Looking Back
Mount Angel Knights celebrate 100th anniversary – Page 20
Vol. 12 No. 3
– Page 10
Our Town 135 N. Main P.O. Box 927 Mt. Angel, Or 97362
Creating a video love letter for Silverton – Page 18
COMMUNITY NEWS Serving Mt. Angel, Silverton, and Scotts Mills
Relocating The Four Freedoms
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Our Town Monthly
Contents
Cut out and save
Something for the Soul The road to recovery............................4 Civics 101 EF decision made, debate continues.....6
Programs, classes & events are FREE for Seniors 60+ unless otherwise noted.
NEWS
Updates....................................8 Arts & Entertainment
PROGRAMS & EVENTS • FEBRUARY 2015
Four Freedoms relocated ...................10 Lunaria celebrates 20 years................11
Something Fun Sharing quite a yarn..........................12
Datebook...............................14 Something To Do
Sports & Recreation
FREE Blood Pressure Checks 9:30 a.m. Tuesday, Feb. 3. Provided by Silverton Health. FREE for Seniors 60+!
Events
16
Wurstfest weekend game plan...........16
Looking Back Knights celebrate 100 years...............18 Our Neighbor Igniting a love letter to Silverton .......20
Health & Exercise
Thank you to everyone for supporting the Silverton Senior Center (SASI) Thrift Shop... so it can contitnue to support the Silverton Senior Center. Tax deductible donations are always WELCOME!
On the cover Tonya Smithburg paints the new mural of the Four Freedoms for Silverton. The originals were demolished with the former Masonic Lodge.
Wrestlers get a grip............................22
Photos by Larry Kassell and Kristine Thomas.
Dining Out.............................23 Marketplace........................25 Passages...............................24 A Grin at the End.............26
Super Bowl Party 2 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 1. $2.50 to watch the Game on the BIG Screen TV and includes your choice of Baked Potato Bar OR Nacho Bar... and soda & YUMMY homemade desserts will be available for purchase. No age restrictions. Day Trip to Hobby Lobby in Albany Wednesday, Feb. 4. Departing at 8:30 a.m. (need to leave on time). Lunch is on your own. Hobby Lobby is located in the Heritage Mall. Leaving from Silverton Senior Center. $12, no age restrictions apply. Call to pre-register and pay as soon as possible! Singles Dine Out 6 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 12. Mt. Angel Sausage Company. Travel Fair 11 a.m. Wednesday, Feb. 18. The Home Place Restaurant in Silverton, upstairs. Pizza provided. No age restrictions apply to trips and travel.
Paula Mabry Editor & Publisher
Jim Kinghorn Advertising Director
Our Town 135 N. Main St., P.O. Box 927 Mt. Angel, OR 97362 Tel: 503-845-9499 ourtown.life@mtangelpub.com www.mtangelpub.com
Mailed free to residents and businesses in the 97362, 97375, 97381 zip codes. Subscriptions for addresses outside this area are available for $32 annually. A publication of
Kristine Thomas Managing Editor
Contributing Artists, Photographers & Writers Steve Beckner Dixon Bledsoe James Day Vern Holmquist Mary Owen Carl Sampson Syd Stibbard Vince Teresi Melissa Wagoner
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Our Town Monthly
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The deadline for placing an ad in the Feb. 15 issue is Feb. 8 Submissions for the Feb. 15 issue of Our Town Life are due Feb. 8. ourtown.life@mtangelpub.com Thank you for spending time with Our Town. Your comments and suggestions are always welcome.
Battle Buddies Coffee Hour 1 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 18. FREE for Senior Veterans. Sweetheart Dance 3 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 21. All ages are invited! $7 per person or $10 for a couple. Beverages and appetizers provided. Music by Our Gang Band. Casino Trip to Spirit Mountain Wednesday, Feb. 25. $10, pre-registration required. Just call to sign up! Meet at 8:45 a.m. and leave at 9:00 a.m. from “C” St. Parking Lot (Mt. Angel-Silverton Therapy).
We’re on facebook! facebook.com/ ourtown.smasm
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Health Net Representative 1 p.m. Monday, Feb. 9. Start & Stay Fit 9:30 a.m. Mon/Wed; 10 a.m. Fri. $3 for Members & $4 for non-members. Yoga 9:30 a.m. Mon/Wed/Fri, $8 member, $10 nonmember. Zumba Gold 8 a.m. Tues/Thurs. $5 member; $6 nonmember. Tai Chi 9 a.m. & 5 p.m. Tues/Thurs. $3 member; $4 nonmember. Open Enrollment Information 12 p.m. Tues/Thurs. Arthritis Exercise Class 1 p.m. Tues/Thurs. Class now sponsored by Arthritis Foundation. FREE! Massage 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. Tuesdays. By appointment: $.50 min. (5-minute minimum). Bill Clubb Massage LC# 14929. Silverton Hospital Foot Clinic By appointment Tuesdays and every other Wednesday. 503-873-1784.
Classes & Workshops Writer’s Seminar 2 p.m. Tuesdsay, Feb. 6. Featuring a different local author each week. FREE for Seniors 60+. • Feb. 6 – Jack Hande • Feb. 13 – Leonide (Lennie) Martin • Feb. 20 –Doris Bernhardt • Feb. 27 –Bobbie Gannon
Nuestros Abuelos (Our Grandparents) 1 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 26. Cooking class and demo. Beginning Drawing 2 p.m. Tuesdays (beginning February 3). $20 for 4 weeks. Knitting 911 10 a.m. Wednesdays. FREE for knitters 60+! Crocheters welcome too! Crafty Wednesdays 2 p.m. Wednesdays. Bring a craft project to share or ideas of projects to do. FREE for Seniors 60+. Spanish Class 10:00 a.m. Thursdays. $10 a class or $40 for the month.
Cards & Games Bingo 1 p.m. Wednesdays. .25 cents a game; total cost for a card for 10 games is $2.50. Social Gaming 12:30 p.m. Mondays. Pinochle Noon. Tues/Fri. Bridge 1 p.m. Thursdays. Any players out there? Please call to see if there are any players. Chicken Foot Dominoes / Table Games 1 p.m. Fridays for Mah Johngg and Word Games – Call for info. FREE for Seniors 60+.
Other Programs Board Meeting 1 p.m. Monday, Feb. 2. Public age 60+ invited! S.N.A.P. By appointment only! Call 503-873-3093. Lunch 11:30 a.m. Mon – Fri. (Suggested donation, $3).
Notes Gardening with Wilco Will return March 11, 2015.
115 Westfield Street • Silverton 97381 503-873-3093 • email: staff@silvertonseniorcenter.org www.silvertonseniorcenter.org February 2015 • 3
Something for the soul
The road to recovery
Two families haunted by harrowing collision
By Brenna Wiegand The world stopped for two Silverton families after their cars collided head-on the morning of July 30.w It was discovered Ron Stutzman had suffered a stroke, causing him to drift into the path of Sue and Stephen Henry.
concerned about Ron and their family. The messages didn’t stop.
“That’s when they said, ‘We’re going to have to run blind and just fix it.’ The next flip put him on his stomach and they wheeled him into surgery – and it all came out good,” Adam said.
For Christmas, Amber compiled all the messages into a book for her folks.
Ron realizes how amazing things went his way when so much could have gotten even worse. He said he had about “half an inch of exposed spinal cord, so I should have been a paraplegic.” During surgery he had another stroke, but about all he has to show for it is one uncooperative foot.
“We’re still in a trauma state,” Ron Stutzman, 63, said. “At any time, we could break down into tears.” And they did as they recounted Ron’s precarious hold on life – for months. He had nine surgeries those first 11 days. He was bleeding out from broken bones as his bruised lungs filled with fluid. Salem Hospital allowed his large family to gather round to say goodbye as he was loaded into Life Flight, bound for Legacy Emanuel Hospital.
condition. The doctors knew they couldn’t keep “flipping” his dad.
Ron and Tami Stutzman
At the hospital he got pneumonia and his body went septic.
wrong,” Ron’s wife Tami Stutzman said. “They knew Ron had broken his back but couldn’t do anything because he was on the ventilator and had to be flipped every 6-8 hours to keep from drowning in his own blood.”
“They hardly let us celebrate the little things because there were so many things
His son Adam Stutzman recalled how the news kept getting worse about his dad’s
“We realize what went on,” Ron said. “This was a God thing and for anybody to argue that with me would be an exercise in futility. I don’t know how anybody without that faith could have gotten through this.” Amber Stutzman, Adam’s wife, remembers how the first night of her father-in-law’s accident that she receved more than 300 emails, texts and Facebook messages from friends and family
Word spread, and so did the story of the family’s undying faith. “This story caused quite a fervor,” Ron said. “We kept hearing how some people’s lives were changed through it and that’s what it’s all about. Our faith was the only thing we relied on; I have no clue how people can do it without that.” Recently Ron and Tami moved in with Adam, Amber and their eight kids. Adam converted their one-car garage into an apartment with help from his friend Matt Traeger. The two were on the same undefeated Silverton High School state championship football team, Ron was an assistant coach. “Oh, I’ll do that for Coach anytime,” Matt said. Ron played football through college and was on a farm team for the Rams. “I’m so grateful he’s still here with us
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and we had a wonderful Christmas and celebrated with everybody else; just joyful, but we would have had a wonderful Christmas without him here, knowing that he was with God and that God takes care of us and he loves us all – and that’s what we shared with the kids,” Tami said.
home, casts on both legs and unable to move her arms due to internal injuries. She was flown to Oregon Health & Science University while Stephen spent 10 days at Salem Hospital with breaks in his neck and leg and a loss of hearing as a result of the accident. His most recent surgery was last month.
Amber is amazed at how much her fatherin-law’s health has improved since the accident.
“Our 6-month-old puppy Gracie was with us and she was as close to death as I was; a broken rib had punctured her lung,” Sue said. “We were so thankful; the breeder took charge of her recovery and kept the dog until Stephen could bring her home.”
“If you just came up and met him you wouldn’t know he’d been in a wreck,” Amber said. “He’s just totally back!” With that cue Ron hoisted up his sweatshirt to reveal his custom T-shirt: “Not the king’s horses and not the king’s men, but God through the doctors put me together again.”
Sue and Stephen Henry
collided,” Sue Henry said. ‘The world just stopped.”
Like the Stutzmans, Stephen and Sue credit their Christian faith as what got them through all that happened during and after the accident.
Sue had 10 broken ribs, a broken sternum, badly broken ankles and “my whole insides had to be redone,” she said. “My son and daughter-in-law didn’t leave my side for five days.”
“I just remember the silence after the cars
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They found out that the night of the accident – and many, many thereafter – their church members congregated on the Henry’s lawn – they just felt closer to the family that way. They brought their Bibles and prayed. A neighbor’s fountain prompted them to pray that the waters of healing would wash over them. “The more I hear, the more emotional I get,” Sue said.
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While the two families do not know one another, they are connected through their faith and prayers. Each family praying for the other with an understanding of what a harrowing journey it has been for both. “As much as I was the older generation that didn’t like Facebook before, now I love it,” Tami Stutzman said. “We felt covered by prayer; God knew what he was doing, even if it meant Ronnie wouldn’t live.” “It’s very traumatic,” Sue said. “I don’t let myself dwell on those parts. All I want to concentrate on is getting better and being healed. “My ankles may never be the same again,” Sue said, “but every day I can’t thank God enough for saving me for whatever he still wants me to do – and I’m willing.”
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Like the Stutzmans, the Henrys discovered people had been praying for them all over the world and continually thank God for saving their lives. And for that they are grateful. Both families are still healing from the injuries.
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February 2015 • 5
Civics 101
Closure set
But debate continues to swirl about Eugene Field School
By Kristine Thomas Although the Silver Falls School District Board of Directors set a date to close Eugene Field Elementary School and relocate students, the debate continues. “This issue isn’t going away,” Dan Johnson said. “This board isn’t listening to the voters. There is a lot of passion about this issue and I feel it is dividing our community and our families.” On Jan. 9, the school board voted 4-3 to close Eugene Field by Aug. 31, 2016. The resolution calls for moving kindergarten through second grades to Mark Twain; putting third through fifth grades at Robert Frost; and moving sixth through eighth to Schlador Street. The resolution estimates the project will cost $2.5 million, to be funded through a loan with amortized annual debt service payments. Other items on the resolution include determining the future use of Eugene Field, evaluating attendance boundaries, and having a district-wide long range facility planning task force evaluate facility needs. Board chair Tim Roth and board members Wally Lierman, Owen Von Flue and Erv Stadeli voted in favor of the resolution. Julie Norris, David Beeson and Tom Buchholz voted against it. Roth said the decision is a temporary solution.
“One thing that will continue is discussions about facilities in general. In time we will be able to come up with a plan that is hopefully more suitable for all district voters,” Roth said. “This plan gives us that time while taking care of immediate needs getting out of Eugene Field.”
School board elections set for May Elections will be held in May for board positions in both the Mount Angel and Silver Falls school districts. The first day to file to run for a seat on the board is Feb. 7. The filing deadline is March 19. To learn more, call the Mount Angel district office at 503-845-2345 or the SFSD office at 503-873-5303.
Beeson said he has heard people are disappointed in the board’s decision. “Disgust’ would be a better word – and a lot of it – with the administration and board leadership about the manner in which the Eugene Field School and the bond requests have been handled would probably be more appropriate,” Beeson said. “The damage to the school district’s credibility with the community will take years and years to repair. It’s not just the school board.”
“With the bond failure, it is still imperative to get kids out of Eugene Field as soon as possible. The building is not adequate or suitable to use as a school anymore. It’s just not good for kids or staff,” Roth said. All the solutions presented would require the passage of a bond measure, Roth said, adding the majority of the board did not think going for another bond was in the best interest of the district and doubted its ability to pass.
Beeson said the hastily conceived and not completely understood plans for the Schlador site are unpopular with many. He said all the reasons raised by the administration to vacate Eugene Field – including seismic safety, aged facilities and location – “somehow don’t apply when discussing the same problems at Schlador or Mark Twain, a very dangerous building with no plans or funds to fix it.”
“This leaves having a plan that the district can afford without bond dollars. This plan is affordable and one that will work. It gets us out of Eugene Field and with the addition of some modulars at Schlador it’s a very workable solution,” Roth said.
Silver Falls Superintendent Andy Bellando said the board spent many months listening to community members and weighing what would be in the community’s best interest.
He hopes the decision doesn’t hinder the passage of a bond in the future.
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“Though this is not the solution we were hoping for, it is now the most appropriate and affordable option to addresses our most pressing facility need, Eugene Field School,” Bellando said. “This plan is not intended to be permanent. Long-range facility planning efforts at all district schools will continue as we move into the future.” Leslie Martin supports the board’s plan to close Eugene Field and the plan to move students. She says she thinks it is the least disruptive to students and staff. “It is past time for this to happen,” Martin said. “Is this the ideal plan? No. But it’s what the district can do with limited resources since bond attempts have repeatedly failed.” Martin is hopeful voters will approve a bond in the next three to five years. While many support the board’s decision to close the school and move forward, there are those who think it moved too fast, especially when other plans were being discussed including placing a bond on the ballot this spring to either pay to make improvements to Eugene Field or to build an elementary school near Robert Frost. Andy Diacetis said he is happy the students and staff will finally be able to move out of Eugene Field. “It is a completely inadequate and substandard facility for
our children,” Diacetis said. “I just wish the community would have been more willing to fight immediately for a different bond.” Diacetis knows many community members who voted no on the past two bonds who would have voted yes for a $16 to $18 million plan to build a new K-3 school behind Robert Frost. That proposal also would have had funds for maintenance for rural schools. “I think this could pass in 2015. The fact that this idea hasn’t even been considered is disappointing to me,” Diacetis said. Sarah Kaser Weitzman said she thinks the community and the teachers and parents are thrilled with the resolution. “Everyone I have spoken to in town, view Eugene Field as an eyesore, a safety hazard, an inappropriate location for an elementary school, and then of course there are all the problems inside,” she said. “An amazing feat is done daily by teachers to educate our kids. They forge through a multitude of problems like one outlet per room and sinks that can’t wash hands just to name a few. “I am thankful for the great work that the board has done, and celebrate that after 30 years of trying to get kids and teachers out of that building, it’s finally happening,”
Weitzman said. Todd White thinks the decision is a mistake, especially adding modulars as classrooms at Schlador Street. “The short term use of trailers at Schlador Street campus is a waste of money, and doesn’t solve any problems, it just moves them,” White said. “These trailers will be worthless after a couple years, and the district does not have the money to buy them to begin with.” White disagrees with the district’s decision to take out a loan or use general funds for the $2.5 million project. “There is absolutely no reason to close Eugene Field at this time,” White said. “It could serve a few more years of service until a better solution could be found, but the board majority has outright said they were tired of this issue. The voters sent a clear message saying no, but they refuse to listen. They did something just to be done with the issue, which was wrong, and I hope they are held accountable.” Rena Wagner said the board spent many hours researching options and listening to the community in order to make an informed decision.
“I have observed them over the years do their homework,” Wagner said. “This was a difficult decision to finally make and I applaud them for it.”
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Water woes When Marion County Circuit Judge Claudia Burton ruled in favor of the East Valley Water District’s request to be have permission to go onto the property of Victor Point landowners along Drift Creek, she also stated she sees what is happening as a potential political disaster - one that must be looked at by the state legislature. As the law is currently written, Burton said, a water district in Medford could claim land on Mount Hood. “This is something for the legislature to fix, not a trial court judge,” Burton said in January. “I see many political problems with this.” Our Town contacted state Rep. Vic Gilliam to ask if the state legislature would address the question this session. Gilliam said he has spoken with many people the last few years on all sides of “this difficult issue.” While he has a lot of respect for Burton, he said he’s not sure a “legislative remedy is in order.”
Silverton Health status unchanged In December, Silverton Health Board of Directors Chair Gayle Goschie said she was hopeful she could announce “by February who Silverton Health has chosen as its partner.” Last year, the board decided it was no longer fiscally responsible for Silverton Health to operate independently. Both Goschie and Silverton Health President/CEO Rick Cagen said a partner had not been chosen as of early December.
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SH Markeing Communications Director Rita Baiocco Kester said in late January “the status remains the same with nothing more to report at this time.” She said the board is still in the process of identifying available options for partnership. “I don’t expect that we will be able to announce anything for a while, I think it will be at least a couple of months, maybe longer, before a decision is made and even then the board won’t be able to announce anything until a letter of intent is signed.”
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Gilliam weighs in He added he is willing to explore that avenue in the future, as well as “possible corrections in flawed administrate rule by the Oregon Water Resource Department.” “Conversations during this legislative session can and will continue as they have for several years, but I doubt there will be consensus for action any time soon – least of all in this session now underway since many important bill deadlines have already passed and agendas are already in motion,” Gilliam said He said he appreciates “the wisdom of state Sen. Fred Girod and others in several aspects of this matter. “But as the state representative for our area, I’m especially bothered by the straight-jacket in which policies of the Oregon Water Resource Department may have unnecessarily and unfairly placed on many farmers in my district.” At this juncture, Gilliam said, the issue is far from being concluded.
Jane Jones named Silverton First Citizen
The Silverton Chamber of Commer ce announced the recipients of the 201 4 community awards to be presented at the chamber’s annual First Citizen Banque t, this year scheduled for Feb. 28 at the Mount Angel Festhalle.
Jane Jones, a community volunteer, is the First Citizen. Silverton High senior Valeria Vazque zTrejo is the Junior First Citizen.
Distinguished Service award will go to Marta Hazekamp, founder of Americ an Academy of Performing Arts Corp. in Silverton Lifetime Achievement award will be presented to Jim Brueckner, Silverto n High School science teacher and form er coach. Business of the Year winner is Our Tow
n. Stories on all the recipients will be in the Feb. 15 of Our Town.
Tickets to the awards banquet are available through the Silveron Chambe r of Commerce. 503-873-5615.
Our Town Monthly
Silverton $575,000 New Carpet & Interior Paint Complated 11/14, 4Bd, 3.5 Ba.Prvt 23AC’s w/marketable 40yr Timber! MLS#681442 • Rosie Wilgus • 503-409-8779 $555,000 Marion Berry Farm!Income Producing17.43AC,Lg Brn,Grt for Crops,View of Valley,3bd,3ba,SngStry,Edge of Silverton. MLS#681326 • Joe Giegerich • 503-931-7824 $549,900 Overlooking Your Own Creek! 4/2.5,3600+sqft,Huge Rms with Oak & Fir Flrs,Riding Trls,Gated Entry,Views from Each Window,Spa Bathroom! MLS#684555 • Valerie Boen • 503-871-1667 $469,000 Exec Hm 2.61AC w/Flr to Ceil Wndws Overlooking Silverton Res!Bonus Rm,Jetted Tub,36x24Shop,Cvrd Patio. MLS#681711 • Rosie Wilgus • 503-409-8779 $449,900 12.82AC Steal w/500ft Silver Crk Frontage!Good Soils for AG.Mostly Level,Great Home! MLS#682998 • Joe Giegerich • 503-931-7824 $369,900 Wonderful Mstr Suite w/FP, 3 Living Areas, Huge Bdrms, 3Car Garage, Rm for Everything! MLS#681896 • Valerie Boen • 503-871-1667 $342,500 Over 4Ac w/Great View,2 Masters,Open Plan, Daylight Bsmnt,2 Farm Bldgs,New Paint. MLS#679819 • Ginni Stensland • 503-510-4652 $325,000 New Construct,HrdWd Flr,Granite,View of Abbey,Low Trfc Nbrhd,2 Cr Grg. MLS#683467 • Ginni Stensland • 503-510-4652 $290,000 Charming Craftsmen Hm w/Buildable Ajoining Lot,2 Prop,Well Maintnd, Sm Shop & Shed. MLS#682310 • Joe Giegerich • 503-931-7824 $269,500 Well Kept Craftsman w/All the Upgrades!Oak Flrs,High Ceilings,Covrd Porch & More! MLS#679826 • Joe Giegerich • 503-931-7824 $242,500 Qlty 4Bdrm Located at End of Culde-sac Feels Like It’s In the Country! Nice Opn Flr Plan, Utility Upstairs, Fncd BkYd. MLS#677492 • Donna Paradis • 503-851-0998 $209,900 Beautiful 2nd Stry Condo Overlooking Silver Creek!Many Upgrades to Incl Dk w/Lg Space. MLS#671383 • Donna Rash • 503-871-0490 $195,000 Lg 1/2Ac Crnr Lot, Ideal3Bdrm Starter Hm w/EZ Walk to Schools or Shoping, Deck with a View. MLS#676902 • Joe Giegerich • 503-931-7824
$189,900 3Bd w/SunRm,Brick Fp,Wd Flrs,Stnls Steel App,Gas & Central AC New in ‘14,Updates Wndws & Doors. MLS#682914 • Robin Kuhn • 503-930-1896 $169,000 2 Bd 2.5 Ba Townhome. 2 Large Masters for Ideal Privacy,9ft Ceilings, Bamboo Flrs and More! MLS#681955 • Ginni Stensland • 503-510-4652 $165,000 Open w/Solar Tube Lighting!Stnls Stl App,Granite,Gas Stv,Fp,Kitchen Upgrades,Wired for Alarm. MLS#683206 • Cynthia Johnson • 503-551-0145
Local Owner/Brokers Located In the heart of Historic Silverton at 119 N Water Street
$164,000 Great Starter Home or Rental! Nicely Renovated, SS Appl, Bamboo Flrs, Fncd BkYd. MLS#675420 • Joe Giegerich • 503-931-7824
Residences with Acreage $347,900 Beautiful Silverton Hills Setting, 14.5Ac, Hm is 3/2 w/new Roof, Flring & Wndws, Guest Bunkhse, 2ponds, Fncd Pasture. MLS#678771 • Marty Schrock • 503-559-9443
Mt. AnGel $459,900 Nr Abby w/Panoramic View of Countryside, 3915sf Hm Blt for Entertaining, Lg Grt Rm w/26’ Ceiling, Beautiful Alder Trim, Qlty Thruout. MLS#672249 • Valerie Boen • 503-871-1667 $339,900 This Home Features A Custom Home & Lg Shop Just at the Edge of Town. MLS#681016 • Donna Paradis • 503-851-0998 $339,000 Xlnt Neighborhd nr Schools, Classic Craftsman w/Orig Details - Blt-in Cbnt, Wd Flrs Has Full Fnshed Bsmt. MLS#668826 • Joe Giegerich • 503-931-7824 $259,000 5bd 3ba,Lg Cvrd Dk,Garden,Shed,RV Pk, Walk to Abbey. MLS#682410 • Donna Paradis • 503-851-0998 $249,900 Lg Dk off Great Rm for Your Summer Fun!Peaceful Sng Stry, Open Plan w/Gas Fp & Tile in Master Ba. MLS#685145 • Robin Kuhn • 503-930-1896 $224,000 3/3.5 w/ over 2200 Sq Ft on over a 1/2 Ac Lot! Sng Stry,Real Wood Floors,Lg Cvrd Dk, Hot Tub, Partially Fnshd Bsmnt & More! MLS#683234 • Ward Frederick • 503-602-5987 $209,900 Quiet & Charming Mt.Angel Beauty!Gas,Stnlss Stl,Cedar Fenc,Lg Yard & Master. MLS#680290 • Joe Giegerich • 503-931-7824
“WE KNOW THIS MARKET” $62,900 Large Private Lot in Coveted Area of Mt. Angel. MLS#683760 • Robin Kuhn • 503-930-1896
SCottS MillS $339,900 Qlty Single Lvl 3/2 on Lg Lot, Set in the Trees Enjoy the Lg Cvrd Deck, Beautiful Interior Details. MLS#678127 • Joe Giegerich • 503-931-7824 $199,000 Great Buy! Over 3Ac - Private, Lg 5Bdrm Hm in the Trees, Barn/Shop. MLS#677852 • Donna Rash • 503-871-0490
SAleM AreA $142,500 Move In Ready! Perfect Starter,Rental,or Dwnsize Home!Nice & Clean w/Neighborhood tomatch. MLS#684813 • Jackie Zurbrugg • 503-932-5833
otHer AreAS
$990,000 176 Acre Farm w/ Quality Soils & Income Producing!Great Loc,48x84 Shp,5 Bay w/ septic & Perrydale. MLS#680924 • Joe Giegerich • 503-931-7824 $510,000 Xlnt Income Producing 20Ac Farm, 8Ac Ennis Hazelnut Orchard-$30K Annu Inc, 2 Well Maintained Homes-Dual Living or Rentals. MLS#673308 • Joe Giegerich • 503-931-7824 $250,000 Fishermans Paradise! 3/2 in Gated Community nr Boat Ramp, Wooded Setting. MLS#679707 • Joe Giegerich • 503-931-7824 $199,900 Stayton, Renovated w/Qlty & Style Single Lvl 3Bd, Lg Crnr Yd, EZ Walk to Schools, Zoned Commercial/Residential. MLS#676880 • Joe Giegerich • 503-931-7824
INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITIES $265,000 Dunmire Auto Service, Qlty Reputation, Loyal Customers, Ideal Dwntwn Location. MLS#678299 • Joe Giegerich • 503-931-7824
lAnD & lotS $265,000 71Ac w/Xmas Trees & Young Reprod Timber, Rd Sys, Spring Water. MLS#676944 • Joe Giegerich • 503-931-7824
$109,000 Sunset Views from the Quarter Ac Lot in Abiqua Heights. MLS#674777 • Ginni Stensland • 503-510-4652
$189,500 Amazing Price for this 4.5 Acre, Dividable Lnd w/ Water Frontage!Several Level Building Sites. MLS#682805 • Ginni Stensland • 503-510-4652
$75,000 Corner lot in popular development. View towards Mt Angel Abbey, Over 8000 sf! MLS#683305 • Ginni Stensland • 503-510-4652
$175,000 .61Ac Blding Site on Abiqua Crk, Septic Apprvd, Easy Crk Access. MLS#668351 • Joe Giegerich • 503-931-7824 $147,000 2.64Ac Prvt Wooded Site, nr Recreation. MLS#677089 • Donna Paradis • 503-871-0998 $125,000 2 Acres w/ Opportunity to Build Your Dream Home on!Right Price for Beauty that Includes Creek. MLS#681152 • Ginni Stensland • 503-510-4652 $120,000 A Fisherman’s Dream! 2 Acres that Includes Silver Creek and Canyon Views! MLS#681153 • Ginni Stensland • 503-510-4652
$72,000 Popular neighborhood on the east side of Silverton. Surrounded by newer homes and has a view of the Abbey in Mt Angel. MLS#683304 • Ginni Stensland • 503-510-4652 $69,000ea Lots Available in Established Neighborhd. MLS#670905, 670908 • Dean Oster • 503-932-5708 $59,900 Level Lot Close to DwnTwn, City Service Avail. MLS#678632 • Marty Schrock • 503-559-9443 $34,700 Lot borders 2 access street, in quiet, well maintained park. MLS#681710 • Ginni Stensland • 503-510-4652
For rent Want to Move on? Let Us Rent Your Home Call Dean Oster 503-932-5708
503.873.8600 • 119 N. Water St., Silverton, OR 97381 • www.NWOregonRealtyGroup.com Our Town Monthly
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February 2015 • 9
Arts & Entertainment
Moving time By Brenna Wiegand On Jan. 27, Silverton’s original Four Freedoms mural was reduced to matchsticks. But as the sign on the chainlink fence announced, the mural will make a grand second appearance.
Joe & Dana Giegerich, Brokers
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Featured Listings $555,000 332 Monitor Road. Marion berry farm! Income producing 17.43 AC, large barn, great for crops, view of valley, 3BD, 3BA, single story at the edge of Silverton. MLS#681326 $299,900 920 Hayes St. Gorgeous large home, 5BD, 2.5BA, granite, marble tile entry, vaulted ceilings, cherry cabinets, master downstairs, backs up Ebner Park. MLS#685389
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PO Box 880, Silverton, OR 97381 Donations may be directed to the First Freedoms fund or designated it for overall mural maintenance. 503-873-6572
“I’m glad we could make it work,” Seven Brides owner Jeff DeSantis said. “We’ve got the space; we’ve got parking – it just makes so much sense.” The Silverton Urban Renewal District granted $4,000 to Silverton Mural Society for the copyright. The entire project is estimated to cost about $50,000. “We still need $15,000 to finish the project; there’s enough to complete two murals and the placard,” Vince Till said. Muralist Tonya Smithburg is tackling the extensive project; each of the four panels takes about two months to paint. The mural society provides paint, brushes and pays the artist $4,000 per panel.
Volunteers needed pickaxes for digging holes for the support beams.
Oregon
Silverton Mural Society
Building owner Ben Johnston donated $20,000 toward the new mural which will be installed at 990 N. First St.. in front of the Seven Brides Brewery warehouse.
“I like doing murals because a lot more people get to enjoy them,” Smithburg said while at work on her scaffold. “It makes a big impact and often provides historical information.”
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The mural’s former home on the old Masonic Lodge on Main Street was demolished and it cost too much – upwards of $90,000 without guarantee of success – to move the original copy of Norman Rockwell’s Four Freedoms. The mural – Silverton’s first – was painted by David McDonald in 1993. The old building is being replaced with a new facility for MAPS Credit Union.
Four Freedoms
“Ron Jiricek (Jiricek Construction) has donated a lot of his time,” Till said. “He did the bracing inside and erected the steel beams, then Scott Marcum (Crusher Service) did the welding.” Logan Kahn is Vince’s “right hand man.” “About $4,000 in labor and engineering has been donated – it’s outstanding they care so much about getting the Four Freedoms back,” Till said. “We’re hoping to put up the first panel Feb. 5.” Four of Silverton’s 27 murals to his
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Silverton muralist Tonya Smithburg is recreating Norman Rockwell’s “Four Freedoms” for their new home at Seven Brides Brewing. Photo by Larry Kazzell
credit, Larry Kassell (Kassell Concepts) is creating a placard with the story of Rockwell’s 1943 contribution to the war effort. “My opinion is that Norman Rockwell is the best painter that ever lived – that means Rembrandt, Michelangelo and all those people,” Kassell said. “He was poopooed by the critics because he was an illustrator, but I think illustrators make far better painters. They’ve got to have a theme and please their employer and work to a deadline too. Norman Rockwell did all of those things – and he told a good story.” “People write letters from as far away as Africa about the murals – freedom of speech, freedom of worship, freedom from fear and freedom from want,” Till said. “Makes you think of how important it is; maybe more so because we are in troubled times.”
Our Town Monthly
First gallery By Brenna Wiegand For some people, February means celebrating groundhogs, love, presidents and Oregon’s birthday. For the artists at Lunaria, February means another anniversary. This February, Lunaria Gallery kicks off its 20th anniversary year with an invitational show of past and current members.
Art co-op turns 20 Lunaria Gallery
Celebrate
2113 N. Water St., Silverton 20th Anniverary Show Feb. 6 - March 2 Gallery hours 11 a.m. - 5 p.m. daily Public artists’ reception First Friday Feb. 6, 7 - 9 p.m.
Twenty years ago, five artists got together with the idea of creating a space to display and sell their work in Silverton. Teresa Burgett, Theresa Sharrar, Ann Altman, Shannon Rice and Tonia Jenkins pooled their talents irst to open a small corner gallery in the Wild Iris Cafe, now O’Brien’s. As more artists joined the gallery, they found expanded quarters, moving a couple times before settling at 113 N. Water St.
Valentine’s Day at The Oregon Garden Resort
Now Lunaria is a cooperative of 25 juried members who are featured one or two at a time in monthly shows. They staff and run all aspects of the gallery.
Enjoy a special dinner menu in the Garden View Restaurant and live music in the Fireside Lounge.
Founder Ann Altman’s most recent work is a large piece she designed and cut out of metal now gracing the extraordinarily blank wall as you come into the library. She hopes others like it half as much as she does. “Lunaria has been a big part of my life,” Altman said. “It’s been a place where I show my best work and interact with the public and get to know people around town. It has grown and as a group the artwork represents a broad selection of quality art being created locally, with a special pride in continuing to get better.” “We designed the business to operate in a slightly foolproof way and make it affordable for people to participate,” Teresa Burgett said. “The other goal was to have something happen in Silverton, so we started First Friday. At the time there was nothing going on.” “Silverton has built a reputation as an artsy town and credit goes to Lunaria Gallery for inspiration and sustainability,” member Marilyn Krug said. Ceramics artist and gallery bookkeeper Julie Huisman sales have increased steadily since the gallery opened and that last year showed a 24 percent increase. “We see a lot of tourists from other areas,” Huisman said, “and I think a lot of them come from the (Oregon) Garden.”
Our Town Monthly
with your Sweetie
Lunaria Gallery co-founder Teresa Burgett, with her dog Lucy, will take part in the 20th anniversary show in February.
“It’s pretty amazing as a co-op that it has lasted as long as it has,” Burgett said. “It started out with a really generous group of people whose intentions were to work as a group and one of the reasons it did succeed is because people were very supportive of each other.” For the show Burgett is firing some ceramics, designing some wood sculptures and doing a painting based on a day at the dog park with her dog Lucy.
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“My work’s all kind of silly and it really annoys some of the members,” Burgett said. “My bottom line is ‘Am I having fun?’ and if I’m not that’s when I quit. “We started the co-op as an opportunity for people to just experiment and find out who they are as artists,” Burgett said. “I found out I like being silly about art – I like to say I’m sincere but not serious – because it’s fun and that’s who I am – and there is a place for that.”
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895 West Main St.Silverton, OR 97381
February 2015 • 11
Something Fun
Quite a yarn
Camerons discover – then share – a life-changing love of alpacas
By Melissa Wagoner
Alpacas at Marquam Hills
Ten years ago, Jennifer Cameron saw a photo of an alpaca in a newspaper that would alter the course of her life.
35835 S. Hwy 213, Molalla Ranch & Gift Shop: 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. daily 503-407-3699
“She thought they were cute,” her husband Bill Cameron said. “There was something about them I wanted to explore,” Jennifer added.
the herd as well as a small, on-site, gift shop attached to the barn. The shop features alpaca yarn in a variey of weights and colors, as well as a clothing – hats, gloves, socks, sweaters – made from alpaca yarn.
The Camerons embarked on a year long research project into the viability of investing in alpacas and discovered the timing was good. “Our oldest son didn’t want his mom to volunteer in the schools anymore,” Bill said, adding that meant Jennifer was in the market for a hobby. Alpacas appealed to her not just because they are cute, but because of their size.
Then five years ago, the Camerons invested in 18-acres outside of Molalla, building a house and barn and increasing their herd. The farm is on Hwy 213 next to AlexEli Vineyard and Winery.
“It’s doable for someone my size,” Jennifer said. “And this livestock is docile.”
Now they have about 95 alpacas, Bill said, adding an alpaca farmer can have between seven to 10 animals on an irrigated acre.
The Camerons, who were living in Tigard, purchased five alpacas which they boarded.
What began as a hobby is now a fulltime, family run business. The Camerons’ Alpacas at Marquam Hill Ranch includes
“It’s been a learning process,” Jennifer said. She is still at the helm caring for the animals, but Bill has taken an active role in the business, becoming an alpaca fiber expert and competition judge. “There are 22 natural colors. In one blanket you can have huge degrees of variants. It gives it the ability to have real niche markets because you don’t have to dye it. It’s very similar in microns to cashmere,” Bill said of alpaca fiber. In early summer the Camerons invite the
community to a shearing day open house. Families can watch as the animals are sheared and the fiber is sorted. Then the Marquam Hills Ranch fiber is made into yarn. “Once it’s been processed to yarn it’s easier to sell,” Jennifer said. “People like the fact that it’s from this place,” Bill said. “When they come in, they’re looking for our stuff,” Jennifer agreed. Besides fiber sales, the Camerons also sell alpacas which are of award-winning lineage. One of the farm’s breeding males has won top male in Denver competitions for three years. He is considered one of the top sires in the country. “You don’t need a lot of males. We offer three or four percent of them for sale and a percentage are fiber males. We also find homes for them and have a program where we sell animals and offer a customer service package,” Jennifer said. Packages includes options like health
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Bill and Jennifer Cameron with some of the ribbons their alpacas have won.
checks and shearing, made easier and affordable when done on a large scale.
including spinning, felting and dyeing. This fall the ranch has two big events scheduled.
“There are people in the area who maybe want to have an animal to eat down the blackberries. We offer that option,” Jennifer said. Besides selling animals and fiber, Jennifer, who has a degree in elementary education, makes sure there are learning opportunities. School groups can schedule tours and there is a 4-H program for children interested in showing alpacas. This July the ranch will host a kids’ camp where campers will learn the history of alpacas as well as how to halter and care for them. They will get a chance to explore fiber art as well. ad-3 625x5-2clr-ShilohWater-14oct-spot
They also offer classes in fiber arts
The first, Dinner in the Field, is a farmto-table meal where more than 100 people are invited to tour the ranch and enjoy local foods prepared on-site by a Portland chef. It will be held early in September. The second, National Alpaca Farm Days, will be held the end of September and is their biggest event. “We can have upwards of 300 people,” Jennifer Cameron said.
The Camerons welcome anyone interested in fiber arts or getting to know alpacas better to come out to the ranch color.pdf 1 10/6/14 7:14 PM and check them out.
One ticket for $1 or an arm’s length for $10!
Open 7 days a Week 301 E. Main Street Silverton 503-874-4401 w w w. w h i m s y e t c . c o m
All proceeds to benefit the Silverton Mural Society. On sale: Friday, Feb. 7. Drawing: Saturday, Feb. 14 at 5pm
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February 2015 • 13
datebook Notices YMCA Swimming Programs
Silver Falls YMCA has February swim team practice i3:30 - 4:45 p.m. MondayFriday at Silverton Pool, 601 Miller St., with tryouts every Friday. Fees range from $35 - $55 a month. Swim lessons begin Feb. 2,, and run monthly. PERS classes $5 a lesson, Progressive classes $6 a lesson. Fees for nonmembers vary. 503-873-6456, theyonline.org
Weekly Activities AA, Al-Anon Meetings
Noon – 1 p.m. Monday - Saturday. Alcoholics Anonymous, St. Edward’s Episcopal Church, 211 W. Center St., Silverton. Serenity Al-Anon, Silverton Assembly of God Church, 437 N. James St.: 10 a.m. Saturday; 5:30 p.m. Tuesday. 503-269-0952. 8 p.m. Monday, Thursday, Saturday. Alcoholics Anonymous, Scotts Mills Community Center, 298 Fourth St. David, 50-383-8327
Silverton Business Group
8 a.m. Wednesdays. Silverton Inn & Suites, 310 N. Water St. Sponsored by Silverton Chamber of Commerce. Network, hear speaker. Free. 503-873-5615
Storytimes at Library
Stories for age groups offered at Silver Falls Library, 410 S. Water St. Chickadees, age 3-4, 12:30 – 1:15 p.m. Wednesdays. Baby Birds, age 0-3, 11 – 11:30 a.m. Thursdays; same time Fridays. Duplo Day, 11:30 a.m. – 1:30 p.m. all ages Fridays. Caregiver must attend. 503-873-7633
Woodcarving Sessions
1 – 4 p.m. Wednesdays. Silverton Arts Association offers Silverchips woodcarving sessions. All skill levels. $2/ week. 503-873-2480
Gordon House Tours
Tours at noon, 1, 2 p.m. Thursday– Monday. Frank Lloyd Wright Gordon House, 869 W. Main St., Silverton. Reservations needed. thegordonhouse. org, 503-874-6006
Overeaters Anonymous
7 – 8 p.m. Thursdays. St. Edward’s Episcopal Church, 211 W. Center St., Silverton. Discuss tips, support. All welcome. 503-910-6862
Weekly Meditation Group
7 – 8:30 p.m. Thursdays. Borland Gallery, 303 Coolidge St., Silverton. A Quiet Place Sangha invites people of all spiritual traditions to weekly guided meditation Free. Newcomers arrive 20 minutes early. 971-218-6641
14 • February 2015
Silverton Toastmasters
7:30 a.m. Fridays. Seventh Day Adventist Church, 1159 Oak St., Silverton. Ann, 503-910-3668
Sunday, Feb. 1
Scotts Mills City Council
7:30 p.m., Scotts Mills City Hall, 265 Fourth St. Open to public. 503-873-5435
Friday, Feb. 6 Writers’ Seminar
Senior Super Bowl Party
2 p.m., Silverton Senior Center, 115 Westfield St. Watch Super Bowl. Baked potato,nacho bar $2.50 each. Seniors 60+. 503-873-3093
Monday, Feb. 2 Groundhog Day
2 p.m., Silverton Senior Center, 115 N Westfield St. Different local author each week. Feb. 6 Jack Hande. Feb. 13 Leonide Martin. Feb. 20 Doris Bernhardt. Feb. 27 Bobbie Gannon. Free. Seniors 60+. 503-873-3093.
YMCA First Friday Fun
Senior Center Board
1 p.m., Silverton Senior Center, 115 Westfield St. Seniors 60+ welcome. 503-873-3093
Silverton City Council
7 p.m., Silverton Council Chambers, 421 S. Water St. 503-873-5321
Mount Angel City Council
7 p.m., Mount Angel Library, 290 E. Charles St. 503-845-9291
Tuesday, Feb. 3 Beginning Drawing for Seniors
2 p.m., Silverton Senior Center, 115 Westfield St. Learn to draw. Seniors 60+. Tuesdays. $20 for month. 503-873-3093
6 - 9 p.m., Silver Falls Family YMCA, 421 S. Water St., Silverton. Drop the kids off while parents enjoy Silverton First Friday downtown. Children 5 and older are $5 for YMCA members; $10 for nonmembers. Register by Feb. 5: 503-8730205, at YMCA, theYonline.org.
SAA Photography Show
6 - 8 p.m., Borland Gallery, 303 Coolidge St., Silverton. Silverton Art Association reception for February photography show. Meet local photographers. Photographs on display noon - 4 pm Saturdays and Sundays during February. 503-874-4158
Silverton vs Lebanon Boys Basketball
Silverton vs Lebanon Swimming
7 p.m., Silverton High, 1456 Pine St.
Silverton Garden Club
First Friday in Silverton
4 p.m., Silverton Pool, 301 Miller St. 7 p.m. Silver Creek Fellowship, 822 NE Industrial Way, Silverton. Toni and Jeff Ruef present “Learning about Our Local Wild Rice.” Free; visitors welcome. Kathy, 503-873-0159
Wednesday, Feb. 4 Ladies Literary Club
6:45 p.m. Guest speaker is author of The Crying Tree Naseem Rakha of Silverton. Free. 503-874-0399. Call for location.
Actors/Improv Group
7 - 8:30 p.m., Silver Falls Library, 410 S Water St., Silverton. Improvisational games. No experience required. Open to adults, high school students. Repeats Feb. 18. Ron, 503-873-8796
7 – 9 p.m. Explore the historic downtown, have dinner, shop, browse through galleries and boutiques. 503-873-5615
Saturday, Feb. 7 Walk With a Doc
9 a.m., Silverton Hospital, 342 Fairview St. Silverton Health physicians lead 30-minute walk. Free pedometer, blood pressure check. Free; open to public. Jessica, 971-983-5319
Indoor Flea Market
7 p.m., Silverton High, 1456 Pine St.
9 a.m. - 3 p.m., Silverton Elks Lodge, 300 High St. Free admission. Spaces $15 per market. First Saturday of month thru May. Dennis, 503-569-0148; Guy, 503-798-1953
Thursday, Feb. 5
Vegan Cooking
Silverton vs Dallas Boys Basketball
Silverton Scribes
7 - 8:30 p.m., Silver Falls Library, 410 S. Water St., Silverton. Informal writer’s group Repeats Feb. 19. 503-873-8796
11 a.m., Immanuel Lutheran Church, 303 N Church St., Silverton. Vegan cooking class taught by Molly Ainsley. Sponsored by Silverton Area Community Aid. Free. Call to register at 503-873-3446
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An Evening in Tuscany
5 p.m., Festhalle, 500 Wilco Hwy., Mount Angel. Auction, dinner, appetizers, entertainment. Tickets $25 in advance, $30 at door. Benefits Holy Family Academy. 503-551-4265
Sunday, Feb. 8 Jesse Cromer Recital
4 p.m., Silverton United Methodist Church, 203 W Main St. Jesse Cromer, choir director, explores the many facets of love through music. Open to public. 503-873-6517
Monday, Feb. 9 Mount Angel School District
6:30 p.m., JFK High School, 890 E. Marquam Road, Mount Angel. 503-845-2345
Silver Falls School District
7 p.m., Silverton Community Center, 421 S. Water St. 503-873-5303
Tuesday, Feb. 10 Bible Study
9:30 - 11 a.m., Shalom Prayer Center, 840 S Main St., Mount Angel. Introduction to reading and hearing the words of the Bible. Every Tuesday through March. $5 per session. 503-845-6773
Ancestry Detectives
10 a.m. – noon, Silver Falls Library, 410 S. Water St. Topic: research women. Donna, 503-209-3183; ancestrydetectives.org
Wednesday, Feb. 11 iPad Workshop
3 p.m., Father Bernard Youth Center, 980 S Main St., Mount Angel. Local technical expert guides users through iPad device settings, navigation, downloading apps, Facetime, more. Bring own iPad. Hosted by Mt. Angel Telephone. Light refreshments served. Repeats at 7 p.m. RSVP to 503-8451031, mmadision@mtangeltel.net.
Year of Consecrated Life
6:30 p.m., Mount Angel Abbey, One Abbey Dr., St. Benedict. Four-month educational film series continues with Of Gods and Men. Continues at 2 p.m. Feb. 28 with Angels with Dirty Faces. The series continues the second and fourth Saturday of the month through April. Free, open to public. 503-845-3303
Silverton vs Crescent Valley Girls Bball 7 p.m., Silverton High. 1456 Pine St.
Our Town Monthly
Thursday, Feb. 12 Celebrate Valentine’s Day
Noon, First Baptist Church, 229 Westfield St., Silverton. Norma Carcio, owner of Norma’s Candy Bouquet shares special arrangments for Valentine’s Day. Bob Shike entertains. Speaker is Roberta Morin, volunteer with Red Cross and long-term care ombudsman. $6.50. Presented by The Mt. Angel Silverton Women’s Connection; Stonecroft Ministries. Reservations necessary by calling Cathy, 503-999-2291. Free childcare by calling Rebecca, 503-873-9321
Free Diabetes Education Class
6 p.m., Silverton Area Community Aid, 421 S Water St. Class taught by Sandy from Diabetes Support Services. Come learn history and prevention. Information will be given on prevention care, roll of caregiver and resources. Door prize and snacks provided. Call to pre-register 873-3446.
Singles Dine Out Club
6 p.m., Mt. Angel Sausage Company, 105 S Garfield St. For singles 40+and seniors 60+. Order off menu, dutch treat. 503-873-3093
Silverton Zenith Woman’s Club
7 p.m., location varies. Members discuss ways to fund, implement projects benefitting Silverton community. Call Barbara for information, meeting place, 503-874-4158.
Friday, Feb. 13 District Wrestling Tourney
Silverton High hosts the Mid-Willamette Conference district wrestling tournament Feb. 13-14. For schedule, call Silverton High at 503-873-6331
Mt. Angel Wurstfest
10 am. - 10 p.m., Festhalle, 500 Wilco Hwy., Mount Angel. A celebration of sausage. Beer, wine, sausage pairings. $5 adults; $10 with specialty stein. Children free with adult. Repeats Feb. 14. mtangelwurstfest. com
Silverton Chamber Forum Lunch
11:45 a.m., Family Birth Center, 342 Fairview St., Silverton. Networking, program. $12 members with reservation. $15 prospective members or no reservation. 503-873-5615,
The Search for the Fairy Princess
7 p.m., Brush Creek Playhouse, 11535 NE Silverton Road, Silverton. Brush Creek annual children and youth production. Tickets $10 adults, $8 seniors and children 12 and under. Advance tickets at BooksN-Time, 210 N Water St., Ste. B, Silverton. Repeats 7 p.m. Feb. 14, 20, 21, 27, 28; 2 p.m. Feb. 15, 22, March 1. 503-508-3682, brushcreekplayhouse.com
Our Town Monthly
Saturday, Feb. 14 Valentine’s Day Wurstfest Run
10 a.m., Festhalle, 500 Wilco Hwy., Mount Angel. Wurst Run features 5K run/walk and 10K run. Pre-register, racenorthwest.com, $25. Day of registration $30. Registration includes race and festival entry, stein, complimentary beverage.
Silver Falls Library Book Club
7 - 8:30 p.m., Silver Falls Library, 410 S. Water St., Silverton. This month’s selection is Boys in the Boat by Daniel Brown. Refreshments. Visitors welcome. Spring, 503-897-8796
Wednesday, Feb. 18 Lenten Breakfast
In Stitches at Silver Falls Library
10 a.m. – noon, Silver Falls Library, 410 S. Water St., Silverton. Group meets to crochet, knit, share ideas. All levels welcome. Free. Spring, 503-873-8796
7:30 a.m., Marquam United Methodist Church, 36975 S Hwy 213, Mount Angel. Breakfast, worship, weekly speaker. Runs seven consecutive Wednesdays. Free; donations accepted. 503-829-5061
Travel Fair
Sunday, Feb. 15
11 a.m., Home Place, 1080 N First St., Silverton. Learn about travel with Silverton Senior Center. No age restrictions. Pizza provided. 503-873-3093
St. Paul Crab Feed
Thursday, Feb. 19
5:30 p.m., St. Paul Catholic Church, 1410 Pine St., Silverton. Silent and oral auctions, dinner of Oregon dungeness crab or chicken cordon bleu. Tickets $40 each. Annie, 503-873-2044
Taizé Prayer
7 - 8 p.m., Benedictine Sisters’ Queen of Angels Chapel, 840 S. Main St., Mount Angel. Open to public. 503-845-6773
Monday, Feb. 16 Presidents Day
Feb. 15. 503-873-6456; theYonline.org
Tuesday, Feb. 17
Silverton vs Central Girls Basketball
Sweetheart Dance
3 - 6 p.m., Silverton Senior Center, 115 Westfield St. Music by Our Gang Band. Beverage, appetizers provided. All ages. $7 per person, $10 couples. 503-873-3093
Sunday, Feb. 22 Free Organ Recital
Monday, Feb. 23
7 p.m., Silverton High, 1456 Pine St.
7 p.m., Silverton High, 1456 Pine St.
Silverton Poetry Festival
7 p.m., Frank Lloyd Wright Gordon House, 869 W Main St., Silverton. Workshops, discussions, professional readings by poets Carter McKenzie and Michael Spring. Free. Open to public. Hosted by Silverton Poetry Association. 503-873-2480
Silverton Poetry Festival
Chili Cook-Off
Silverton vs South Albany Boys Bball
Silverton vs Dallas Girls Basketball
Friday, Feb. 20
9 - 11:30 a.m., 310 Water Restaurant, 310 Water St., Silverton. Dr. Andrea Larson presents “The Heart of a Woman.” 503-873-3276 5 - 7 p.m., Silverton United Methodist Church, 203 W Main St. Celebrate Fat Tuesday with a meal and bingo as Silverton celebrity chefs vie for best chili. Minimum donations of $5 per meal. Benefits Silverton Area Community Aid. 503-873-3446
Friday, Feb. 27
Saturday, Feb. 28
9:30 a.m., First Christian Church, 402 N. First St., Silverton. Gil Wittman performs pieces from Handel’s Overture to Handel’s Messiah, Wagner’s Tannheueser, Greig’s Morning Song and Anitra’s Dance. 503-873-6620
Silverton Aglow Lighthouse
9 a.m., C Street Parking Lot, 111 W C St., Silverton. Silverton Senior Center bus trip to Spirit Mountain Casino. Return around 7 p.m. $10. All ages. Preregistration required. 503-873-3093
6 - 8 p.m., Seven Brides Brewing, 990 N. First, Silverton. Meet other knitters, crocheters for an evening of pints and some purls. Hosted by Apples to Oranges. Everyone welcome. 503-874-4901
Saturday, Feb. 21
10 - 1 p.m., Silverton Community Center, 421 S. Water St. No school means open gym at the Y. Stick around for open swim 1- 3 p.m. Ages 5 and older. $5 for Y members; $10 nonmembers. Register by
Spirit Mountain Casino Trip
Pints & Purls
7 p.m., Silverton High, 1456 Pine St.
YMCA Open Gym
Wednesday, Feb. 25
Mount Angel Community Awards 6 p.m. Social hour, 6:30 p.m. dinner. The Mount Angel Festhalle, 500 Wilco Hwy. Tickets available at Columbia Bamk. US Bank or Wells Fargo Bank in Mount Angel.
Tuesday, Feb. 24 Silverton vs Woodburn Boys Bball
1 p.m., Silver Creek Coffee House, 111 N Water St., Silverton. Poet Laureate Peter Sears reads his poems. Poetry workshop follows 2:30 - 4:30 p.m. Workshop limited to 12 participants. $35. To register, call Silverton Poetry Association, 503-873-2480. Round out the day with a salon reading by Andrea Hollander and Josh Booton at 7 p.m. at Edward Adams House B&B, 729 S Water St., Silverton.
Silverton’s First Citizen Banquet
5:30 p.m. The Mount Angel Festhalle, 500 Wilco Hwy. Silverton Chamber of Commerce sponsors annual event honoring top citizens, civic volunteers, schooldistrict employees. Tickets: $35; in advance at chamber office, 426 S. Water St., or by phone, 503-873-5615 (credit card). No tickets sold at door. Feb. 27 is deadline to purchase tickets.
7 p.m., Silverton High, 1456 Pine St.
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February 2015 • 15
Something To Do
Wurst weekend
Festival offers best plan for five celebrations in one by staying healthy. The Wurstfest Fun Run begins at 10 a.m. Saturday at the Festhalle. To register or for information visit: racenorthwest.com/wurstrun. And for those who prefer dancing to running, there will be plenty of music to keep you moving on both days.
Is it possible in one weekend to celebrate Valentine’s Day, Oregon’s birthday, have one last blast before the Lenten season begins on Ash Wednesday and get a kick start on health goals? Only if you are willing to have the best of times at the Wurstfest. The seventh annual Mount Angel Wurstfest is 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Friday, Feb. 13 and Saturday, Feb. 14 at the Mount Angel Festhalle, 500 S. Wilco Hwy. Admission is $5 or $10 with specialty stein or glass. Children with an adult are admitted free until 10 p.m. Proceeds from Wurstfest benefit the Mount Angel Chamber of Commerce’s community projects and activities. Besides being a celebration of the sausage, Wurstfest is also a celebration of community. There is something for everyone to enjoy from senior citizens to young children. Our Town worked with Wurstfest committee member Kathy Wall to devise a game plan to enjoy all there is to do during Wurstfest. Celebrate senior status Wall said last year senior citizens lined up an hour before the doors opened for Wurstfest. This year on Friday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., those 65 and older will be eligible for special give-a-ways.
Celebrate Oregon’s 156th birthday
German Mardi Gras or Fasching is celebrated at Wurstfest.
Celebrate Fasching – a German Mardi Gras: For those of you who can’t make it to New Orleans for Mardi Gras, celebrate Fasching – or German Mardi Gras – from 5 to 10 p.m. Friday. Wear a colorful mask, an old bridesmaid dress, mismatched clothing or dress up as a superhero, favorite character or ... ? Wall said this is the second year Fasching will be a part of Wurstfest. There will be a parade and prizes for the best costumes. Celebrate the Wurst Run for the best reason Extend your years of eating, drinking and being merry
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On Feb. 14, 1859, Oregon became the 33rd state. As every devoted Oregonian knows, the best way to celebrate the state’s birthday is by enjoying Oregon’s bounty. Sausages, mustard, beer and wine locally made will be featured. Mt. Angel Sausage Co., The Glockenspiel Restaurant, Mount Angel’s Beneditine Sisters, Seven Brides Brewing of Silverton and Hanson Vineyards of Monitor will be serving up local delights. There will be others with fine German food and beverages as well. Celebrate Valentine’s Day Wall also encourages couples to participate in the anniversary dance. “We invite all the couples onto the dance floor and then we ask couples who have been together a year to first leave and continue until we have the couple who has been married the longest who will receive a gift,” Wall said. The young ones can visit Kindergarten Corner, perhaps making a Valentine for mom or dad, or having their face painted and being entertained by balloon fun.
Chocolate is the Gift of Love! Featuring the finest Oregon made premium chocolates & award winning wine, imported ports and sparkling Bruts. Taking advance orders for pick up of gourmet Chocolate Covered Strawberries
The Chocolate Box 115 N. Water St. • Silverton •
Day Valentine’s 4. is Feb. 1
Next to Lunaria Gallery
Call for extended Valentine’s week hours:
503.873.3225
R e g u l a r h o u r s : T u e – S a t 1 1 : 3 0 a . m . – 5 : 0 0 p . m . www.silvertonchocolatebox.com
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Our Town Monthly
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$89,900 1318 S. Water St. 1/4 acre waterfront lot, Silver Creek. Owner may carry contract. Duplex possible. Bledsoe/Santana. WVMLS#661427.
$879,900 19067 Abiqua Rd NE. 80 acre farm/timber mix (Sept. 2014 timber cruise), water rights, livable home. Some Abiqua Frontage. Bledsoe/Santana. WMLS#681128
$529,000 203 East Main. Business Opportunity. Towne House Restaurant and Lounge. Over 7,000 s.f. with two rented apts on top. Price Includes business, equipment, building. Nearly Turn key. Bledsoe/Santana WVMLS#684920.
$369,900 3007 Cascade Hwy. 8.31 acres, good soil, great well, waterfront, nice home. Close in. Bledsoe/Santana Team. WVMLS#670622
$225,500 955 Hayes Street, Mt. Angel. 3BD/2BA, 1571 s.f., vaulted ceilings. Recently reduced. Great price, great deal. Compare price per square foot and be impressed. Maryann Mills. WVMLS#677122
$219,900 1704 Merganser. Brand new townhome. 1940 s.f. Large master up and small master down. Close to lake. Bledsoe/Santana Team. WVMLS#676177
$190,000 1763 N. 2nd Street. 2BD/1.5BA. 1360 sq. ft. .75 acre lot near town. Shop/guest quarters. Bledsoe/Santana Team. WVMLS#682006
$89,500 each - Four Beautiful building sites in Abiqua Heights on Eastview and Tillicum. Maryann Mills. WVMLS#660625, 684288, 660633, 660626.
$74,900 Silverton’s Stone Buddha retail store. Inventory, name, and training included. Tammie Anderson. WVMLS#683201
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www.silvertonproperty.com Our Town Monthly
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February 2015 • 17
Looking Back
Knights of Columbus
Mount Angel Council celebrates 100 years of service
By Kristine Thomas If you ask Alfred Beyer, 82, or John Beyer, 89, why they became members of the Knights of Columbus Mount Angel Council, they will tell you they didn’t have a choice. “We were told when you are 18 years old that you join,” Alfred said, laughing. “Plus, we enjoyed the togetherness of the group.” “The Knights are a group of men who are committed to service to their community and helping others,” John added. “We do a lot of good for our community by donating money to good causes.” Chat with the men a little more and you’ll discover what it really means to them to be a Knight of Columbus. “When our dad injured his knee, the Knights came to our house and set all the posts in our five-acre Loganberry field,” John said. “What they did was a huge gift to our family.” Being a Knight, means taking care of others, they said. On Jan. 21, more than 140 men of the Knights of Columbus Mount Angel Council 1787 gathered at
St. Mary’s Catholic Church to celebrate the group’s 100th anniversary. The evening began with a mass and concluded with a banquet. The council was started in November 1914 by 58 men, many with familiar last names still around today Grand Knight Fred Vandecoevering said the first chapter of the Knights of Columbus was formed on Feb. 6, 1882 by Father Michael J. McGivney, an assistant pastor of St.
Mary’s Church in New Haven, Conn. “Father McGivney saw a real need for a religious order to take care of its own. The Knights cared for the widows and the orphaned children. The focus on the family is a very important part of what the Knights do,” Vandecoevering said. A fraternal benefit society, the Knights’ founding
In Memory Of …
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229 Mill St. • Silverton 503-873-5141 Our Town Monthly
principles are charity, unity and fraternity. According to its website, the Knights of Columbus was formed to “render financial aid to members and their families. Mutual aid and assistance was offered to sick, disabled and needy members and their families.” Today, there are 14,000 councils and 1.8 million members throughout the world. Vandecoevering said the council’s clubhouse was a room in the former St. Mary’s school, where more than 100 men would meet to eat, drink and talk on a Tuesday night. “When television came in and all the activities families do now days, the number of men attending meetings fell off,” Vandecoevering said. While there isn’t a large gathering at meetings, he said the members are active throughout the community including having a free-throw contest and hosting three fundraising breakfasts a year, donating money to various organizations and volunteering to help at Oktoberfest and the Fourth of July celebration. “We are currently talking with Habitat for Humanity on how we can volunteer there,” Vandecoevering said. “Our hope is to get some men helping to build homes.” Father Philip Waibel of St. Mary’s Catholic Church is grateful for the Knights of Columbus. “The Knights have provided an incredible service and
generosity to St. Mary’s Church over the years,” Waibel said. “They do quite a lot of volunteer projects including the annual picnic.” Ed Schiedler, 89, joined the council after serving in the Army and returning to Mount Angel in 1950. “We make many contributions to the community,” he said, adding the Knights also support national causes such as the Right to Life. Ray Eder became a member of the Knights of Columbus in 1985 because he was asked. “There is a lot of pride in this council of getting to 100 years,” Eder said. “There probably aren’t a lot of councils that have achieved that goal.” Vandecoevering said recently four new members joined the council. He said he joined because it was an opportunity to work with other Catholic men in his community. “Being a Knight is a way to live my faith by giving back to my community,” Vandecoevering said., adding he also takes pride in the traditions and ceremonies.
L e r oy G i l g e O.D. K a r i C l i n e O.D. S i l v e r t on E y e c a r e
Joe Schmidt, 70, said he joined the Knights in 1945 when he was 18 years old.
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“These men are just a good bunch of people,” Schmidt said. “They are just good, old Catholic gentlemen.”
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February 2015 • 19
Congratulations to Sandra PhiliPPi , winner of a Kindle Fire!
Our Neighbor
Story seeker By Melissa Wagoner
Marty Limbird is fascinated by the story behind the story. “My passion is people,” he said. Limbird and his wife, Liz, moved to Silverton from Portland four years ago. As a professor in physical education and the men’s soccer coach at Chemeketa Community College for the past 12 years, Limbird was familiar with the Silverton area. “I always thought this was a really cool place. If I was going to move anywhere close to Salem this would be the place,” he said.
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Limbird, father of three, recently left coaching at the college level to coach the teams of his sons, Emmett, 8, and Isaac, 6, and to spend more time with his family. The change in lifestyle also gave him the time to pursue his new venture, IGNITE Motion Pictures. “I still teach full time but IGNITE doesn’t take me away from home. I’m busy but I’ve always been busy. I’m always looking for the next project,” Limbird said. Limbird met IGNITE partner Nathan Holstedt, a Salem resident whose background is in corporate marketing and media, while working together on an athletic video.
“We were creating a marketing promo campaign for an athletic facility concept I have been working on which is still yet to launch,” Limbird said. “We worked really well together. I recognized his talent and his ability to capture that emotional element.” Limbird and Holstedt started IGNITE last spring, looking to share hidden stories about unique individuals with the world. “IGNITE was the name that was given to the business because Nathan and I really wanted to ignite a conversation,” Limbird said. In the past six months, the duo has produced a number of short videos showcasing distinctive people, places and even music. One of the first videos IGNITE created was about Rebecca Urlacher, an artist in Bend who creates custom guitars. “While I was in Bend I reached out to a couple of art galleries and I ended up driving down a dirt road,” Limbird said. That road led to Limbird’s next story, J. Chester Armstrong, a self-taught wood sculptor. “The house was totally off the grid and there were some rough sculptures in the yard. In the garage, the light was
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Our Town Monthly
Limbird creates video love letter to Silverton Limbird said. The first Silverton segment was released about two months ago. “For me, it’s like unwrapping a present because I’m there during the filming but then it goes behind closed doors. The anticipation for the reveal motivates you for the next project,” Limbird said. The video shows Limbird walking the trails at Silver Falls State Park and the streets of downtown Silverton. With his 2-year-old daughter Amara on his back, he narrates his feelings about the area. It shows glimpses of businesses and murals, as well as farms and iconic places on the city’s outskirts. Marty Limbird
streaming in the window and he had all of his work ready to take to a gallery. It was amazing,” Limbird said. IGNITE’s goal is to create two to three projects a month. “Sometimes the challenge is finding a story within a story. If someone has a vision or an interest, it’s a matter of sitting down and drawing that out,” Limbird said. IGNITE’s most recent documentary was one some Silverton residents may recognize. Originally intended to be one video about the murals in town, the piece was split into two because of the vast amount of material the team wanted to show. “I approached the chamber and said, ‘Silverton is such a unique place. Can we do a piece about the muralists?’”
“I just put it on Silverton Connections at a whim. By the next day, we were at 1,000 views. 5,000 in three days and that’s without really trying,” Limbird said. The second half, recently released, shows the murals in town. It gives voice to those in the Silverton Mural Society who maintain them. Both videos will be used this spring by the Silverton Chamber of Commerce to promote Silverton, as well as a way to raise money to move the Four Freedoms murals to a new home along Seven Brides Brewing on First. “There’s a big fundraising effort to make that happen. We see this as a platform to help,” Limbird said. He also thinks of the videos as a gift to Silverton. “Silverton deserves that and more. We tried to do it justice in a short piece,” Limbird said.
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Our Town Monthly
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Sports & Recreation
SpecIal emplOyee RaTe fOR maRIOn cOunTy ReSIdenTS
Getting a grip “The wrestling team started out the year with high numbers and a lot of enthusiasm,” Silverton Assistant Coach Jesse Davis told Our Town. “We have a young team with lots of potential. We are now in the part of the season that has become known as the ‘grind.’ Practice will get harder and competition will increase. The wrestlers will take their biggest strides in wrestling and will grow in character the most during this time.” Among the top performers for the Foxes have been Boston Merrifield (126 pounds), Austin Reed (132) and heavyweight Cody Gubbels. All three participated on the Foxes squad that finished seventh at last year’s OSAA Class 5A state meet. Other wrestlers who have shown strong improvement, Davis said, have been sophomore Nathan Butsch and junior Braden Sinn. “Many of the athletes are very inexperienced,” said Davis, who added that the squad has “made great strides in the last two months.”
with purchase of two entrees in the Garden View Restaurant
Silverton hosts this year’s MidWillamette Conference district tournament Feb. 13-14. The state meet starts Feb. 27 in Portland.
Includes overnight stay, breakfast and admission to The Oregon Garden. Offer Valid now through feb. 28 Blackout Jan 23 - 25 & feb 13 & 14 Must be a Marion County resident. Must purchase entrees on same night as overnight stay. Not to be combined with other offers, based on availability. Tax additional.
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22 • February 2015
Fox wrestling
Boys basketball: Silverton is off to a 4-0 start in Mid-Willamette Conference play and is ranked No. 6 by OSAA. The Foxes are 9-3 overall, with just one loss to a Class 5A team. Silverton took a sevengame win streak into Jan. 28’s home game vs. No. 2 Central, which is also 4-0 in league play. Silverton has been doing it with defense all season, with Springfield the only team to pass 50 points against the Foxes. “The kids play with a lot of confidence and we have benefitted from strong leadership, especially on defense,” Silverton Coach Steve Roth told Our Town. “They take a lot of pride in their defense (and) they are patient and unselfish, so when things aren’t clicking offensively they are pretty good about sticking together until it starts clicking.” Girls basketball: Silverton is 3-1 in the Mid-Willamette and also had a showdown with Central this week. Central took a 4-0 record (tied with Corvallis for first place) into Tuesday’s matchup against the host Foxes, who lost to Corvallis 45-40 on Jan. 20. Silverton is ranked 12th by the OSAA.
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“We are playing well defensively,” Foxes Coach Tal Wold told Our Town. “We still have a ton to learn: We are playing two freshmen and four sophomores. I really like the potential of this team on defense.” Alia Parsons leads the team in steals and deflections and is battling with Maggie Roth for the rebounding lead. Others playing key roles defensively include Brooke, Kacey McLaughlin, Hannah Munson and Haley Smisek. Kennedy, meanwhile, is 13-4 overall, third in Class 2A and tied for second place in the tough Tri-River Conference with five-time defending state champion Regis. Both squads are 5-2 in league, trailing No. 1 Western Mennonite (6-0). The Trojans lost a close 46-42 decision Jan. 23 against Regis. Mannion: Former Oregon State University standout Sean Mannion participated in the Jan. 24 Senior Bowl all-star game in Mobile, Ala. Mannion hit on 9 of 14 passes for 79 yards and a touchdown for the North squad, which triumphed 34-13. Coaching opening: Mount Angel Middle School has an opening for a softball coach. The position is open until filled. Further information and application materials can be found on the district website, www.mtangel.k12.or.us. Wurst Run: The Wurst Run begins at 10 a.m. Saturday, Feb. 14 in Mount Angel. There is a 5K run and walk and a 10K run. Registration includes race entry, festival entry, stein and complimentary beverage. Pre-registration is $25. Day of race registration is $30. For information visit: racenorthwest.com/wurstrun. Follow me on Twitter.com @jameshday. Got a news tip? Email me at jamesday590@gmail.com
Our Town Monthly
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Our Entire Menu Available All Day!
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MAKE YOUR ♥
VALENTINE S REsERvAtiOns nOw!
♥February 14♥
Serving Breakfast & Lunch Local, seasonal menu Crépes, pastries & espresso
Proudly serving Silver Falls Coffee
503-874-4888
GATHERINGSPOTCAFE.COm
Sun-Thurs till 9pm • Fri & Sat till Midnight
FREE POOL• FREE WI-FI
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203 E. Main Street, Silverton (503) 873-2841
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February 2015 • 23
eng acupuncture Start the New Year right...
we are now offering facial rejuvenation, Naet Allergy Elimination introducing community $25 per session –
Monday, February 9 & each Tuesday. Acute and Chronic Pain Relief • Fertility Arthritis Fibromlyalgia Allergy Elimination Motor Vehicle Accident Workers Comp Most Insurances Accepted
Marjorie Eng L.Ac Hae Kyung Kim L.Ac Mika Watanabe L.Ac, Dipl OM
MASSAGE THERAPISTS: Susan Petersen, LMT • Christina Estrada, LMT
Serving Silverton and the Surrounding area for 28 YearS
612 N. First St. Silverton
503-873-6705
www .e n g a c u p u n c tu r e c enter.c o m
Passages
Barbara Hartley Barbara Elizabeth Hartley passed away Jan. 11, 2015 in Silverton. She was born Jan. 22, 1927 in Portland, Ore., to Helen Mossman Nelson and Donald Orelup Nelson. She married Richard Davis Hartley July 29, 1949. He preceded her in death, as did her brother, Robert Ross Nelson (Beverly). Barbara moved to many places as a child. Her father was a structural engineer for projects, including the Grand Coulee Dam. After her parents’ deaths, she moved to Oregon, where she graduated from Tigard High School in 1945. She earned a bachelor of arts in history from Willamette University in 1949. She was a member of Beta Chi chapter of Alpha Chi Omega sorority, where she met life time friends. She moved to Silverton with her husband in 1950, then briefly moved to the Camp Pendleton Marine base in California when he was reactivated as a Navy Corpsman for the Korean War. Returning to Silverton, Barbara became active in the community. She was a charter member of the Evergreen Women’s Golf
Jan. 22, 1927 to Jan. 11, 2015 Association in Mount Angel, a member of United Methodist Church, and served as a leader with the Girl Scouts in the Silverton and Mount Angel area for 26 years. Barbara loved living and raising a family in Silverton’s South Center Street neighborhood. Her love of history was reflected in her genealogy research and writings about her life and family. Family vacations involved research on the destination. No historical marker went unread. She enjoyed time at the cabin, in her family since 1926. She is survived by sons Don (Sharon), Douglas (Nancy), Stuart (Joanne) and daughter Carol (Mo) and seven grandchildren: Megan, Alissa, April (Michael Wolber), Kelly, Emily (Orion Sword), Jeffrey, Sara and two great granddaughters, Madiline and Scarlett Sword. Memorial services were Jan. 23 at the Silverton United Methodist Church. In lieu of flowers, contributions can be made in memory of Barbara Hartley to: Girl Scouts of Oregon and SW Washington, Service Unit 25 or to the Silverton Country Historical Society. Share with Us! WWW.FACEBOOK.COM/
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Mary Parenteau Silverton resident Mary Louise Parenteau died Jan. 18, 2015 at the age of 81. Mary was born in Manila, Philippines Nov. 2, 1933. Her Chinese father, Guan “George” Chuan Wee, MD, a surgeon, and German/Irish mother, Mary Virginia Wee, had five children. Mary was the middle child and first daughter. Her fondest childhood memories were taking her younger brother Bobby to the movie theater, to escape the Philippine heat, and feed her love for American movies. As a child, she experienced the Japanese occupation and the Allied liberation during World War II. After the war, she moved to the U.S. and graduated as a registered nurse from Los Angeles’ Methodist Hospital School of Nursing in 1956. In December 1956, she married Aime Parenteau, a French Canadian teacher living in Southern California. They had three children; Renee, Paul and John. After divorcing, Mary and the children moved to Oregon, having fallen in love with the Pacific Northwest after reading an article in Sunset magazine. The family
Place your ad in Marketplace 503-845-9499
Nov. 2, 1933 -Jan. 18, 2015 moved to the hills above Silverton in 1970 where she met Alden Waterson. Married in 1972, a fourth child, Michelle, was welcomed to the family. Mary worked at Salem Memorial Hospital and then a nursing home in Silverton. She was proud of being an RN. She loved living in the country and was happiest gardening. She made few friends, but those who knew her well grew to care for her deeply. Her collection of classic movies were treasured, and she took every opportunity to share that love with her children. Mary never missed an opportunity to experience the romance of some place new, whether it was a trip to Hawaii, Egypt, or visiting the Queen Mary 2 in New York. Mary is survived by her brother Robert Wee (Patricia), her children Renee, Paul, John, and Michelle (John) Kuenzi, and her grandchildren Austin, Ashley, Nathan, Justin and Carson. Services were held at St. Paul Catholic Church in Silverton on Jan. 31. Donations may be made to the Find Your Light Foundation in Mary’s name.
GENERAL
SEASONED OAK FIREWOOD $220 a cord, can deliver in Silverton and Mt Angel. 503-845-6410 FREE very clean king size bed in Mt. Angel 503-871-0733 or 503-989-3055 BACK ROOM SECOND HAND Sale inside Silverton Barber Shop at 209 E Main St. Open Wed-Sat 9-4. Call 503801-5555 Great Stuff
HELP WANTED
Mt. Angel Middle School has an opening for a 7th/8th grade Softball Coach. The position is open until filled. Further information and application materials can be found on the District website.www.mtangel. k12.or.us
NOTICES
“An Evening in Tuscany”- Holy Family Academy Benefit Auction Sat, Feb.7th at the Mt Angel Festhalle. Doors open at 5pm with appetizers. Silent & Oral Auction. Dinner and Raffle. Tickets $25, $30 at the door. Must be 14 & older. Contact Laura 503-551-4265
Fil l i n g s • C r ow ns • R oot Canal s I m p la n t s • E xtr acti ons • Dentu r es
New patients & emergencies welcome Matthew B. Chase, D.M.D. Mark A. Haskell, D.D.S.
303 N. First • Silverton 503-873-8614 Our Town Monthly
SERVICES
WOOD DOCTOR - Furniture restoration. Revives / Restores Metal / Wood Antique Furniture, Family Heirlooms. Also Specializes in Custom Wood-Craft. FREE Estimates. James Scialabba: 971-208-4348. CINDY’S SALON & Boutique Located at 204 Jersey St, SIlverton. Call 503874-0709 or 503 884-4196 to set up an appointment. FAMILY CLEANING SERVICE 10 years experience-Free estimates. Excellent references. Call 503 569-3316 7/15bl CONSTRUCTION DRAWINGS Residential, light commercial, new buildings, additions, remodeling. Reasonable rates. Michael Finkelstein Design, 503-873-8215. CARPENTRY – If you need any repairs, remodeling, window and door replacement, new deck, repair, or custom cabinetry. Call Keith Cobb (Mount Angel Carpenter) at 503-8459159, or 503-989-1167 or see us on the web at www.mtangelcarpentry.com. Licensed and Bonded. CCB# 175719
Quality Dental Care in a Friendly Environment
Compl ete D e n t a l S e rvice s
WANTED
BOTTLE & CAN - Collecting bottles and cans for a school trip next year. Please call 503-845-9651 to have them picked up.
Volunteer at Frank Lloyd Wright’s Gordon House in Silverton. You can guide tours, garden, or help with special public events, office work, or computer data entry for the museum library and collection. Call503.874.6006 or sign up at www.thegordonhouse.org/ volunteerrnow. Pick a day, pick a job, have fun.
RENTALS
Doublewide manufactured home in country setting, 3BR, 2BA, lg. shop and big yard, outside of Lyons. $950/month. 503-364-6797.
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TINA’S LANDSCAPE MAINTENANCE Mowing – Edging - Bark Dusting – Fertilizing – Pruning - Thatching and Aerating - On Going Maintenance and clean up – yard debris/ Hauling. CBL# 9404 971-2161093 tinaslandscapemaint.com CASCADE CONCEALED CARRY INSTRUCTIONS INC. is teaching Oregon concealed hand gun classes on the 1st and multi state on the 3rd Saturday. Call for location. Visit our website at cccinstruction.com or Call 503-580-0753
VEHICLES
IF YOU HAVE A VEHICLE YOU NEED TO SELL, ADVERTISE IN MARKETPLACE. WE REACH YOUR NEIGHBORS.
SWCF -one man woman seeks WCM, one woman man for friendships, romance, maybe more. Possible LTR. Prefers CC/CS, ND/NS church church going romantic gentleman. If interested to talk or meet, call 503-874-9116. Serious inquiry and replies only! TREADMILL Trying to find a good treadmill for disabled Vietnam vet losing his ability to walk. Reasonably priced or a donation would be gladly accepted. Have one clogging your garage? Please call Steve at 503-873-6653.
Are you starting your spring cleaning? Sell those unwanted items. Your ad in Marketplace
reaches the mailboxes of your neighbors in Mount Angel, Silverton, Scotts Mills, Stayton, Sublimity, Aumsville, Lyons, Mehama . . . TO ADVERTISE CALL
503-845-9499 February 2015 • 25
a Grin at the end
The curse of the Internet
I used to think the Internet was destroying society. Now I am sure of it. As a matter of fact, that’s about the only thing I’m sure of these days. Here are eight reasons why I think the Internet causes more trouble than it’s worth. First without rival, the Internet is the biggest source of misinformation, half-truths, hyperbole, disingenuousness and pure baloney in the history of mankind. Nowhere can you find more stuff that is factually wrong, misinterpreted and pure fabrication than the Internet. Second, as a brain-draining diversion, the Internet has no rivals. People waste hours, days, months and years staring at junk such as Facebook and games that no otherwise sane person would spend a second on. Third, it’s destroyed people’s ability to have a conversation. Hardly anyone can engage in an oldfashioned conversation without reaching for their phone to check for messages, tweets, emails, sports scores or news flashes. Next time you are at the grocery store waiting in line, notice what people are doing – staring at their phones. I haven’t seen the face of one of my kids for three years. It’s been buried in his phone or tablet.
Fourth, easy access to see pornography. Enough said.
and downright orneriness unparalleled in history. Don’t believe me? Read the comments after a newspaper story or comments posted on social media sites. It’s as though the Internet is the world’s biggest school yard brawl. The Jerry Springer Show is the Lincoln-Douglas debate by comparison.
Fifth, the selfie. We have everyone, from the president down to nearly every high school kid, constantly taking photos – of themselves. What, did they forget what they looked like 30 seconds ago, when they took the last photo? Did their friends forget? If this generation isn’t the most hung-up, look-at-me generation of all, I don’t know which is. Sixth, politics. Like everything else, politicians have tried to hijack the Internet, and it’s the lamest, most pitiful sight ever. They announce how they have saved the world every 10 minutes – all the while asking for a donation. Seventh, swear words. If I had a penny for every swear word used on the Internet, I’d be able to buy Bill Gates, Warren Buffett, that Chinese guy who started Alibaba and 14 other zillionaires and still have money left over for Elon Musk and a six-pack of Teslas. People these days can’t express themselves without using @#$% and &*@$. And don’t forget about %&$*. It’s gruesome the way people make fools of themselves in public with foul language. Eighth, public discourse in general has sunk into a swamp of accusations, assumptions, vitriol, meanness
Yet, there are good things about the Internet. They are, uh, wait a minute, I’ll come up with something. Oh, I know, you can get public documents on the Internet. And you can Google – or Yahoo or Bing – stuff. Big deal. It used to be that I’d just call the nearest library and a helpful librarian would look it up for me. But no matter what other “good” things I could list, they wouldn’t offset the horrible, offensive and barbaric stuff that dominates the Internet. It used to be said that the media was a mirror of society. If the Internet is a mirror of our society, we’re in deep trouble. Carl Sampson is a freelance editor and writer.
Holland Custom Screen Printing & Embroidery Silverton’s screen printer for over 10 years! SPORTS • TEAMS • FUNDRAISERS • COMPANY APPAREL 381 Monitor Road • Silverton • 503-873-6154 victoryprintsinc @ wavecable.com 26 • February 2015
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Collision Service
Full Service Autobody & Towing Mark Holland, Owner
636 McClaine St. Silverton • 503-873-5381 Our Town Monthly
BROKERS ARE
SILVERTON LICENSED IN OREGON HUBBARD TOWN COUNTRY Mike Bothum Broker, GRI 873-3545 ext. 326
Marcia Branstetter Broker, GRI 873-3545 ext. 318
Meredith Wertz Broker, GRI 873-3545 ext. 324
Ryan Wertz Broker 873-3545
Micha Christman Property Manager 873-1425
Michael Schmidt Broker, GRI 873-3545 ext. 314
Chuck White Mason Branstetter Broker Principal Broker, GRI 873-3545 ext. IN 325TOWN873-3545 ext. 303 NEW HOME CONSTRUCTION
COUNTRY/ACREAGE
SILVE STAYTON/SUBLIMITY
HU
LAND/ACREAGE
COMMERCIAL/INDUSTRIAL #T2169 PERFECT RETAIL/LUMBER SALES PARCEL w/ AREAGE! $695,000 2.76 acres, 6000 sqft. warehouse w/2100 sqft. retail. Bare lot can be sold separately, see also WVMLS#’s 684100 & 6841061. Call Mason at ext. 303 (WVMLS#684096)
#T2166 COMPLETELY REMODELED 1952 HOME $258,700 New paint throughout interior, as well as exterior, new flooring, refinished hardwood floors. New kitchen with granite countertops and stainless appliances. 3BR, 2BA 1617 sqft. Call Mike at ext. 326 or Meredith at ext. 324 (WVMLS#683376)
FOR RENT
#T2164 SILVERTON VIEW PROPERTY #T2163 HOME IN THE CITY, ON ACREFOR LEASE/COMMERCIAL $349,000 Built in 2008, and less than 5 AGE! $429,900 Don’t miss this great minutes from downtown! Attached 2-car family home on 1.86 acres, overlooking BARELAND/LOTS garage and extensive garden and landSilverton and the Willamette Valley. Formal living and dining areas. Large 2-car garage scaping. Vaulted ceilings. 4BR, 2BA 2021 and attached shop. 3BR, 2.5BA 2519 sqft. sqft. Call Michael at ext. 314 (WVMLS#682018) Call Chuck at ext. 325 (WVMLS#682015)
TOWN
TOWN SILVERTON
TOWN SIL COU H
TOC
AUMSVILLE/TURNER
HUBBARD WOODBURN
CO
STAYTO #T2167 WELL KEPT FLEETWOOD MH IN 55+ PARK! 3BR, 2BA 1152 sqft. Call Chuck at ext. 325 $31,900 (WVMLS#683573) SOLD – #T2159 CLASSIC RANCHER BUILT IN THE 1950’S 2BR, 2BA 1514 sqft. Call Mike at ext. 326 or Meredith at ext. 324 $196,800 (WVMLS#681470) #T2154 HISTORICAL SILVERTON HOME 4BR, 2BA 2792 sqft. Call Mike at ext. 326 or Meredith at ext. 324 $398,700
LAN
TOWN
#T2165 LOT #62 IN SILVER CLIFF ES#T2173 NEW TO THE MARKET IN MT. ANGEL! 3BR, 2BA 1802 sqft. Call Michael TATES .12 Acre lot. Call Chuck at ext. at ext. 314 $269,000 (WVMLS#685084) 325 $33,500 (WVMLS#682938) COMM #T2120 READY TO BUILD YOUR (WVLMS#685076) DREAM HOME! 2.09 acres Call Mike FOR NEW – #T2174 1971 HOME ON A STAY at ext. 326 and Meredith at ext. 324 IN TOWN NEW HOME CONSTRUCTION SMALL ACREAGE 3BR, 1.5 BA 1080 $114,999 (WVMLS#674595) LA COUNTRY/ACREAGE #T2168 PERFECT RETAIL/LUMBER BARELAND sqft. 5.450 acres. Call Chuck at ext. 325 #T2054 DEVELOPERS TAKE NOTICE! SALES PARCEL 1.76 acres, 6000 sqft. $299,000 (WVLMS#685050)#T2157 FANTASTIC 45.03 acres Call Michael at ext. 314 warehouse w/ 2100 sqft. retail Call Mason HOME WITH ALL THE EXTRAS! 3BR, (WVMLS#680576) $750,000 (WVMLS#670158) CO STAYTON/SUBLIMITY at ext. 303 $595,000 (WVMLS#684100) 2.5BA 2834 sqft. 1.39 acres. Call Mike at #T2153 FANTASTIC POTENTIAL IN SOLD: #T2089 LARGE LOT W/GREAT ext. 326 or Meredith at ext. 324 $527,800 LAND/ACREAGE #T2170 ONE ACRE IN LIGHT INDUS13.4 ACRE FARM 4BR, 3BA 3201 sqft. VIEW TO THE NORTH .22 acres Call (WVMLS#681183) TRIAL ZONE Call Mason at ext. 303 Call Mike at ext. 326 or Meredith at ext. IN TOWN NEW HOME CONSTRUCTION Mike at ext. 326 or Meredith at ext. 324 324 $409,900 (WVMLS#680213) $189,000 (WVMLS#684106) #T2156 RANCH STYLE HOME ON 85 COUNTRY/ACREAGE BARELA $65,000 (WVMLS#668472) SOLD! – #T2147 1ST TIME BUYER OPCOMMERCIAL/INDUSTRIAL ACRES! 3BR, 1.5BA 1311 sqft. 85.52 #T2103 HIGH VISIBILITY/TRAFFIC #T2042 LOT #88 IN SILVER CLIFF ESPORTUNITY! 3BR, 1BA 960 sqft. ranch acres. Call Chuck at ext. 325 or Marcia at COMMERCIAL PROPERTY 1.46 acres TATES .12 acre lot LEASE/COMMERCIAL Call Chuck at ext. 325 style home in Silverton. Call Chuck at ext. FOR ext. 318 $549,900 (WVMLS#680896) Call Mike at ext. 326 or Meredith at ext. $35,900 (WVMLS#660605) (WVMLS#679343) 325. $149,500 STAYTON/SUBLIMITY 324 $485,000 (WVMLS#672150) #T2041 BEST VALUE IN THE NEIGHSOLD! – #T2145 ROOM, ROOM & MORE #T2146 PRIVATE & SECLUDED 2BR, BARELAND/LOTS LAND/ACREAGE ROOM! 3BR, 3BA 2130 sqft. Call Marcia BORHOOD! .20 acre lot Call Michael at 1BA 768 sqft. 66.22 acres. Call Michael at ext. 318. $299,900 (WVMLS#679094) ext. 314 $79,500 (WVMLS#660768) at ext. 314 $325,000 (WVMLS#679341) #T2144 1940’S CHARMER! 4BR, AUMSVILLE/TURNER 2.5BA 2010COMMERCIAL/INDUSTRIAL sqft. Call Chuck at ext. 325. $269,900 (WVMLS#678920) Call Micha at 503-873-1425 FOR LEASE/COMMERCIAL SOLD – #T2047 HERR CONSTRUCTION or see them on our website TO BUILD A SINGLE – LEVEL HOME BARELAND/LOTS 3BR, 2BA 1909 sqft. Call Mike at ext. www.silvertonrealty.com 326 or Meredith at ext. 324 $269,900
SILVERTON
HUBBARD
NEW – #T2175 1989 HOME IN PRIVATE LAKE ESTATE 4BR, 3BA 3537 sqft. 19.6 acres Call Chuck at ext. 325 $679,000
COUNTRY
TOW
TOWN
TOW
COUNTRY
W
TO
TOWN
TO
FOR RENT
TOWN
TOWN
(WVMLS#661003)
TOWN
WOODBURN
FOR RENT
F OR R ENT
AUMSVILLE/TURNER
WOODBURN Our Town Monthly
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503.873.3545 • 1-800-863-3545
TRUST THE
February 2015 • 27
Join us for
Valentine’s Day! At
3Ten Water Restaurant We will be serving a special dinner menu on both Friday and Saturday nights. Reservations Recommended. Call to reserve today! 503-873-9303 L
310 Water St. • Silverton
ive Music!
Alan G. Carter, DMD Heidi’s calm demeanor and conscientious attention to her patients’ needs make her an outstanding and sought after hygienist. Thank you, Heidi, we appreciate you! Call today for your appointment!
Alan G. Carter, DMD General & Family Dentistry
(503) 873-8335 106 McClaine St., Silverton www.AlanGCarterDMD.com
28 • February 2015
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Our Town Monthly