus-122 run dif-ferential and were 13 games over .500. So the Mariners’ surely can’t keep this up, especially with them leading the majors in one-run wins (18). It’s not sustainable ... right?
So then the Mariners bashed the Astros to the tune of a 7-1 victory behind three home runs and James Paxton’s 7 2/3 innings at Minute Maid Park, improving to 38-22.
No extra-innings luck. No one-run timeliness. This was their largest margin of victory since a 9-3 win over the Blue Jays on May 10, when the Mariners
still had Robinson Cano as their No. 3 hitter.
Make that two games up in the AL West standings for the Mariners with one more game against the Astros on Wednes-day before heading to Tampa Bay.
But, again, this is all low-hanging fruit.
If this were the Mariners’ three-game series in Houston in the middle of September, this is all a better narrative. But Mariners manager Scott Servais warned, himself, before Tues-day’s game of onlookers placing far too much significance on this series.
One fact remains — the Mar-iners are right where they want to be.
“Guys made a strong state-ment tonight,” Servais told re-porters afterward. “And we’re swinging the bat good. Hope-fully it continues.”
Statement?Servais backed off that a little
in his next breath.“We’re focused on the road
trip,” he said. “We want to have a good road trip.
“We were prepared. We were ready to play tonight. That’s a really good sign. This team, if you’ve followed us closely the past month and a half -- little
bit different ball club than we’ve had in the past. Guys are excit-ed. They’re having fun and they can’t wait for the game to start. And it’s different guys all the time ... it’s a collective group and it’s a lot of fun.”
They jumped on Houston’s former Cy Young pitcher Dal-las Keuchel in the first two in-nings, with Kyle Seager lifting an opposite-field home run into the Crawford boxes for a three-run shot -- his 10th home run of the season.
“I think this is the only park that I can do that in,” Kyle Seager told 710-AM afterward.
And that was a good sign for Seager, who tinkered with his swing this offseason. That was the farthest left the left-handed hitter has hit a home run, with teams normally playing him to pull. Kyle Seager’s 55 home runs against left-handed pitch-ers since 2012 are more than any other player in the majors in that span.
That came after Mitch Ha-niger scored Dee Gordon from third base on a fielder’s choice, just getting to first base in time to beat a potential double-play ball.
Then a Mike Zunino bomb.He was batting ninth in the
lineup and crushed a 76-mph slider with a 110-mph exit veloc-ity off of his bat. MLB’s Statcast measured it at 429 feet, but it seemed more like 829 feet.
That two-run home run gave the Mariners a 6-0 lead in the second inning.
Jean Segura added one more home run off of Keuchel in the fifth inning. That’s the most runs Mariners have ever scored off him in a game and he has only allowed that many runs in a start eight times since 2012.
Meanwhile, James Paxton rolled behind some big defensive plays.
Seager had Marwin Gonza-les’ chopper bounce off his back-hand stab down the left-field line in the second inning when the Astros scored their lone run. But he started back-to-back inning-ending double plays in the fifth and sixth innings.
“Double plays are a pitcher’s best friend,” Servais said. “They say that for a reason. We’ve played really well defensively.”
Guillermo Heredia jumped into the wall in center field for one out and Dee Gordon stuck a scorching ground ball from Yuli Gurriel in the fourth. The Mariners have not committed an error defensively in their past 13
games.Paxton’s biggest jam came
in the second inning. Gonzales’ double gave the Astros runners at second and third with one out before Paxton struck out Max Stassi and Jake Marisnick to end the threat.
“It’s big,” Paxton said. “Every series against a team in your di-vision is big. Especially these guys being atop the division with them right now — every game puts us ahead. So every win is big.”
The Mariner—have now won five consecutive games and nine of their past 11. Since Robinson Cano fractured his finger and then getting an 80-game drug suspension, the Mariners are 16-3 — the best records in base-ball in that span.
And the Mariners are 16 games over .500 for the first time since the 2007 season.
Pretty remarkable.“We feel good,” Seager said.
“We’re playing with a lot of confi-dence. There’s a lot of trust and a lot of belief. And we understand that our pitching has been awe-some and they’re going to keep us in the game and we’re going to scratch and claw and do what-ever we can.”
For Real Now? Mariners Bash Astros in Houston, Increase Lead in AL West
By Ryan Divish
The Seattle Times
HOUSTON — They weren’t strikes. They weren’t even par-ticularly good pitches for a hitter to swing at in search of success.
And yet they all resulted in hits that hurt the Mariners and helped the Astros ignite a four-run seventh inning that extin-guished any of Seattle’s hopes of a sweep of the two-game series as Houston posted a 7-5 victory Wednesday.
Reliever Juan Nicasio was on the receiving end of the bad luck that this team has been able to avoid in recent weeks.
Brought in to protect a 4-3 lead in the seventh, Nicasio gave
up a leadoff single to Tony Kemp and it only got worse.
A slider low and away from the plate to George Springer on a 1-2 count resulted in a blooped double off the end of the bat into right field. With runners on the corners, Nicasio got up 1-2 on Alex Bregman and again fired a slider outside of the strike zone. Bregman lunged at the pitch and poked a soft ground ball up the middle that got by Nicasio and went for an infield single that tied the game.
Jose Altuve ended Nicasio’s night, jumping on a first-pitch fastball that was well below the strike zone and dumping into left for the go-ahead run-scoring single.
Nicasio came into the game having retired 26 of the past 29 batters he faced with 16 strike-outs.
On this night, he retired no one and was replaced by Dan Altavilla, who allowed two more runs to score.
The defeat snapped the Mari-ners’ five-game winning streak. They fell to 38-23 and are 2-4 against the defending World Se-ries champs.
The surprising and magical run of quality starts from Wade LeBlanc ended against the As-tros. It wasn’t a bashing or a beat-ing, but it might have been had he tried to navigate through the order one more time.
Instead, he was pulled from
the game after a rough fourth in-ning when he turned a 1-0 lead into a 3-1 deficit. He left a 3-2 fastball to the lumberjack that is Evan Gattis down the middle of the plate, which was a costly mistake. It resulted in a two-run homer off the glass windows above the train tracks for the retractable roof. LeBlanc later allowed a run-scoring double to Springer that made it 3-1.
Down two runs and with a rested bullpen, there was no rea-son to push LeBlanc further in the game. Manager Scott Servais went to his bullpen in hopes of keeping the deficit workable and maybe scratch out the necessary runs against Lance McCullers or the Astros bullpen.
They did both.After homering in the fourth
inning off McCullers for Seattle’s first run, Nelson Cruz drove in the second run with a run-scor-ing single through the left side of the infield to cut the lead to 3-2 in the sixth inning.
Denard Span tied the game to start the seventh, ambushing the first pitch he saw from McCull-ers over the wall in right field for a solo homer that tied the game at .
The Mariners took a brief lead later in the inning when Jean Segura laced a run-scoring single off the glove of reliever Chris Devenski into center field to score Guillermo Heredia.
Astros Go Out of the Strike Zone for a 7-5 Victory
The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, June 7, 2018 • Sports 5SPORTS
Prep Baseball
W.F. West’s Brandon White Selected by Dodgers in MLB DraftRELIEF: White Picked in 14th Round With 434th Pick by Los Angeles
By Matt Baide
After two days of waiting to be selected, W.F. West se-nior pitcher Brandon White was drafted by the Los Angeles Dodgers in the 14th round of the Major League Baseball draft on Wednesday.
It was a relief for White to hear his name called in the morning as the 434th pick.
“I’m excited for the opportu-nity. ...It’s been a weird month. For a while, I thought I was go-ing to Wazzu and heading over there this summer,” White said.
“Once the opportunity came to get drafted, it got complicated for me. It just feels good to have it be over now. I just have to weigh the options and put 100 percent into that. That’s the most exciting part for me.”
The process of getting draft-ed started at the beginning of baseball season, as scouts from MLB teams were at every start on the mound for White.
Being drafted turned into a real possibility when White trav-eled to Los Angeles last week to participate in a draft combine at Dodger Stadium. The pitch-ers were the first prospects to be looked at, and White was the second to last pitcher to throw for scouts.
White started playing catch with an assigned catcher before going to the bullpen to get ready for his time on the real mound.
“I went on the main mound and threw in front of scouting
directors. I threw about 13-15 pitches, and they would tell me ‘Let’s see four fast balls, three curves, three changeups,’” White said. “Then they have you act like there’s a batter and keep track of balls and strikes. I threw about 25-30 pitches. It went by really fast when I was out there.”
The night before, White was able to attend a Dodgers game and watch Clayton Kershaw pitch.
White came back to Chehalis and waited until the draft start-ed on Monday. The first round went by and the second round came on Tuesday.
“I was thinking I’d get picked up the second day in the ear-
lier rounds or going early to-day,” White said. “It’s not in your control, this is the first time I’ve watched the draft to see what it’s like and have more of an idea of where I’d get picked.”
When he was taken in the morning on Wednesday, he found out almost at the same time as everyone else did watch-ing the draft.
“It was kind of last minute. Most guys kind of know about a round before, I didn’t know I was until I got a text before I got picked,” White said. “I knew I was going to go right then. It was a lot of waiting but it was pretty exciting.”
The senior ace — who has
signed to play for Washington State University next season
— posted a 7-2 record in 55 in-nings pitched. The Evergreen 2A Conference co-MVP allowed five earned runs all season to ac-cumulate a 0.64 ERA. He struck out 92 batters and walked just 12 while holding opponents to a .137 batting average.
The Chronicle’s 2018 All-Ar-ea Baseball co-MVP, he allowed 10 runs all season to help lead the Bearcats to a third-place finish in the State 2A Baseball tourna-ment.
For Brandon’s dad Chris, he was trying to keep track of the draft while his students were taking a math final.
“It was stressful. I teach math, today I was giving a fi-nal to several of my seniors. I couldn’t get away from my class during crunch time. I wasn’t in the loop on what was going on,” Chris White said. “I was just get-ting kind of nervous. What we thought was going to happen was the 11th or 12th. Those went by, I was like oh boy. It made me a little nervous.”
Now that Brandon has been drafted, Chris can finally relax now that the draft process is over.
“I’m so proud, beyond words proud of him,” White said. “I’m really proud of the way he’s han-dled himself. He’s made me a real proud dad.”
Even with the draft over, Brandon now has another de-cision to make. He is currently signed to play for WSU next sea-son, but would have to give up that if he signed a professional contract with the Dodgers.
“I know I was picked. From there, the whole time, I’m weigh-ing the options of going now and having your career start now and what you’d like to do,” White said. “I can just go to college and get your stock up more in three years. I think both options are great options, it’s just whatever feels right.”
Regardless of his decision, White is ready to put his full ef-fort into the next step of his base-ball career.
“For me, it wasn’t my mindset on one thing. I’m going off how my gut felt,” White said. “I’m just ready to make a decision, have things work out and put 100 per-cent of my effort and focus into what I decide.”
MATT BAIDE / [email protected]
W.F. West’s Brandon White watches his pitch fly towards home plate against Tumwater during an Evergreen 2A Conference
baseball game at Bearcat Stadium in Chehalis on April 18.
Legion Baseball
Guerrero, Hawkins Lead I-5 Toyota Past CapitalBy The Chronicle
OLYMPIA — I-5 Toyota/Mtn. Dew swung the bats well here on Wednesday, collecting 16 hits en route to a 12-5 win over Capital in a AAA Legion Baseball game.
Lane Douglass had three hits and an RBI, Tyson Guerrero had three hits including a double, triple and two RBIs and Dakota Hawkins also had three hits with a double and two RBIs.
Nole Wollan had two hits and three RBIs and Max Miller add-ed two hits for I-5 Toyota.
Hawkins started on the mound and threw four innings, allowing five hits and one earned run with six strikeouts. Guerrero came on in relief and had two hits and four strikeouts in three innings of work.
I-5 Toyota scored two runs in the first, second and fifth frames and put the game away with five insurance runs in the sixth in-ning.
I-5 Toyota/Mtn. Dew is back in action on Monday against Capital in Olympia.
I-5 Renegades Take Down Titus-Will
Tanner Vaughn allowed no hits in five innings on the mound to lead the I-5 Jeep Renegades to a 5-1 win over Titus-Will in a Legion Baseball game at Bearcat Stadium on Wednesday.
Vaughn allowed one earned
run with eight strikeouts. Kaleb Rashoff came on in releif and pitched the final two innings, allowing just one hit and no earned runs.
Titus-Will’s Noah Aliff had the lone hit and scored the only run and Dominic Aguirre had an RBI.
Luke Bennett was 2 for 3 with two runs and an RBI and Brit Lusk was 2 for 3 with a run and two RBIs for the Renegades.
Titus-Will scored in the first inning to take the lead. The Ren-egades gained the lead in the fourth inning with two runs and added three insurance runs in the fifth.
Titus-Will faces Black Hills at Wheeler Field on Thursday.
Rochester Falls to River Ridge
LACEY — River Ridge scored all four of their runs in the fifth inning to secure a 4-1 win over Rochester in a Legion Baseball game here on Wednesday.
Jared Winters pitched all six innings and only threw 60 pitches, allowing four runs and five hits.
Cade Lenzi had a double and Winters and Nolan Eyles each had a hit for Rochester.
Rochester scored their lone run in the sixth on a passed ball.
Tuesday’s Results
Titus-Will, Timberline Split Doubleheader
Timberline won the first game, but Titus-Will bounced back to take the second game to earn a split in a Legion Base-ball doubleheader at Ed Wheeler Field on Tuesday.
In Game 1, Timberline won 4-1. Jeremy Wood was 2 for 3 at the plate.
The Haks scored three runs in the fourth inning to take the lead for good.
“Their pitcher kind of domi-nated our young kids for the most part,” Titus-Will coach Rex Ashmore said. “I’m definitely not disappointed in our effort or how we approached the game. That kid’s just pretty good.”
Cameron Cabrera started and threw five innings for Titus-Will. Benito Valencia came on in relief to finish the game.
In Game 2, Wood pitched a complete game to lead Titus-Will to a 4-1 win. He allowed just three hits and one run while striking out five batters.
Wood was also 2 for 2 at the plate with a triple in the fourth inning.
“He had real good command of his breaking ball,” Ashmore said. “It was a good outing for him… much more what we’re used to for him.”
Titus Will (4-3) plays at Wheeler Field on Thursday at 6 p.m. versus Black Hills.
MLB Briefs
Suddenly Explosive Marlins Offense Bashes the Cardinals for Second Consecutive GameBy Tribune News Services
ST. LOUIS — The Marlins arrived in St. Louis ranked last in baseball in multiple offen-sive categories.
The Cardinals are still wait-ing to see that team take the field.
The Marlins bashed St. Louis pitching again Wednes-day night recording season-highs in runs, hits and extra-base hits in an 11-3 rout of the Cardinals at Busch Stadium.
The Marlins (22-39) scored the most runs they have this season in a two-game span with 18, which is four more than they scored over their previous six games _ all losses.
The Marlins, who entered the game with a major-league worst 203 runs scored, 45 home runs and .349 slugging percentage, recorded a season-best 17 hits, 10 extra base hits, six doubles and matched a sea-son-high with three home runs.
Lewis Brinson, who entered the game with a .161 batting average, hit two home runs, giving him nine for the season. It was his second multi-home run game as well.
Derek Dietrich recorded a career-high four hits including his seventh home run.
Starlin Castro recorded three doubles and J.T. Realmu-to hit two doubles and a triple.
Drew Rucinski picked up the victory in relief of Wei-Yin Chen after going 2 1/3 innings and allowing one run on two hits.
White Sox Shortstop Tim Anderson’s Talent on Full Display in 5-2 Win Over TwinsBy Tribune News Services
MINNEAPOLIS — On Wednesday night at Target Field, the Twins played Jour-ney’s “Don’t Stop Believin’ “ while hosting the White Sox.
The Sox are glad they haven’t stopped believin’ in Tim Anderson.
The shortstop’s talent was on display all night in a 5-2 win, as he drove in three runs,
scored another and stole his 13th base in 14 tries.
Twins starter Jake Odorizzi held the Sox to one run before he put the first two men on in the sixth and handed the reins to Ryan Pressly, who loaded the bases with one out.
Pressly got up 2-0 on An-derson and heard the whistles from the home crowd. That’s when everything unraveled for the Twins. Pressly threw a wild pitch that brought home Yol-mer Sanchez to tie the score at 2, then Anderson’s single to left plated two more as Anderson moved to second on the throw to home.
Anderson stole third, and Engel bunted him in on a squeeze. Engel initially was ruled safe after Pressly one-hopped the throw to first, but the call was overturned.
The White Sox loaded the bases in the eighth before Charlie Tilson grounded out.
The best news for White Sox starter Hector Santiago
— besides winning his second game of the season to go 2-2
— was that he didn’t give up a home run, which had been a recurring problem in his previ-ous three starts. He allowed six homer in that span and lasted only 3 1/3 innings in his last start against the Brewers.
Still, the Twins still gave him enough trouble to make his outing mostly about dam-age control, which he managed to do for the most part thanks to some help from the defense.
After Robbie Grossman singled and Mitch Garver doubled in the second inning, Ehire Adrianza took Santiago to the wall as the ball sailed over Engel’s head in center field for another double.
Grossman scored and with no outs, Santiago was looking at trouble. Ryan LaMarre al-most added three more runs, but his shot to left hooked foul and he eventually grounded out.
Brian Dozier helped San-tiago out with a comebacker that led to Mitch Garver being caught in a rundown between third and home. Eddie Rosario flew out, and Santiago’s escape was complete.
It was not a great night for Yoan Moncada, who struck out the first four times he came to the plate.
MLB
By Dave Nichols
The Spokesman-Review
Several players with area ties were selected on Day 3 of the 2018 MLB Draft on Wednesday in Se-caucus, New Jersey.
Gunnar Schubert, SS, Gonza-ga: Schubert was drafted by Mi-ami in the 28th round, 837 over-all. He hit .306 with four homers and 40 RBIs as a senior in 2018. In his junior season he started all 53 games at shortstop and hit .229. He was a two-time Gold Glove shortstop for Pierce College and hit .371 with 69 hits and 45 runs as a sophomore.
Casey Legumina, RHP, Gon-zaga: Legumina was selected by Cleveland in the 35th round, 1063 overall. The sophomore went 3-3
with 13 saves and a 2.77 ERA, striking out 52 in 48 2/3 innings. He made 13 appearances as a freshman, starting seven times and built a 1-4 record, 5.46 ERA in 57 2/3 innings of work with a 36/16 strikeout/walk ratio.
Jake Pfennigs, RHP, Post Falls HS: Pfennigs was selected by San Diego in the 35th round, 1041 overall. He is committed to Ore-gon State. He went 3-0 with a 1.91 ERA and 39 strikeouts over 36 2/3 innings over eight starts this sea-son, leading the Trojans to third in state 5A. A three-sport star, the 6-foot-7 Pfennigs was also named Idaho’s Gatorade state player of the year, leading Post Falls to a semifinal appearance at state. He averaged 18.4 points and 12.2 re-
bounds this season.Joel Condreay, RHP, Whit-
worth: Condreay was selected by Colorado in the 31st round, 936 overall. The senior hit .355 with two homers and 25 RBIs in 124 at-bats for the Pirates, but was drafted as pitcher. He tossed 2 2/3 innings this season. Condreay was the second Whitworth play-er selected in this draft (Hugh Smith, sixth round, Detroit), the first time in program history that’s happened.
Gage Burland, RHP, Lewis-Clark State: Burland (East Val-ley) was drafted by Toronto in the 22nd round, 656 overall. Burland was three-time all Great North-ern League and league MVP his senior season.
Gonzaga’s Gunnar Schubert, Post Falls’ Jake Pfennigs Selected on Day 3
While clear waters lapped along the bank I tried to estimate its size. From my vantage, and excited estimate, it seemed like it must be at least ten feet wide and perhaps two hundred feet tall.
A maple sweet breeze rustled through the cattail reeds. Their heavy brown heads reminded me of carnival corndogs as they bobbed above the lily pads and brambles. I took a step back to get a better angle and craned my neck to see but it was no use. The thing was simply too big to for a small mind to imagine.
Elephant trunk limbs hung out over the water and draped the anglers path in early morn-ing shade. A fallen tree, half decayed and soft as an old sink sponge, plunged into the water at an obtuse angle and created a gentle eddy near the shore. It sure seemed like the big fish would hide under there.
An anaconda root coiled through the compact soil and busted loose ten feet down like an eternally thirsty serpent. The hillside fell away in moss caked terraces that traced the course of those immense snaking roots. Over the water a skinny tire swing on a tired rope draped from a gargantuan overhanging limb. An irregularly tended fish-ing line was cinched close to the horizontal tip of its branches.
It was likely the site of endless tug-of-wars that no fish ever won. Not even the largest of lunkers.
As the di-mensions con-tinued to roll through my noggin, I began to feel a twinge of guilt for its brethren that we‘d turned to ashen bones in the camp-fire the night before. They say the forest has eyes and I wondered if it knew I was the one responsible for all that smoke.
As my mind wandered I walked around the corner to try to see the other side. That’s when I finally saw the sign. It was painted in colors of the for-est and made out of wood. It was larger than an old school princi-pal’s paddle but still altogether dwarfed by the immensity of its subject. On top of a weathered round wooden post, on its bark brown face in salal green paint, the sign read: GIANT SITKA SPRUCE.
The sign was no misnomer or common case of fish tale hyper-bole. It was a hardwood fact.
At the base of the tower-ing, and hulking, tree there was a smooth swale between roots where a body could sit and be en-veloped in the trunk like a mem-ory foam recliner.
The scent of a new morning campfire crept beneath the can-opy and revealed others were fi-nally awake. But still, I remained.
Sitting there at the base of the elder tree memories that weren’t even mine flooded my mind and remained just out of reach. Like a forlorn sailor in fog I could al-most make out the outline of the shore, but I could never make it.
How had the forest changed since it first began to grow? Where did all of the big fish go? How many other people had stopped at its base for a rest and wondered about the world?
What had become of them? What would become of the tree? What will become of me?
Then I heard the bell ring and saw my abandoned rod bow tip toward the water and all other thoughts vanished. I still couldn’t tell you how many more tree rings I will grow, but right then it was time to bonk anoth-er cutthroat and take it back to camp.
FISHIN’
If you’ve been meaning to cast a line lately but just haven’t gotten around to buying your license, this weekend is the moment you’ve been waiting for. Saturday and Sunday, the
WDFW will offer their annual Free Fishing Weekend for all an-glers on Washington’s assorted waterways and beaches.
That two-day happening will allow anglers and shellfish har-vesters to try their luck without the need to purchase a license. Additionally, anglers will not need to purchase a Columbia River salmon and steelhead en-dorsement to fish the mighty river or any of its tributaries, and a two-pole endorsement will not be required on waters where that approach is allowed.
What’s more, no access pass or Discover Pass will be required on most state owned lands in-cluding the water access sites run by the WDFW. However, DNR managed lands will still require a regular access pass, and all other regulations must be followed.
Just in time for Free Fish-ing Weekend, fish officials from Washington and Oregon came to an agreement that will allow for expanded fishing opportunities on the Columbia River and its tributaries. The spring king fish-ery below Bonneville Dam was slated to close on June 6 but has now been extended through June 15 with an increased daily limit of two adult hatchery Chinook. The expansion of the fishery was give the OK after the forecast for springers was updated to call for 116,500 Chinook. All wild salmon and steelhead must be released.
“There is sufficient catch al-location to allow us to add a few more days of fishing opportunity in the mainstem Columbia be-low Bonneville Dam,” said Ryan Lothrop, fishery manager for the WDFW.
Additionally, a rare white sturgeon retention fishery has been extended in the Lower Co-lumbia River. A series of one-day openings came to an end early this week but fish manager have agreed to open Lower Columbia to sturgeon harvest once again on Saturday. That one-day fish-ery will be open from sunrise through 2 p.m. from the Wauna powerlines to the estuary at the Buoy 10 cutoff. Keeper sturgeon must measure between 44 and 50 inches fork length and the daily limit is one fish and the annual limit is two. All green sturgeon must be released immediately.
On June 2 and June 4, anglers in the Lower Columbia River es-tuary made 2,964 trips to catch sturgeon and wound up with 660 keepers. The salmonid an-gling last weekend was a mixed bag between from Bonneville down to the estuary. On Satur-day, officials counted 199 boats fishing for salmon along with 237 bank anglers on the Oregon side of the river. The closer to the mouth the anglers got the better their odds tended to be. Boat an-glers between Goble and Beaver caught an average of 0.11 Chi-nook, while anglers in the estu-ary averaged 0.15 Chinook and 0.22 steelhead per boat.
In another week regulations on the Columbia River will change again. From June 16-30, anglers will be allowed to retain up to two hatchery steelhead per
day, but all sockeye must be re-leased. Fishing at night will also be permitted on Washington waters, but all adult Chinook must be released between June 16-21. That Chinook fishery will pick back up again from June 22 through July 4 from the Megler-Astoria Bridge up to Bonneville Dam with a daily limit of two adult hatchery Chinook, two hatchery steelhead, or one of each.
Anglers who typically pre-fer the Cowlitz River may be inclined to take their rods and reels south in coming weeks be-cause the bite has been sleepy from the barrier dam down to Gearhart Gardens. From the I-5 Bridge downstream last week, the WDFW sampled 30 anglers with no catch. Upstream 55 bank rods showed eight keeper spring-ers and two steelhead, while 31 bank rods kept two adult spring-ers and 14 steelhead.
Those results were not enough to impress Andy Cole-man of Andy’s Angling Ad-ventures, who makes his living playing the emerald waters of the Cowlitz, the lower Columbia, and the Chehalis rivers.
“Things have been terribly slow on the Cowlitz and Cheha-lis systems this year,” said the ad-venturous Coleman. “June might produce some fish in both rivers with strong returns during this time the past few years. Seeing a few summer steelhead around but shouldn’t see anything great till the 3rd week of June if we get any after the poor release (of smolts).”
Additional creel sampling by the WDFW on the Kalama Riv-er showed 12 bank anglers and three boat anglers who released one steelhead. On the Lewis River four bank rods showed no catch. The North Fork Lewis River was slightly more active though with five boat rods keep-ing five spring Chinook. How-ever, 15 bank rods had no catch at all.
Out on the ocean, Pacific halibut seasons have been set by the WDFW. In Marine Area 1, the nearshore fishery is cur-rently open seven days a week but will close at the end of the day on June 20. The all-depth fishery, which is currently closed, will reopen for a one day catch on June 21. In Marine Area 2 the nearshore fishery closed on June 6. However, both the nearshore and all-depth fisheries will re-open for a single day on June 21 before closing for good at the end of the day.
Inland anglers also have plen-ty of options available on area lakes and ponds.
“Riffe Lake is taking off. You’re finally able to get a boat in,” said Curt Coleman, pur-veyor of Tri-Mountain Sports and Radio Shack in Morton, who noted bank anglers have been catching limits for silver salmon in as little as 15-minutes at both ends of the long lake. “The bank anglers are catching plenty of big fish and the boat anglers are catching even bigger fish.”
He added that smallmouth bass have been biting at Riffe
both early and later on in the day.Smallmouth bass have also
been biting both early and late in the day.
“There’s not as many fisher-men these days,” said Coleman, who explained that fluctuating water levels at Riffe Lake over the last few years have chased off many longtime anglers. “People who came down and couldn’t launch their boat, they’re never coming back.”
On the south end of Riffe Lake, anglers can also try their odds at Swofford Pond, which is an abandoned hatchery rearing pond located adjacent to the lake and a cow pasture.
“Swofford is a pretty cool little lake with electric motor only (regulations for boats),” said Curt Coleman, who pointed out that bass were biting hard earlier in the spring but rainbow trout have recently turned into the catch du jour.
Heading uphill from Morton there are also plenty of opportu-nities awaiting in the alpine lakes. Coleman said that the time to hit those lakes is, “Right now. The locals fish those as early as you can drive to them, before all the snow melts and the tourists show up, and the campground host, and the mosquitoes. Personally, I’m not interested in any of the three.”
ADVISIN’
The WDFW is looking for qualified individuals to fill as many as two positions on the Cowlitz River Advisory Group.
The group was formed in 2010 in order to provide rec-ommendations to the WDFW about Cowlitz River hatchery programs, fishery management issues, and recovery actions for wild fish populations. Up to 20 members represent the interests of the general public, sport an-glers, guides, commercial fishers, and other interest groups.
Meetings take place at least four times a year and applica-tions will be accepted through 5 p.m. on July 31.
Additional information, along with an application form and instructions are available online at https://wdfw.wa.gov/about/advisory/crag/.
ADVENTURIN’
Entrance fees to National Forests and other public lands will be waived on Saturday in recognition of National Get Outdoors Day. That annual cel-ebration of the great outdoors is intended to encourage Ameri-cans, particularly the young and disadvantaged, to participate in healthy and active outdoors ac-tivities.
“The Pacific Northwest is blessed with incredible natural beauty and world-class recre-ation opportunities,” said Re-gional Forester Jim Peña, in a press release. “Whatever your interest or skill level, there’s something for everyone, so get outdoors and enjoy your public lands!”
On Saturday, fees will be
waived at picnic areas, boat launches, trailheads and visi-tors centers, among other areas. However, concession operations will still charge fees and charges will still apply for camping, cab-in rentals, heritage expeditions and other permits.
The U.S.F.S. manages more than 2,400 developed recreation sites in the Pacific Northwest Re-gion. Those sites include more than 24,000 miles of trails, 51 Wild and Scenic Rivers, and two national monuments. As much as 98 percent of those forest and grasslands can be accessed free of charge all year long, as well as about two-thirds of the devel-oped recreation sites.
After Saturday, there will still be three Forest Service free-days remaining this year. Those op-portunities will be offered on Sep. 22 for National Public Lands Day, and on Nov. 11-12 in honor of Veterans Day Weekend.
HUNTIN’
Hunters are presumably salt-ing old meat with their new tears since all seasons are currently out of date. For the next few months, hunters will have to keep them-selves busy searching for sheds and scouting for new ruminant targets to pop in the fall.
Bears season will open up again in early August, along with some special muzzleloader seasons. Until then though, coy-otes will remain fair fodder for anyone who can put one in the crosshairs.
INVADIN’
The WDFW is urgently re-minding boaters that they need to inspect and clean their ves-sels before moving them around from one body of water to an-other, especially when they are crossing state lines.
In recent days WDFW in-spectors found three invasive, non-native zebra mussels on a pontoon boat that was stopped for checking at the Washington-Idaho border on Interstate 90 east of Spokane. The offending vessel was being transported from Michigan to Alaska.
“Fortunately the mussels were dead and the boat had been out of the water since last fall,” said Pam Taylor, a WDFW inspec-tion sergeant. “But the boat made it through several other states with these mussels aboard with-out detection.”
According to Taylor the boat was subject to a “high risk” in-spection from top to bottom in order to make sure it was clean, drained, and dry before it was released.
Zebra mussels are native to the Caspian Sea and were in-troduced to the Great Lakes in the 1980s from the ballast water of ships. The small mussels are the size of a fingernail and have since spread to more than 20 states and two Canadian prov-inces where they are a known threat to native fish and wildlife due to their propensity to con-sume available food and smother native species. The mussels also cause infrastructure damage that costs millions of dollars per year in taxpayer money. Zebra mus-sels can live out of the water for an extended period of time and are easily transported on boats.
Around 1,000 boats were in-spected at the location near Spo-kane in May. The WDFW oper-ates another inspection station at the Washington-Oregon border on the Columbia River south of the Tri-Cities, where about 600 boats were inspected in May.
Taylor pointed out that any-one traveling with any sort of water craft is required by law to stop at the inspection stations.
“If it floats, it’s a boat, and could harbor aquatic invasive species that could harm Wash-ington waters,” she said in the release.
Sports 6 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, June 7, 2018SPORTS
OutdoorsHunting & Fishing Report
By Jordan Nailonjnailon@
chronline.com
Bonkin’ Cutthroats and Huggin’ Trees
JARED WENZELBURGER / [email protected]
A dragonfly rests on a leaf.
The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, June 7, 2018 • Sports 7SPORTS
OutdoorsHunting, Fishing Hiking, Birding
The Great Outdoors From Around Lewis County
JARED WENZELBURGER / [email protected]
Steve Fishback, of Silver Creek, looks at his first catch of the day, a rainbow trout,
while standing on a bank at Swofford Pond Tuesday afternoon near Mossyrock.
JARED WENZELBURGER / [email protected]
A dragonfly rests on a stick.
Kerry Buchanan / Submitted Photo
A view of the sunset in Willapa Valley.
Pamela S. Collins / Submitted Photo
The view of Mt. St. Helens along Spirit Lake Highway.
KC Smith / Submitted Photo
The view of Mt. Rainier from the Mt. Rainier scenic railway.
Brittany Hope / Submitted Photo
A dog enjoys the kiddie pool in Winlock.
April Ebeling / Submitted Photo
A view of Millersylvania State Park.
glove and bat for good. “It’s huge, I’ve played since
I was about five and now I’m done,” Vadala said. “It’s been re-ally tough and emotional to ac-cept the fact that I’m not going to be playing in the fall but I think that I’m ready to continue my education and just focus on that. The high school part is really sad, I’m going to miss all the girls and everything like that.”
Vadala is in the nursing pro-gram at Centralia College and is ending her softball career be-cause of it, especially since soft-ball is a big commitment.
“Outside of it to, I guess ev-erybody doesn’t understand that pitching is a year round thing,” Vadala said. “It’s already kind of like, oh wow, I’m done, like I haven’t been going up there. It’s just weird.”
Her favorite memories from her prep career include the two state titles she’s won, but also the bus rides to and from games with teammates.
“I don’t think I have my whole head wrapped around it yet but I already miss it,” Vadala said.
“But at the same time, it’s going to be good for me to be done too. I’m pretty burnt out on it but of course I’m going to miss it...it’s me and my dad’s thing, it’s really sad too that that’s done.”
The standout dual threat in the 2B ranks this season was Music. She was the workhorse pitcher for the Tigers, throwing 142 ⅓ innings with a 2.31 ERA while leading her team to a sec-ond-place finish at the State 2B tournament.
“I think the ending wasn’t quite what we wanted but it was a fun season, I was glad to make it that far with my group of se-niors,” Music said. “We played hard and had a fun time.”
This year, she had 20 wins in the circle and struck out 234 batters and surpassed 500 strike-outs in her prep career and was named the Central 2B League softball MVP.
“It was nice, I wanted to be in the circle a lot more this year. I just wanted to go out there and dominate,” Music said. “That was awesome, I wasn’t sure if I would get that recognition (C2BL MVP) but it was nice to know that people saw that I worked
hard.” Music was the leadoff hitter
for Napavine, hitting a team-high .615 average and 60 runs scored. The senior — signed to play softball with Lower Colum-bia next season — collected 59 hits, including 20 doubles, five triples and four home runs. Mu-sic also had 35 RBIs.
After a second place finish in the NWAC softball tournament, Music is excited to join the Red Devil squad.
“They’re a good program. I’m excited to play with some expe-rienced players and have a new group of girls to meet, get to know,” Music said.
Music was joined on the team by two other Tigers from the team that won the league and district titles in Maddie Thomp-son and Ada Williams. Thomp-son, a senior infielder, hit .483 with 43 hits, 25 RBIs and 46 runs scored batting in the No. 2 spot in the Napavine lineup. She had six doubles, four triples and one home run with a .535 on base percentage.
Thompson has committed to playing at Centralia College next season, and Music hopes to face her Napavine teammate at some point.
“Oh yeah, I want to pitch against Maddie,” Music said with a smile.
Williams, a junior infielder, hit in the No. 3 spot and accu-mulated a .494 average with a team-high 49 RBIs and 36 runs scored.
She had 39 hits, which in-cluded 11 doubles, four triples and four home runs. Williams
was such a threat at the plate, she drew a team-high 19 walks or HBP.
Vadala was joined by three other members of the Bearcats in Olivia Dean, Paetynn Lopez and Ashlyn Whalen.
Dean, a senior shortstop, ac-cumulated a .508 batting average in the leadoff spot for W.F. West, collecting 60 hits including 14 doubles and five home runs. She had 45 runs scored and 34 RBIs and will play next season at Cen-tralia College.
Lopez, a sophomore catcher, hit .426 with four doubles, three triples, nine home runs and 43 total hits. The No. 2 hitter in the Bearcats’ lineup scored 26 runs and had 36 RBIs and drew a team-high 15 walks.
Whalen is a sophomore sec-ond baseman that burst onto the scene for W.F. West. Occupying the No. 3 spot in the battering or-der, Whalen hit .520 with 52 hits and set a regular season home run record with 10 in the regu-lar season. She was able to score a team-high 48 runs and knocked in 43 runs.
Rochester’s Hunter Hahn and Delaney Glazer were also selected to the All-Area team. Hahn, a senior pitcher/infielder, hit .424 with a .547 on base per-centage. She hit one home run with 13 RBIs, eight stolen bases and drew 15 walks.
In the circle, Hahn had a 3.63 ERA with 27 strikeouts in 44 in-nings pitched. She has commit-ted to playing softball next sea-son at St. Martin’s University in Lacey.
Glazer was a standout junior
for the Warriors this season. She spent the most time in the circle for Rochester, totaling a 2.82 ERA with 80 strikeouts in 67 in-nings pitched.
She recorded the second highest batting average in the EvCo at .556 and had 19 RBIs and four doubles and was a key part of the Warriors run in the district tournament.
The Central 2B League is well represented on the All-Area team. The third-place Pe Ell-Willapa Valley Titans landed Sid Pollard and Britney Patrick on the All-Area team.
Pollard was the starting shortstop for PWV and hit .564 with 53 hits, which included 15 doubles, six triples and five home runs. The senior committed to playing next season for the Uni-versity of Montana-Billings, Pol-lard scored 54 runs and knocked in 34 runs.
Patrick makes her second straight appearance on the All-Area team after earning an All-Area selection as a freshman last season. Patrick continued to swing the boom stick in her sophomore season, hitting .545 with with 17 doubles, seven tri-ples and 14 home runs while to-talling 48 hits.
The starting third baseman was the cleanup hitter for the Titans and recorded a team-high with 55 runs and 58 RBIs.
Adna’s Haley Rainey made the All-Area team this season as
a freshman. Rainey hit .419 with 14 doubles, two triples and seven home runs and accumulated 44 hits. She scored 33 runs and had 40 RBIs.
The freshman spent plenty of time in the circle for the Pirates, accumulating a 1.40 ERA and a 10-1 record in 65 innings pitched. She allowed just 13 earned runs and struck out 106 batters.
Onalaska had two players make the All-Area Team in se-nior Alicia Vint and junior Amy Henderson.
Vint hit .567 at the plate with a .900 slugging percentage and recorded a .980 fielding percent-age for the Lady Loggers. Vint has committed to playing soft-ball next season at Doane Uni-versity in Crete, Neb.
Henderson spent a lot of time in the circle for Onalaska, accu-mulating an 11-6 record. At the plate, Henderson hit .490 with an .850 slugging percentage for a Logger squad that qualified for the state tournament.
Winlock’s Cheleena Squibb cracked the All-Area Team for the Cardinals. Squibb was the top hitter for Winlock with a .526 batting average and garnering 20 hits, including four doubles, two triples and two home runs.
She scored 15 runs and had 19 RBIs for a Winlock squad that made a run in the District 4 2B tournament before falling to Onalaska for the final spot into the state tournament.
Sports 8 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, June 7, 2018SPORTS
SoftballContinued from Sports 1
MATT BAIDE / [email protected]
The Chronicle’s 2018 All-Area Softball Team poses for a photo at Fort Borst Park in Centralia on Tuesday. (L to R): W.F. West’s Paetynn Lopez, W.F. West’s Olivia Dean, W.F. West’s Ashlyn Whalen, W.F. West’s Ashlee
Vadala, Pe Ell-Willapa Valley’s Britney Patrick, Pe Ell-Willapa Valley’s Sid Pollard, Adna’s Haley Rainey, Onalaska’s Alicia Vint, Onalaska’s Amy Henderson, Napavine’s Maddie Thompson, Napavine’s Abbi Music,
Napavine’s Ada Williams, Rochester’s Hunter Hahn and Rochester’s Delaney Glazer. Not pictured: Winlock’s Cheleena Squibb.
MATT BAIDE / [email protected]
Winlock’s Cheleena Squibb catches for Winlock as Sid Pollard takes a swing during
a Central 2B League softball game on March 16 in Winlock.
The Chronicle’s 2018 All-Area Softball TeamAshlee Vadala (Co-MVP) Sr. W.F. West
Abbi Music (Co-MVP) Sr. Napavine
Olivia Dean Sr. W.F. West
Ashlyn Whalen So. W.F. West
Paetynn Lopez So. W.F. West
Maddie Thompson Sr. Napavine
Ada Williams Jr. Napavine
Haley Rainey Fr. Adna
Britney Patrick So. Pe Ell-Willapa Valley
Sid Pollard Sr. Pe Ell-Willapa Valley
Hunter Hahn Sr. Rochester
Delaney Glazer Jr. Rochester
Alicia Vint Sr. Onalaska
Amy Henderson Jr. Onalaska
Cheleena Squibb Jr. Winlock
Horse Racing
Well-Rested Hofburg Could be Threat to Justify’s Bid For Triple CrownBy Andrew Gross
Newsday
Bill Mott has saddled one Bel-
mont Stakes champion, Drossel-meyer, a 13-1 shot who outlasted Fly Down by three-quarters of a length in 2010 with Mike Smith aboard and no Triple Crown on the line.
The veteran trainer believes he may have an even better horse for this Saturday’s 150th Bel-mont Stakes in Hofburg, who finished seventh in the Kentucky
Derby then skipped the Preak-ness to recover and prep for the chance to derail Justify’s shot at becoming the 13th Triple Crown winner.
Hofburg, who will have jock-ey Irad Ortiz Jr. up, drew Post No. 4 and 9-2 morning line odds on Tuesday, making him the second favorite after the Smith-ridden Justify, who starts with 4-5 odds
and the unfavorable Post No. 1.“It’s a major challenge for any
horse to win the Triple Crown,” said Mott, 64, who had his great-est success with Cigar, who won 16 straight races from 1995-96 as a 4- and 5-year-old. “You have to have a tough horse to with-stand the challenges or horses that haven’t run both races. We skipped the Preakness so, hope-
fully, he’s fresh and ready to go.”Hofburg, training at Sarato-
ga, breezed an impressive 1:01.03 over five furlongs on Sunday in his last major work before Satur-day’s race.
If that’s any indication, Hof-burg should run a faster race than Drosselmeyer’s pedestrian 2:31.57 in 2010. It’s likely he’ll be chasing Justify down the stretch.
The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, June 7, 2018
Life Editor: Natalie Johnson
Phone number: 807-8235
e-mail: [email protected]
ACCEPTANCE: Camp Offers Retreat for Families Living with Autism
By Carrina Stanton
For The Chronicle
Allen Goulter, 11, of Centra-lia, paused briefly to listen to one of the mammoth bullfrogs in the nearby pond. It was the one he’d almost caught the day before teasing him — he was sure of it.
Turning back toward camp, he paused to look around at the unspoiled nature around him.
“This is a pretty cool place to camp,” he said.
For the parents of kids like Allen, these moments are more than simply endearing. They are glimpses at the amazing kids these parents know they have. And this space, a campground called Acceptance: A Trans-formative Place is a chance for their entire families to rest and recharge from the toll that living in the spectrum of Autism dis-orders can take.
Located between Centralia and Rochester, Acceptance is the brainchild of Danny Raede, CEO and co-founder of As-perger Experts, a Seattle-based online Asperger’s support and education clearinghouse ac-cessed by 500,000 people in 89 countries. Raede, who serves as the Director for the Board of Ac-ceptance, was diagnosed with Asperger’s at age 12.
Asperger’s, often generally referred to as part of Autism Spectrum Disorder, is a neu-rological condition that means those living with it can become easily overwhelmed by sensa-tions and have difficulty con-necting socially.
“A lot of people think As-perger’s is about social skills, the nerdy professor, but it’s really about processing sensations in the world, especially manmade,” Raede explained.
Raede first had the idea for Acceptance about three years ago. He wanted to start a com-pany that was completely sepa-rate from Asperger’s Experts but that helped families much in the same way as the established online community. Acceptance bills itself as a place that wel-comes “people with Asperger’s, autism, PTSD, anxiety & those that just don’t fit into traditional society.”
“I realized that something that is missing from the market-place was a family-style retreat where people could go with no expectations and be accepted as they were,” Raede said. “There’s really a lack of experiences
where people can get together in a non-therapeutic setting.”
Acceptance officially opened last year and is currently housed at Grey Owl Hollow, a prop-erty owned by Seth and Yvonne MacNeely. The MacNeelys are working to create an outdoor event center at the site and also offer the space for camping on hipcamp.com. Seth McNeely said he and Raede met at a con-ference and bonded over their shared passion for the concept of “nature therapy”, which is the use of the natural environ-ment to help people heal. Raede explained that since people with Asperger’s most often go into “defense mode” from manmade stimulus, being in nature can be a calming, reconnecting experi-ence for many.
The MacNeely family was looking to relocate from the San Diego area and agreed to assist Raede in making his vision a re-ality by finding a place his fam-ily could call home that could also be used as a camp for Ac-ceptance for an interim period.
“This was something I could do out of my resources,” Mac-Neely said. “A big part of what we want to do here is create a community where people can live and work together and this is perfect for that.”
At the moment, Acceptance is a camping spot that offers pay-what-you-can weekends throughout the summer to those living with Asperger’s. The space looks like a fairly typi-cal campground, with leveled camping spots and a central fire pit where parents tend to con-gregate while their kids play. On a recent family weekend, less than 24 hours in, kids who had never met one another played as if they were old friends. And their parents reflected on how much it means to them to spend time in a space where they know they are supported.
“I don’t have to explain any-thing and I don’t have to feel
bad,” said Debra Greywolf, of Renton, who brought her son Ja-kob, 8. “And we haven’t had any incidents but I get the feeling that if something were to hap-pen, everybody would be like ‘I’ve got your back.’”
Raede said families bring all of their camping equipment and food (although the MacNeelys have equipment that can be bor-rowed if needed). What they get is an instant community of people who understand what their families face. When asked what they wish other parents understood about Asperger’s, the families nodded knowingly when each one spoke.
“The amount of work I go through every day so he is pre-sentable in public,” Greywolf said. “You see ‘well he looks like a normal kid.’ What you don’t see is the three blankets and two pillows in the car and I started to get ready one hour before we had to get into the car.”
“It’s the brushing or the es-sential oils. It’s whatever that child needs to feel comfortable,” added Melissa Goulter, Cen-tralia, who came with her hus-band, Jim, and their sons, Allen, 11, Remington, 8, and Connor, 6. “It’s different for every fam-ily and each kid but it’s takes A through Z not just ABC.”
“Sometimes, it’s A through Z twice,” added Billie Milliken, of Spokane, who came as a support person for Jeff Sitek of Hauser, Idaho.
In its first summer season, more than 100 guests camped at Acceptance. Visitors came
from throughout the Northwest, some traveling from as far away as California. One of Raede’s favorite visitors was a 7-year-old who told him he doesn’t feel like he has autism when he’s at Acceptance. Another favorite memory was with a 20-year-old man who helped him move clear rocks from the main camping area one afternoon.
“At the end of the day, he said to me ‘you know, I think I’m get-ting a lot out of this program,’ and I said, ‘what program? You’ve been helping me move rocks all day,’” Raede remem-bered with a laugh. “But I think that shows how the most power-ful form of therapy is creating the right environment.”
One of the issues that many parents of children on the au-tism spectrum face is screen addiction. Raede and MacNeely said they do not apply force to any visitor about the use of screens because when faced with nature, the screens seem to get forgotten.
“So far we haven’t had a sin-gle kid be isolated. Within two hours that kid is out of the car and they don’t touch the iPad for the rest of the trip,” MacNeely said. “It’s about trusting in the kid and the environment and trusting in what we’ve created here.”
What they’ve created is a space that is as unlike as pos-sible to our fast-paced world. There are no planned events, only activities when the mood strikes. There might be a hike through the woods, or a sponta-
neous game of tag or the resident miniature donkey might come down the hill for a visit. But the pace is slow and everyone gets to choose their level of interaction. There are walking trails that wind up a hill from the camp-ground that are mowed into the prairie grasses. There are the be-ginnings of a winding labyrinth of a path that, when completed, will take at least 10 minutes to walk. It will eventually include a number of nooks like the re-cently completed meditative space that includes a log bench surrounded by sword ferns and purple hollyhocks.
“We’re trying to design every-thing to have a purpose,” Raede said. “For instance, winding paths have introspective prop-erties. It allows central nervous system pathways to open. In common lingo, it Zens you out.”
Raede and MacNeely spent several looking before finally deciding on the current 20-acre property. They said they chose it because of its central location within Washington, proximity to city amenities and for the fact that it was situated next door to another 20-acre property that was also for sale. The hope is that if Raede is able to raise enough funds, he would pur-chase the other property where a permanent retreat center and guest cabins would be built to allow for year-round use of the site for family style retreats as well as potentially an internship type programs for young adults.
So far, the organization has raised about $4,000 of the $250,000 they need. They are awaiting the finalization of their 501(c)3 nonprofit status and are working with an architect to get a conceptual drawing that can be shown to potential donors. For now, though, they can walk visitors to the site they hope to purchase, which includes room for a retreat center as well as about 10 “Hobbit” style guest cabins.
UPCOMING CAMPING WEEKENDS INCLUDE:• Dungeons & Dragons – June 15-17• Family Camping – June 29-July 1• Dungeons & Dragons – July 6-8• Young Adult Camping Retreat – July 27-29• EpicWrite Larping Weekend – Aug. 17-19• Family Camping – Aug. 24-26For more information about Acceptance: A Transformative Place,
go to www.findacceptance.be.
Paul Dunn
Parents and others gather recently around a campfire at Acceptance: A Transformational Place in rural Centralia.
Danny Raede, 27, director of Acceptance: A Transformational Place, talks about
the organization recently from a meditation spot in the camp’s rural Centralia site.
Jakob Greywolf, 8, displays the crystals he has accumlated during a recent Satur-
day at Acceptance: A Transformational Place in rural Centralia.
Life 2 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, June 7, 2018LIFE
By Justin Chang
Los Angeles Times
CANNES, France — Early on in “Burning,” the gripping new psychological thriller from South Korean filmmaker Lee Chang-dong, a shy, troubled young man named Jongsu (Yoo Ah-in) returns to a small farm-house in the town of Paju, where he’s lived since childhood. Presi-dent Trump can be seen and heard blaring from a TV in the background, a throwaway detail that becomes more disquieting when it’s revealed that Jongsu lives close to the border with North Korea.
Adapted and transplanted from a 1992 short story by Ha-ruki Murakami, “Burning,” a runaway critical favorite at the recent Cannes Film Festival, is less about any geopolitical tur-moil than it is about class privi-lege, youthful ennui and frus-trated longing.
But for Lee, the 63-year-old writer-director of such ac-claimed character studies as
“Secret Sunshine” (2007) and “Poetry” (2010), there is some-thing undeniably resonant about his first film in eight years arriving at a tense, potentially historic moment on the Korean peninsula.
“This is a film about anger. I think everyone is angry these days. I think it was also some people’s anger that made Trump president,” Lee says. “What I pay attention to is the anger of young people. Youngsters don’t understand why they don’t have a future or hope. They don’t have a specific target for this an-ger.”
The movie keeps that rage pulsing, steadily but ambigu-ously, in scene after scene; it’s the very definition of a slow burn. Lee was a renowned au-thor before he became a film-maker, and his movies are often praised for their novelistic den-sity — their deliberate pacing, subtle emotional modulation and richly textured sense of place. While these stories come to poignant, sometimes tragic ends, they never feel rigid or deterministic, thanks to Lee’s ability to capture moments that feel carefully sculpted yet pow-erfully unresolved.
“Burning” is no exception. For 2 ½ hours, this leisurely but ruthlessly unpredictable movie follows Jongsu as he falls hard for an old childhood friend, Haemi (Jeon Jong-seo), only to watch as she begins seeing Ben (“The Walking Dead’s” Steven Yeun), a rich, young man from Seoul. Rather than erupting im-mediately, the tensions remain on a low simmer, gradually pro-pelling this romantic triangle into mystery-thriller territory.
The result is an empathetic but unsparing study in human fragility and torment, much like Lee’s “Secret Sunshine” (2007),
which won an acting prize at Cannes for its star, Jeon Do-yeon, and catapulted the direc-tor to international prominence. Lee returned to Cannes three years later with the equally ad-mired “Poetry” (2010), which won a screenplay award.
“Burning” is Lee’s third and most unanimously acclaimed feature to screen at Cannes, where it received an unprec-edented average score of 3.8 out of 4 stars on the annual Screen International critics’ grid, beat-ing out even the previous record (3.6) held by 2016’s “Toni Erd-mann.” (Full disclosure: I was one of 10 critics who participat-ed in the poll.)
But like “Toni Erdmann,” “Burning” didn’t succeed in par-laying its critical love into rec-ognition from the official jury. While it was named the best film in the competition by the international critics’ organiza-tion FIPRESCI, it left the festi-val’s awards ceremony empty-handed.
Still, the prospect of awards seems far from Lee’s mind when we sit down on a pier overlooking the Mediterranean the day after his film’s premiere. Friendly yet hushed and grave in demeanor as he speaks through an inter-preter, he seems to radiate the wisdom of a few past lives or at least past careers: In addition to working as a high school teacher and novelist, he served as South Korea’s minister of culture and tourism from 2003 to ’04.
A Long Search
During the eight years be-tween “Poetry” and “Burning,” the director considered several other projects, three of which became finished screenplays be-
fore falling apart.“Strangely enough, I couldn’t
find a definitive reason as to why they had to be made into films,” he says. “I was searching for something different … but I wasn’t sure what it was exactly. I cannot say that ‘Burning’ is an entirely new and original kind of film, but it’s a film that has come closest to the new style of storytelling that I’ve been searching for.”
Some elements from those aborted projects made their way into “Burning,” which deviates significantly from “Barn Burn-ing,” the Murakami short story on which it’s based. Securing the rights to the material de-layed the production by a year, during which time Lee and his co-writer, Oh Jung-mi, elaborat-ed and deepened the script. The movie’s second half is almost en-tirely of their own devising.
It was also during this wait-ing period that Lee, who had been planning to cast a local Korean actor as Ben, decided to look further afield. He ended up casting the Seoul-born, Michi-gan-raised Yeun, who remains best known for playing Glenn Rhee, a popular character on
“The Walking Dead.”“Burning” marks Yeun’s sec-
ond collaboration with a major Korean auteur after Bong Joon-ho’s “Okja” (2017), in which he played a bilingual environ-mental activist. Joining Lee in conversation on the pier, Yeun admits he didn’t feel confident initially about working with Lee, whom he reveres.
“I don’t want to ruin his film-ography,” he recalls thinking. “I don’t want to do something I had no business doing.”
But Lee persuaded him that he was a good fit for Ben, the
enviably privileged and sophis-ticated man who keeps Jongsu unnervingly close even as he pushes him aside. In the end, Yeun found he couldn’t refuse.
“The first reason I cast Steven was because he was a successful man, a man with a success ordi-nary people cannot even dream of,” Lee says. “He has power and money, and he is someone young Korean people today ad-mire. While being all that, he also has a kind heart, as you can tell from his character on ‘The Walking Dead.’ … Ben had to keep a delicate balance, to be an uneasy and mysterious charac-ter until the end.”
That emotional inscrutabil-ity is typical of Lee’s characters, who are in no hurry to reveal every facet of themselves. Al-though Ben is outwardly gener-ous and hospitable toward both Jongsu and Haemi, his every word, breath and gesture can’t help but convey an ingrained sense of superiority.
Expert Casting
For Yeun, Lee’s instinct for casting, borne out by the perfor-mances he elicits from his actors, stems from “an understanding of humans at a level that most people probably don’t see.”
It would be hard to imagine a more unusual (or more per-suasive) choice for the role of a humble country boy like Jongsu than the 31-year-old Yoo Ah-in, a well-known and somewhat controversially outspoken actor, gallerist and fashion icon. By contrast, “Burning” is the first screen credit for Jeon Jong-seo, 23, who uses her newcomer sta-tus to underscore Haemi’s little-girl-lost quality.
As for Yeun, he prepared
for the role of Ben by reading Nietzsche and working hard to nail the nuances of his all-Ko-rean dialogue. But what really makes the performance work is an element of emotional reserve, an outsider quality that Yeun frames in terms of his immi-grant background.
“I think there’s something inherent about being in Korea when you don’t feel completely integrated into it,” he says. “It cultivates its own sense of loneli-ness.”
Loneliness and unbelonging are constants in Murakami’s fiction, and they are crucial to the effect of “Burning.” Fore-grounding class tensions far more than he has in his previous films, Lee continually draws vi-sual contrasts between Jongsu’s rusty old truck and Ben’s shiny Porsche, between the wide-open prairies of Paju and the modern cafes and apartments of Seoul. The separation of North and South looms large as a metaphor for countless smaller but equally irreconcilable divisions across an entire spectrum of Korean society.
The result is not a movie that Lee expected he’d make at the outset of his career, even though it is, to a remarkable de-gree, a movie that no one else could have made. An optimistic phrase that he continually uses, while describing the shaping of the material through its many setbacks and delays, is “the des-tiny of this film.”
Yeun hails the director for allowing his actors to pursue “a type of freedom you don’t really get in filmmaking.”
“He would always say that this movie is making itself,” Yeun says. “We just need to go with it.”
Director Lee Chang-dong and Actor Steven Yeun on the Profound Mysteries of ‘Burning’
Aurore Marechal/Boyer-Hahn-Marechal / Abaca Press
Actors Jong-seo Jeon, Steven Yeun, Ah-in Yoo and director Lee Chang-dong attending the Burning Photocall held at the Palais des Festivals as part of the 71st annual
Cannes Film Festival on May 16, 2018 in Cannes, France.
By Gary Thompson
The Philadelphia Inquirer
I think it’s probably bad when you’re watching a movie about two people fighting to survive in a crippled boat on the open sea and you’re wishing one of them were a volleyball.
But “Adrift” does kind of make you homesick for “Cast Away” and the enviable chem-istry between Tom Hanks and Wilson. Certainly their relation-ship had a zing missing in the spark-free interface between Shailene Woodley and Sam Claflin in “Adrift,” a particular problem as the movie is built around their romance.
Woodely is Tami Oldham, a California drifter out to see the world, taking odd jobs in ports all over the map, until she meets sailor and shipbuilder Rich-ard Sharp (Claflin). They walk around tropical markets, try on cute hats, swim near waterfalls and then, in the evenings, share good meals and bad dialogue.
Eyelash-batting and goo-goo eyed romance do not seem to be the strong suit of director Baltasar Kormákur, probably se-lected because he made the sea-faring movies “The Deep” and
“Contraband,” and is a proven hand in movies that require lots of shooting at sea, a notoriously difficult task.
He earns his money when Tami and Richard hire out to sail a boat across the Pacific to San Diego, and run into a Category 4 storm. Wind and waves snap the mast, punching a hole in the hull and leaving Richard with a bum leg and busted ribs.
So, Tami now must nurse Richard while taking over the tasks of repair, navigation and piloting what is left of the their storm-damaged vessel, hoping to limp into Hawaii, itself an am-bitious feat of dead reckoning.
There is the potential here for an engaging adventure/sur-vival tale, wrapped in a story of a woman finding her self-confi-dence by drawing on untapped reserves of strength. But Kor-mákur fails to find any shape in the narrative of Tami’s actual or psychological journey. Tami’s behavior is inconsistent and con-fusing. “We’re going to be OK,” she assures Richard, but a min-ute later she’s candidly saying they’re sure to die, and a minute after that is confidently plotting
a bold change in direction.Also, their desperate situation
seems at times not so desperate. Tami takes post-storm inven-tory and finds … water, canned beans, peanut butter, Spam. Also marijuana and booze. And a gui-tar.
Also fishing equipment, al-though Tami, a vegan, tells Rich-ard she’d rather starve than fish because she doesn’t want anoth-er creature to suffer.
Well, then, Tami, don’t take them to see “Adrift.”
PS — if you’re a Woodley or Claflin fan, and you’re dead set on seeing this movie, based on a true story, don’t research it, or you’ll spoil the one narrative surprise the movie manages to conceal.
Woodley, for her part, is lucky to be heading back to HBO and another season of “Big Little Lies.” Her movies have been less artistically fulfilling — “Diver-gent,” “Insurgent,” “Allegiant,” and now, “Submergent.”
‘Adrift’: This Movie is Dead in the Water
STXfilms
Shailene Woodley and Sam Claflin star in the film, “Adrift.”
The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, June 7, 2018 • Life 3LIFE
By Michael Phillips
Chicago Tribune
All happy families are alike; each unhappy family is unhap-py in its own way, as Tolstoy not-ed in a sentence so right, by the time you started arguing with it “Anna Karenina” was off and suffering.
If Tolstoy got a look at “He-reditary,” he might’ve added:
“Well. There’s unhappy, and then there’s grief-stricken-hideously cruel-unholy family secrets-hor-ror movie-unhappy.”
The latter is the dwelling place of director Ari Aster’s fiendish feature debut. Not ev-erything in “Hereditary” fits to-gether; its rhythm is a little off in its second half (at 127 minutes, it feels slightly attenuated), and it’s clear Aster wanted to throw a little bit of everything, from seances to sleepwalking to ma-levolent specters of doom, at his devastated family unit in the center of his tale.
Yet you may be too fraught watching the thing to bother over a few missteps. Working with a superb cast, a crafty, teas-ing musical score by Colin Stet-son and a steady accumulation of wracked nerves, gathered im-age by carefully planned image, this movie promises a paradoxi-cally bright future for its direc-tor.
Aster also wrote the screen-play, which begins with an on-screen newspaper obituary not-ing the passing of a 78-year-old woman at her daughter’s home, near the mountains. (The movie was shot in Utah.) Aster makes no mystery of his protagonist’s feelings regarding her late moth-er. Toni Collette plays Annie, a driven, somewhat forbidding artist specializing in miniatures. In fastidiously re-created tab-leau, she depicts tiny little scenes from her own life. At the funeral, early on, Annie speaks of her mother’s “secretive and private” side. Later, when Annie reluc-tantly visits a grief-counseling group, she tells the strangers more about that secrecy, along with the streak of madness and
loss that runs in her family.Annie’s husband (Gabriel
Byrne) is quiet sanity incar-nate. He half-wonders if Annie should find a way to unblock her feelings toward her late, un-lamented mother. She does so, without his help, in the worst possible way: We’ll keep spoilers under wraps, but it’s enough to say “Hereditary” makes Annie’s children the playthings of the story’s supernatural element.
Forced by Annie to take his troubled, withdrawn younger sister, Charlie (Milly Shapiro), to an unsupervised high school party, stoner Peter (Alex Wolff) concludes the evening in a panic. Charlie, who likes to click her tongue and make a pingpong-ball sound, has a severe nut al-lergy, ruthlessly foreshadowed by the filmmaker. Peter rushes her to the car, and takes off, try-ing to get her to the hospital in time. Then something truly brutal happens, and it’s enough
to slap the audience into real-izing this family’s troubles have just begun.
In interviews Aster has ac-knowledged the various cin-ematic influences on “Heredi-tary,” among them Nicholas Roeg’s “Don’t Look Now” and Roman Polanski’s “Rosemary’s Baby.” He set out to make “an alienating film,” as he told Film Comment, “whose primary aim was to upset the audience in a very deep way.” Additionally, he said, he wanted an experience
“that betrays you on every level, where you become invested in all these people, and what hap-pens to them is not fair. You have to contend with it.”
Many will choose not to. If the mixed, largely hostile audi-ence response three years ago to Robert Eggers’ beautiful creep-out “The Witch” is any guide,
“Hereditary” may generate its share of resentment. It’s not a cathartic horror movie; its pre-
occupations and methods are pretty grueling. Annie finds her way to the spirit world by way of a sympathetic amateur medium (Ann Dowd) who takes an in-terest in her recovery after the highway tragedy. By this time Peter’s barely functioning; be-tween him and his mother, the feelings of guilt, resentment and rage run both ways, and Peter becomes one of the “pawns in a horrible, hopeless machine” one of his fellow English class students talks about, in a discus-sion of Greek tragedy and piti-less gods.
Aster borrows from all over the place, with unusual confi-dence and purpose. His best im-ages play spatial games between Annie’s miniatures and the go-ings-on in the real house. Each time Aster cuts to a shot of the spacious semifurnished tree-house behind the family home, the one emitting a ghostly red glow from a space heater, it’s
just as arresting as the previous time. Above all, there’s Collette, who sometimes can overdeliver a dramatic moment or an aghast reaction, but in this storytell-ing context she’s fabulous. It’s a fierce performance with a hu-man pulse, racing one minute, dead still the next. If “Heredi-tary” isn’t quite up to the horror-debut level of “The Witch,” it’s still a pretty remarkable expe-rience. And now I think I need to pet my dog, or listen to some Gershwin, or something.
‘Hereditary’
3.5 stars
MPAA rating: R (for horror violence, disturbing images, lan-guage, drug use and brief graph-ic nudity)
Running time: 2:07
‘Hereditary’ Review: Toni Collette Reveals a Sixth Sense For Icy Terror
By Kate Feldman
New York Daily News
Girl squads are invited to the heist early.
AMC Theatres will debut the all-female “Ocean’s 8” reboot a day ahead of schedule for a spe-cial “Girls’ Night Out” event.
Select theaters will show the movie on Wednesday, along with a collectible pen, notebook and order of popcorn. Locations with a bar will also serve “The Heist,” a cocktail made of peach vodka, triple sec, orange juice and soda.
“We’re so excited to offer this exclusive opportunity for guests to return to the high-stakes world of the Ocean crew, but a crew with a new twist, a few days early in the incredible movie-watching environment of Dolby Cinema at AMC,” Eliza-beth Frank, executive vice presi-dent at AMC, said in a statement.
“This new approach to Ocean’s franchise results in an incredibly fun film, led by an amazing cast, and it is perfect for a girls’ night out, a date night or for any movie-lovers wanting to see a great summer comedy.”
The event won’t be limited to just women, though, unlike Alamo Drafthouse’s ladies-only “Wonder Woman” screenings last year.
There are no special screen-ings in New York or New Jersey, but the offer is available in At-lanta, Baltimore, Chicago, Los Angeles, Tampa, and Washing-ton, D.C., among other locations.
“Ocean’s 8,” starring Sandra Bullock, Cate Blanchett, Anne Hathaway, Mindy Kaling, Sarah Paulson, Awkwafina, Rihanna and Helena Bonham Carter, will officially premiere Friday.
‘Ocean’s 8’ Will Premiere a Day Early at AMC Theaters For ‘Girls’ Night Out’
Reid Chavis
Toni Collette in “Hereditary.”
18TH ANNIVERSARY
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Life 4 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, June 7, 2018LIFE
Washington
State
HISTORY
Celebrity CipherToday’s clue: C equals F
“ R V T N 17 T K I S W Y T P X O . . . S D D U D K Y G D D U
T S X Y T K I S W Y O N T R I , ‘ X Y G H R K , O D J ’ P Y D J P
L J O . ’ ” — Z T S S G Y D C S W Y Z J G LY A D X Z T S T K S
X Y G Z P D D U N
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: “The free men of the world are marching together to victory.” — General Dwight D. Eisenhower, D-Day, June 6, 1944
© 2017 by NEA, Inc.
Crossword
SudokuPuzzle One Find answers to the puzzles here on Puzzle Two on page Life 7.
HistoryLink.org
United Air Lines Airliner With Nine People Aboard Crashes in the Cascade Foothills Near Selleck
On June 7, 1934, a United Air Lines, Boeing Model 247D, passenger airliner en route from Spokane to Seattle via Wenatchee crashes in the in the foothills of the Cascade Moun-tains in east King County. The nine occupants of the aircraft survive the accident and are rescued the following day by a search party from nearby Sell-eck, a small mill town 18 miles east of Kent.
An Airliner and its FlightThe Boeing Model 247
Commercial Transport, devel-oped in 1933, was an all-metal, low-wing, twin-engine aircraft and the world’s first modern airliner. It was a revolutionary design, featuring such inno-vations as an auto-pilot, two-way radio, heated cabin, vari-able pitch propellers, de-icing equipment, and retractable landing gear. The streamlined aircraft was 51 feet, 7 inches long, with a wing span of 74 feet, and powered by two 500 horsepower Pratt & Whit-ney Wasp radial engines. At a cruising speed of 189 mph, the Boeing Model 247 had a range of 745 miles. It had accom-modations for two pilots, one
flight attendant, 10 passengers and 400 pounds of cargo. Boe-ing Airplane Company pro-duced 75 Model 247s, most of which were operated by Boeing Air Transport Company (later United Air Lines).
At 3:22 p.m. on Thursday, June 7, 1934, a United Air Lines, Boeing Model 247D, passenger airliner, registration No. NC-13302, departed Felts Field (now Spokane International Airport) in Spokane en route to Boeing Field in Seattle. On board the airliner were Cap-tain Ben Z. Redfield (1905-1989); second officer Dwight A. Hanson; Marion Bennett, flight attendant; and two pas-sengers: Paul C. Beezley, an executive of the Washington Asphalt Company in Seattle and Mildred A. Johannesen from Spokane. At 4:35 p.m., the airliner landed at Fancher Field in Wenatchee and picked up four other passengers: Hel-en Curran, a cashier for the Great Western Life Assurance Company in Seattle; Robert C. Clark, a Washington State Liquor Board inspector from Tacoma; and Daisy A. Moony and Mercedes Boyd, school teachers from Winthrop in Okanogan County.
“Pull Up!”It was relatively clear when
the United Air Lines flight de-parted Wenatchee, but as the plane flew over the crest of the Cascade Mountains, the weather deteriorated. There was a low cloud ceiling and visibility was poor on the west side of the mountains, requir-ing the pilots to carefully navi-gate over the landscape on their way toward Seattle. Through a break in the clouds, Hanson suddenly saw the plane was headed toward a hillside and told Captain Redfield to “pull up.” Redfield throttled forward and attempted to gain altitude, but it was too late. The Boeing 247 bellied into the fir trees at a 45-degree upward angle and slid to the ground, tail first. The nose of the all-metal air-craft had been crushed and the wings torn away, but the cabin was intact.
Remarkably, only four per-sons were injured in the crash. Captain Redfield was the most seriously injured with a com-pound fracture of the left arm. Second officer Hanson sus-tained head injuries, a broken nose, and lacerations, Helen Curran had fractured a leg and Robert Clark a wrenched back. Marion Bennett, as were all United Air Lines’ flight atten-dants, was a registered nurse and took charge of the injured. With Beezley’s help, she fixed a shelter for Captain Redfield under one of the wrecked wings, made Curran comfort-able inside the cabin of the air-craft, and handed out blankets and emergency rations. It was cold and raining heavily, but they didn’t dare light a fire for fear of igniting gasoline drip-ping from the wing tanks of the aircraft.
Seeking Help and Waiting for Help
Hanson, being familiar with the terrain, having flown over the Cascades numerous times, took the responsibility to seek help. He removed the magnetic compass from the aircraft’s instrument panel and then headed west on foot, ac-companied by Mercedes Boyd. There were still a few hours of daylight left and although concussed and bleeding from his wounds, Hanson thought he could find a logging road and possibly a telephone. Af-ter struggling through the un-derbrush for several hundred yards, Hanson realized Boyd could not keep up and told her to return to the plane. Hanson continued moving west and af-ter a few miles happened upon rail line belong to a logging company. Although the spur had been abandoned, there were still telephone call boxes that tied directly to the Pacific States Lumber Company dis-patcher at Selleck.
Meanwhile, Boyd became concerned she might become hopelessly lost in the approach-ing darkness if she attempted to return to the aircraft. In-stead, she just sat down and
waited in the woods through-out the night, hoping for res-cue. At daybreak, she found the trail and returned to the plane.
The RescueAt approximately 8:30 p.m.,
several experienced woodsmen set out from Selleck on a gaso-line-powered railroad speeder to rescue Hanson and find the downed airliner. By the time the search party reached Han-son’s location, approximately three miles from Selleck, it was too dark and dangerous to find their way through the tangle of logging debris and under-brush, so they bivouacked for the night. Hanson, in pain and suffering from shock, was sent to Selleck on a railroad speeder and then transported by am-bulance to Virginia Mason Hospital in Seattle.
By 6:00 a.m. on Friday, June 8, a large search party headed by Walter Gustke, superinten-dent of the Pacific States Lum-ber Company, had assembled at the spur line and set out on foot to find the aircraft and res-cue the survivors. They were accompanied by a group of airline officials and newspaper reporters. Hanson had marked his trail with pieces of cloth torn from clothing found scat-tered about the crash site. At approximately 10:00 a.m., the search party located the wreck-age on the slope of a heavily forested hillside at an altitude of 3,300 feet in Seattle’s Cedar River watershed, four nautical miles southwest of Cedar Lake (now Chester Morse Lake).
Meanwhile, Paul Beez-ley, worried that Hanson and Boyd had become lost, took the ship’s backup compass and at 4:30 a.m. set out in a westerly direction. He met up with the rescuers and offered to lead them back to the air-liner. Superintendent Gustke was concerned about Beezley’s health, however, and had him taken to Selleck where he was treated for minor injuries, giv-en breakfast and then driven to Virginia Mason Hospital for observation.
Foul weather made the hike through the rugged terrain
slow and treacherous. Five of the passengers were able make it to the logging spur with-out assistance, but the rescue party had to carry out Captain Redfield and Helen Curran on stretchers. Ambulances were waiting at Selleck to rush the crash survivors to hospitals in Seattle. Redfield was taken to Providence Hospital and the others to Virginia Mason Hos-pital for treatment and obser-vation.
Evaluating and SalvagingOn Monday, June 11, 1934,
officials from Boeing Airplane Company visited the wreckage to determine how much of the $65,000 airliner could be sal-vaged. Although much of the plane was still intact, it was located in an inaccessible area of the Snoqualmie National Forest and the logistics as well as the cost of removal would be prohibitive. Ultimately, the experts determined that the radial engines, flight instru-ments, and fittings were all that could be reasonably salvaged. The rest was damaged beyond repair. That there had been no fatalities was a testament to Captain Redfield’s flying skill and the inherent sturdiness Boeing-built aircraft.
An investigation deter-mined that the accident was caused by unexpected bad weather and pilot error. He likely suffered a vestibular (in-ner ear) illusion resulting in spatial disorientation (vertigo). The pilot experiences a head-up or false-climb illusion and pushes aircraft into a descent to correct altitude.
Such a phenomenon can occur when flying suddenly into foul weather. The pilot looses natural, visual referenc-es to maintain orientation and has an overwhelming impulse to disregard the aircraft’s flight instruments. According to the Federal Aviation Administra-tion, statistics show that up to 10 percent of all general avia-tion accidents can be attributed to spatial disorientation, most of which are fatal.
Courtesy Boeing Aircraft Company
Boeing Model 247D Commercial
Transport.
The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, June 7, 2018 • Life 5COMICS
GET FUZZY by Darby Conley
PEARLS BEFORE SWINE by Stephan Pastis
RHYMES WITH ORANGE by Hilary B. Price
DILBERT by Scott Adams
NON SEQUITUR by Wiley
HERMAN by Jim Unger
DENNIS THE by Hank
MENACE Ketcham
SHOE by Gary Brookins & Susie MacNelly
PICKLES by Brian Crane
CLASSIC PEANUTS by Charles Schulz
BLONDIE by Dean Young & John Marshall
FRANK & ERNEST by Bob Thaves
BEETLE BAILEY by Mort, Greg & Brian Walker
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston
HI & LOIS by Greg & Brian Walker
B.C. by Mastroianni & Hart
WIZARD OF ID by Parker & Hart
Life 6 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, June 7, 2018COMICS
GET FUZZY by Darby Conley
PEARLS BEFORE SWINE by Stephan Pastis
RHYMES WITH ORANGE by Hilary B. Price
DILBERT by Scott Adams
NON SEQUITUR by Wiley
HERMAN by Jim Unger
DENNIS THE by Hank
MENACE Ketcham
SHOE by Gary Brookins & Susie MacNelly
PICKLES by Brian Crane
CLASSIC PEANUTS by Charles Schulz
BLONDIE by Dean Young & John Marshall
FRANK & ERNEST by Bob Thaves
BEETLE BAILEY by Mort, Greg & Brian Walker
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE by Lynn Johnston
HI & LOIS by Greg & Brian Walker
B.C. by Mastroianni & Hart
WIZARD OF ID by Parker & Hart
Centralia-Chehalis Chamber of Commerce Monthly Newsletter
It’s Summer-time and the warmer weather is moving in. We start to see our area buzz a bit more with outdoor activi-ties. Commu-nity events kick into high gear and with that, we see visitors
from near and far joining our county for entertainment. It is really an important time for our
area because the visitors are a key element to tax dollars that benefit our local economy. Lodging tax and sales tax are a very important part of how our local businesses budget and project. The visi-tors really are a critical piece to a healthy community and a com-munity that is looking for growth.
The summer months are rid-dled with hometown festivals and celebrations of our local as-sets that keep visitors coming back from year to year. The list is lengthy from week to week of events in Lewis County. We re-ally are fortunate to be placed in a lay of land that is so attrac-tive. The visitor center that the Centralia-Chehalis Chamber operates gets to hear how excited people are as they come in for in-formation about the attractions we have here locally. Many times people will walk into our front door to talk about their weekend plans within our area. It reminds me to not take advantage of this beautiful and valuable place we call home. Others appreciate it, so should we!
For the Chamber our summer is packed with being involved in many fun activities. One of our favorites is the Seattle to Port-land Bike Ride. (The STP) which is Saturday July 14th. Every year The Centralia-Chehalis Chamber contracts with the Cascade Bi-cycle Club to provide services for our local area for the race. We are contracted to coordinate private housing, feed the one-day riders a lunch, hand out several thousand creamsicles as riders enter into town, sort and distribute luggage (several thousand pieces of lug-gage) for Centralia and Chehalis, and coordinate dinner, beer gar-den, band and breakfast for riders who camp at Recreation Park in Chehalis. It’s a fun and exciting event for our community. We
are engaged in the planning pro-cess year round by coordinating the private housing for the riders who choose to stay at the halfway point. (which happens to be Lew-is County) About 11,000 riders are involved in the bike ride and out of that number about 3,500 of them make the trek in 1 day. The rest of them stop and usually spend the night within our com-munity. The riders staying over-night fill our local hotels, motels, campgrounds, schools, churches and the like. There are activities at many locations to showcase our community and to of course encourage these riders to spend a little money locally but also show off our community attributes so these individuals feel compelled to come back and see more in Lewis County when they have a chance.
The Chamber looks for local organizations and local families that are willing to house riders. We like to think of it as a 1 night hosting opportunity. The people who host riders actually get paid a fee that the Chamber will coor-dinate. We see a lot of non-profit organizations come together and host several riders and use the experience as a nice fundraiser for their group. We are currently looking for local people (indi-viduals or groups) that would be interested in hosting riders. We have an information sheet that we will share if you are interested and it gives all the details of what hosting a rider looks like. Just call the Chamber at 360-748-8885 and we will get you set up.
If you have an interest in help-ing as a volunteer we are always in need of people to be part of the event. Whether you have an hour or two to give or you want to help all day we would be gracious to have your time. Bring the kids be-cause it’s a family friendly event.
Alicia Bull
Executive Director
BusinessConnectionsJune 2018
The Chamber is open Mon-Fri 9-5 and Saturdays 9-3
STP is Coming Soon
New MembersTop Notch Home Inspection106 Faun Rae LaneChehalis, WA 98532360-827-1436www.topnotch-home.com
Capitol City Press2975 37th Ave SWOlympia, WA 98512360-292-5553www.Capitolcitypress.com
The Centralia College Foundation, through the Ellis Oliver Endowment, is pleased to offer tuition assistance for Chamber members and their employees to take a selection of classes through a “Matching
Scholarship” (scholarship covers one half tuition) for Summer
quarter. Summer quarter open registration begins May 29th
and classes start on July 2nd. For more information and for a list of classes, please contact the Centralia College Foundation
office at (360) 623-8942.
Thank You Rob Fuller Scholarship Luncheon Event Sponsors!
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paid- in- fu l l memberships * at Thorbeckes Athlet ic Club.
Thorbeckes.com | @thorbeckes
*Limit of 1 per person. Individual, couple, and family memberships. Must not have been an act ive member in the past 90 days. Offer expires June 30, 2018.
Hub City Car Show is right around the corner and we are looking for businesses who are interested in participating in the Hub City Car Show goodie bags. This is an inexpensive way to market your business and reach a vast audience at
the same time! Each year we give away 300 goodie bags with various goods and coupons provided by our local businesses.
This is a way for us to promote #ChooseLocalFirst and support our community! If you would like to participate please contact
us at 360-748-8885 and tell us what you would like to add to the goodie bags. Suggestions for items are: coupons/fliers,
magnets, lanyards, clips, and branded treats or bottled water. Please contact us for more information.
Applications available at The Chamber (360) 748-8885 or visit www.ChamberWay.com
Thank you to our sponsors!
Car Giveaway Dash Plaques
Raffle Vendors
Kidz Zone By Bethel Church
BBQThanks to Ken Stedham for sponsoring the kick off BBQ
Friday, August 24 5 pm at Ken’s Service, 515 W. Main St., Centralia
9 AM - 4 PM
CENTRALIA, WA
Chamber Forum - June 11th, 2018 - 11:30am-1:00pm
O’Blarney’s - 221 N. Tower, Centralia
Reid Bates, owner of the Aberdeen, Centralia, and Olympia Express Employment Professionals Offices, joins us this month to discuss the
“Top 5 Threats Facing Businesses Today”. We invite you to enjoy a delicious lunch prepared by O’Blarney’s for just $15 or there is a small sitting fee of $4 to attend the event. The menu for this forum includes: BBQ Beef Brisket Sandwiches, cole slaw, homemade chips, lite dessert, and various beverages.
Ribbon Cutting - July 19th, 2018 - 11:00am
Community Farmers Market of Chehalis- Boistfort St., Chehalis
The 2018 season for the Tuesday Community Farmers Market in Chehalis has started! We invite you to join us in welcoming the vendors and to #ChooseLocalFirst! At this family-friendly event, you can look forward to local organic produce, jam, herbs, eggs, craft Items, flowers and so much more!
Business After Hours - June 21st, 2018 - 5:00pm-7:00pm
Centralia Law offices of Althauser Rayan Abbarno, LLP. - 114 W. Magnolia St., Centralia
Althauser Rayan Abbarno, LLP is hosting the June Business After Hours in Historic Downtown Centralia. Join us for food, wine, beer, prizes, raffles, while connecting with local businesses. #ChooseLocalFirst and invite a friend or two to the event!
Ride the Willapa - June 23rd-24th, 2018
Willapa Hills Trail, Chehalis
Ride the Willapa is an annual bike riding event and festival filled with the simple pleasures of fresh air, family, and fun. Utilizing 22 miles of the gorgeous Willapa Hills Trail, Ride the Willapa offers a go-at-your-own-pace, build-your-own-experience kind of ride. Starting and then ending the next day at the Chehalis Veterans Museum, you can make as many stops and check out as many things as you’d like on the trail. There is something for everyone. If you are interested in participating in this event you can register online at ridethewillapa.com
Upcoming Events
STP Fundraising Opportunity STP 2018 is almost here and we are looking for community
members and organizations who are interested in providing
private housing for STP riders. Hosts earn $50 per rider housed
and the requirements are EASY! This is a fun way to show visitors
some Lewis County hospitality and make a quick income. Contact
us at (360) 748-8885 to learn more!
STP Volunteers Needed We’re looking for friendly people who are willing to help with the
Seattle-to-Portland Bicycle Classic. We need volunteers for a wide
variety of tasks including providing information to riders, passing
out popsicles and sorting luggage. Hours can vary and any
amount of time you can donate to help with this exciting event is
appreciated. Even if you only have an hour or two to spare, this is
a great work bonding experience as well as a perfect opportunity
for students and community members to get volunteer hours
signed. Contact us at (360) 748-8885 to sign up!
2
CONTACT US:
500 NW Chamber of Commerce Way
Chehalis, WA 98532
Office: 360.748.8885
Toll free: 1.800.525.3323
Fax: 360.748.8763
DirectoryCHAMBER STAFF
Alicia Bull
Executive Director
Dolly Tardiff
Office Manager
Cecilia Jimenez
Marketing Manager
2018 EXECUTIVE BOARD
Suzie Mitchell, Chair
Helly Hansen
Coralee (Cori) Taylor, Incoming Chair
Silver Agency
Todd Chaput, Past Chair
Holiday Inn Express & Suites
Julie Shaffley, Treasurer
Good Health Nutrition Center
Julie Pendleton, Secretary
Dicks Brewing Co.
Amanda Singleton, At Large
Rainier Connect
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Cameron McGee
Claypso
Tony Ketchum
Callison’s
Chris Thomas
Providence Centralia Hospital
Walter Cuestas
Century 21/Lund
Matt Moses
Sierra Pacific Industries
Bob Jackins
Community Member
Matt Osborne
McMenamins Oly Club
Lindy Waring
Chronicle
Jeff Bass
Dutch Brothers
Cindy Peabody
Tiki Tap House
Matt Noren
Pacific Sports Spa
Daryl Lund
Community Member
Mike Lucas
Lucky Eagle Casino
NON-VOTING
Rob Hill
City of Centralia
Jill Anderson
City of Chehalis
Ambassador Spotlight
NAME: Alicia Bossert
BUSINESS: Security State Bank
HOBBIES: Spending time with my husband and 2 mini Australian sherpherds, camping, hanging out with family.
SPOUSE: Aaron Bossert
WHERE WERE YOU BORN: Centralia
HOW DID YOU COME TO SETTLE IN LEWIS COUNTY?
I was born and raised in Centralia, I moved away after graduating high school thinking I didn’t want to stay in the area and after going to college in North Dakota and Idaho I ended up back here. Being away from home made me realize how much I enjoyed living in Centralia so I settle back here with my husband.
TELL US ABOUT YOUR FAMILY: I am very close with my family, I love spending as much time as I can with them. My parents are my best friends and I have 1 brother and 1 sister. Both have married and started families of their own, I recently became and Auntie for the first time and I love it and can’t wait to spoil my nieces and nephews rotten! My family is big on spending time together when we can with all of our busy schedules. I have always had a big family and it just keeps growing including 6 dogs between us all.
WHAT HAS YOUR CAREER BEEN LIKE? My career has been a whirlwind, I have been with Security State Bank for 7 years and I started as a teller and moved up pretty quickly. I have worked at 5 different branches and each move has been a step up for me in my career. I am currently an Operations Supervisor and love it! I never thought I would advance as quickly as I have and I couldn’t be happier. I have learned a lot about myself in my career and grown so much and I credit a lot of that to the managers I have worked with, I learned to take something from each of them to help better myself and grow.
WHAT WOULD WE BE SURPRISED TO LEARN ABOUT YOU? I do not want any kids of my own, being a fur mom and auntie is good enough for me!
WHY ARE YOU A CHAMBER AMBASSADOR? I wanted to expand my networking and get my face out in the community. Being part of the community is something I have always done growing up but being able to do as a working member of our community is even better. I enjoy getting to know other business members and helping the Chamber support them.
Platinum
Port of CentraliaRainier ConnectLucky Eagle Casino & HotelMcMennamins Olympic ClubI-5 Auto groupBethel ChurchThe ChronicleKELA/KMNT RadioLive 95/KITICity of ChehalisCity of CentraliaTitle Guaranty
Gold
Holiday Inn ExpressTree Management PlusPacific Mobile StructuresO’Blarney’s Irish PubProvidence Centralia HospitalTwinStar Credit UnionSecurity State BankToledoTelDick’s Brewing Co.LewisTalk.comThorbecks FitlifeSunbird Shopping CenterCallisons
Silver
Best WesternShop N KartRB EngineeringLakeside Industries, IncAldersons Awards West-PrintwaresAlthauser, Rayan, Abbarno, LLPThe Silver AgencyDutch BrosInnovations in Eye CareTiki Tap HouseChehalis-Centralia Railroad Assoc.Port of ChehalisCustom SecurityWashington Federal
SCJ AllianceCalypso Window WashingLes Schwab - Centralia
Bronze
Century 21 Lund - Walter CuestasValley View Health CenterSierra Pacific IndustriesColumbia BankLewis County Title CompanyWolf Haven InternationalTimberland BankEsco Pacific SignsGood Health NutritionCentralia General AgenciesWashington Orthopaedic
2018 CHAMBER SPONSORS
Ride the Willapa June 23rd - 24th Chehalis to Pe Ell
Seattle to Portland Bike Classic July 14th - 15th Centralia College & Rec
Park, Chehalis
Hub City Car Show August 25th Downtown Centralia
Trick or Treat Transit October 31st Chehalis/
Centralia
Choose Local Black Friday Bags November 21st
Chamber Office, Chehalis
69th Annual Santa Parade December 1st Downtown
Chehalis
2018 CHAMBER
EVENTS
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What is going on with your business? Submit a small
paragraph (200 words or less) and let the community
know about new hires, promotions, business awards and
other business news. Deadline is the last Friday of each
month by 4:00 p.m. Email [email protected]
Title Guaranty May High School hero
Title Guaranty Company of Lewis County is proud to an-nounce the May High School Hero, Lexi Poole from Centralia High School! She is a CHS cheer-leader and a captain of the squad. Lexi is senior class vice president, an advisory representative, pres-ident of National Honor Society, and vice president of the cheer team. In the past Lexi has served as National Honor Society trea-surer, and she was the treasurer and secretary for the cheer team. She also teaches cheers and chants to kids involved in Twin Cities Youth Football cheer and served as a camp counselor at Cispus. Lexi plans on attending Northern Arizona University and becoming a forensic pathol-ogist. Congratulations to Lexi, and thank you for being a High School Hero!
Beautify Chehalis - Chehalis Community Renaissance Team
The Chehalis Community Renaissance Team (CCRT) in-vites our community to become part of the tradition welcoming spring to Downtown Cheha-lis. The organization is seeking sponsors for the annual spring beautification project, planting flowers and tree pots through-out Downtown Chehalis. We extend our thanks to everyone who continues to support this beautification effort. We hope you will consider sponsoring an island or tree pot this year to help brighten and beautify our downtown. The cost of sponsor-ship is $50, and remember – as a contribution to a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization, your dona-tion is tax-deductible. Contact CCRT at [email protected], by phone at (360) 345-1738, or download the sign-up form at www.ci.chehalis.wa.us/renaissance/beautify-chehalis.
Quiznos Centralia
Quiznos in Centralia has new Delivery Hours. Sunday - Thurs-day 10am-8pm NEW Friday and Saturday 10am- Midnight. Order online @ quiznos.com or call 1-360-330-5100. HAVE IT DELIVERED!
Lewis County Gospel Mission
Lewis County Gospel Mis-sion’s Annual Dinner/Auc-tion fundraiser in April was a grand success. Over $14,000 was raised; $3,000 specifically toward a new commercial re-frigerator. Many thanks to the businesses and individuals who contributed donation items and purchased tables for eight. De-spite lower than average atten-dance, it was a lively event with Mary Garrison, Garrison Auc-tioneers, leading the guests. The long awaited renovation is mov-ing again. As with any reality shows where a house is repaired and flipped, there have been
“oh, dear!” moments as walls are opened up and additional fixes needed. A special thanks to the unflappable Sam Burgee for the work already done and the great crew he brings in. This will be a slow process, moving as workers and funds are available. What a blessing it will be when we are able to expand the dining room and relocate all food storage and refrigeration units closer to the kitchen. The addition of offices and ADA compatible shower and restroom will round out the renovation. Thank you to all who have been involved with the renovation planning and fund-ing.
WSU- Master Gardeners of Lewis County
Confining Your Garden Exu-berance: Corralling Your Plants June 2, 2018; 10-11:00AM Sal-kum Timberland Library 2480 US HWY 12, Salkum. Dai-
sies or peonies flopping over? Squash vines out of control? Learn how to craft simple bar-riers from ordinary materials to keep your plants in check. Open House Hands on Composting & Hugelkultur
June 23, 2018, 10AM Lewis County Transfer Station 1411 South Tower, Centralia. Instead of burning branches & tree de-bris bury it! Use nature’s tech-nique for creating the same rich humus found on forest floors. Washington State University (WSU) Lewis County Exten-sion Master Gardeners are vol-unteers who have completed a 12-month WSU based training course. The program has year-round enrollment open to ev-eryone! Now is a perfect time to advance your gardening knowl-edge. Gardening is both re-warding and therapeutic! WSU Master Gardener Lewis County Extension volunteers educate the community throughout the year and county by hosting free workshops about gardening and conducting plant clinics. This service helps the public gain gardening knowledge, iden-tify plants and insects, diagnose plant diseases and recommend scientific based cures. For more information about the program or how to become a Master Gar-dener, visit lewis-mg-mrc.org or call Art Fuller, Master Gardener Coordinator at 360-760-1216 or [email protected].
Woodland Village Retirement Community - Creekside
Campout
Village Concepts of Chehalis – Woodland Village is proud to present our first annual “Creek-side Campout” June 15 & 16. Join us for S’mores around the camp-fire Friday night with games and an afternoon BBQ at 3 pm on Saturday. Call 360-748-0095 to reserve a spot for your family’s tent or trailer. All proceeds will go to the Olympia Chapter of Trout Unlimited. Campsites $15/per night. Saturday BBQ/Cook-out $15.00 per person, $7.00 children. Woodland Village is also proud to become part of the community circle hosting “Life Line Screening” - Monday June 25.” Five Screenings include: Carotid Artery/Plaque Screen-ing, Heart Rhythm, Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm Screening, Pe-ripheral Arterial Disease Screen-ing, and Osteoporosis Risk As-sessment. To register for your screening, please call 888-653-6450 or visit www.lifelinescreen-ing.com/community-partners. With the tight housing market, remember Woodland Village is the perfect retirement com-munity solution with options of apartments, townhomes and cottages. Make new friends; en-gage in the many activities and trips offered while the cooking, housekeeping, maintenance and landscaping are all done for you. Call 360-748-0095 for a tour to-day!
Centralia Outlets Big 4th of July Sales Event
Shop one of summer’s biggest sale events with Centralia Out-lets 4th of July Summer Sale! Independence Day brings bar-becues, fireworks, and of course, big discounts. At the majority of our outlet stores you’ll find the must have fashion trends for summer! Discover cool t-shirts and casual shorts! Select breezy summertime dresses at Dress-barn and Francesca’s. Choose trendy swimwear at Aėropostale, Lane Bryant Outlet, VF Outlet and Volcom. Stylish beach hats are at Claire’s, Francesca’s and Polo Ralph Lauren Clearance. Ready for sandal season? Shop the Famous Footwear Outlet for the whole family! Kitchen Collection has sizzling deals on accessories for barbecues and
reusable containers for potluck gatherings. Whether you’re looking to score savings on clothing, outdoor gear, barbecue grilling tools, or all of the above, you’ll enjoy huge savings on the best 4th of July deals at all your favorite stores. Check out our website at centraliaoutlets.com for updated sales events.
Centralia College - Foundation awards grants to college faculty
and staff
The Centralia College Foun-dation has announced this year’s recipients of the Hanke Faculty Achievement Awards and Staff Mini-grants, named for Walter Hanke, one of the foundation’s longtime support-ers. Centralia College employees were eligible to apply for grants to cover expenses outside the scope of state resources, includ-ing special projects, activities, or equipment.“Where foundation scholarships support students in a very direct way, the faculty awards and staff mini-grants support the college’s overall learning environment,” said Christine Fossett, Centralia Col-lege Foundation director. “This additional funding supports the projects and equipment our staff and faculty need in and out of the classroom.” Faculty Achieve-ment Awards. To read more: visit chamberway.com
Top Notch Home Inspection
If you are in the process of buying a home, or if you al-ready own a home, then getting a home inspection is a great way to protect that investment. At Top Notch Home Inspections I offer VA Pest Inspections, Pre-sale Inspections, Homeowner checkup inspections, and Home buyer inspections with a free Structural Pest Inspection. As a member of InterNachi, the In-ternational Association of Certi-fied Home Inspectors you can be confident that I keep up with the latest in the home inspec-tion industry. With 20 years experience in home repairs and 12 years experience as a WDO (Wood Destroying Organisms) Inspector you will receive a thor-ough inspection report. Your online interactive inspection re-port from Homegauge software comes with pictures that enlarge when you click on them and an option to Create a Repair/Re-quest List (or project list). This feature will help you determine what defects should be left as is, repaired, or replaced. I ser-vice ALL of Lewis County and surrounding areas. Call today (360)827-1436 or email [email protected] and men-tion the bizz buzz to get $25.00 off your first home inspection. (Inspection fees start at $325).
Centralia Lions Annual Yard Sale
The Centralia Lions Club is gearing up for the summer. On June 15th & 16th we hold our an-nual “Huge” Yard Sale at 1220 S. Scheuber Rd in Centralia. Lots of great items and on Saturday morning “Fresh right out of the oven Cinnamon rolls and other great baked goods are available. Hours are Friday noon to 3 p.m. and Saturday 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Proceeds go to support the many Centralia Lions Club projects. See you there. Our second meet-ing of the month is an outdoor BBQ at 920 Fair St. Potluck din-ner begins at 6 p.m. Come and have a steak or a hot dog with us and enjoy some fun fellow-ship with your local Lions Club members. Everyone welcome.
Centralia Downtown Association
The flower baskets are up and downtown Centralia spruced up and ready for you! Join us Thursday June 21st, 5-8pm, for a “Block Party on Third Thurs-day. Enjoy Art, Music, Shopping, Dining, (Really) Young Entre-
preneurs, and much more. King Agriculture Museum opens June 1 and don’t forget Billetproof Cruise Night June 23! When you are downtown, be sure to visit Centralia Downtown Associa-tion members, and everyone else, on the Blue Block: Centralia Fox Theater - 123 S Tower - is being restored to the grandeur it had when built in 1930. Great things are happening so keep an eye on the progress! The folks at The Station: Coffee Bar & Bis-tro - 120 S Tower - are passion-ate about perfect coffee drinks, committed to providing guests with great service, delicious food, and dedicated to giving back to our communities. Stop by Gracie’s - 120 S Tower – for gorgeous fashions and acces-sories for work, weekend ad-ventures, vacations and gifting. While you are on the Blue Block, step into Embody - 115 S Tower. The boutique offers unique gifts, workout clothing and self-care items. Classes at Embody enable individuals to heal their bodies, minds, and spirits through joy-ful movement in community.
King Agriculture Museum
King Agriculture Museum’s 2018 season runs June through September. Hours; Tue through Sat, 10am to 4pm. It’s our 4th season and we are excited to show off new and interesting exhibits. We have expanded our Nautical Room, added to the logging exhibit, added a sew-ing room and brought in our first official mascot. His name is Roger. We have a Stihl trac-tor (yes the chain saw co.), on loan from J & I Equipment in Yelm and Olympia. They made 2000 of them, only 3 are in the US. The museum is becoming a destination for travelers who want to experience a bit of the past, walking through displays of tractors, logging equipment, toys, pedal tractors old tools and household items that bring back memories of simpler times. The kids love our hands on and interactive displays. Come join us and experience some history. Have a cup of coffee and visit!
Toy Farmer Magazine had a great article on our first annual Antique Toy Show. Watch for information on our Facebook Page for the next show coming in the spring of 2019.
Shop For Dads & Grads at Centralia Outlets
High school and college grad-uations are upon us and Father’s Day is June 17th. Celebrate your graduates and dads with gifts they’ll appreciate from the Centralia Outlets. What do they need for their dorm room? What can they use in their new apart-ment? For your graduate, some essential kitchen items from Kitchen Collection are knives, spatulas, a skillet and a stockpot. For your Dad, barbecue acces-sories from Kitchen Collection make a wonderful gift on Fa-ther’s Day.
What do they like to read? For the reader in the family, Book Warehouse carries great books at unbeatable prices. Are they athletic? Nike Clearance Store and Under Armour Clearance have all types of sportswear for the active grad or Dad. Back-packs from Eddie Bauer Outlet and leather briefcases from Wil-sons Leather are essential for a family member on the go.
Purchase the latest and great-est tech at T-Mobile to keep you connected with your favorite Dad or Grad. Find trendy sun-glasses from Eddie Bauer Outlet and Volcom. Discover an amaz-ing selection of sophisticated men’s watches at Kay Jewelers Outlet. Give graduates and dads the freedom to choose what they want by buying gift cards
for specific stores. Purchase all kinds of great gifts for your grads and Dads at Centralia Outlets!
How to Find ARTrails Artists
May 23, 2018--Forty artists participating in the ARTrails studio tours is a lot of people to keep track of--and you may not want to. Maybe you’re longing for a woven handbag or a turned wood bowl but have no interest in paintings or photography. How do you sort them out? Check the new Studio Tour Guide and at-tend the opening Gala. The 2018 Studio Tour Guides will be out soon. In them you’ll find: photo samples of each artist’s work, a list of participating artists, and a map showing where to find each one during the tours. The Gala is at the train depot, held the first Friday before tours begin. It has one piece of work from each art-ist, and most of the artists will be attending so you can actu-ally meet them. In the next few weeks, we’ll be listing artists by the medium they juried in with. At their studios, they may have other things they’ve done as well.
This year, for instance, we have four photographers: Den-nis Blake (at Rectangle Gallery), Justin Page (Santa Lucia Coffee Co.), Madeline McIntire (The Watson Studio), and Carlene Salazar (Pacific Ocean Graphics and Fine Arts).
Centralia College - Ellis Oliver
The Centralia College Foun-dation, through the Ellis Oliver Endowment, is pleased to offer tuition assistance for Chamber members and their employees to take any of the following identi-fied classes through a “Matching Scholarship” (scholarship cov-ers one half tuition) for Summer quarter. Summer quarter open registration begins May 29th and classes start on July 2nd. For more information, please con-tact the Centralia College Foun-dation office at (360) 623-8942.
The Hive
DID YOU KNOW: Genet-ics only plays 20% in how your skin looks. 80% comes from the products that you put on your face. So if you can improve on your skin and how it looks & feels why wouldn’t you want to use a product that helps turn back the time clock? We have these products and we welcome you can come try them and see firsthand how they look and how it makes your face feel. We would love to have your opin-ion. Our pampering sessions are complimentary, you get to exfoliate your face, your lips and your hands. We also offer a charcoal mask treatment to help your pores. WE won’t let you leave with a naked face so we will provide a foundation match, mascara and lip gloss. Bring a friend or two and have an hour of girlfriend time. We also of-fer GIFT BASKETS & GIFT CERTIFICATES for graduation, birthdays, anniversaries etc. Just call 360-880-2441 Gig
Heath & Hope Medical Outreach
Mark Your Calendar! Save the date for the 2nd Annual Health & Hope Medical Outreach fun-draiser! A Sip, a Bit, and a Steam Train Trip will be held on Fri-day, August 3rd at 6:00 pm. Be prepared for nostalgia, enter-tainment, wine tasting, hors d’oeuvres, and adventure on a chartered steam train to support the area’s free medical clinic.
Ride the Willapa- Lewis County Community Trails Association
Ride the Willapa, a local an-nual bike riding event, offers a front seat to one of the most beautiful and peaceful places in Washington. It’s a one-day
please see BIZZ BUZZ, page 4
4
Ribbon Cuttings
Bizz BuzzContinued from page 3
Additional Directories available
at the Chamber
Office
or two-day family-friendly ride beginning June 23 - starting and ending at the Veterans Memorial Museum in Chehalis. Back for its third year, Ride the Willapa offers a go-at-your-own-pace, build-your-own-experience kind of ride. Visit small farms on Tour de Farms, traverse over trestles and rivers, and turn off the trail to visit the small neighboring towns. There is something for ev-eryone. Mountain bikes or bikes with wide tires are recommend-ed to ride this flat, compacted gravel trail. Tickets are available for one-day riders (total of 56 round-trip miles – new trail is open beyond Pe Ell). Sorry, over-nighting at Rainbow Falls Camp-grounds is full. Register online for a quick check-in – which will be open 9am to noon, June 23, at the veterans museum. Visit ride-thewillapa.com for tickets and more information.
Cutting Edge Landscape & Maintenance
Its that time again! Summer is sneaking up on us, are you ready? No worries, Cutting Edge Land-scape & Maintenance is here to help. Whether you need trees re-moved, a fence built around your new pool, monthly maintenance, one time clean up, a whole new yard or sprinkler system, we are ready. Call today for your free, no obligation, hassle free estimate! Hope to see you soon. 360-669-9375
Sparkles-N-Spurs
Let Sparkles n Spurs help up-date your summer wardrobe this June. We’ve got the cutest shorts, capris, tanks and the perfect san-dals to match! Come check our our amazing selection of blinged out clothing, conceal and carry purses as well as matching wal-lets. The quality of the specialty products we carry truly make our boutique unique! Sparkles n Spurs offers a military discount year round to honor and thank our service men, women and families! Located across from the Centralia Coach Factory Outlet. See you soon!
Sunbird Shopping Center Celebrates 42 Years
The Sunbird Shopping Cen-ter invites you to come celebrate their 42nd Anniversary, June 9, 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. at their Chehalis location. The event is free to all. Enjoy a free piece of cake and coffee, or come for lunch and purchase a hot dog and a Pepsi for just 25 cents! Ven-dors will be on hand with prod-uct demonstrations, and samples. Bring your pressure canner lids for a FREE pressure gauge test during the celebration. Sign up to win giveaways from Carhartt, Pure Fishing, Camp Chef, Presto, Lodge, Chef’s Choice, Lamiglas, Georgia Boot and more! If you’re planning a graduation or father’s day party, Sunbirds has a variety of products to help your party get off to the right start. We have lawn furniture, canopies, grills, flowers and more for every type of party!
“Growing Lewis County one family at a time!”
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Winner of a brand new TV courtesy of I-5 Chrysler, Jeep, Dodge, Ram, & FIAT at their May Business After Hours Event!
The Centralia Farmers Market welcomes local vendors and com-munity members to celebrate with a ribbon cutting on opening day!
The new Friday Night Market for the Community Farmers Market at Chehalis opens up with a suc-cessful turnout!
Megan Wilks, pictured with Key Speaker Rob Snaza, receives one of the many raffle prizes during the Rob Fuller Scholarship Luncheon. More than $10,000 in scholarships and prizes were awarded at the event!
The Top 25 students from Centralia High School and WF West reveal their plans and goals following graduation at the May 14th Rob Fuller Scholarship Luncheon.
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The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, June 7, 2018 • Life 7LIFE
Celebrity Cipher
Today’s clue: N equals Y
“ O B C Z U . . . R O C R B A S W Y R K B A R Y T G Z L G K B A W A
R O B K C Z W A B Y L B Z B G H B A , Y G U B D W U B U . . .
R G F G W A . ” — 2 1 - N B C Z- G S U J B C C Z R O X Z
SOLUTION TO PUZZLE ON PAGE LIFE 4: “I was 17 and the Army... took one look at me and they said, ‘Melvin, you’re our guy.’”
— Battle of the Bulge combatant Mel Brooks
© 2017 by NEA, Inc.
Crossword
Sudoku
Answer to Puzzle on Page Life 4
Puzzle Two Start on Puzzle One on page Life 4. Answers to the puzzles here will be published in Saturday’s paper.
Answer to Puzzle on Page Life 4
By Rick Bentley
Tribune News Service
“Hotel Artemis” is a shin-ing example of how it is not the amount of money spent to make a movie, but how the budget is being spent. Director/writer Drew Pearce has managed to take the money that would be the cape-pressing budget for most superhero movies and create a high-energy, gritty-looking and prophetically scary tale set in the near future that comes across as big as any summer blockbuster but offers far more bang for the bucks in the writing, visuals and acting.
The film looks at “a typical Wednesday night” in the year 2028. The streets of downtown Los Angeles are the location for the most violent riot in the city’s history. All the blue war-painted protestors want is clean water, something that has become a premium in the state because of corporate greed.
Four men wearing skull masks find themselves in the middle of a failed bank heist where one of the robbers gets wounded. Sherman Atkins (Sterling K. Brown) must get his brother, Lev Atkins (Brian Tyree), to the only place crimi-nals can get medical attention, Hotel Artemis, without attract-ing the attention of the law. The medical care is given by the no-nonsense woman known only as The Nurse (Jodie Foster).
The film is a compelling vi-sual as either “Blade Runner” movie from Pearce’s depiction of the riot-filled streets of Los An-geles to the guest rooms for the patients that reflect a passion for the exotic that has faded.
Pearce has created a very be-lievable world that looks to be on the doorstep of being post-apocalyptic. The way the direc-tor keeps the action confined to a minimal amount of sets (partly because of budget restrictions) works because it creates a play-like structure with more of an emphasis on the actors than on the action.
And, “Hotel Artemis” is filled with standout performances
topped by an Oscar-worthy ef-fort by Foster, who in recent years has been more content to work behind the cameras instead of in front of them.
Foster transforms herself from her world-weary face to a way of shuffling when she walks that suggests a life of pain and suffering ignored to spend more time helping others. This is one of the Oscar-winner’s best and most memorable performances.
That’s because Pearce was so willing to cast against type with her and Brown. His performance as the always-planning thief couldn’t be any more different than his work on “This Is Us.”
It’s a chance for Brown to show his range and in the process cre-ate a character who is smart, loy-al and just a little dangerous.
The unusual casting con-tinues through Dave Bautista, Charlie Day, Jenny Slate and Zachary Quinto. ‘Hotel Arte-mis” gives Bautista a chance to show he can do more than flex his muscles, while Day plays the most despicable character of his career. One of the biggest sur-prises is Slate, who is often cast in lighter projects, but this dra-matic role pays off.
Every bit of casting works. Pearce is able to bridge the worlds of great acting and superb ac-
tion through Sofia Boutella, who plays Nice, an assassin for hire. Generally, Boutella plays the role with a scary likability that is at its best in scenes with Brown. She is also involved with one of the best confined space fight sequences in film since “Captain America: Winter Soldier.”
Getting both a very human and very deadly performance from Boutella is another example of how Pearce has shown great prudence in making the movie. Everything about the movie works, whether it is viewed as just another summer popcorn movie or as a small independent film driven by a compelling story
and performances.The film was made on a low
budget, but it wasn’t cheaply made. Don’t have any reserva-tions about checking out “Hotel Artemis.”
‘Hotel Artemis’
3.5 stars
Cast: Jodie Foster, Sterling K. Brown, Bryan Tyree, Sofia Boutella, Charlie Day.
Director: Drew Pearce.Rated: R for violence, drug
use, language.Running time: 97 minutes.
Jodie Foster Makes ‘Hotel Artemis’ First-Class Experience
Ink Factory Films
“Hotel Artemis” movie
Life 8 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, June 7, 2018LIFE
How ‘Barry’ Gave Henry Winkler Another Signature Role Decades After Playing FonzieBy Glenn Whipp
Los Angeles Times
You know him as the Fonz. And probably Bar-ry Zuckerkorn, the Bluth family’s inept attorney on “Arrested Development.”
But you don’t know the depth of Henry Win-kler’s talents unless you’ve seen him play Gene Cousineau, the self-styled master acting teacher on HBO’s first-year comedy, “Barry.”
Winkler stopped by The Times recently for a video interview to talk about finding yet another role of a lifetime. Here are excerpts from the con-versation.
Q: Did you know there were so many actors wanting to play Gene?
A: I did not know that. I auditioned for it. And when I first got the call, I said, “OK, just tell me this. They say I’m on a short list. OK. Is Dustin Hoffman on that list? Because if he is, I’m not go-ing in.”
Q: You’re not going to waste your time.A: No, I don’t have a chance. So I go in, and I
audition for (series co-creator and star) Bill Hader, and I get it. OK, whew! And then it is the Super Bowl in February, and I went to a friend’s house, and there were agents there and they said, “What are you doing?” And I said, “Well, we just shot the pilot of ‘Barry.’” And they went, “You got that?”
Then we went to see a good acquaintance of ours, John Lithgow, on Broadway, and he said,
“What are you doing?” And I said, “Well, I’m doing ‘Barry.’” And he went, “I wanted that!” And I went, “Oh my God, this is amazing.”
Q: When you were coming up, did you have an acting teacher like Gene?
A: Everybody has had someone like Gene. The whole premise of the series (is) people who are torn apart. (Gene) goes out on auditions. He’s a regular working actor. And you know, you lose a commer-cial to a gecko, you teach. And so, then in the class-room, he’s treated like an emperor. That is his arena because outside of those four walls, he doesn’t seem to be able to practice what he preaches.
Q: We see Gene go out for an audition and he’s going for the role of Man in the Back of the Line. It’s humbling.
A: It is humbling. It is humbling in real life, let alone on the screen. But I knew that I had done that (audition) scene correctly, because I did it and then I turned away, knowing that (Gene’s) never going to get this, and all I heard from video village, where the producers and the writers sit, was, “Oh.” And that pathetic, “Oh,” I figured I got it right.
Q: There’s a great dinner scene where Gene ambushes Det. Moss. She thinks she’s there for information, but in his mind, it’s a date. And he
really sells it.A: You know what? As an actor, when you do a
scene like that, you do a scene with the love of your life. I think underneath all of his baloney, he truly cares. He is smitten by this woman.
Q: I love the line: “All I want is someone to spoil.” It does look like Gene makes a great omelet.
A: He really does. Now, his favorite, of course, is eggs Benedict. And his sauce, if it’s eaten at the moment, is unbelievable.
Q: What advice do you have when it comes to acting?
A: When I was 27, I got the Fonz. And because I changed my voice, I changed my body, it was like a key that unlocked my imagination. And at that moment, after all of my training, I realized that I really am just a character actor. I am not a lead-ing man. But I knew, without the change of voice, without the detail of the Fonz, I wasn’t the actor I wanted to be in my mind or in my imagination.
So that was 27. And now I’m 72, so I’ve flipped the numbers, and I am closer to the actor that I thought about being when I was 27. Some people can do it right away, there is no difference between the character and their soul. There’s no space. I dreamed of that, but I couldn’t accomplish that. And maybe I’m just getting there now.
ADVICE: Dear Abby
DEAR ABBY: My brother-in-law died a month ago and was cremated by the local affiliate of a prominent funeral home. To make it easier for my sister, I accompanied her to the mortu-ary to pick up her husband’s remains. I walked in alone, and as I returned to the car with his urn, a young funeral home employee in a black suit and scuffed shoes followed me. Through the window of the car, he presented my sister an arti-ficial red rose and said, “We’re sorry for your loss.”My sister and I were appalled by the insincerity of this ges-ture, and I called and told the funeral home director that the sentiments were as phony as the rose. He said, “I thought it was a great idea,” and couldn’t understand our reaction. Were we wrong? — RESENTING PHONY SENTIMENTSDEAR RESENTING: Yes, you were. When people are griev-ing, emotions are sometimes raw, so I’m not going to scold you. However, your response to the young man was ungracious. All that needed to be said was, “No, thank you.” DEAR ABBY: My mother-in-law keeps buying us decorator items that don’t have a place in our home. While I appreci-ate the effort and the thought, I have no more closet space in which to store them. I was taught to accept gifts and express gratitude, even if you don’t like them. My mother-in-law is coming to visit in a few weeks, and my husband insists we should dis-play the items she’s purchased for us. This would entail put-ting holes in my walls, as she tends to get us items that need to be hung. I don’t think we should have to go through this charade just to appease her. It will only encourage her to buy
us more things. What should I do? — NO MORE CLOSET GIFTSDEAR N.M.C.G.: It won’t de-stroy your home to display one (or two) of the items your MIL has given you while she’s visit-ing. But while she’s there, make sure she opens the closet where you have stored all the other items she has sent “because she’s such a generous doll you can’t possibly use them all.” When she leaves, sell the gifts or donate them, then pray she takes the hint. DEAR ABBY: I need your ad-vice. I’m in love with a wonder-ful man. He says he likes and respects me but does not love me. I desperately want his love, but have agreed to be friends with benefits in the hope that in the future he may come to love me. Should I continue with this, and is there a fu-ture for me? — HOPEFUL IN TELANGANA, INDIADEAR HOPEFUL: For many people, liking and respect-ing someone would make the person a candidate for mar-riage. The bad news is, the man you care so much about is not one of them. The good news is, there are many eligible, emotionally available men who might value what you have to offer. Time is precious. If you want your future to be a happy one, be glad your friend with benefits has been honest with you, cut your losses and look elsewhere for love.
•••Dear Abby is written by Abi-
gail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Write Dear Abby at www.Dear-Abby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.
Fake Flower Prompts Emotional Reaction
From Offended Widow
Puzzle Three
I am an actress and fashion
designer born in Texas
on October 26, 1945. I
was intended to become a
ballet dancer, but went into
modeling and acting. My
most famous role is as part
of a trio of female crime
fighters.
Answer: Jaclyn Smith
Lionel Hahn / Abaca Press
Henry Winkler attends WE Day California at The Forum in
Inglewood, Calif., on April 19, 2018.
The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, June 7, 2018 • Life 9LIFE
FRIDAY EVENING June 8, 2018
CEN CHE 6 PM 6:30 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30
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Hawaii Five-0 McGarrett enlists the help of a hacker. ’ (CC)
Blue Bloods “Pick Your Poison” Eddie arrests a loathed acquaintance.
KIRO 7 News at 11PM (N) (CC)
Late Show-Colbert
PBS 9 9PBS NewsHour (N) ’ (CC) Washington Week
(N) (CC)ForEveryone.net Tim Berners-Lee.
Father Brown “The Angel of Mercy” Mrs. McCarthy’s friend dies. (CC)
Celtic Gold: An Irish Song & Dance Journey Celebrating Irish music, song and dance. ’ (CC)
Doo Wop Generations (My Music) Original Doo Wop per-formers reunite. ’ (CC)
MNT 10 10Friends ’ (CC) Friends An attrac-
tive cousin visits.Mom ’ (CC) Modern Family
“Starry Night” ’Mom ’ (CC) Modern Family
“Game Changer”Q13 News at 9 (N) (CC) The Big Bang
Theory ’ (CC)The Big Bang Theory ’ (CC)
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CW 11 11The People’s Court “Exes’ Loan Battle.” ’ (CC)
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My Last Days Diane Nguyen focuses on positivity. (N) (CC)
Life Sentence “Love Factually” Stella is desperate to talk to Wes. (N)
Seinfeld “The Stock Tip” (CC)
Seinfeld “The Van Buren Boys”
Family Guy “Into Harmony’s Way”
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PBS 12 12Perry Como Classics: Till the End of Time (My Music) Perry Como’s hit songs. ’ (CC)
Northwest Now ’ Fleetwood Mac: The Dance Rock group reunites. ’ (CC) ››› Concert for George (2003, Documentary) Tom Hanks, Eric Clapton, Paul McCartney. Musicians celebrate the legacy of George Harrison.
FOX 13 13Modern Family “Game Changer”
Modern Family “Starry Night” ’
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Phenoms (N) ’ (CC) Phenoms (Season Finale) (N) ’ (CC) Q13 NEWS AT 10 (N) (CC) Washington’s Most Wanted
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IND 14 14 The Message of the Cross (CC) Donnie Swaggart (CC) Crossfire Service (CC) Jimmy Swaggart (CC)
ION 15 15CSI: Crime Scene Investigation Mac Taylor finds missing girlfriend. ’
CSI: Crime Scene Investigation “Exile” A Cuban singer’s sister dies. ’
CSI: Crime Scene Investigation Sara becomes a murder suspect. ’
CSI: Crime Scene Investigation The deaths of several poker players. ’
CSI: Crime Scene Investigation A for-mer prom queen is murdered. ’
CSI: Crime Scene Investigation A body found near a forest reserve. ’
IND 18 18 I am Woman Conference Hope Connect. Jewish Jesus Hour of Salvation K. Copeland Life Today (CC) Joyce Meyer I am Woman Conference “Nicole Crank” The Green Room
ABC 22 222018 NBA Finals Golden State Warriors at Cleveland Cavaliers. The Cavaliers play host to the War-riors at Quicken Loans Arena in Game 4 of the NBA Finals. (N) (Live) (CC)
Jimmy Kimmel Live (N) ’ (CC)
Wheel of Fortune “Tennis Week”
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Nightline ’ (CC) KATU News at 11 (N) (S Live) (CC)
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NBC 26 26KGW News at 6 (N) Tonight With Cas-
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American Ninja Warrior “Los Angeles City Qualifiers” Competitors face six ob-stacles. ’ (CC) (DVS)
Dateline NBC (N) ’ (CC) KGW News at 11 (N)
Tonight Show-J. Fallon
UNI 30 30 Noticias Univisión Noticiero Univis’n La Rosa de Guadalupe (N) (SS) El rico y Lázaro (N) Papá a toda madre (N) Por amar sin ley ’ Noticias Univisión Noticiero Uni
FOX 27 276 O’Clock News (N)
Timbers in 30 Family Feud ’ (CC)
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Page Six TV (N) ’ (CC)
A&E 52 52Live PD “Live PD -- 06.02.18” Riding along with law enforcement. ’ (CC) Live PD: Rewind “Live PD: Rewind No.
117” (N) ’ (CC)Live PD “Live PD -- 06.08.18” Riding along with law enforcement. (N Same-day Tape) ’ (CC)
AMC 67 67›› National Lampoon’s Vacation (1983, Comedy) Chevy Chase, Beverly D’Angelo. A vacationing family detours into screwball side trips. (CC)
›› Die Another Day (2002, Action) Pierce Brosnan, Halle Berry, Toby Stephens. James Bond and an American spy track a North Korean villain. (CC)
Fear the Walking Dead Madison de-cides to help an adversary. (CC)
APL 43 43 Tanked “Tank of Jericho” ’ (CC) Tanked ’ (CC) Tanked ’ (CC) Tanked “The Dunk Tanks” (N) (CC) Tanked ’ (CC) Tanked “Ty Dolla’s Fresh Tank” ’
BET 56 56 ›› The Wood (1999, Drama) Omar Epps, Taye Diggs, Richard T. Jones. ›› Soul Plane (2004, Comedy) Kevin Hart, Tom Arnold, Method Man. Martin ’ (CC) Martin ’ (CC) Martin ’ (CC) Martin ’ (CC)
BRAVO 66 66The Real Housewives of New York City “Holidazed and Confused”
The Real Housewives of New York City Luann is the talk of the town.
››› The Wedding Singer (1998, Romance-Comedy) Adam Sandler, Drew Bar-rymore. A 1980s wedding crooner attempts to find true love. (CC)
››› The Wedding Singer (1998, Romance-Comedy) Adam Sandler, Drew Bar-rymore. A 1980s wedding crooner attempts to find true love. (CC)
CBUT 29 29 CBC Vancouver News (N) (CC) Rick Mercer Laughs: Gags marketplace ’ The Investigators the fifth estate ’ (CC) The National (N) ’ (CC) CBC Van News Exhibitionists
CMT 61 61 Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing Last-Standing ››› Cool Runnings (1993) Leon. Based on the true story of Jamaica’s 1988 bobsled team. Cool Runnings
CNBC 46 46 American Greed (CC) American Greed (CC) American Greed (CC) American Greed (CC) American Greed (CC) Paid Program BBQ Pro Secrets
CNN 44 44 Cuomo Prime Time (N) (CC) CNN Tonight With Don Lemon (N) CNN Tonight With Don Lemon (N) Anderson Cooper 360 (CC) Cuomo Prime Time (CC) CNN Tonight With Don Lemon (CC)
CNNH 45 45 Cuomo Prime Time (N) (CC) CNN Tonight With Don Lemon (N) All News Updated hourly. All News Updated hourly. Cuomo Prime Time (CC) CNN Tonight With Don Lemon (CC)
COM 60 60The Office “Customer Loyalty” Jim misses Cece’s first recital. ’ (CC)
The Office “Junior Salesman” ’
The Office “Van-dalism” ’ (CC)
The Office “Cou-ples Discount” ’
The Office “Moving On” (CC)
The Office “Moving On” (CC)
› Tammy (2014, Comedy) Melissa McCarthy, Susan Sarandon, Kathy Bates. A woman hits the road with her feisty grandmother. (CC)
DIS 41 41 Descendants (2015, Children’s) Dove Cameron, Kristin Chenoweth. ’ (CC) Disney’s Descendants 2 (2017) Dove Cameron, Cameron Boyce. ’ (CC) Andi Mack (CC) Raven’s Home ’ Andi Mack (CC) Bunk’d ’ (CC)
DSC 8 8BattleBots Hypershock and Biteforce face off. ’ (CC)
BattleBots Tombstone versus Gigabyte. ’ (CC)
BattleBots “Just Keep Spinning” A match-up between Icewave and Yeti.
Bering Sea Gold “King of Nome” Shawn risks the Christine Rose. (N)
American Chopper: Rebuilt “The Con-frontation” Senior signs a deal.
Bering Sea Gold “King of Nome” Shawn risks the Christine Rose. ’
E! 65 65Keeping Up With the Kardashians “Decisions, Decisions” (CC)
E! News (N) (CC) Sex and the City ’ (CC)
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ESPN 32 32College Track and Field NCAA Men’s and Women’s Outdoor Championships. From Eugene, Ore. (N) (Live) (CC)
SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter With Scott Van Pelt (N) (Live) (CC)
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ESPN2 33 33 College Baseball NCAA Tournament -- Mississippi State vs Vanderbilt. (N) SC Featured NBA at the Mic (N) (Live) Boxing Diego De La Hoya vs. Jose Salgado. (N Same-day Tape) SportsCenter (N)
FNC 48 48 Hannity (N) (CC) The Ingraham Angle (N) (CC) Fox News at Night with Shannon Tucker Carlson Tonight (CC) Hannity (CC) The Ingraham Angle (CC)
FOOD 35 35 Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive
FREE 39 39 ›› She’s All That (1999) ’ (CC) › Zookeeper (2011, Comedy) Kevin James, Rosario Dawson. ’ (CC) Marvel’s Cloak & Dagger (CC) Marvel’s Cloak & Dagger (CC) The 700 Club ’ (CC)
FX 53 53››› Everest (2015, Adventure) Jason Clarke, Josh Brolin, John Hawkes. Climb-ers fight for survival during a storm on Mount Everest. ’ (CC)
››› Mission: Impossible Rogue Nation (2015, Action) Tom Cruise, Jeremy Renner, Simon Pegg. Ethan Hunt and his team square off against the Syndicate. ’ (CC)
Pose “Pilot” Damon aspires to join a dance company. ’ (CC)
GOLF 70 70 Golf Central (N) PGA Tour Golf FedEx St. Jude Classic, Second Round. (CC) PGA Tour Champions Golf Principal Charity Classic, First Round. (CC) PGA Golf
HALL 19 19Once Upon a Prince (2018, Romance-Comedy) Megan Park, Jonathan Keltz. A young woman’s beau is secretly a king. (CC)
Love on the Sidelines (2016, Romance) Emily Kinney, John Reardon. Sparks fly between an injured quarterback and his assistant. (CC)
The Middle “The Man Hunt” (CC)
The Middle “The Wisdom Teeth”
The Golden Girls ’ (CC)
The Golden Girls “Adult Education”
HGTV 68 68 Fixer Upper (CC) Fixer Upper (CC) Dream Home Dream Home Dream Home Dream Home House Hunters Hunters Int’l Tiny House Hunters Int’l
HIST 37 37 Ancient Aliens “The New Evidence” Ancient Aliens ’ (CC) Ancient Aliens: Declassified “Alien Weapons” Advances in technology and weapons. (N) (CC)
LIFE 51 51 Love by the 10th Date (2017) Meagan Good, Kelly Rowland. (CC) ›› Tyler Perry’s The Single Moms Club (2014) Nia Long, Amy Smart. (CC) › Addicted (2014, Drama) Sharon Leal, Boris Kodjoe, Tasha Smith. (CC)
MSNBC 47 47 The Rachel Maddow Show (N) (CC) The Last Word The 11th Hour With Brian Williams The Rachel Maddow Show (CC) The Last Word The 11th Hour With Brian Williams
MTV 63 63 Jersey Shore: Family Vacation (CC) Jersey Shore: Family Vacation (CC) ››› Easy A (2010) Emma Stone, Penn Badgley. Premiere. ’ (CC) ›› Bad Teacher (2011, Comedy) Cameron Diaz. Premiere. ’ (CC)
NBCS 34 34 Swimming Mecum Auto Auctions “Denver” Classic car auction from Denver, Colo. (N) Truck Tech Detroit Muscle Cycling
NICK 40 40 The Loud House The Loud House Henry Danger ’ Henry Danger ’ ›› Happy Feet Two (2011) Voices of Elijah Wood, Robin Williams. ’ (CC) Friends ’ (CC) Friends ’ (CC) Friends ’ (CC) Friends ’ (CC)
OXY 50 50 Snapped “Wanda Stanley” (CC) Snapped A parishioner is murdered. Mysteries & Scandals (N) Snapped “Joyce Sturdivant” (CC) Snapped “Joanna McElrath” (CC) Snapped “Verginia Turner” (CC)
PARMT 57 57Mom ’ (CC) Mom Christy’s night
takes a turn.Friends ’ (CC) Friends “The One
With the Football”Friends ’ (Part 1 of 2) (CC)
Friends ’ (Part 2 of 2) (CC)
››› Remember the Titans (2000, Drama) Denzel Washington, Will Patton, Donald Adeosun Faison. A black man coaches high-school football after integration. ’ (CC)
››› Creed (2015, Drama) ’ (CC)
ROOT 31 31 MLB Baseball: Mariners at Rays Mariners Post. Mariners Pre. MLB Baseball Seattle Mariners at Tampa Bay Rays. From Tropicana Field in St. Petersburg, Fla. (N) (Live) Mariners Post. MLR Rugby
SYFY 59 59 Journey to the Center of the Earth ›› Journey 2: The Mysterious Island (2012) Dwayne Johnson. (CC) (DVS) Futurama (CC) Futurama (CC) Futurama (CC) Futurama (CC) Futurama (CC) Futurama (CC)
TBN 20 20 Hal Lindsey (CC) End of the Age Perry Stone The Watchman Praise “Brian Houston” (CC) Frederick Price Spirit Reinhard Bonnke Prince: Let Go Travel the Road Treasures (CC)
TBS 55 55Family Guy “Un-derage Peter” ’
Family Guy “The Heartbreak Dog”
Bob’s Burgers ’ (CC)
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››› Transformers (2007, Action) Shia LaBeouf, Tyrese Gibson, Josh Duhamel. Two races of robots wage war on Earth. (CC) (DVS)
ELEAGUE Street Fighter Invitational Group B. (N) (CC)
TLC 38 38 90 Day Fiancé: Happily Ever After? 90 Day Fiancé My 600-Lb. Life 90 Day Fiancé: Happily Ever After? Annie questions her marriage to David. 90 Day Fiancé My 600-Lb. Life Say Yes to the Dress ’ (CC)
TNT 54 54NCIS: New Orleans A death in a gen-eral’s hotel room. ’ (CC) (DVS)
››› Unstoppable (2010, Action) Denzel Washington, Chris Pine. Two men try to stop a runaway train carrying toxic cargo. (CC) (DVS)
›› Focus (2015, Comedy-Drama) Will Smith, Margot Robbie, Adrian Martinez. A con man’s former protege/lover throws him off his game. (CC) (DVS)
Claws “Self-Portrait” The ladies go to their new, fancy salon.
TOON 42 42 Unikitty (CC) Teen Titans Go! Unikitty (CC) We Bare Bears King of the Hill Cleveland Show Cleveland Show American Dad ’ American Dad ’ Bob’s Burgers ’ Family Guy (CC) Family Guy (CC)
TRAV 36 36 Ghost Adventures (CC) Ghost Adventures (CC) Ghost Adventures (CC) The Dead Files (N) (CC) The Dead Files (N) (CC) The Dead Files (CC)
TRUTV 49 49 Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Impractical Jokers “Stage Fright” Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Late Snack
USA 58 58Law & Order: Special Victims Unit “Si-lence” Murdered transsexual. ’
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit “Chameleon” Female serial-killer. ’
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit A powerful family fights a rape charge.
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit A teen stops an assault on his mother.
Modern Family “Mistery Date”
Modern Family ’ (CC) (DVS)
Modern Family ’ (CC) (DVS)
Modern Family ’ (CC) (DVS)
VH1 62 62 ››› White Men Can’t Jump (1992, Comedy) Wesley Snipes. ’ (CC) › Big Daddy (1999, Comedy) Adam Sandler, Joey Lauren Adams. ’ (CC) ›› Baby Mama (2008, Comedy) Tina Fey, Amy Poehler. ’ (CC)
SATURDAY DAYTIME June 9, 2018
CEN CHE 6 AM 6:30 7 AM 7:30 8 AM 8:30 9 AM 9:30 10 AM 10:30 11 AM 11:30 12 PM 12:30 1 PM 1:30 2 PM 2:30 3 PM 3:30 4 PM 4:30 5 PM 5:30
ABC 4 4KOMO 4 News Saturday 6:00am
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KOMO 4 News Saturday 8:00am
Jack Hanna
Ocean Treks
Sea Res-cue
Wildlife Docs
Rock-Park
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James Brown
Nightline (CC) World of X Games (N)
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World News
NBC 5 52018 French Open Tennis Women’s Final. From Roland Garros Stadium in Paris. (N) (Live)
Voyager Wild-Vet XTERRA Adv.
XTERRA Adv.
Track & Field 150th Belmont Stakes From Belmont Park in Elmont, N.Y. (N) (S Live) (CC)
Evening Ever
Biz Kid$ KING 5 News at 5 (N) (CC)
IND 6 6 Suc Paid Rescue Dog Green Hiring Health Cham House Home. Spaces Homes/ Hazel House Mak Ciscoe Hydro Suc Sexy Suc Bissell Bennett Raw Travel
CBS 7 7CBS This Morn-ing: Saturday (N)
KIRO 7 News Saturday Morning (N) (CC)
Innova-tion Nat
Inspec-tors
Dr. Chris MyPillow Success Success SNEW SHARK
PGA Tour Golf FedEx St. Jude Classic, Third Round. (N) (S Live) (CC)
Paid Prog.
Success Pet Vet Sports Stars
KIRO News
KIRO News
PBS 9 9Mister Rogers
Dinosaur Bob the Builder
Daniel Tiger
Pinkali-cious
Splash Curious George
Nature Cat
Ready Jet Go!
Wild Kratts
Memory Rescue With Daniel Amen, MD ’ (CC)
Nature The abilities of butter-flies. ’ (CC) (DVS)
Benise: Fuego! Spirit of Spain ’ (CC)
Fleetwood Mac: The Dance Rock group reunites. ’ (CC)
MNT 10 10Dentures Page Six
TVQ13 News This Morning (N) (CC) Sexy
HairRegrow Hair
Success Paid Prog.
Person of Interest “YHWH” ’
Person of Interest “B.S.O.D.”
Pawn Stars
Gold-bergs
Gold-bergs
Modern Family
Modern Family
Modern Family
CW 11 11L King Report
Success Dog Whis
Dog Whis
Dog Whis
Dog Whis
This Old H.
Hidden Heroes
WRIN-KLES!
Paid Prog.
Regrow Hair
Success Marie Fit Airfryer Oven Airfryer Oven
Success Organic Springs-teen
Success King of Queens
King of Queens
Mike & Molly
Mike & Molly
PBS 12 12Travel-scope
WA. Grown
Garden Smart
Garden Home
Greener World
Knit-Crochet
It’s Sew Easy
Fit 2 Stitch
Sewing Quilting Arts ’
Fresh Quilting
Love of Quilting
Quilt in a Day
The Migraine Solution Man-aging migraines. (CC)
ADD and Loving It?! ’ (CC) Celtic Gold: An Irish Song & Dance Journey
Perry Como Clas-sics
FOX 13 13Marie Fit Paid
Prog.Nature Knows
Xplor. DIY Sci
Xplor. Planet
Stem Cell
Success Success NASCAR NASCAR Racing Xfinity Series: LTi Printing 250. (N) (S Live)
Success Success Bones Charred hu-man remains.
No More Just for Laughs
MLB Baseball New York Yankees at New York Mets. (N) (CC)
IND 14 14 FWC Sto.- Frances and Friends (CC) Generation Jimmy Swaggart (CC) Living Waters Donnie Swaggart (CC) Message-Cross FWC Music Frances-Friends
ION 15 15LifeLock Paid
Prog.Paid Prog.
Paid Prog.
New Bis-sell
Weight Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU Law & Order: SVU
IND 18 18 Gospel Two By Adven Maralee Cowboy Ishine Scaly Wonder Scaly Gospel Re Gospel Osteen Jimmy Chris Bles Re Huch Jewish Harvest I am Woman Conference
ABC 22 22Good Morning America (N) ’
KATU News This Morning Saturday (N) (S Live) (CC)
Jack Hanna
Ocean Treks
Sea Res-cue
Wildlife Docs
Rock-Park
Vacation Wild Amer.
Improve Foot
Nightline (CC) World of X Games (N)
World of X Games Good Feet St.
Home-owner
KATU News
World News
NBC 26 262018 French Open Tennis Women’s Final. From Roland Garros Stadium in Paris. (N) (Live)
Voyager Wild-Vet Secrets Secrets Track & Field 150th Belmont Stakes From Belmont Park in Elmont, N.Y. (N) (S Live) (CC)
Grant’s Get-
Straight Talk
KGW News at 5 (N)
FOX 27 27Good Day Oregon Saturday (N) Grand
FloralGrand Floral Parade (N) Paid
Prog.Paid Prog.
Yard Paid Prog.
››› This Is Spinal Tap (1984) Rob Reiner, Michael McKean.
MLB Baseball New York Yankees at New York Mets. (N) (CC)
UNI 28 28 Pro Pro Pro Pro Planeta U (SS) Calimero Fútbol Fútbol International Friendly. (N) (Live) Pro Pro Pro Pro Nosotr. Nosotr. Renta Renta Vecinos Privi
A&E 52 52Facelift in Min.
Flipping Vegas ’ (CC)
Flipping Vegas ’ (CC)
Flipping Vegas “Reptile House”
Zombie House Flipping (CC)
Zombie House Flipping (CC)
Biography Carlo Gambino; Paul Castel-lano. ’ (CC)
Mobsters John Gotti. ’ (CC)
Live PD: Rewind ’ (CC)
Live PD “Live PD -- 06.01.18” Riding along with law enforcement. ’
AMC 67 67Stooges The Ri-
flemanThe Ri-fleman
The Ri-fleman
The Ri-fleman
The Ri-fleman
The Ri-fleman
The Ri-fleman
The Ri-fleman
›› Young Guns (1988, Western) Emilio Estevez, Kiefer Sutherland. (CC)
›› Die Another Day (2002, Action) Pierce Brosnan, Halle Berry, Toby Stephens. (CC)
››› Fury (2014, War) Brad Pitt, Shia LaBeouf, Logan Lerman. (CC)
APL 43 43 Dr. Jeff: RMV Dr. Jeff: RMV Dr. Jeff: RMV Dr. Jeff: RMV Dr. Jeff: RMV Dr. Jeff: RMV Dr. Jeff: RMV Dr. Jeff: RMV Dr. Jeff: RMV Dr. Jeff: RMV Dr. Jeff: RMV Dr. Jeff: RMV
BET 56 56 Showd.- Faith Prince Prince Martin Martin Martin Martin Payne Payne Payne Payne Browns Browns Meet the Browns Browns ›› Soul Plane (2004) Kevin Hart. The Fighting Temptations
BRAVO 66 66Southern Charm (CC)
Southern Charm (CC)
Below Deck Medi-terranean
Below Deck Medi-terranean
Below Deck Medi-terranean
Below Deck Medi-terranean
Southern Charm New Orleans
››› Superbad (2007, Comedy) Jonah Hill, Mi-chael Cera, Christopher Mintz-Plasse. (CC)
››› The 40-Year-Old Virgin (2005) Steve Carell, Catherine Keener, Paul Rudd. (CC)
CBUT 29 29 The True PJ Ollie Dot ’ Pablo Our Vancouver Rugby Sevens Track & Field Equestrian RBC Grand Prix. (N) Mercer 22 Min Murdoch Myst. Dragons’ Den ’
CMT 61 61 CMT Music (CC) CMT Music (CC) CMT Music (CC) Hot 20 Countdown (N) (CC) CMT Music Awards 2018 (CC) ›› Overboard (1987) Goldie Hawn. (CC) ›› Blue Crush
CNBC 46 46 Learn Paid ION Hal Bissell Phil Bennett LifeL MyPil Orman Burnett LifeL Bissell Skelton U2, The The Deed (CC) The Deed (CC) The Deed (CC) Undercover
CNN 44 44 Smerconish (N) CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom Smerconish CNN Newsroom Special Report
CNNH 45 45 Smerconish (N) CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom All News Updated hourly. CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom All News All News CNN Newsroom Special Report
COM 60 60Try Total Gym
MyPillow Scrubs (CC)
Scrubs (CC)
’70s Show
’70s Show
’70s Show
That ’70s Show Creepy teenager.
’70s Show
’70s Show
’70s Show
’70s Show
’70s Show
’70s Show
’70s Show
’70s Show
That ’70s Show “I’m Free” (CC)
› Vegas Vacation (1997) Chevy Chase, Beverly D’Angelo. (CC)
› Tam-my
DIS 41 41 Mickey Roads Roads Roads Gravity Gravity Big Big Lego DuckTales (CC) Duck Duck Duck Duck Bunk’d Bunk’d Bizaard Bizaard Stuck Stuck Raven Jessie Jessie
DSC 8 8Sticker Shock ’ (CC)
Fish Guyz
Chasin’ the Sun
Chasin’ the Sun
MLF All Angles
Dirty Jobs “Leech Trapper”
Dirty Jobs ’ (CC) Dirty Jobs ’ (CC) Dirty Jobs “Exotic Nanny” ’
Dirty Jobs ’ (CC) Dirty Jobs Mike travels to Maine.
Dirty Jobs “Cedar Log Peeler”
Expedition Un-known ’ (CC)
Expedition Un-known (CC)
E! 65 65Sex & the City
Sex & the City
Sex & the City
Sex & the City
Sex & the City
Sex & the City
Sex & the City
Sex & the City
Sex & the City
Sex & the City
Sex & the City
Sex & the City
Sex & the City
Sex & the City
Sex & the City
Sex & the City
Sex & the City
Sex & the City
Sex & the City
Sex & the City
Sex & the City
Sex & the City
Sex & the City
Sex & the City
ESPN 32 32SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC)
SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC)
SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC)
College Baseball NCAA Tournament -- Auburn vs Florida. Super Regional, Game 1. (N) (Live)
Soccer France vs United States. (N) (Live) (CC)
MLS Soccer New York Red Bulls at Columbus Crew SC. (N) (Live)
College Track & Field
ESPN2 33 33 Boxing In the Ring F1 Racing College Baseball: Tar Heels vs Hatters College Baseball: Golden Eagles vs Longhorns SportC College Baseball
FNC 48 48 FOX & Friends Cavuto Live (N) (Live) (CC) America’s News Headquarters (N) News HQ Journal Editorial News HQ America’s News Headquarters (N) Fox Report (N) Watters’ World
FOOD 35 35 Paid Paid Guy’s Brunch Giada Con Trisha’s Trisha’s Pioneer Pioneer The Kitchen (N) The Kitchen Best Baker Masters Dallas Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners Diners
FREE 39 39 MyPil PiYo › The Smurfs (2011) Hank Azaria. ›› The Sorcerer’s Apprentice ’ ››› The Incredible Hulk (2008) ’ (CC) Cloak & Dagger Cloak & Dagger ››› Hercules (1997) ’ (CC) Wreck
FX 53 53Try Total Gym
Paid Prog.
How I Met
How I Met
How I Met
How I Met
How I Met
›› Battleship (2012) Taylor Kitsch. Earth comes under at-tack from a superior alien force. ’ (CC)
››› Everest (2015, Adventure) Jason Clarke, Josh Brolin, John Hawkes. ’ (CC)
››› Spy (2015, Comedy) Melissa McCarthy, Jason Statham, Rose Byrne. ’ (CC)
›› The Heat ’
GOLF 70 70 European PGA Golf Golf Central Pregame (N) PGA Golf Golf LPGA Golf PGA Web.com PGA Champions
HALL 19 19I Love Lucy
I Love Lucy
June in January (2014) Brooke D’Orsay, Wes Brown. (CC)
The Wedding March (2016) Jack Wag-ner, Josie Bissett. (CC)
›› Elevator Girl (2010) Lacey Chabert, Ryan Merriman. (CC)
Moonlight in Vermont (2017) Lacey Chabert, Carlo Marks. (CC)
Stop the Wedding (2016) Rachel Bos-ton, Niall Matter. (CC)
Marrying Mr. Darcy (2018)
HGTV 68 68 Paid LifeL Property Bro Property Bro Property Bro Hidden Hidden Property Bro Property Bro Flip or Flip or Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters Hunters
HIST 37 37 Coin Credit? Swamp People Swamp People Swamp People Swamp People TBA ››› Casino (1995) Robert De Niro, Sharon Stone, Joe Pesci. ’ (CC) Amer. Pickers Amer. Pickers
LIFE 51 51 Paid Age Balding Dr. Ho Credit? Hair Philips Paid LifeL Paid Killer Coach (2016) (CC) Pregnant at 17 (2016) Damaged (2014) Chris Klein. (CC) A Neighbor’s Deception (2017)
MSNBC 47 47 MSNBC Live AM Joy (N) (CC) MSNBC Live MSNBC Live MSNBC Live MSNBC Live MSNBC Live (N) MSNBC Live (N) All In With Chris Rachel Maddow The Last Word
MTV 63 63 Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Ridic. Jersey Shore Jersey Shore Jersey Shore Teen Mom 2 Teen Mom 2 Teen Mom 2 ’ Teen Mom 2 ’ ››› Friends With Benefits (2011) ’ (CC)
NBCS 34 34 Mecum Auto Auctions Classic car auction from Denver, Colo. Mecum Auto Auctions (N) Belmont Stakes Prep (N) (Live) Auto Auctions Motorcycle Race Ra Inside IndyCar IndyCar IndyCar
NICK 40 40 Gold Gold Loud Loud ›› Happy Feet Two (2011) ’ (CC) Spong Spong Spong Spong Rang Spong Spong Spong Spong Spong Spong Spong Loud Loud Loud Loud
OXY 50 50 Snapped (CC) Snapped (CC) The Case of: Caylee Anthony (CC) The Case of: Caylee Anthony (CC) Caylee Anthony The Backyard Wed & Murder Snapped (CC) Snapped (CC) Snapped (CC)
PARMT 57 57Paid Prog.
Airfryer Oven
Paid Prog.
Weight Larry K Try Total Gym
›››› Rocky (1976) Sylvester Stallone. A heavyweight champ gives a club fighter a title shot. ’ (CC)
››› Rocky III (1982, Drama) Sylvester Stallone, Mr. T, Talia Shire. ’ (CC)
›› Rocky IV (1985, Drama) Sylvester Stallone, Talia Shire. ’ (CC)
››› Remember the Titans (2000) ’ (CC)
ROOT 31 31 Air Paid Tai WORX Tummy Easy Yard Yard Arthri-D Credit? Bensin Frontier Mari Pre MLB Baseball Seattle Mariners at Tampa Bay Rays. Mari Undeniable MLR
SYFY 59 59 LifeL LifeL Credit? LifeL Face Off (CC) Flight 7500 (2013) Ryan Kwanten. ›› Resident Evil (2002) (CC) ›› Resident Evil: Apocalypse (CC) ›› Resident Evil: Extinction (2007) Cabin-Woods
TBN 20 20 RocK Auto Osteen Prince Veggie Hop Mon Goliath Ishine Inspir. Kroeze Don- Holt Ancient Turning Point ’ Graham Stage Memories In Touch Huckabee (N)
TBS 55 55Married ... With
›› Jack the Giant Slayer (2013, Fantasy) Nicho-las Hoult, Eleanor Tomlinson. (CC) (DVS)
››› Transformers (2007, Action) Shia LaBeouf. Two races of robots wage war on Earth. (CC) (DVS)
››› The Jungle Book (2016, Chil-dren’s) Neel Sethi. (CC) (DVS)
Joker’s Wild
Friends (CC)
Friends (CC)
Friends (CC)
Friends (CC)
Friends (CC)
Friends (CC)
Friends (CC)
TLC 38 38 Say Say Say Say Say Say Say Say Say Say Say Say Say Say Say Say Say Say Say Say Say Yes Say Yes: ATL
TNT 54 54Law & Order “Jus-tice” ’
Law & Order “Marathon” ’
Law & Order “Refuge”
Law & Order “Refuge”
›› The Forbidden Kingdom (2008, Action) Jackie Chan, Jet Li. (CC)
››› Batman Begins (2005, Action) Christian Bale. Bruce Wayne becomes Gotham City’s Dark Knight.
››› The Dark Knight Rises (2012, Action) Christian Bale. Batman faces a masked villain named Bane.
TOON 42 42 Apple Apple Gum Gum Teen Teen Teen Teen Teen Teen Teen Teen Ben 10 OK KO Gum Gum Unikitty Unikitty Unikitty Gum Power Gum Titans Titans
TRAV 36 36 WORX Philips Mysteries at Mysteries at Mysteries at Mysteries at Expedition Un. Food Food Food Food Food Paradise Food Paradise Food Paradise Food Paradise
TRUTV 49 49 Knock Knock Knock Knock Funni Funni Funni Funni Funni Funni Funni Funni Jokers Jokers Jokers Jokers Jokers Jokers Knock Knock Jokers Jokers Jokers Jokers
USA 58 58NCIS: Los Ange-les (CC) (DVS)
Try Total Gym
MyPillow Paid Prog.
Makeup! Chrisley Chicago P.D. ’ (CC) (DVS)
Chicago P.D. “A War Zone” ’
Chicago P.D. “Some Friend”
NCIS Posthumous accusation.
NCIS Biohazard isolation. ’
NCIS “Twilight” ’ (CC) (DVS)
NCIS The bodies of two assassins.
NCIS “Probie” ’ (CC) (DVS)
VH1 62 62 Cheater Cheater Cheater Cheater Cheater Cheater Cheater Cheater Cheater Cheater Cheater Cheater ››› Men in Black (1997) Tommy Lee Jones. ›› Men in Black II (2002, Action) ’ (CC) How Stella Got
Movies Sports Kids Bets
Movies Sports Kids Bets
Life 10 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, June 7, 2018LIFE
SATURDAY EVENING June 9, 2018
CEN CHE 6 PM 6:30 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30
ABC 4 4KOMO 4 News Saturday 6:00pm (N) (Live) (CC)
Wheel of Fortune ’ (CC)
Jeopardy! ’ (CC) The Crossing Sophie has information about Reece. (N) ’ (CC)
The Crossing Jude and Nestor’s un-likely ally. (N) (CC)
20/20 A rape accusation divides a town. ’ (CC)
KOMO 4 News 11:00pm
Ring of Honor Wrestling (CC)
NBC 5 5KING 5 News at 6 (N) (CC)
KING 5 News at 6:30 (N) (CC)
Paid Program Paid Program Taken “Carapace” Bryan must protect his cousin. (N) ’ (CC)
Dateline NBC (N) ’ (CC) KING 5 News at 11 (N) (CC)
Saturday Night Live ’ (CC)
IND 6 6 MyDestination.TV Great Escapes Stem Cell Age Spots American Ninja Warrior ’ (CC) American Ninja Warrior ’ (CC) News Sheriffs Sheriffs Imp. Jokers
CBS 7 7CBS Weekend News (N) (CC)
KIRO 7 News at 6:30PM (N) (CC)
Entertainment Tonight (N) ’ (CC) Ransom “Hardline” A prime minister’s child is kidnapped. (N) ’ (CC)
48 Hours ’ (CC) 48 Hours ’ (CC) KIRO 7 News at 11PM (N) (CC)
Scandal “Wild Card” ’ (CC)
PBS 9 9PBS NewsHour Weekend (N) ’
BBC Newsnight (N)
Joe Bonamassa -- British Blues Explosion Live Guitarist Joe Bonamassa performs. ’ (CC)
Celtic Thunder X Celtic Thunder celebrates 10 years. ’ (CC) Celtic Gold: An Irish Song & Dance Journey Celebrating Irish music, song and dance. ’ (CC)
MNT 10 10Modern Family “Little Bo Bleep”
Sounders FC Pre-Match Show
MLS Soccer D.C. United at Seattle Sounders FC. From CenturyLink Field in Seattle. (N) (Live)
Sounders FC Post-Match Show
Washington’s Most Wanted (N)
Bones Angela hides details of her preg-nancy. ’ (CC)
The X-Files “Three of a Kind” The Lone Gunmen trick Scully. ’ (CC)
CW 11 11Family Feud ’ (CC)
Family Feud ’ (CC)
2 Broke Girls ’ (CC)
2 Broke Girls ’ (CC)
Rizzoli & Isles “Living Proof” Jane and Maura discover a murder. (CC)
Major Crimes “Do Not Disturb” Rusty contemplates sharing a secret.
CSI: Miami Eric Delko returns as an expert witness. ’ (CC)
Band in Seattle Family Guy “Tea Peter” ’ (CC)
PBS 12 12Perry Como Clas-sics: Till the End
Doo Wop Generations (My Music) Original Doo Wop performers reunite. ’ (CC) Fleetwood Mac: The Dance Rock group reunites. ’ (CC) Doctor Who “The Time Monster”
Doctor Who “The Time Monster”
FOX 13 13MLB Baseball New York Yankees at New York Mets. (N) (S Live) (CC)
The Big Bang Theory ’ (CC)
The Big Bang Theory ’ (CC)
Two and a Half Men ’ (CC)
Two and a Half Men ’ (CC)
The Big Bang Theory ’ (CC)
The Big Bang Theory ’ (CC)
Q13 NEWS AT 10 (N) (CC)
Washington’s Most Wanted
Love Connection “Kirstie & Joe” ’ (CC) (DVS)
IND 14 14 Frances and Friends (CC) Family Worship Center Service (CC) Crossfire Service (CC) Jimmy Swaggart (CC)
ION 15 15Law & Order: Special Victims Unit A polygamist’s wife is murdered. (CC)
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit A wealthy teen is found murdered. ’
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit A woman’s body is found in a park. ’
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit “Unorthodox” ’ (CC)
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit A sperm bank is robbed of embryos.
Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Crooked prison guard suspected. ’
IND 18 18 Kenneth W. Sekulow In Touch With Dr. Charles Stanley Manna Fest Love Israel Jentezen Healing Soul I am Woman Conference Saving the World Way Of Master
ABC 22 22KATU News at 6 (N) (S Live) (CC)
Improve Foot Health
Jeopardy! ’ (CC) Wheel of Fortune ’ (CC)
The Crossing Sophie has information about Reece. (N) ’ (CC)
The Crossing Jude and Nestor’s un-likely ally. (N) (CC)
20/20 A rape accusation divides a town. ’ (CC)
KATU News at 11 (N) (S Live) (CC)
Ring of Honor Wrestling (CC)
NBC 26 26Straight Talk Naturally, Danny
Seo (CC) (DVS)The Champion Within ’ (EI)
Health & Happi-ness With Mayo
Taken “Carapace” Bryan must protect his cousin. (N) ’ (CC)
Dateline NBC (N) ’ (CC) KGW News at 11 (N)
Saturday Night Live ’ (CC)
UNI 30 30 María de Todos Noticiero Univi Como Dice el Dicho (SS) Premios TV y Novelas 2018 La trigésima sexta entrega de los premios TV y Novelas. María de Todos Noticiero Univi
FOX 27 27MLB Baseball New York Yankees at New York Mets. (N) (S Live) (CC)
Graham Bensinger The James Brown Show ’
Grand Floral Parade 10 O’Clock News (N) Love Connection “Kirstie & Joe” ’ (CC) (DVS)
A&E 52 52Live PD “Live PD -- 06.01.18” Riding along with law enforcement. ’ (CC)
Live PD: Rewind “Live PD: Rewind No. 118” (N) ’ (CC)
Live PD “Live PD -- 06.09.18” Riding along with law enforcement. (N) (S Live) (CC)
Gotti: Godfather & Son “Kid Christmas; A Made Man” (Series Premiere) John Gotti Jr.’s childhood and youth. (N) ’ (Part 1 of 2) (CC)
AMC 67 67››› Fury (2014, War) Brad Pitt, Shia LaBeouf, Logan Lerman. (CC)
››› Tombstone (1993, Western) Kurt Russell, Val Kilmer, Michael Biehn. Doc Holliday joins Wyatt Earp for the OK Corral showdown. (CC)
››› Tombstone (1993, Western) Kurt Russell, Val Kilmer, Michael Biehn. Doc Holliday joins Wyatt Earp for the OK Corral showdown. (CC)
APL 43 43 Dr. Jeff: Rocky Mountain Vet (CC) Dr. Jeff: Extra Dose (N) (CC) Dr. Jeff: Rocky Mountain Vet (N) Dodo Heroes (N) (CC) Vet Gone Wild “Sneak Peek” (N) ’ Dr. Jeff: Rocky Mountain Vet (CC)
BET 56 56 ›› The Fighting Temptations (2003, Comedy) Cuba Gooding Jr.. (CC) ›› Lottery Ticket (2010, Comedy) Bow Wow. A young man wins a multimillion-dollar prize. ›› Madea’s Witness Protection (2012) Tyler Perry.
BRAVO 66 66››› The 40-Year-Old Virgin (2005)
››› Superbad (2007, Comedy) Jonah Hill, Michael Cera, Christopher Mintz-Plasse. Co-dependent teens hope to score booze and babes at a party. (CC)
›› Talladega Nights (2006, Comedy) Will Ferrell, John C. Reilly, Sacha Baron Cohen. A NASCAR driver has a new rival. (CC)
›› Talladega Nights (2006, Comedy) Will Ferrell, John C. Reilly. (CC)
CBUT 29 29 CBC News marketplace ’ The Nature of Things (CC) (DVS) Still Standing ’ Still Standing ’ Just for Laughs ’ (CC) Laughs: Gags CBC News The Bang Bang Club (2010) ’ (CC)
CMT 61 61 ›› Blue Crush (2002, Drama) Kate Bosworth. (CC) ›› Overboard (1987) Goldie Hawn. An amnesiac millionairess is duped by a cunning carpenter. ›› Blue Crush (2002, Drama) Kate Bosworth, Matthew Davis. (CC)
CNBC 46 46 Undercover Boss “Shoppers World” Undercover Boss “Frontier Airlines” Undercover Boss “Hooters” (CC) Undercover Boss (CC) Undercover Boss “Shoppers World” Paid Program Organic
CNN 44 44 Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown
CNNH 45 45 Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown All News Updated hourly. All News Updated hourly. Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown Anthony Bourdain: Parts Unknown
COM 60 60› Tammy (2014, Comedy) Melissa McCarthy, Susan Sarandon, Kathy Bates. A woman hits the road with her feisty grandmother. (CC)
› Joe Dirt (2001, Comedy) David Spade, Dennis Miller, Brittany Daniel. A mullet-headed janitor relates his personal tale of woe. (CC)
›› Step Brothers (2008, Comedy) Will Ferrell, John C. Reilly, Richard Jenkins. Two spoiled men become rivals when their parents marry. (CC)
DIS 41 41 Bunk’d ’ (CC) Bunk’d ’ (CC) ››› Big Hero 6 (2014) Voices of Ryan Potter. ’ (CC) Big Hero 6 Big Hero 6 Bunk’d (CC) Bunk’d ’ (CC) Jessie (CC) Jessie (CC) Andi Mack (CC)
DSC 8 8Expedition Unknown The secrets of Nefertiti and Cleopatra. (CC)
Expedition Unknown Treasure from a fleet of Spanish ships. ’ (CC)
Expedition Unknown Josh treks to an ancient Mayan city. (CC)
Expedition Unknown The lost Mayan city of El Mirador. (CC)
Expedition Unknown Josh traces the Vikings’ movements. ’ (CC)
Expedition Unknown Legendary ex-plorer Harold Lasseter. ’ (CC)
E! 65 65Sex and the City “Frenemies” ’
Sex and the City ’ (CC)
Sex and the City ’ (CC)
Sex and the City ’ (CC)
Sex and the City “The Real Me”
Sex and the City ’ (CC)
Sex and the City ’ (CC)
Sex and the City “Ghost Town” ’
Sex and the City ’ (CC)
Sex and the City ’ (CC)
Sex and the City ’ (CC)
Sex and the City ’ (CC)
ESPN 32 32College Track & Field
College Baseball NCAA Tournament -- Vanderbilt vs Mississippi State. Super Regional, Game 2. (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC)
SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC) SportsCenter (N) (Live) (CC)
ESPN2 33 33 College Baseball College Baseball NCAA Tournament -- Oregon State vs Minnesota. Super Regional, Game 2. (N) (Live) GLORY 54 Birmingham (Taped) Cornhole Cham
FNC 48 48 Justice With Judge Jeanine (N) The Greg Gutfeld Show (N) (CC) Watters’ World (CC) Justice With Judge Jeanine (CC) The Greg Gutfeld Show (CC)
FOOD 35 35 Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive Diners, Drive
FREE 39 39 ››› Wreck-It Ralph (2012, Children’s) Voices of John C. Reilly. ’ (CC) ››› The Incredibles (2004, Children’s) Voices of Craig T. Nelson, Holly Hunter. ’ (CC) ››› The LEGO Movie (2014) Voices of Chris Pratt. (CC)
FX 53 53›› The Heat (2013, Comedy) Sandra Bullock, Melissa McCarthy. A federal agent and a Boston cop go after a drug lord. ’ (CC)
››› The Martian (2015, Science Fiction) Matt Damon, Jessica Chastain, Kristen Wiig. A stranded astronaut tries to sur-vive on Mars. ’ (CC)
Pose “Pilot” Damon aspires to join a dance company. ’ (CC)
GOLF 70 70 Golf Central (N) (Live) (CC) PGA Tour Golf FedEx St. Jude Classic, Third Round. (CC) PGA Champions
HALL 19 19Marrying Mr. Darcy (2018, Romance) Cindy Busby, Ryan Paevey. (CC)
The Perfect Bride (2017, Romance) Pascale Hutton, Kavan Smith, Leanne Lapp. A fitness instructor starts to fall for a client’s fiance. (CC)
The Perfect Bride: Wedding Bells (2018) Pascale Hutton. Premiere. Nick and Molly have six weeks to plan the wedding of their dreams. (CC)
The Golden Girls “The Auction” ’
The Golden Girls “Blind Date” ’
HGTV 68 68 Fixer Upper (CC) Fixer Upper Fixer Upper Fixer Upper Renovating a ranch. Fixer Upper (CC) House Hunters Renovation (N) (CC) Mountain Life (N) Mountain Life (N)
HIST 37 37 American Pickers “Picker’s Code” American Pickers ’ (CC) (DVS) American Pickers: Bonus Buys “Midwest Picking” A Model-A tow truck; bubbletop cars. ’ (CC) American Pickers “Let’s Be Frank”
LIFE 51 51 Girl Followed (2017, Suspense) Emma Fuhrmann, Joey Lawrence. (CC) A Daughter’s Revenge (2018) Jessica Sipos, Linden Ashby. Premiere. (CC) Psycho Brother-In-Law (2018) Brittany Falardeau, Zach Gold. (CC)
MSNBC 47 47 The 11th Hour With Brian Williams Deadline: White House (CC) Hardball With Chris Matthews (CC) The Beat With Ari Melber (CC) Dateline Extra “Lost and Found” Dateline “Down the Back Staircase”
MTV 63 63 ››› Easy A (2010, Comedy) Emma Stone, Penn Badgley. ’ (CC) ›› Bad Teacher (2011, Comedy) Cameron Diaz, Justin Timberlake. ’ (CC) ›› White Chicks (2004, Comedy) Shawn Wayans, Marlon Wayans. ’ (CC)
NBCS 34 34 IndyCar Racing DXC Technology 600. (N) (Live) IndyCar Series Inside IndyCar Swimming TYR Pro Swim Series: Day 2. Diving FINA Diving World Cup. Cycling
NICK 40 40 The Loud House The Loud House The Thundermans ’ (CC) Nicky, Ricky Knight Squad (N) Star Falls (N) ’ Full House (CC) Full House (CC) Full House (CC) Friends ’ (CC) Friends ’ (CC)
OXY 50 50 Snapped “Martha Farmer” (CC) Snapped “Amy Van Wagner” (CC) Snapped “Karen Sanchez” (CC) Snapped “Dee Eggert” (CC) Snapped “Eugenia Campbell” (CC) A Wedding and a Murder (CC)
PARMT 57 57››› Remember the Titans (2000, Drama) Denzel Washington. ’ (CC)
››› Creed (2015, Drama) Michael B. Jordan, Sylvester Stallone, Tessa Thompson. Rocky Balboa mentors Apollo Creed’s son. ’ (CC)
›››› Rocky (1976, Drama) Sylvester Stallone, Talia Shire, Burgess Meredith. A heavyweight champ gives a club fighter a title shot. ’ (CC)
ROOT 31 31 Major League Rugby: Seawolves at Elite MLS Soccer Sporting Kansas City at Portland Timbers. (N) (Live) Timbers Post MLB Baseball Seattle Mariners at Tampa Bay Rays.
SYFY 59 59 ››› The Cabin in the Woods (2011) Lake Placid vs. Anaconda (2015) Robert Englund, Yancy Butler. (CC) Lake Placid: Legacy (2018, Horror) Katherine Barrell, Tim Rozon. (CC) Futurama (CC) Futurama (CC)
TBN 20 20 Somebody’s Hour of Power ’ (CC) Pathway Victory Huckabee (CC) Somebody’s Rem the Music › Behind the Mask (1999) (CC) The Stranger Not being “perfect.”
TBS 55 55Seinfeld “The Keys” ’ (CC)
Seinfeld “The Trip” (CC)
Seinfeld “The Trip” (CC)
Seinfeld “The Pitch” (CC)
Seinfeld “The Ticket” (CC)
Seinfeld “The Bubble Boy” ’
The Big Bang Theory ’
The Big Bang Theory ’
The Big Bang Theory ’
The Big Bang Theory ’
Full Frontal With Samantha Bee
The Last O.G. “Clemenza”
TLC 38 38 I Want THAT Wedding (N) Linda and Drew Say I Do Say Yes to the Dress: Atlanta ’ I Want THAT Wedding ’ Linda and Drew Say I Do Say Yes to the Dress: Atlanta ’
TNT 54 54››› The Dark Knight Rises (2012, Action) Christian Bale. (CC) (DVS)
›› Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice (2016, Action) Ben Affleck, Henry Cavill, Amy Adams. Batman embarks on a personal vendetta against Superman. (CC) (DVS)
›› Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice (2016) Ben Affleck, Henry Cavill. Batman embarks on a personal vendetta against Superman. (CC) (DVS)
TOON 42 42 › Ben 10: Race Against Time (2007) Graham Phillips. Teen Titans Go! Cleveland Show Family Guy (CC) Rick and Morty Rick and Morty Family Guy (CC) Dragon Ball Dragon Ball Z Kai My Hero Ac...
TRAV 36 36 Ghost Adventures “Fear Factory” Ghost Adventures (CC) Ghost Adventures “Wolf Creek Inn” Ghost Adventures (N) (CC) Ghost Adventures (CC) Ghost Adventures “Manresa Castle”
TRUTV 49 49 Imp. Jokers Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Inside Carbonaro Carbonaro Eff. Carbonaro Eff. Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers Imp. Jokers
USA 58 58NCIS “Untouchable” The team probes a cryptographer’s death. ’
NCIS “Sharif Returns” A terrorist with a chemical weapon. ’
NCIS “Heartland” ’ (CC) (DVS)
NCIS “Truth or Consequences” The team tries to replace Ziva. ’
NCIS “Squall” ’ (CC) (DVS)
NCIS “Rogue” The team investigates a car explosion. ’ (CC) (DVS)
NCIS “Willoughby” An undercover op-eration is compromised. ’
VH1 62 62 ›› How Stella Got Her Groove Back (1998) Angela Bassett. ’ (CC) ›› Think Like a Man (2012) Michael Ealy. Men use an advice book to turn the tables on their gals. ’ (CC) ›› Diary of a Mad Black Woman ’
WEEKDAY DAYTIMECEN CHE 6 AM 6:30 7 AM 7:30 8 AM 8:30 9 AM 9:30 10 AM 10:30 11 AM 11:30 12 PM 12:30 1 PM 1:30 2 PM 2:30 3 PM 3:30 4 PM 4:30 5 PM 5:30
ABC 4 4 KOMO 4 News Good Morning America Kelly and Ryan The View KOMO 4 News The Chew General Hospital Harry Seattle News KOMO 4 News News ABC
NBC 5 5 News Today Megyn Kelly Today-Kathie New Day NW KING 5 News Days of our Lives Dr. Phil Ellen DeGeneres Take 5 KING 5 News
IND 6 6 Extra Inside KING 5 Morning News on KONG The 700 Club Foren Foren Killer Crimes Joyce Evening News The Dr. Oz Show New Day NW The List Blast Rachael Ray
CBS 7 7 KIRO News CBS This Morning Make a Deal Price Is Right Young/Restless News Minute The Talk Bold Million. Steve Judge Judge News News
PBS 9 9 Wild Wild Ready Cat in Nature Curious Pink Tiger Tiger Splash Sesame Super Dino Peg Sesame Splash Curious Pink Varied Programs News Busi
MNT 10 10 Den The Varied Pawn Jerry Springer Maury Judge Judge Divorce Hatchett Judge Judge Judge Mathis Cops Cops Last Last Rules Rules Gold Gold
CW 11 11 Wom Robison Varied Paid Paid Funny Mike King Broke Mike King Broke Patern Court Robert Irvine Patern Court Hot Hot Fam Fam People’s Court
PBS 12 12 Members’ Choice KBTC Members’ Choice Be Fit KBTC Members’ Choice Sesame Tiger Pink Curious Dino Super Cat in Peg Clifford Nature Wild Arthur Ready Odd
FOX 13 13 Q13 NEWS TH Q13 NEWS TH Q13 NEWS TH Q13 NEWS TH Wendy Varied Maury Steve Wilkos Varied Programs Crime Watch Daily Daily Q13 Varied Q13 NEWS AT 5
IND 14 14 FWC Insight Frances and Friends FWC Swagg’t Varied Programs Living Waters Varied Programs Insight Swagg’t Varied Programs
ION 15 15 Varied Les Lever Varied Lever Varied Lever Varied Lever Varied Programs
IND 18 18 Varied Today Cope Creflo Varied Joyce Marcus and Joni Varied Programs Super Today Prince Keesee Varied Bill Win Love- Reflec Varied Reflec Varied J. Ha Wom Joni:
ABC 22 22 KATU News Good Morning America AM Northwest The View Kelly and Ryan The Chew General Hospital Million. Million. Afternoon Live KATU News First News ABC
NBC 26 26 KGW News Today Megyn Kelly Today-Kathie Blast Blast News Paid Days of our Lives Portland Today Ellen DeGeneres KGW News at 4 News News
FOX 27 27 Day Oregon News Varied Programs Good Day Or. 700 Varied Rachael Varied 12 O’Clock News Varied Programs The Dr. Oz Show People’s Court Judge Judge 5 O’Clock News
UNI 28 28 Dice el Dicho ¡Despierta América! Corazón que Notici Vecinos Rosa Guadalupe La bella Simplemente Ma Gordo Flac Primer Impacto
A&E 52 52 Paid Paid Parking Parking Dog Dog Dog Varied Dog Varied Programs
AMC 67 67
M Cue Va Tai Paid Paid Paid LifeL Dietland Plum makes risky choices. ›› How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days 2003 ›› Anger Management 2003 Adam Sandler. ››› The Goonies 1985 (CC)
Tu Philips! Tummy Paid Paid Tai LifeL Stooges (:25) ›› Anger Management 2003 (CC) (11:55) ››› Twins 1988, Danny DeVito (CC) (:25) ››› My Cousin Vinny 1992 Joe Pesci. Fantastic Four
W P. Po Cue Va Paid Paid Paid Paid ›› Street Kings 2008 (:20) › Runner Runner 2013 (CC) (:20) ››› Tomorrow Never Dies 1997 (CC) (2:55) ›› Fantastic Four 2005, Action (CC) Run All
Th Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid Stooges (:45) ››› Tomorrow Never Dies 1997 (CC) (:15) ›› Run All Night 2015 Liam Neeson. (CC) (2:50) ››› The Lincoln Lawyer 2011 (CC) Twister
F Philips! Paid Paid Paid Paid Paid ›› The Lake House 2006 (CC) ›››› When Harry Met Sally (CC) ›› The Blue Lagoon 1980 Brooke Shields. ›››› Jaws 1975 Roy Scheider. (CC)
APL 43 43 Raised Varied My Cat From Hell Too Cute! Buying Buying Dr. Dee: Alaska Hope for Wildlife Animal Cops Animal Cops Pit Bulls-Parole Pit Bulls-Parole Lone Star Law North Woods
BET 56 56 Sh.- Varied Foxx Foxx Browns Browns Payne Payne Payne Varied Prince Prince Prince Prince Payne Payne Browns Browns Browns Browns Movie Varied Programs
BRAVO 66 66
M Housewives Your Husband Your Husband Your Husband Your Husband OC Watch Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Housewives/OC Housewives/OC
Tu OC Million Dollar Million Dollar Million Dollar Million Dollar Million Dollar Million Dollar Million Dollar Million Dollar Million Dollar Million Dollar Million Dollar Million
W Million Dollar Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC Housewives/NYC
Th OC Guide-Divorce Guide-Divorce Guide-Divorce Guide-Divorce Guide-Divorce Guide-Divorce OC Southern Charm Southern Charm Southern Charm Southern Charm Southern Charm
F Million Dollar Million Dollar Million Dollar Million Dollar Million Dollar Million Dollar Million Dollar Million Dollar Million Dollar (:03) The Deed (:05) ›› The Dilemma 2011 (CC)
CBUT 29 29 The Early Edition Napkin Beat Varied The Tiger Pablo Chirp Super Dragons’ Den CBC News Murdoch Myst. The Goods Cor Varied Vet Vet Varied Programs
CMT 61 61 CMT Music CMT Music CMT Music Pickler & Ben House House House Reba Reba Reba Reba Home Varied Home Home Home Home Home Last Last
CNBC 46 46 Squawk on the Street Squawk Alley Fast Money Power Lunch Closing Bell Fast Varied Mad Money Shark Tank Shark Tank
CNN 44 44 CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom At This Hour With Inside Politics Wolf CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom Jake Tapper Situation Room Situation Room E. B. OutFront Anderson Cooper
CNNH 45 45 CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom At This Hour With All News CNN Newsroom CNN Newsroom Jake Tapper All News All News E. B. OutFront Anderson Cooper
COM 60 60 Varied Programs Scrubs Scrubs Scrubs Scrubs Fturama Fturama Fturama Fturama Fturama ’70s ’70s Varied ’70s ’70s ’70s ’70s ’70s ’70s Office Office Office Varied
DIS 41 41 Roads Muppet Puppy Vampi Jessie Jessie Bunk’d Duck Raven Stuck Bunk’d Bunk’d Jessie Jessie Bizaard Bizaard Stuck Stuck Bunk’d Bunk’d Duck Jessie Jessie Bizaard
DSC 8 8 Varied Programs
E! 65 65
M Sex-City Sex-City Sex-City Sex-City Sex and the City ›› Sex and the City 2 2010 Sarah Jessica Parker. E! News: Daily The Kardashians The Kardashians The Kardashians The Kardashians The Kardashians
Tu Total Bellas (CC) Total Bellas (CC) Total Bellas (CC) Total Bellas (CC) Total Bellas (CC) Total Bellas (CC) E! News: Daily The Kardashians The Kardashians The Kardashians The Kardashians The Kardashians
W The Kardashians The Kardashians The Kardashians The Kardashians The Kardashians The Kardashians E! News: Daily Botched (CC) Botched (CC) Botched (CC) Botched (CC) Botched (CC)
Th Botched (CC) Botched (CC) Botched (CC) Botched (CC) Botched (CC) Botched (CC) E! News: Daily The Kardashians The Kardashians The Kardashians The Kardashians The Kardashians
F Sex-City Sex-City Sex-City Sex-City Sex-City Sex-City Sex-City Sex-City Sex-City Sex-City Sex-City Sex-City E! News: Daily Total Bellas (CC) ››› The 40-Year-Old Virgin 2005 (CC) ››› Meet the Parents
ESPN 32 32
M (4:00) Get Up (N) First Take (N) (S Live) (CC) High Noon (N) Outside NFL Live (N) (Live) (CC) NBA: The Jump (N) (CC) Ques Around Pardon SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) NBA Base
Tu (4:00) Get Up (N) First Take (N) (S Live) (CC) High Noon (N) Outside NFL Live (N) (Live) (CC) NBA: The Jump Nation Ques Around Pardon SportsCenter (N) SportCtr MLB Baseball
W (4:00) Get Up (N) First Take (N) (S Live) (CC) High Noon (N) Outside NFL Live (N) (Live) (CC) NBA: The Jump Nation Ques Around Pardon SportsCenter (N) MLB Baseball: Nationals at Yankees
Th (4:00) Get Up (N) First Take (N) (S Live) (CC) High Noon (N) Outside NFL Live (N) (Live) (CC) NBA: The Jump (N) (CC) Ques Around Pardon SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) NBA Boxing
F (4:00) Get Up (N) First Take (N) (S Live) (CC) High Noon (N) Outside NFL Live (N) (Live) (CC) NBA: The Jump Nation Ques Around Pardon SportsCenter (N) SportsCenter (N) Prospect to Pro
ESPN2 33 33
M SportsCenter (N) Get Up (CC) College Baseball: Golden Eagles vs Longhorns College Baseball: Blue Devils vs Red Raiders College Baseball
Tu SportsCenter (N) Get Up (CC) First Take (S) (CC) Jalen Outside Intentional Talk NFL Live (CC) Around Pardon Women’s Soccer
W SportsCenter (N) Get Up (CC) First Take (S) (CC) Jalen Outside Intentional Talk NFL Live (CC) Around Pardon WNBA Basketball: Mystics at Sun
Th SportsCenter (N) Get Up (CC) First Take (CC) SportsCenter (N) Jalen Outside Intentional Talk NFL Live (CC) Around Pardon NFL Live (CC) Sports. Football
F SportsCenter (N) Get Up (CC) First Take (S) (CC) Jalen Outside Intentional Talk SportsCenter (N) Ques Around Pardon NFL Live (CC)
FNC 48 48 America’s Newsroom Outnumbered Overtime Daily Briefing Shepard Smith Neil Cavuto The Five Special Report The Story Tucker Carlson
FOOD 35 35 Varied Paid Paid Paid Varied Paid Paid Pioneer Varied Programs Pioneer Pioneer Varied Programs
FREE 39 39 Joyce Varied Nanny Nanny Nanny Nanny Nanny 700 The 700 Club Reba Reba Reba Reba Middle Middle Middle Middle Middle Middle Varied Programs
FX 53 53 Paid Paid Movie Varied Programs Mother Mother Mother Mike Mike Mike Varied Programs
GOLF 70 70 U.S. Varied Programs U.S. Varied Programs
HALL 19 19 Lucy Lucy Lucy Lucy Golden Golden Golden Golden Home & Family Home & Family Movie Movie
HGTV 68 68 Paid Varied Programs Fixer Upper Varied Programs
HIST 37 37
M Paid Learn Decoding Past Pickers Pickers American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers
Tu More Philips Modern Marvels Ku Klux Klan: A Secret History (CC) Holy Grail in America (S) (CC) Leonardo Da Vinci’s Book The Lost Pyramid (S) (CC) Forged in Fire Forged in Fire
W Philips! Innova The Universe (S) Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn Pawn
Th Paid Credit? Wild West Tech Alone (S) Big Rig Bounty Big Rig Bounty Big Rig Bounty Big Rig Bounty Big Rig Bounty American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers American Pickers
F Paid Philips America America America America America Ancient Aliens Ancient Aliens Ancient Aliens Ancient Aliens Ancient Aliens Ancient Aliens
LIFE 51 51 Paid Robison Joyce Varied Mysteries Mysteries Mysteries The First 48 The First 48 The First 48 The First 48 Grey’s Anatomy Grey’s Anatomy Grey’s Anatomy
MSNBC 47 47 MSNBC Live MSNBC Live MSNBC Andrea Mitchell MSNBC Live MSNBC Live MSNBC Live Deadline: White MTP Daily The Beat With Hardball Chris All In With Chris
MTV 63 63 Varied Programs TRL Varied Programs
NBCS 34 34 The Dan Patrick Show Varied Programs NASCAR America Varied Programs
NICK 40 40 Gold Gold Sponge. Sponge. PAW Peppa Peppa Bubble Bubble PAW Top PAW Blaze Rivets PAW PAW PAW PAW Sponge. Sponge. Sponge. Sponge. Loud Loud
OXY 50 50 Varied Programs
PARMT 57 57 Varied Programs Bar Rescue Bar Rescue To Be Announced Two Two Two Two Two Two Mom Mom Mom Mom
ROOT 31 31 Paid Varied Paid Varied Paid Varied The Rich Eisen Show Paid Paid The Dan Patrick Show Varied Programs
SYFY 59 59 Zone Varied Programs
TBN 20 20 Creflo J. Ha Osteen Prince Cope Franklin S. Fur Bles the Varied Robison Jewish The 700 Club J. Ha Varied Praise Varied John Varied Programs Potters Praise Varied
TBS 55 55 Married Married Married Married Married King King King Seinfeld Seinfeld Seinfeld Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends Amer. Amer. Amer. Amer.
TLC 38 38 Varied Programs My 600-Lb. Life Four Weddings Four Weddings Say Yes Say Yes Say Yes Varied Say Yes Varied Say Yes Say Yes Varied Programs
TNT 54 54 Law & Order Charmed Charmed Charmed Supernatural Supernatural Supernatural Supernatural Bones Bones Bones Varied NCIS: N.O.
TOON 42 42 Steven Teen Ben 10 Unikitty Ben 10 Teen Ben 10 Gumball Ben 10 Teen Ben 10 Teen Ben 10 Gumball Ben 10 Teen Ben 10 Teen Ben 10 OK KO Ben 10 Gumball Ben 10 Craig
TRAV 36 36 Paid Paid Paid Varied Coaster Coaster Varied Programs
TRUTV 49 49 Paid Paid MyPil Funni Varied Programs Pranks Pranks Pranks Pranks Carbon Carbon Carbon Carbon Varied Programs
USA 58 58 CSI: Crime Scene NCIS: LA Chicago P.D. Varied Programs Law & Order Law & Order Law & Order
VH1 62 62 Martin Martin Martin Martin Prince Prince Prince Varied Programs
Movies Sports Kids Bets
Movies Sports Kids Bets
MAKE YOUR ADSTAND OUT!
e ! ASK . b
CUSTOMERSERVICE
ABOUT ADDINGCOLOR!
360 h 807 h 8203
Couple wanted to set up& run estate sale. 20%c o m m i s s i o n . 3 6 0 -827-4067
EASY GOING GUY seeksfriendly gal, 55 to 70 withslim/average build to sharequiet times. I like trips,walks, nature, moonlightand cuddling. Write Greg,P.O. Box 3013, Arlington,WA 98223.
Would you like to learn about adifferent culture right at home & build alife-long relationship while you do it?
iE-USA is welcoming exchange students for the2018/2019 school year that would LOVE to
experience America in Washington. Some havenever had the opportunity to play a school sportor to be involved with a school music program.
Exchange students experience many "firsts" withtheir American family & enjoy learning &
celebrating American culture & traditions. We arelooking for caring volunteer host families that
have a desire to add another family member forthe next academic school year (semester or full),
to share their American life withan exchange student while getting to
learn about another culture.
Want to learn more? Contact Isabella Hauck:
INDEPENDENT MOTOR ROUTE
SUPPLEMENT YOUR INCOMEAVAILABLE NOW
Route #9053Chehalis area, NE Adams Ave., NE Division St.,NE Fair Oaks Terrace, NE Franklin Ave., NEGreenwood Terrace, NE Highland Pl., NEJefferson Ave., NE North St., NE Summit Rd., NEWashington Ave., NE Evergreen Dr., SE MonroeAve., SE Hilltop Dr., SE Parkhill Dr., SEWinchester Hill Dr. Approximately 37 papers.Delivery days are Tuesday & Thursday by 5:30p.m. & Saturday before 7:30 a.m.
For more information:Amanda Curry
360-736-3311 Ext 1277
321 N. Pearl St.Centralia, WA 98531
360-736-3311
CAREGIVERCaregiver needed, ex-perience helpful but willtrain. 360-736-1613
LOST: Fawn pug namedMissy, 10 years old, halfblind/deaf, vet tag. Lost5/25 evening, going southon Rice Rd. 360-330-0344
Want to reach localfamilies with advertising?
Contact Lindy!* 360-807-8219! -
DRIVERSSeeking CDL drivers for anexciting career in the fastpaced world of aerial appli-cation. Offering full bene-fits, excellent startingwage, incentive pay pro-gram and per diem whenout of town. Call forinformation on how toapply. 360-480-6110
RELIEF MANAGERCowlitz River Lodgein Packwood is nowhiring for a reliefmanager. 2 full con-secutive days a week.Required to stay overnight. Customer serv-ice skills and comput-er knowledge prefer-red. Fax resume to360-496-5331 or applyin person. SalaryDOE.
LEAD PRESS OPERATOR
We are looking for a quality conscious, detail oriented,self-motivated, reliable, team player. Responsibilitiesinclude operating and maintaining a DGM430 web press.The ideal candidate will have at least 4 years of experiencein a high-volume environment. Multi-web experience is amust with 4/color process understanding.The ideal candidate is able to follow all safety rules,communicate effectively, keep areas clean and maintained,follow written and verbal instruction, report concerns andissues in a timely manner, verify press counts and ensureaccuracy, ensure samples are pulled, direct suborinates,and work well without constant supervision.The ideal candidate is production oriented whilemaintaining quality, able to think critically to solveproblems, able to perform simple math, familiar withcomputer and applicable software and good with people.
PRODUCTION WORK/DRIVER
Production position in newspaper distribution center.Nights and possible weekends a must. Skills needed forthis position include; punctuality, good attendance, abilityto do repetitive work and ability to lift 50+ pounds. Validdriver's license and clean driving required. Mechanicalknowledge, delivery driving experience and forklift traininga plus.
Interested parties should mail,email in a cover letter and resume.
The Chronicle, 321 N. Pearl St.,Centralia, WA 98531
No phone calls please.
The Chronicle is a publication of LafromboiseCommunications Inc., which is an Equal Opportunity Employer
who provides drug-free workplaces. Drug testing is aprerequisite for as well as a condition of employment.
No phone calls.
GARDENERWANTED & ETC
360-266-0617360-266-8417
3 SUMMER JOBSNeed help housekeepingon Sundays +, groundskeeping & maintenance onproperty & boats, & helpingwith boat rentals. Call 360-983-3804
EXPERIENCEDSERVER
Nights, Tuesday - Satur-day, 30+ hours per week.Bring your resume to TheMain Street Grill, 719 WMain St., Centralia.
Want your event inThe Chronicle'sCommunityCalendar?
Email your event to:calendar
@chronline.com
PART-TIMEHELP WANTED
Small Instrument Co. 3 dayper week to start, requiresoffice & computer skills,answering telephone & or-der filling, working aroundmachines, occasionalheavy l i f t ing. 360-736-7105
GROUNDSKEEPER
WANTED360-266-0617360-266-8417
FOUND:
Morton area, 5-18-18,F i r e a r m s . C a s e #18C5702.
Chehalis area, 5-29-18,BB Gun. Case# 18C6257.
Lewis Co Jail, Shirts, CellPhone, Hats, Bracelets.Case# 18C2355.
"Football Field" unknownarea, 5-19-18, Cell Phone.Case# 18C5739.
Morton area, Float tube,5-23-18. Case# 18C5915.
Please callLewis County
Sheriff's Officeto describe and claim,
360-740-1470
COUNTERMANAuto parts counterman,mechanical background,self-starter, goof customerservice skills, salary DOE,send resume to MossyrockAuto Value: PO Box 538,Mossyrock, WA 98564, oremail: [email protected]
I mow lawns at a reasona-ble price. Chehalis & Cen-tralia only. Call Larry at360-262-9784.
REMEMBER…An ad under Card of
Thanks is only $14 a dayfor 100 words or less!
Call Customer Service at
360-807-8203to place your ad today!
2 Class ADRIVERS!
3 Home daily3 Good pay3Obtain T.W.I.C.
Text or leavea message.
360-304-8056
GENERALLABOR WORKERS
Cascade Hardwood islooking for general laborworkers. Sawmill & sanderexperience preferred, butnot required. Acceptingapplications on Saturday,June 9, 2018, from 5:30am to 8:30 am with sameday interviews. Equal Em-ployer Opportunity & aDrug Free Workplace.Cascade Hardwood LLC
158 RIbelin RdChehalis, WA 98532
360-748-0178
MOSSYROCKSCHOOL DISTRICT
is acceptingapplications for thefollowing position:
� Atheltic Director 2018-19School year
Apply online at:mossyrockschools.org
ClosesJune 22, 2018,
at 5:00 p.m.
RESIDENTIALAIR PARK LOTSLocated mid way be-tween Portland, Ore.,& Seattle, Wash., inToledo, Wash (TDO).Access to 5000x150'runway with Vasisystems at bothends. Also has GPSapproach. Property135x459=1.42 acres,water & electric, tele-phone & latest highspeed internet at theproperty, $95,000.Call 360-864-6370,360-864-6271 or 360-269-4907.
COOKColonial Residence is
seeking reliablefull time cook.
Experience required.Friday-Tuesday, 11-7.
Apply in person at2700 Colonial Dr.,
Centralia, WA 98531.360-736-1551
WILLAPAHARBOR HOSPITAL
Registered Nurse1 full-time night shift RN &1 part-time night shift RN.Acute care experience, ER& Med/Surg.
For an applicationcontact Dustie Franks [email protected] or
www.willapaharborhospital.com.
EOE
Call 360-807-8203 360-807-8258
For availability or to reserve this space call 807-8203
Who could imagine?? So many lives you have touched and memories fulfilled.
As you start your new journey, fun, joy and RELAX, all of these are for real!
Please join us to celebrate Raelee’s retirement and teaching career at the
Senior Center in Winlock, June 9th, from 1:00pm - 4:00pm.
Former students are welcome as well.See you there!!!
For availability or to reserve this space call 807-8203.
Samantha Leanne BaileyJanuary 18, 2009 7 lbs. 3 oz. 18 inches
Book this ad for $50!
360-807-8203
The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, June 07, 2018 • Classifieds 11CLASSIFIEDS
42' Open Range 2011 5thwheel toy hauler, 3 slidesplus deck, new, paid$ 7 0 , 0 0 0 , a s k i n g$28,750/offer, must sell,great home. 360- 245-3966or 360-520-6690
2001 Leisure travel RVvan, in good condition, newtires, stove & refrigerator,completely self contained,$13,500. 360-748-6721
GARAGE SALE!Fri & Sat,
June 8 & 9, 10-4.N. Fork Rd.,
Chehalis, WA 98532.Follow signs!
60 years of accumulation& collectibles.
2001 Yamaha GP-1200R:Waverunner, excellentshape,, rebuilt carbs$2800/best offer. 360-736-4669
RAIN OR SHINE
ESTATE SALE!Sat & Sun,
June 9 & 10, 10-?10239 185th Ave. SW,Rochester, WA 98579.
Furniture, China, dishes &misc. Lots of stuff!
1969 17' Glasply: inboard120 horse iron duke, veryclean, run great, freshwa-ter cooled, $6000. Callanytime, 360-269-8774.
Grant's Towing &Automotive/Grant's
Centralia/Grant's SouthAbandoned Vehicle
Auction Every Friday11:30 am at 915 KoontzRd, Chehalis. Viewing
every Friday beginning@ 8:30am. Call
360-330-2442 forcurrent list.
WE NOW HAVE
BAZAAR &GARAGE SALE
PACKAGESAVAILABLE!
R R R R R R R R R R
Packages include 2 lami-nated signs, 4 sheets ofpricing stickers, 3 salesheets, a sharpie andballoons! packages areonly $5 with the pur-chase of a classified ad.
FRESH, LOCAL,NO-SPRAY
STRAWBERRIESDAILY!
Jeremy's Fruit Stand& Market
576 W. Main St.,Chehalis, WA 98532.Open 7 days a week!
360-748-4417
PARKWOOD55 ESTATES
MULTI-FAMILYSALE!
Fri & Sat,June 8 & 9, 9-5.
271 Romerman Rd.,Chehalis, WA 98532.
Fishing gear, collectable,household & lots of goodmiscellaneous items!
PNNA STATEWIDE CLASSIFIEDS
CH586917aa.cg
ANNOUNCEMENTS
AUTOS WANTED
BUSINESS SERVICES
CABLE/INTERNET SERVICES
FINANCIAL SERVICES
HEALTH/MEDICAL
MISCELLANEOUS
SENIOR LIVING
TAX SERVICES
FIREWOODGood quality clean
firewood, $160 cord.360-749-2923
FREE HAY! You cut,700-1000 bails, Centralia.727-647-1002
FREE: Kimball organ, big.360-736-2161
FREE TO GOOD HOME: 2year old female, black labmix. 360-280-3216
FREE: to good home, 10year old Maultises, 1 male& 1 female. 360-330-1387
GOING OUT OFBUSINESS SALE!
CLOSING:Black Bird Cafe,
by the Los CostenosTaco Truck.
NOW UNTIL JUNE 10!Come check out the
new low priceswhile they last!
5th Wheel hitch, $275.Plate packer, $500. Poulanchainsaw, 22", $150 &Craftsman chainsaw, 18",$25. Poulan Pro cultivatorattachments only, $40.Shop Smith, $500. 3 loadlocks, $25. Saganaw 4speed manual transmis-sion, $175. Lincoln stickwelder, $125. 360-785-9571
Y E L L O W J A C K E T S(LIVE)! Nests collectedfor medical use. Nocharge. 360-578-2018Registered Tarentaise and
F1 heifers. Dual purpose.Some with A2A2 milkgenetics. Some bred andsome open. Various prices.360-894-2717 Yelm
FREE: 9 month old spadefemale Border Collie,needs more room to runand work. 360-864-2041
GARAGE SALE!Fri & Sat,
June 8 & 9, 9-2.105 Camellia Ln,
Chehalis, WA 98532.Off Pattee Rd on LoganHill Rd. Leather sofa, desk,shelf, garden tools, gardenwork bench, books &household items.
1-1/8" plywood concreteforms, metal ties, steelstakes, tools, pair 40'wooden extension ladders,great condition, roofingitems, 12 bundles #1 dryred cedar shingles, miscel-laneous glue-lam beams,solid wood header stock,building blocks & metaljoist hangers & hydraulicjacks. 360-748-4311 or360-507-9927.
1 CLASSIFIED 1DEADLINES
\ Monday, 10:00 a.m.for Tuesday's paper.
\ Wednesday, 2:00 p.m.for Thursday's paper.
\ Friday, 2:00 p.m. forSaturday's paper.
To place your ad,call 360-807-8203!
PLACE YOURPET AD HERE!
Email or callyour ad in today!
ROCHESTER: Nice smallsize room, closet, heat &WIFI, cable TV extra,downs stairs, other sharedliving spaces, private park-ing, quiet neighborhood,$450/month. Backgroundcheck fee refundable ifapproved. 360-481-9632,NO TEXT.
Wheelchair, like new, $40.360-996-2826
- - SOLD! - -This ad sold on the
FIRST DAY!
_________________
Small John Deere rid-ing mower, runs good,call for details, $175.
_________________
Furnished 1 bedroom, allutilities & basic cable paid,$800. 253-961-7690
LETS FINISH THIS
ESTATE SALE!Sat, June 9, 10-4.
3834 Cook Hill Rd.,Centralia, WA 98531.
No reasonable offer will berefused!
Selling an item for
$100 or less???Call customer servicetoday to place your
FREE AD!t t t t t
The Chronicle360-807-8203
Ads run 4 days,4 lines for FREE!
Jazzy 1103 power chair,runs great, $300. 360-402-5630
Medium sized refrigeratorwith small freezer, workswell, $50. 360-996- 2826
HUNTER'S WALKANNUAL
GARAGE SALE!ALL WEEKEND!
Fri, Sat, & Sun, 9-5.June 8, 9 & 10.
201 W Oakview Ave. #58,Centralia, WA 98531.
Front fenders for 1979Chevy Luv pick-up, $40each. 360-278-3426
Fire pit, still in the box,never been used, $50.360-736-2648
NEW HOME3 bedroom, 2.5 bath,
2 car garageon 5 acres,
$300K. 360-262-9332
PETCONNECTION
l l l l l l l l
IT IS THE TIMETO FIX
YOUR ANIMALS!
For a limited timewe will
have coupons for a$20 discount on
CATS anda $40 discount on
DOGS!!
With a generousdonation fromJack & Sharon
Tipping,Pet Connection canoffer a $10 rebate oncats & $20 rebate ondogs, in addition tothe above discount!
360-748-6236
30" GE white slide instove, self-cleaning ovenwith pigtail, $100. 360-736-3072
Do you have aFREE ITEM?
Call Customer Servicetoday to place your
k FREE AD! k
The Chronicle360-807-8203Ads run 4 days,4 lines for FREE!
GARAGE SALE!Thur - Mon, 9-?,
June 7, 8, 9, 10 & 11.310 W. Pine St.,
Centralia, WA 98531.Kerosene heater, minifridge, tools, jewelry,clothes, antiques, knick-knacks, gas BBQ & furni-ture.
FREE TO AGOOD HOME
Spayed calico cat, has aninfection in right eye, de-clawed, 3 years old, comeswith her supplies, will needa cat carrier. 360-388-5128
Outdoor shed, 10x8x8,never assembled, paid$800, asking $600/offer.360-291-3015 or 360-880-0896
GARAGE SALE!Fri & Sat,
June 8 & 9, 9-5.104 N Fork Rd.,
Chehalis, WA 98532.Wedding tent, sports col-lectibles, sewing machine,vacuum cleaners, olddressers, lots & lots ofmiscellaneous, furniture,washer & dryer.
Go to chronline.comto place your
ad online,just 6 easy steps from
the convenience ofyour own home.
ROAD MAINTENANCETECHNICIAN IILewis County -Public Works
For job requirements,job description
and application go tohttp://lewiscountywa.govor pick up an applicationpacket (8AM-5PM) at thePublic Services Building2025 NE Kresky Avenue,
Chehalis.Posting Closes @ 4PM,
6/8/2018
Parrorlet bird, green ontop, blue belly, month & ahalf old, very sweet, $350.360-388-5128
1 year old male CoonHound, neutered, goodfamily dog, needs fencedyard, trained, good withother dogs & kids, $50.360-827-2387
FRIDAY, JUNE 8, 2018
SATURDAY, JUNE 9, 2018GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
Participate in organized events and
activities. Your input will lead to a
proposal that is worth your while. An
emotional matter should be dealt with
behind closed doors.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
You can make changes, but do so
for the right reason. If you let your
emotions take the reins and make
decisions for you, mistakes will occur.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
Look for a way to appease others
without taking on too much. If you
delegate jobs to others, you will show
your strength and things done.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
An emotional matter should be looked
at carefully. Don’t settle for something
a solution that is within your budget.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)
Take your time. If someone pressures
you, walk away. Relationships will need
to be handled with care. A stressful
domestic situation will develop due to
poor spending habits.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)
The desire to make a move or alter
your life in some way needs to be
handled with care. Impulsive action will
lead to disappointment.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21)
Participation is favored, as long as
you don’t overspend. Someone will
complain if you don’t live up to a
promise you made. Emotional stress
will wear you down.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)Concentrate
on self-improvement, not on trying to
more you look inward, the easier it will
be to let others be who they are.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Speak up and get involved in
conversations that will help you resolve
issues. Not everyone will agree with
you, but at least you’ll know how to
best move forward.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
You’ll be questioned if you are too
whimsical about the way you do things.
A personal change can be put into
play.
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Be careful how you deal with domestic
matters. An older friend or relative
will be a problem. Patience and
consideration will be necessary if you
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Don’t underestimate others. You must
be on your toes if you want to get
ahead. Temptation must not lead to
spur-of-the-moment decisions. Put a
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)You’ll be faced with mixed emotions that are bound to make you think twice when it comes to how much you do for others. Listen to what’s being asked
CANCER (June 21-July 22)Emotional problems will surface when dealing with decisions that include other people. Partnerships must be handled with care to avoid a misunderstanding.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)A short trip will do you good and will encourage you to make a decision that you’ve been contemplating. If you are uncertain, ask someone you trust to
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)Keep plugging away at whatever it is you must accomplish. Hard work will
extra detail will not be wasted. Follow your instincts.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23)Channel your energy into home and personal improvements. Gather information to ensure that you have
criticism or derogatory remarks. Take better care of your health.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)Look at the big picture, but don’t buy
your sights on what’s realistic and doable. A personal improvement or romantic encounter looks inviting.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21)Discuss your intentions with someone
you make. Getting the go-ahead will make your plans easier to achieve. Home improvement is favored.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)Listen carefully and look for a way to deal with friends and relatives without upsetting someone you care about. Don’t make changes without getting
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)Clear the air. If you want someone to do something, you have to be blunt about what you want. Find out where you stand, and do what’s necessary.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)Not everyone will see things the same way you do. Take a wait-and-see approach when dealing with matters
ARIES (March 21-April 19)Keep busy. A physical challenge will
from doing or saying something you shouldn’t. Bide your time and gather information.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)Resolve uncertainty and move forward with enthusiasm. Personal gains can be made if you are willing to put in the
Classifieds 12 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, June 07, 2018CLASSIFIEDS
SUPPORT READING
IN THE SCHOOLSCall 807-8203 to donate your paper
when you go on vacation.
Make Your Vehicle Work for You!Vehicle lettering will help advertise your
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104376 Carr Rd FireSalvage
NOTICE OFPUBLIC TIMBER SALE
Department of Natural Resour-ces will auction timber to thehighest bidder. Contract termsand bidding information isavailable by calling PacificC a s c a d e R e g i o n a t360-577-2025 or by visiting theRegion Office at Castle Rockor Product Sales & LeasingDivision, Olympia. Bidding be-gins at 10:00 a.m. at thePacific Cascade Region Office,Castle Rock, WA, on July 26,2018.CARR RD FIRE SALVAGE,App. No. 096859, approxi-mately 9 miles by road east ifRandle, Washington on part(s)of Sections 10 all in Township12 North, Range 8 East, W.M.,comprising approximately 87Mbf of Timber. This sale isExport Restricted.OFFICIAL NOTICE OFDATE AND PLACEFOR COMMENCINGAN APPEAL:Notice is given under SEPA,
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104513 IDS# 141446 - TS#WA-18-813483-NJ
TS No.: WA-18-813483-NJ Or-der No.: 8732396 PropertyAddress: 123 Granite Lane,Chehalis, WA 98532 Abbrevi-ated Legal Desc.: LOT 5GRANITE DIVISION I APN:017203003008 REVISED NO-TICE OF DEFAULT AND"FORECLOSURE SALE"WHEREAS, on 5/5/2011, acertain Deed of Trust wasexecuted by LLOYD C HUBERAND NELDA G DEHLINE,ASLO APPEARING OF RE-CORD AS NELDA GDEHLINE-HUBER, HUSBANDAND WIFE, as trustor(s), infavor of MORTGAGE ELEC-TRONIC REGISTRATIONSYSTEMS, INC. (MERS) ASNOMINEE FOR AMERICANADVISORS GROUP IS OR-GANIZED AND EXISTING UN-DER THE LAWS OF CALI-FORNIA, as beneficiary, andwas recorded on 5/16/2011Instrument No. 3362616 in theOffice of the County Recorderof LEWIS County, WA; andWHEREAS, the Deed of Trustwas insured by the UnitedStates Secretary of Housingand Urban Development (theSecretary) pursuant to theNational Housing Act for thepurpose of providing single
104474 2018-2019 BudgetProposal & Hearing
Oakville SchoolDistrict #400NOTICE OF
BUDGET HEARING2018-2019 Budget
Proposal & Hearing
Notice is hereby given that theBoard of Directors of OakvilleSchool District #400, GraysHarbor County, Washington,will meet on June 25, 2018, at5:00 PM in the District BoardRoom for the purpose ofholding a public hearing forreview and adoption of the2018-2019 fiscal budget, thefour-year budget plan summa-ry, and four-year enrollmentprojections. Any taxpayer mayappear at said meeting and inaccordance with District policyregarding Board meetings, beheard for or against any part ofthe 2018-19 budget, the four-year budget plan summary, orthe proposed uses of enrich-ment funding.
Notice is hereby given that theOakville School District #400,Grays Harbor County, Wash-ington will complete the budgetfor the fiscal year 2018-2019and place it on file in theschool district administrationoffice June 18, 2018. Copiesthereof will be furnished to anyperson who calls upon thedistrict for them.
Rich StaleySecretary to the Board
Published: The ChronicleJune 7 & 14, 2018
104414 2018-19 Budget
The Toledo School District willbe adopting its 2018-19 Budg-et on Thursday, June 21st,2018 at 7:00pm, at the ToledoMiddle School library. Anyperson may appear and beheard for or against any part ofthe budget.
Published: The ChronicleJune 7 & 14, 2018
2010 Grand Marquis, ex-cellent condition, black,$5,900. Call John, 360-219-5204
2007 Kia Hatchback, black,very good condition,$2,995. No dealers or text,leave a message. 360-858-7721
104461 Dependency:Mark Biddiscombe
IN THE SUPERIORCOURT OF THE
STATE OF WASHINGTONIN AND FOR THE
COUNTY OF SNOHOMISH
JUVENILE COURT
SUMMONS BYPUBLICATIONDEPENDENCY
THE STATE OF WASHING-TON, TO WHOM IT MAYCONCERN, AND TO:
Mark Fitzgerald Biddiscombe,Father of Mark Kenneth Biddis-combe, b.d. 08/10/16, Depend-ency Petition 18-7-00202-31filed on February 13, 2018.
A Preliminary Hearing on July24, 2018, at 9:00 a.m. and aFact Finding hearing on Au-gust 23, 2018, at 9:00 a.m. willbe held on this matter atSnohomish County JuvenileJustice Center, 2801 10thStreet, Everett, Washington98201.
THE STATE OF WASHING-TON, TO WHOM IT MAYCONCERN, AND TO:
A Preliminary Hearing on July31, 2018, at 9:00 a.m. and aFact Finding hearing on Au-gust 30, 2018, at 9:00 a.m. willbe held on this matter atSnohomish County JuvenileJustice Center, 2801 10thStreet, Everett, Washington98201.
These hearings will determineif your child is dependent asdefined in RCW 13.34.050(5).This begins a judicial processwhich could result in perma-nent loss of your parentalrights. THE ABOVE NAMEDINDIVIDUALS ARE SUM-MONED TO APPEAR at bothof said hearings regarding yourchild. If you do not appear atthe first (preliminary) hearing,the court may cancel thesecond hearing and take evi-dence and enter an orderwithout further notice to you.To request a copy of theNotice, Summons, and De-pendency Petition, and/or toview information about yourrights in this proceeding, go towww.atg.wa.gov/DPY
SONYA KRASKI, Clerk of theSuperior Court; SARAH PA-TRENETS, Deputy Clerk
Published: The ChronicleJune 7, 14 & 21, 2018
2006 Ford Taurus: 4 door,$1000 as is. 360-508-4668
SBP: William H. Lahan& Karen F. Lahan
SUPERIORCOURT OF
WASHINGTONCOUNTY OF LEWIS
William H. Lahanand Karen F. Lahan,
husband and wife,Plaintiffs,
vsEagle Rock Estates,an irrevocable trust,
Marcia Doerr, Trustee,and Unknown Defendants,
Defendants.No. 18-2-00546-21
SUMMONS BYPUBLICATION
TO THE DEFENDANTS: EA-GLE ROCK ESTATES, anirrevocable trust, Marcia Doerr,Trustee, TOGETHER with anyand all other persons, partiesor entities unknown claimingany right, title, estate, lien orinterest in the real estatedescribed in the complaintherein:YOU AND EACH OF YOU arehereby summoned to appearwithin sixty (60) days after thedate of the first publication ofthis Summons, to-wit, withinsixty (60) days after the 17thday of May 2018, and defendthe above entitled action in theabove entitled Court and an-swer the complaint of thePlaintiffs and serve a copy ofyour answer upon the under-signed attorney for the Plaintiffat her office below stated; and,in case of your failure to do so,judgment will be enteredagainst you according to thedemands of the complaint inthis action which has been filedwith the Clerk of the Court.The object of this action is toquiet title in Plaintiffs to realestate in Lewis County, Wash-ington described as:Parcel A:Lot 2 of Segregation Survey,recorded October 31, 1997,under Auditor's File No.3030106 in Volume 16 ofsurveys, page 263, records ofLewis County, Washington,being located within the north-east quarter of the northwestquarter of Section 13, Town-ship 13 North, Range 1 East,W.M., Lewis County, Washing-ton.
104193 Notice to Bidders:Windolph
Notice To BiddersWindolph
Water Main Replacement
Sealed bids for the aboveproject will be received fromcontractors by the WindolphAssociation at 3334 WindolphLane NW Olympia, WA 98502until Friday, July 6, 2018, at4:00pm at which time bids willopened and read.
A mandatory pre-bid meetingwill be held at 3334 WindolphLane NW Olympia, WA 98502on Friday, June 15, 2018 at3:00pm. Note that the meetingplace is relatively small andadjacent parking is limited.Please limit the number of yourfirm's representatives to one orperhaps two persons.
Project Bid Documents may beobtained for a non-refundablefee of $35.00 (thirty-five dol-lars) from Water System Engi-neering, PLLC beginning Fri-day, June 1, 2018. Contractorscall (360) 831-9191 for moreinformation or to request that acopy be mailed to them, or topick them up. Project BidDocuments will be available forreview at the following plancenter:Daily Journal of Commerce-Seattle83 Columbia Street, Suite 200Seattle, WA 98104-1482www.djc.com(206) 622-8272,fax (206) [email protected]
Weekly Construction Reporter2215 Midway Lane, Suite 208Bellingham, WA 98226-1219www.wcrnc.com(360) 738-0370,fax (360) [email protected](253) 922-7172
Project Bid Documents mayalso be downloaded at: https://www.dropbox.com/l/scl/AADeeihz_3qp5B9Anmm5ijCCr5zXkn3ugLc
Water main replacement, tankremoval & well decommission-ing
Engineer's estimate is$250,000 to $300,000
This project is funded throughthe Washington State DrinkingWater State Revolving Fund(DWSRF) program (ContractNo. DP16-952-037), with fed-eral funds from the Environ-mental Protection Agency. Thegeneral contractor and allsubcontractors must meetDWSRF requirements and pro-visions. All contractors must belicensed, bonded and insured.All contractors must be li-censed to conduct business inWashington State.
All work performed on thisproject will be subject to thehigher of the prevailing state orfederal wage rates.
Windolph Association is anEqual Opportunity and Affirma-tive Action Employer.
Small, Minority- and Women-owned firms are encouraged tosubmit bids.
1950 Ford: 2 door custom,all original, complete en-gine built, new white walltires, car from Yakima,original radio rebuilt, playsam/fm & mp3, $16,000.360-701-9701
104468 Sole Source
LEGAL NOTICESOLE SOURCE
ADVERTISEMENT
Chehalis School District con-templates awarding a solesource contract to AnatomageInc. to provide an Anatomagetable.
We believe this qualifies as asole source contract becausewe were unable to find othervendor products that met thespecifications set forth by theinterested programs for thiscustom anatomy table whocould also meet the 1st yearwarranty software upgrade,technology support, InVivo53D imaging Software withMedical Design Studio andon-site training.
The contract will be issued onor about five (5) business daysfrom this announcement.
Vendors contemplating theabove requirements are re-quired to contact Heather C.Pinkerton for anatomy tablespecifications and to thensubmit capability statementsdetailing their ability to meetrequirements within five (5)business days of this an-nouncement. In the absence ofother qualified sources, it is theintent of the Chehalis SchoolDistrict to make a sole sourceaward of the contract.
For more information, contact:
Chehalis School DistrictHeather C. Pinkerton310 SW 16th St.Chehalis, WA 98532-3809
Telephone: 360.807.7207E-mail:[email protected]
Published: The ChronicleJune 7, 2018
104492 Notice of PublicHearing
Notice of Public Hearing
A hearing on the budgetadoption of the 2018-2019General Fund, Capital ProjectsFund, Debt Service Fund,Transportation Fund and ASBFund Budgets for the OnalaskaSchool District No. 300 will beheld on June 20th at 6:00 p.m.in the High School Room 408.Any person may appear at themeeting and be heard for oragainst the budget adoption orany part thereof. Copies of thebudget are available in thedistrict office.
Jeff DavisSecretary to the Board
If you have any questionsplease contact:Tami Weiher,Business Manager360-978-4111 Opt 5
Published: The ChronicleJune 7 &12, 2018
2014 Honda CivicSedan LX
4 door, 75K miles, 35mpg highway & 29 city,excellent condition, orig-inal owner, non-smoker,$12,000. I don't need 3vehicles! No dealers, nobuyers or text. Leave amessage, 360- 628-6773.
Parcel B:An easement for the purposesof ingress, egress and utilities,as delineated on SegregationSurvey, recorded October 31,1997, under Auditor's File No.3030106 in volume 16 ofsurveys, page 263, records ofLewis County, Washington.Except that portion of saideasement lying with the aboveParcel A.Said easement is for thebenefit of Lots 1-4 of saidSurvey and for adjoining prop-erty to the north.Against the claim of theDefendants and any one ofthem.Dated: May 14, 2018Roberta Church,WSBA #26842Attorney for the Plaintiffs
Published: The ChronicleMay 17, 24 & 31, 2018 & June7, 14 & 21, 2018
family housing; and WHERE-AS, the Deed of Trust is nowowned by the Secretary, pur-suant to an Assignment recor-ded on 11/17/2016 as Instru-ment Number 3456877 in Bookxx, Page xx of LEWIS County,WA; and WHEREAS, a defaulthas been made in the cove-nants and conditions of theDeed of Trust in that: BOR-ROWER(S) HAVE DIED ANDTHE PROPERTY IS NOT THEPRINCIPAL RESIDENCE OFAT LEAST ONE SURVIVINGBORROWER AND, AS ARESULT, ALL SUMS DUEUNDER THE NOTE HAVEBECOME DUE AND PAYA-BLE WHEREAS, by virtue ofthis default, the Secretary hasdeclared the entire amount ofthe indebtedness secured bythe Mortgage to be immediate-ly due and payable andsufficient payment has notbeen made as of the date ofthis notice; and WHEREAS,the total amount due as of6/5/2018 is $291,074.20.WHEREAS, a Notice of Defaultand Foreclosure Sale waspreviously issued, that recor-ded on 4/24/2018 in LEWISCounty, CA as Instrument No.3482892, that set a sale for6/1/2018 at 10:00 AM and theForeclosure Commissionerhereby desires to continue saidsale date as set forth below.NOW THEREFORE, pursuantto the powers vested in QualityLoan Service Corporation ofWashington by the SingleFamily Mortgage ForeclosureAct of 1994, 12 U.S.C. 3751 etseq., by 24 CFR Part 27subpart B, and by the Secreta-ry's designation of QualityLoan Service Corporation ofWashington as ForeclosureCommissioner as indicated onthe attached Foreclosure Com-missioner Designation, noticeis hereby given that the revisedsale date is now set for6/15/2018 at 10:00 AM localtime, all real and personalproperty at or used in connec-tion with the following descri-bed premises will be sold atpublic auction to the highestbidder: Commonly known as:123 Granite Lane, Chehalis,WA 98532 Located in: City ofChehalis , County of LEWIS,WA . More particularly descri-bed as: LOT 5, GRANITEDIVISION I AS RECORDED INVOLUME 8 OF PLATS, PAGE16, AND CORRECTED UN-DER VOLUME 8 OF PLATS,PAGE 21, RECORDS OFLEWIS COUNTY, WASHING-TON. TOGETHER WITH ANEASEMENT FOR INGRESS,EGRESS AND UTILITIESOVER AND ACROSS GRAN-ITE LANE, AS SHOWN ONTHE FACE OF SAID PLAT.The sale will be held At theNorth entrance of the LewisCounty Courthouse, located at351 NW North St, Chehalis,WA 98532 The Secretary ofHousing and Urban Develop-ment will bid $297,850.24There will be no proration oftaxes, rents or other income orliabilities, except that the pur-chaser will pay, at or beforeclosing, his pro rata share ofany real estate taxes that havebeen paid by the Secretary tothe date of the foreclosuresale. When making their bids,all bidders except the Secreta-ry must submit a depositt o t a l i ng app rox ima te l y$29,785.02 in the form ofcertified check or cashier'scheck made out to the Secre-tary of HUD. A deposit neednot accompany an oral bid. Ifthe successful bid is oral, adeposit of $29,785.02 must bepresented before the bidding isclosed. The deposit is nonre-fundable. The remainder of thepurchase price must be deliv-ered within 30 days of the saleor at such other time as theSecretary may determine forgood cause shown, time beingof the essence. This amount,like the bid deposits, must bedelivered in the form of acertified or cashier's check. Ifthe Secretary is the highestbidder, he need not pay the bidamount in cash. The success-ful bidder will pay all convey-ancing fees, all real estate andother taxes that are due on orafter the delivery date of theremainder of the payment andand all other costs associatedwith the transfer of title. At theconclusion of the sale, thedeposits of the unsuccessfulbidders will be returned tothem. The Secretary may grantthe winning bidder an exten-sion of time within which todeliver the remainder of thepayment. All extensions will befor 15-day increments for a feeof $500.00, paid in advance.The extension fee shall be paidin the form of a certified orcashier's check made payableto the Secretary of HUD. If thehigh bidder closes the saleprior to the expiration of anyextension period, the unusedportion of the extension feeshall be applied toward theamount due. If the high bidderis unable to close the salewithin the required period, orwithin any extensions of timegranted by the Secretary, thehigh bidder may be required toforfeit the cash deposit or, atthe election of the foreclosurecommissioner after consulta-tion with the HUD representa-tive, will be liable to HUD forany costs incurred as a result
RCW 43.21C.075, WAC197-11-680 of Department ofNatural Resource's action de-scribed in (4) below.1. Any person whose propertyrights or interests will beaffected and feels himselfaggrieved by the Departmentaction may appeal to LewisCounty Superior Court within30 days of June 5, 2018,pursuant to RCW 79.02.030.2. Any action to set aside,enjoin, review, or otherwisechallenge such action on thegrounds of noncompliance withthe provisions of RCW 43.21C(State Environmental PolicyAct) shall be commenced on orbefore July 5, 2018.3. Pursuant to WAC197-11-680(4)(d), no appealmay be filed under RCW43.21C more than 30 daysafter the date in (1) above,unless an appeal was filedunder RCW 79.02.030 as in (1)above.4. Description of DepartmentAction: Approval for sale of theproposed timber sale(s),shown above.5. Type of environmental re-view under SEPA: A determi-nation of non-significance ormitigated determination ofnon-significance was issuedfor each timber sale.6. Documents may be exam-ined during regular businesshours at the Region Office ofthe Department of NaturalResources and at OlympiaHeadquarters, Product Sales &Leasing Division, 1111 Wash-ington St. SE, Olympia, WA98504-7016, 360-902-1600.7. This notice filed by: SteveOgden, Assistant Region Man-ager, Pacific Cascade RegionOffice, P.O. Box 280, CastleRock, WA 98611-0280360-577-2025.
Published: The ChronicleJune 7, 2018
2001 Wildwood T25 withslide out, 1 owner, goodcondition, $11,500/offer.360-262-9397
of such failure. The Commis-sioner may, at the discretion ofthe HUD representative, offerthe property to the secondhighest bidder for an amountequal to the highest priceoffered by that bidder. There isno right of redemption, or rightof possession based upon aright of redemption, in thetrustor(s) or others subsequentto a foreclosure completedpursuant to the Act. Therefore,the Foreclosure Commissionerwill issue a Deed to thepurchaser(s) upon receipt ofthe entire purchase price inaccordance with the terms ofthe sale as provided herein.HUD does not guarantee thatthe property will be vacant.The scheduled foreclosuresale shall be cancelled oradjourned if it is established,by documented written applica-tion of the mortgagor to theForeclosure Commissioner notless than 3 days before thedate of sale, or otherwise, thatthe default or defaults uponwhich the foreclosure is baseddid not exist at the time ofservice of this notice of defaultand foreclosure sale, or allamounts due under the mort-gage agreement are tenderedto the Foreclosure Commis-sioner, in the form of a certifiedor cashier's check payable tothe Secretary of HUD, beforepublic auction of the property iscompleted. To obtain a pre-sale reinstatement all defaultsmust be cured prior to thescheduled sale, plus all otheramounts that would be dueunder the mortgage agreementif payments under the mort-gage had not been acceler-ated, advertising costs andpostage expenses incurred ingiving notice, mileage by themost reasonable road distancefor posting notices and for theForeclosure Commissioner'sattendance at the sale, reason-able and customary costsincurred for title and lien recordsearches, the necessary out-of-pocket costs incurred by theForeclosure Commissioner forrecording documents, a com-mission for the ForeclosureCommissioner, and all othercosts incurred in connectionwith the foreclosure prior toreinstatement. To obtain infor-mation regarding reinstatingthe loan by paying the sumsthat are delinquent you shouldcontact the Foreclosure Com-missioner, Quality Loan Serv-ice Corporation of Washington,at the address or phonenumber listed below. Tender ofpayment by certified or cash-ier's check or application forcancellation of the foreclosuresale shall be submitted to theaddress of the ForeclosureCommissioner provided below.QUALITY MAY BE CONSID-ERED A DEBT COLLECTORATTEMPTING TO COLLECTA DEBT AND ANY INFORMA-TION OBTAINED WILL BEUSED FOR THAT PURPOSE.TS No.: WA-18-813483-NJDated: Foreclosure Commis-sioner Jeff Stenman, Presidenton behalf of Quality LoanService Corporation of Wash-ington Trustee's Mailing Ad-dress: Quality Loan ServiceCorp. of Washington 411 IvyStreet, San Diego, CA 92101Trustee's Physical Address:Quality Loan Service Corp. ofWashington 108 1 st AveSouth, Suite 202, Seattle, WA98104 For questions call toll-free: (866) 925-0241 A notarypublic or other officer complet-ing this certificate verifies onlythe identity of the individualwho signed the document towhich this certificate is attach-ed, and not the truthfulness,accuracy, or validity of thatdocument. State of: Washing-ton) County of: King) On6/5/2018 before me, KristenOswood a notary public, per-sonally appeared Jeff Sten-man, who proved to me on thebasis of satisfactory evidenceto be the person(s) whosename(s) is/are subscribed tothe within instrument andacknowledged to me thathe/she/they executed thesame in his/her/their author-ized capacity(ies), and that byhis/her/their signature(s) on theinstrument the person(s), orthe entity upon behalf of whichthe person(s) acted, executedthe instrument. I certify underPENALTY OF PERJURY un-der the laws of the State ofWashington that the foregoingparagraph is true and correct.WITNESS my hand and officialseal. Signature Kristen Os-wood NOTARY PUBLIC -State of Washington MyComm. Expires 7/19/2020 ID-SPub #0141446 6/7/20186/12/2018
Published: The ChronicleJune 7, 12 & 14, 2018
104363 Notice of BudgetHearing
The Evaline School DistrictBoard of Directors shall meetTuesday, June 19th, at 7:00P.M. in the school library forthe purpose of adopting the18-19 budgets. Any personmay appear thereat and beheard for or against any part ofsuch budgets.Kyle MacDonald,Secretary to the Board
Published: The ChronicleJune 7 & 12, 2018
All bids must be submitted onthe forms furnished for thatpurpose, and each proposalmust be accompanied by a bidbond, certified check or cash-ier's check made payable toWindolph Association, in anamount of not less than (5) fivepercent of the total bid.
Windolph Association here-by notifies all bidders that itwill affirmatively ensure thatin any contract entered intopursuant to this advertise-ment, disadvantaged busi-ness enterprises will beafforded full opportunity tosubmit bids in response tothis invitation and will not bediscriminated against on thegrounds of race, color, sex,or national origin in consid-eration for an award. Wind-olph Association encourag-es contracting procedureswhich provide DBE's equalopportunity to participate onWindolph Association con-tracts.
Any questions regarding thecontract documents can bedirected to Mary Wilkes, P.E.,of Water System Engineering,PLLC, at (360) 831-9191. Ifnecessary, questions will beanswered via an addendum.
Windolph Association reservesthe right to reject any and allbids.
Dated Friday, June 1, 2018,Lacey, Washington.
Mary Wilkes, P.EProject Engineer
Published: The ChronicleMay 31, 2018 & June 7, 2018
The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, June 07, 2018 • Classifieds 13CLASSIFIEDS
: Ads will run in the Business & Service Directory for 30 consecutive publishing days without changes to copy or layout. If you have any questions, please call Customer Service at (360) 807-8203.Chapter 18.27.100 of the Revised Code of Washington requires that all advertisements for construction-related services include the contractor’s current Department of Labor and Industries registration number in the
Industries Specialty Compliance Services Division at (800) 647-0982 or check L&I’s website at: www.lni.wa.gov. Ifyou have any questions, or to place an ad please call Customer Service at (360) 807-8203.
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Air Conditioners | Air Handlers Ductless Systems | Duct Cleaning
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Call For A FREE Estimate
Landscaping
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Thatching, Pruning Bushes, Tree Pruning, Clean Up Flower Beds, Hauling, Mowing,
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MOERKSPO72N5 *Licensed and Bonded* MOERKSP981DA
Water Wells, Pumps, Pressure Tanks,
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748-38051162 NW State Ave.
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Wells, Pumps & Filters
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• Student Loans• Lifetime Placement • All Training Conducted Locally • More Job Connections = More Job Choices• Small Class Sizes• VA approved.
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Appliances
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360-996-4748
Parts & Service Repair
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www.dbcooperappliances.com
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Construction
Licensed • Bonded • InsuredSHADOCL926DQ
Senior Discount
318 Hewit Rd.Chehalis, WA. 98532 Owner: John Wilkey
No Job Too Small
Home Repair • Porches • CarportsNew Fences & Repair • Handyman Services
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New Construction, Handyman Services, Remodels, Decks, Siding, Rot Repair,
Windows, Pole Barns & ShopsLic. Ins. & Bonded #PARKSSP924CD
RICK FRANK
“BUILDING THE BEST, FIXIN' THE REST”
General Contractor
(360) 266-7076
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Larry Rice
Manufactured Home Repairs
Reasonable Rates!
Senior Discounts!
360/978-5708
360/359-6618
Lic. # LARRYR*832MO
Service & maintenance repairs, all types of adjustments, leveling, etc.
BENNYSC984MA
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BENNY SANDRINI
360-266-1302
BENNY SANDRINI
CONSTRUCTION
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TOP QUALITYTOPSOIL
Spring SpecialStraight organic sandy loam topsoil — $1250/yd
3 and 1 compost mix — $1650/ydStraight compost — $1500/yd
Septic approved soil — $1000/ydAll U-Haul Prices
Delivery Available including evening & weekends
360-748-4195
LLCLAWN MAINTENANCE
Commercial and Residential
~Quality at an affordable price~
Lic# WIDDELM888DR
• Tree Trimming • Pruning • Thatching
• Barking • Lawn Maintenance • Clean-Ups
• Flower Beds • New Landscapes
• Sprinkler Systems • Top Dress Overseed
• Decks • Roof Treatment (Moss Removal)
• Gutter Cleaning • Pressure Washing
• Fences • Small Handyman Work
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Storage
360-266-0158www.StorageChehalis.com
AVAILABLE NOW!
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132 Estep Rd, Chehalis, WA 98532
MINI STORAGE
Trees
PS HendersonPS H dLogging & Laand Clearing
On site payment available for selected trees. Prices range from $500 to $5000 per tree for maple. Free estimates of current market values for all species.
I Buy Maple
large in sizeTrees
=$PS Henderson Logging and Land Clearing
Licensed, Bonded & Insured. CC PSHENHL832LK
Call Brian Ames at 360-523-3177
Alder • Veneer • Saw Logs
Logs bought standing or by the cord
Shawn BorenTonewood [email protected]
162 Conradi Rd. Winlock, WA(360) 785-4100(360) 204-2618
18 YEARS OF EXPERIENCEI buy large select maple,30 inch+ wide trees/logs!
FREE ESTIMATESRESIDENTIAL COMMERCIAL
INTERIOR EXTERIOR
360-388-6930C
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INTERIOR &
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Licensed, Bonded & Insured#DAVESCU218KD
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Strong TowerPainting & Siding
Interior & ExteriorKeep the value of your home and enjoy.
(360) 880-3347(360) 740-9754Lic # STRONTP83RL & Bond
FREE ESTIMATES!Seniors & New Customers
10% Discount!
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Painting
Prices include all paint & materialsLicensed, Bonded, Insured • TOTAL cc832JF
360.269.0792
O dINTERIOR/EXTERIOR SPECIALS
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BestReferences
Guaranteed!
HousePainting
One Story House: $1,600Two Story House: $2,200
Insured, Licensed & Bonded GEN. CONT# NAVARLI875KN
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Francisco NavarreteOwner
360.520.9937PO Box 297 Adna, Wa. 98522
www.navarreteslandscapinginc.com
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Right on Time Construction
Licensed, Bonded, Insured Contractor
Example Service Offered:
Home construction and remodeling
Manufactured home set up and leveling
Masonry services • Handyman
Vehicle Graphics?
360-736-6322
Classifieds 14 • The Chronicle, Centralia/Chehalis, Wash., Thursday, June 07, 2018CLASSIFIEDS