Our Town Life: February 15, 2019

Page 1

Arts & Entertainment

Something Fun

Silverton Poetry Festival draws Oregon’s Poet Laureates – Page 6

The Great Grownup Spelling Bee – Page 4

Vol. 16 No. 3

COMMUNITY NEWS

Serving Mt. Angel, Silverton and Scotts Mills

February 2019

Peter and the Starcatcher – Page 9

Our Town P.O. Box 927 Mt. Angel, Or 97362

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Sports & Recreation

SHS Aqua Foxes head to state meet – Page 12


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Our Town Life


Contents

Something Fun

A spelling bee for grown-ups......4

February 2019

11

CLOSED Presidents Day, Feb. 18

Arts & Entertainment

Silverton Poetry Festival at 19....6

SILVERTON SENIOR CENTER

Brush Creek’s swashbucklers.......8 Silverton High actors set course for Neverland.............................9

115 Westfield Street • Silverton • 503-873-3093

SAVE THE DATE! SAVE THE DATE! SAVE THE DATE! Rockin’ Casino #Casino NOT in Reno Annual Fundraising Event for the Silverton Senior Center May 4, 2019 • 4 – 9:30 pm New Games, New Prizes, New Awesome Auction Items, and NEW Ways to WIN! Traeger Jr. Elite BBQ is this year’s Door Prize! Compliments of Chuck’s BBQ Store in Keizer Tickets on sale soon!

Something to Do

Rebranding reveals Volksfest...10 Business

Chef launches Magnolia Grill......11 Sports & Recreation

Silverton swim team makes a splash at district meet............12 Marketplace....................13 People Out Loud..............14 On the Cover

Above

The Silverton Thespians will perform Peter and the Starcatcher, an adventurous tale set before the events in the original Peter Pan.

Raul Santana is the proprietor and head chef of Magnolia Grill, a new restaurant located in downtown Mount Angel.

MELISSA WAGONER

BRENNA WIEGAND

Editor & Publisher

Elyse McGowan-Kidd Graphic Artist

Jim Kinghorn Advertising Director

Steve Beckner Custom Design

DeeDe Williams Office Manager

Tavis Bettoli-Lotten Copy Editor

P.O. Box 927 Mount Angel, OR 97362 401 Oak St. Silverton, OR 97381 503-845-9499 ourtown.life@mtangelpub.com

ourtownlive.com Our Town mailed free to residents and businesses in the 97362, 97375, 97381 zip codes. Subscriptions for outside this area are available for $48 annually. The deadline for placing an ad in the March 1 issue is Feb. 19.

Contributing Artists, Editors, Writers, Photographers Dixon Bledsoe • James Day • Vern Holmquist • Nancy Jennings Sara Morgan • Steve Ritchie • Carl Sampson Melissa Wagoner Katie Bassett Greeter

Our Town Life

• Pancake Breakfast Sun. Feb. 24, 8am - 1:30 pm. A Delicious way to support the SS Center. ONLY $5. Kids under 7 FREE. • Grief Support provided by Providence Benedictine Home Health is Wed. Feb. 27, 2-3:15

Our Town

Paula Mabry

Congratulations to the Senior Center’s Volunteers of the Year – from the Silverton Senior Center’s Thrift Shop: Judy Drake-Roofener, Manager & Dave Kemper, Donation Volunteer.

Thank you for spending time with Our Town. Your comments and suggestions are always welcome.

• AARP Tax Services are FREE every Sat. thru April 13, 2019. Walk-in appts only. 10 am – 2 pm

• AARP Driver’s Safety Class is Sat. April 6 9 – 4 $15 for AARP members & $20 for nonmembers. Please call 503-873-3093 or stop by to register/pay. • Applications for the 3 open Board of Director’s positions at the SSC are available. Due on Feb. 25 by 5 pm. More info at the Front Desk at the SS Center. Drop by and attend a Board Meeting: 2nd Tue. of the month at 5:30 pm

• Mobile Dental Van for free dental services is Thur. Feb. 28. Services based on age, need and lack of insurance. Apps are available at the front desk at the SS Center. Deadline is Feb. 25 by 5 pm. Accepted apps will be notified. If not apps will be passed to the next available Mobile Dental Van provider.

FROM ALL OF US AT THE SILVERTON SENIOR CENTER TO ALL OF YOU: HAPPY 2019!

Be sure to LIKE the SILVERTON SENIOR Silverton Senior Center CENTER’S THRIFT SHOP on Facebook, 207 High St. where monthly Open Tues – Sat 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. and Sun 11 a.m. - 4 p.m. events are listed and be sure * = FREE for members, $2 for nonmembers 50+. to check out our website

Nonmembers still need to be 50+ unless otherwise stated.

www.silvertonseniorcenter.org

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February 2019 • 3


Something Fun

May I have the definition?

By Nancy Jennings

winning literacy program, established in 1995, mails one book per month to each enrolled child from the time of their birth through their fifth birthday. She started the program in her home of Sevier County, Tennessee, to encourage a love of reading and learning. Its success has spread across the country. By the end of January, the DPIL delivered its 115,144,428th book.

What does Dolly Parton and a spelling bee have in common? For the answer, look no further than Silverton’s Kiwanis Club – which will host the inaugural Great Grown-up Spelling Bee & Wine and Dessert Auction on Friday, March 8 at Silverton’s First Christian Church. The silent wine/dessert auction (and “heavy hors d’oeuvres”) will begin at 6 p.m., with the spelling bee portion starting at 7 p.m. Catering will be provided by the Wooden Nickel. A no-host bar will be available. Sponsors, so far, include Citizen’s Bank, Ticor Title, and Bledsoe Santana Team Realty.

Silver Falls Library Director and Kiwanis Bee Co-Chair Christy Davis is thrilled “to put books in the hands of kids.”

Community members involved in the bee so far include: Dan Schacher (MC and Auctioneer), Gus Frederick (Word Pronouncer), and Bob Holowati (“Killer Bee”). Brittney Black (“Queen Bee”) will collect money from the audience when someone pays to keep a team in the game. The three judges will be Silverton Mayor Kyle Palmer, Silver Falls Superintendent Andy Bellando and Pastor Steve Knox. While bee team members must be aged 18 and up, all ages are welcome to attend. Proceeds will benefit the Kiwanis Club for establishing a Dolly Parton Imagination Library (DPIL), and other child-focused programs, in Silverton. The beloved country music star’s award-

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“It’s a zip code-based program, so we’re looking at Silverton, Scotts Mills and a little bit of Sublimity,” Davis said. “We’re looking at the addresses in the Silver Falls School District and the Silver Falls Library District. When you become a partner with the DPIL, it’s a twopart commitment: you must have a champion who will register families, and you have to have a fundraising arm that will raise money to pay for the books. The library will serve for logistics, Kiwanis and our community for the funds. Children aged newborn through their fifth birthday are eligible for the program. There is no cost, but the child’s legal parent or guardian must sign up the child at the library.” This is where the spelling bee comes into play. “The adult spelling bees started about a decade ago in Austin,

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Great Grown-up Spelling Bee & Wine and Dessert Auction Friday, March 8. Auction 6 p.m., Bee 7 p.m. First Christian Church, 402 N. First St., Silverton. For information about the DPIL visit www.imaginationlibrary.com Texas, to raise money for a literacy foundation,” Davis explained. “The idea caught on and then I heard about it in my hometown of Bloomington, Indiana, and the county school foundation there needed to raise funds for capital improvements. Then, in 2016 and 2017, at the Klamath County Library I was working with my library foundation board because we also needed to raise capital funds to do some improvements to our library and branch libraries.” Now it’s Silverton’s turn. “The first team I drafted as a sponsor was the ‘Friends of the Silver Falls Library.’ They know how important this is. Getting the kids to sign up for this at the library – and we’ll maintain the database for Dolly’s program – will be really good because the parents/caregivers will come in, sign-up for the program and get rolling. While they’re

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Grown-up Spelling Bee benefits Dolly Parton Literacy Program book giveaway money raised to start signing up youth in May, but if not, we’ll continue to raise funds until we do.” Kiwanis President and fellow Bee Co-Chair Lisa Santana, of Bledsoe Santana Team Realty, is looking forward to watching her business partner perform. “Our office has sponsored two teams with Dixon Bledsoe and his daughter, Briana Hupp, competing against each other. The people I’ve talked to are excited to be on a team. We’re trying to get a team of Rotarians together because we like competition,” Santana said. The spelling bee consists of 12 three-person teams competing against each other in six rounds, plus a final round. Official rules will be followed with the help of the pronouncer and panel of judges.

Silverton Kiwanis Bee Committee Co-Chairs, Lisa Santana and Christy Davis. NANCY JENNINGS

there, we can introduce them to the library if it’s new to them,” Davis said, adding, “We hope to have enough

But there is a fun tweak in the gamebook: “There’s a special weird rule that if they misspell a word – and they have someone in the audience who really wants them to stay in – they can give the ‘Queen Bee’ $50,” Davis said. When they miss a second word, the amount increases to $100. The third, and final time, bumps up to $150. Who chooses the words used in the bee? “I already have a proprietary word list that was created by a bee elsewhere. The only person who will see these words prior to the bee will be me and the pronouncer,” Davis said. Themed

team costumes are encouraged, as are funny/inventive names. So far, the following team names have been submitted: “The City Slickers” (City of Silverton), “The Krazy Goood Spellerzz” (Ticor Title), “Money Honeys” (Citizens Bank) and “The Liberry Ann’s” (Friends of the Silver Falls Library). Entry fees per team are $300 – and include three additional guest tickets. Tickets are $20 per person until Feb. 20. After that, they will be $25 (and at the door). More sponsors are welcome, with special notice given to those donating $100 (“Honey Bee”), $200 (“Worker Bee”), $500 (“Queen Bee”) and $1,000 (“Killer Bee”). Suitable donated silent auction items include: gift certificates for goods/services, bottles of wine or groupings of beer, honey, “bee-themed” or “wordthemed” board games or motif items for the kitchen, office or home. As for dessert items, homemade/specialty ones are ideal. Store-bought desserts are also gladly accepted. Food items can be dropped off at the Bledsoe Santana Team Realty office one day before the event. To purchase tickets, sponsor the event, or ask questions – contact Davis, 541-331-1897, christy.davis@ccrls.org, or Santana, 503-930-7793, lisa@bledsoesantana.com or Brian Mitchell, 503-874-8808, bmitchell@citizensebank. com.

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February 2019 • 5


Arts & Entertainment

‘Flavor of unity’ By Brenna Wiegand The Silverton Poetry Festival has grown in scope and popularity over the past two decades, a reflection of the growth of the art form throughout the region. “If they’re not in the scene, people don’t realize how much poetry is happening in the area,” Silverton poet and festival co-founder Steve Slemenda said. “The Willamette Valley is rich with poetry; it’s going on all over the place all the time.” Which makes his new radio show all the more fun. The retired English professor hosts Poetry on the Air the second and fourth Fridays of the month, 10 - 10:30 a.m. on listener-supported Salem station KMUZ 100.7. The show may also be live-streamed from the station’s website. In a recent show Slemenda sang the praises of the 19th annual Silverton Poetry Festival, Feb. 15-17. “Every year we start the festival at the Gordon House, a landmark architecture built by Frank Lloyd Wright, and end at the Mount Angel Abbey Library auditorium, the architecture of Alvar Aalto,” Slemenda said. “These are nice bookends to the festival because poetry is a thing constructed, not unlike a building.” Silverton Poetry Association member Kelley Morehouse said SPA is built on a dedicated volunteer board and many small contributions from the community. “They have sustained us year after year in our endeavor to provide poetry to the community,” Morehouse said. “There are two main parts to a festival: the poets and the audience. The audience at these festivals have been very supportive as listeners, and fully engaged participants

Poetry Festival features Kim Stafford, other free events

with the readings, so much so that poets often remark how wonderful the audience has been.” The festival opens Friday evening with a reading by Oregon Poetry Laureate Kim Stafford who will be accompanied by one of his Lewis & Clark College students who’ll play the harp. Stafford is the son of William Stafford, probably the most highly profiled and familiar Oregon Poet Laureate. “Kim has published many books of poetry himself and writes a lot of prose,” Slemenda said. “He’ll be reading his work and likes to be interactive with the audience; you never know what will happen at his readings.” Slemenda said the Gordon House usually fills up for the event and recommends arriving early to get a seat. Saturday brings a day packed with poetry related doings, beginning with two events at Silver Falls Library starting with the Favorite Poem Project. “It may be a well-known poem or not as popular,” Slemenda said. “Last year the place was filled for the favorite poem event, in which people read an already published poem and briefly share how it is significant to them.” Most of these people stay for the Open Mic session that follows, an opportunity for them to share their original poetry, but everybody’s invited to enjoy and be inspired. That afternoon Slemenda will share his writing process in a free workshop at the library. “Every morning I sit down with a legal pad and just free write; it’s exploratory

Silverton Poetry Festival Event Calendar Friday, Feb 15 Featured Poet: Oregon Poet Laureate Kim Stafford reads his poetry at the Frank Lloyd Wright Gordon House, 869 W. Main St., 7 - 8:30 p.m.

Saturday, Feb. 16 Favorite Poem Project: Participants read a favorite (already published) poem and briefly describe its significance to them. Silver Falls Library, 410 S Water St., 10:30 11:30 a.m. Open Mic: Participants read their original poems or come to be inspired. Silver Falls Library, 11:45 am - 1 p.m. Poetry Workshop: Local poet Steve Slemenda explores methods, practices and prompts for exploratory writing to reveal poem possibilities. Bring writing materials and a mind ready to fool around with words. Preregistration not necessary but class limited to 20; info: 503-269-7895. Silver Falls Library, 2:30 - 4:45 p.m. writing,” Slemenda said. “It’s unguided written meditation; you write a couple, three pages and try not to censor yourself or stop writing and after a while it takes on its own energy. “The analogy is looking for gold in gravel, like sifting through silt in a pan looking for those little nuggets of potential,” he said. “I’ll go back through and circle something – a word or image or idea – and extract it and often that becomes the basis for a new poem.”

Sunday, Feb. 17 Feast of Poets: Former Oregon Poet Laureates Paulann Peterson and Lawson Inada will be joined by Clemens Starck in the festival finale. The trio will read poetry and, in an interactive conversation with the audience, discuss their writing and life in poetry. Mount Angel Abbey Library auditorium, 1:30 - 3:30 p.m. A culinary feast follows in the library foyer. All events are free; refreshments served at most. That evening, Main St. Bistro is the venue for a two-part workshop addressing the daunting task of translating poetry from one language to another. First, an English language poem translated into Arabic and Spanish is presented, followed by a discussion on the choices and challenges of translation. Next, students from the Oregon School for the Deaf present poetry translated into American Sign Language, accompanied by oral interpretation. Have a home to rent? Call us!

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Translations & Approximations: In this two-part program, poets present an English language poem translated into Arabic and Spanish. Discussion follows on the choices and challenges of translation. Next, students from Oregon School for the Deaf present poetry translated into American Sign Language. Oral interpretation provided. Main St. Bistro, 201 E. Main St., 7 - 8:30 p.m.

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Briefs

Conservation district holds native plant sale The 17th annual Marion Soil and Water Conservation District Native Plant Sale and Scholarship Fundraiser will be held Saturday, March 9, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Bauman’s Farm and Garden, 12989 Howell Prairie Road, Gervais. Profits from the sale fund the Stan Vistica Memorial Scholarship which is awarded yearly to two students from Marion County who are studying natural resources or agriculture at an Oregon college or university. There will be no pre-orders. Cash, checks, credit and debit cards will be accepted. There will be no limit on the number of plants that can be purchased. Over 70 species of native plants will be available. For information or to see a full list of available plants and their prices visit, www.marionswcd.net/nps19. OSU Extension will also be offering free nitrate screenings for well water from

Oregon Poet Laureate Kim Stafford is the featured poet at this year’s Silverton Poetry Festival, seen here at a recent, packed poetry event in Mount Angel. SUBMITTED PHOTOS

“Paulette Peterson is an Oregon treasure; one of the brightest and richest poets in Oregon,” Slemenda said. “Clement spent his life in construction and carpentry and

Using native plants in your landscape helps support and enhance local environments and habitat for wildlife, birds and pollinators. Native plants are a great benefit to any landscape because they require minimal or no water once they are established, they rarely require additional fertilizers or pesticides, they increase the biodiversity of an area and they are beautiful. The mission of the Marion Soil and Water Conservation District is: to protect, conserve and improve the quality of soil and water in Marion County through planning, technical assistance and education.

Home Is Where The Art Is opens at Lunaria d work

Sunday the festival features three highly accomplished and recognized poets, two of whom are former Oregon Poet Laureates. “I consider them the wise elders of Oregon poetry and I look forward to hearing them talk about their life and work,” Slemenda said. “Lawson Inada is a poet who has written much about the internment of Japanese Americans, including his family and himself, during WWII.

9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Bring ½ cup of untreated well water in a clean, watertight container. The testing will be done on-site.

Gallery presents an exhibit of jurie For March, the main floor of Lunaria the a thematic piece for Home Is Where by area artists, all of whom created , phy to Z: A Little Celebration of Typogra Art Is. In the upstairs Loft exhibit, A work of artworks by Maude Anne May. Her Color & Words features a collection be on hery, and collage. Both shows will involves the use of mixed media, stitc ay Frid t Firs the at lar business hours and display Feb. 27 - April 1, during regu artists’ reception March 1, 7-9 p.m.

was a merchant marine; his poems often celebrate the workingman and he talks about constructing his poems as though framing a house.” This “Feast of Poets” is followed by a culinary feast for attendees.

n from Willamette Valley artists. Home Is Where the Heart Is was draw iums. about home in a wide variety of med Each has created personal imagery are ia cs, gouache, and mixed med Oil painting, graphite drawing, cerami r, & A Little Celebration of Typography, Colo among the mediums used. A to Z: ds. May has amassed fiber, papers, Form, celebrates color, type, and wor resin, tographs. With beeswax and Demar ribbons, ephemera, fabric, and pho 11 n ope is n, a, 113 N Water St., Silverto she layers elements together. Lunari a.m. to 5 p.m. daily.

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February 2019 • 7


Arts & Entertainment

Avast!

Youth perform at Brush Creek

Brush Creek kicks off the 2019 season with this year’s children and youth performance. The Pirate Paradise: Legend of Libertalia opens its three-weekend run on Friday, Feb, 22, with evening performances at 7 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays and matinees at 2 p.m. on Saturdays and Sundays. The show is directed by Linda Zellner, assisted by Emily Wood. It is based on a script by Emily Wood and Michael Wood. This twist on the typical swashbuckling tale finds an orchid-hunter from Victorian England shipwrecked on an island where he finds a lost world from the great Age of Piracy – a “pirate paradise” – where democracy and equal rights for all hold sway in the midst of the usual thieving, gambling and piracy.

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But all is not well in Libertalia, as he soon discovers, and the orchid-hunter’s arrival triggers events that may very well cause the end of this paradise – as well as endanger the pirate captain who captures his heart with her spirit and taste for risking everything on a throw of the dice.

Brush Creek Playhouse 11535 Silverton Road NE, Silverton Feb. 22 -March 11. Fridays 7 pm; Saturdays 2 and 2 pm; Sundays 2 pm Tickets: $10 general, $8 seniors, students

Shipboard battles, sword fights, fiery battles for the city, trials where everything hangs in the balance, a love story, and even a touch of music, The Pirate Paradise offers it all. The two young casts are age 5 to 17. Reserved seat tickets are available at two pre-sale ticket locations, Books-N-Time, 210 N. Water, Silverton, 503-874-4311, or Runaway Art & Craft Studio, 311 Commercial NE, Salem, 503-881-6270.. Tickets are $10 each ($8 for seniors 60 and older, students, and children 12 and younger. Tickets also go on sale at the door 30 minutes before each performance.

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Action-adventure By Melissa Wagoner “We don’t do good shows, we do great shows,” is the motto of the Silverton High School Theater Department. “The reputation of the program has been one of high quality and entertainment,” instructor and director Doug Ousterhout, explained. “We have high expectations and strive to make our shows the best they can be.” In keeping with this longstanding tradition, the Silverton Thespians will open their next great show on Feb. 15. Peter and the Starcatcher, a play written by Rick Elice, is a prequel to the well-known Peter Pan story, explaining the backstory of how Peter acquired his name, what brought him to Neverland and how he learned to fly. “I personally was very excited to do this show from the first time I read it,” Ousterhout said. “It is full of characters that come alive right before your eyes. Peter and the Starcatcher is full of the theater magic that I enjoy so much – great characters, a great story and a great chance to thrill an audience with action and adventure. “The story comes alive so well that you can’t help but to be part of the story yourself. From the first moment the actors speak to their last exit you are transported to another world – a world where anything can happen.” The play – with a cast of 34 students and

SHS Thespians set sail with Peter Pan prequel

Peter and the Starcatcher Silverton High School Theater Department, SHS Auditorium 1456 Pine St,, Silverton • Friday, Feb. 15 at 7 p.m. • Saturday, Feb. 16 at 7 p.m. • Sunday, Feb. 17 at 2 p.m. • Thursday February 21 at 7 p.m. • Friday February 22 at 7 p.m. • Saturday February 23 at 7 p.m. Adults: $10, children: $5. Tickets are available at the door 30 minutes prior to curtain call or by reservation at 503-873-6331. more than 20 backstage crewmembers – is an excellent showcase of just what the theater department is capable of, according to Ousterhout. “It has great characters for the SHS actors to have fun with and a great story that is sure to entertain any audience, but also the challenge of this show is something I felt our department could not pass up. The set requirements far exceed the normal, as does the other technical aspects. We at the SHS Theater department have always enjoyed a challenge and always rise to the occasion.” Full of the mischief of swashbuckling pirates searching for treasure, sword fights and two young people on an adventure to

The cast of Peter and the Starcatcher rehearsing on the Silverton High stage.

find magic and themselves, Peter and the Starcatcher is a show for the whole family, according to the cast. “It’s an extremely diverse show,” actor Ben Koch – who plays Peter – said. “It’s appropriate to all age groups. It’s a comedy, it’s a drama – it’s everything.” “Come see the show and bring your friends,” Summer Schiewe – who plays Pirate Sanchez – encouraged.

MELISSA WAGONER

And Ousterhout firmly agrees. “I began the year with the thought of how to get more people to see what I see in these wonderfully talented young people,” Ousterhout said. “We need to get more people to come to the shows. Silverton is a great and supportive community. So I would like the community to ask itself, ‘When was the last time you saw a high school play?’ Now is the time and this is the show.”

Chloe Platt, as Molly Aster (grandmother of Wendy) in Peter and the Starcatcher. MELISSA WAGONER

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February 2019 • 9


Something to Do

Volksfest

In Memory Of …

Dolores Ann Miller

June 26, 1931 — Feb. 1, 2019

By Melissa Wagoner Volksfest – or a festival of the people in German – is an apt name for the annual wintertime sausage-themed extravaganza that takes place in Mount Angel.

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“There’s a plethora of entertainment and food,” Jim Hoke – owner of Mt. Angel Sausage Company, a festival sponsor – said. “Every little kid and every grandparent feels comfortable in the crowd.” The festival – which was previously held under the name Wurstfest – was renamed this year due to a registered trademark disagreement with the Wurstfest Association of New Braunfels, Texas. Although unplanned, the name switch has not been an entirely negative experience, giving the planning committee the chance to reinvent the festival – now in its 11th year – with a fresh look.

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“It’s a festival of the people – it represents the people really well,” Hoke said. “The one thing about Volksfest is that it’s just part of Mount Angel and we stay within the Bavarian theme. You will leave feeling like you’ve been in a Bavarian street market. ” One of the biggest changes to this year’s event is the extended food options, which was previously based entirely around sausage. Although still a fundamental part of the menu – along with a wide array of German beers – other vendors will include: G-Gourmet serving wraps and sandwiches, Mary’s Kitchen with Mexican food and St. Mary Parish providing fondue. “Mount Angel does a great job with parties,” Hoke said. “Nobody does it better. There’s a lot of pride that’s in it.”

Compl ete D e n t a l S e rvice s

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

The festival – which will take place March 1 and 2 from 10 a.m. until midnight – has also added an additional day – staying open through Sunday from 10 a.m. until six p.m.

New patients welcome Matthew B. Chase, D.M.D. Mark A. Haskell, D.D.S.

303 N. First • Silverton 503-873-8614 10 • February 2019

Cost of admission to Volksfest on any day is $5 for those 21 and over – $10 for those who would like a commemorative glass. Guests under 21 are free with an accompanying adult. Volksfest, which is a uniquely multigenerational event, will once again offer a kindergarten area with face

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JIM KINGHORN

Volksfest

“A Mount Angel Celebration of German Sausage” Mount Angel Festhalle 500 Wilco Highway NE, Mount Angel March 1 and 2, 10 a.m. to midnight March 3, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Senior Day: March 1, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Wurst Run: March 2 at 9:30 a.m. (https://runsignup.com/Race/OR/ MountAngel/Wurst) Festival admission: $5 for those 21 and older ($10 with a commemorative glass). Those under 21 are free with a paying adult. www.mtangelvolksfest.com

painting, crafts and a magician for the younger crowd. For seniors, Friday from 10 a.m. until 3 p.m. is designated “Senior Day” with a variety of free gifts. And for runners, the annual 10k and 5k Wurst Run will take place Saturday, March 2 at 9:30 a.m. with runners receiving a tour of Mount Angel before ending at the Volksfest site. “If you look at Volksfest – it’s everything that’s good about the community,” Hoke said. “There’s just a lot of fun stuff. It’s really easy to be a part of something that’s so well run.”

Our Town Life


Business

Comfort food

Chef Raul Santana

By Brenna Wiegand Raul Santana first found work in the berry fields after migrating to the U.S. in 2000. The 16-year-old, brought by an uncle, taught himself English and completed his GED in pursuit of The American Dream. It was his love of learning that got him there.

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“The rest of my family is still in Mexico City and I go back and forth,” Santana said. “Moving away was hard and is hard still.” Nevertheless, Santana got busy, picking berries, building fences and fighting wildfires until, at 18, he got his first restaurant job at Love Teriyaki in Wilsonville. Being the dishwasher gave Santana a bird’s eye view of the kitchen and, ever the student, he started asking questions. The line cooks rewarded his curiosity by teaching him how to cook. “After six months the cooks disappeared; just vanished,” Santana said. “The owner was freaking out and I told her I could do it.” As his capabilities and passion for the kitchen grew, Santana went from one restaurant to another starting as a line cook and working his way up the ranks to sous chef and then head chef, racking up cooking experience that includes Moroccan, Italian, American, Argentinian, Mexican fine dining and Indian cuisines as well as event catering. In 2009, Santana took a cook’s job at the Oregon Garden Resort, eventually making head chef. Later, Santana became a chef with Willaby’s Catering of Salem, something he still does, and helped a friend to open an Italian restaurant in Mount Angel. About six months later the friend told Santana he was going to close. Santana realized this was his next step. “I think it’s every chef’s dream to have your own place,” Santana said. Despite the knowledge that he was heading into a restaurant owner’s two worst months of the year, he seized the opportunity – and took the leap. “I didn’t know how hard it would be; how people would respond; but I thought this is my chance,” Santana said. “I’ll give it a try; I’ll do my best and let’s see how things go.” Friends and family helped Santana prepare and decorate the space and Magnolia Grill opened Dec. 1. “We have comfort food like chicken pot pie, a couple pastas and a couple steaks,

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$585,000 NEW LISTING! 3bd/2ba ~ 1737 SF ~ 12.3 Acres ~ Salem Cynthia Johnson •503551-0145• MLS#744267 Raul Santana opened Magnolia Grill in Mount Angel in December. BRENNA WIEGAND

Magnolia Grill

210 E. Charles St., Mount Angel Open Tuesday – Saturday, 11 a.m. - 2 p.m. for lunch; 5 - 9 p.m. for dinner.

$439,900 NEW LISTING! 3bd/2.5ba ~ 2264 SF ~ .16 ac ~ Silverton Linda Webb •503-5087387• MLS#744052 $395,000 NEW LISTING! 4bd/2.5ba ~ 2012 SF ~ .15 ac ~ Silverton Nick Ayhan •503-314-1651• MLS#743697

The next wine pairing dinner is March 14. Cost: $75; call 503-996-1029 for reservations. Menus and events at Magnolia Grill on Facebook. so we have a variety,” Santana said, who believes American food lends itself to more creativity than other cuisines. “I’m already thinking about changing the menu in a couple spots,” he added. “You can tell whether something’s going to work or not in just the first two weeks.” Santana’s specialty is wine pairing and once a month he holds a wine pairing dinner after hours. “I love to do it; I can be creative and provide a fine dining experience,” Santana said. “I think the town needs more of that so people don’t have to travel to Portland. Even in Salem I don’t think there are very many places doing wine dinners.” Daily lunch and dinner specials provide another outlet for his creativity, as does hosting private events. Santana seeks out fresh, local food, high quality meats, fish and makes everything from scratch.

$1,189,000 Price reduced! 4bd/3ba ~ 4599 SF ~ 16.45 Acres ~ Salem Joe & Dana Giegerich •503-931-7824• MLS#740220 $1,100,000 Fantastic Farm! 4bd/1.5ba ~ 2160 SF ~ 80.44 Acres ~ Aumsville Joe & Dana Giegerich •503-931-7824• MLS#738089 $699,000 Picturesque! 4bd/1.5ba ~ 2108 SF ~ 24.38 Acres ~ Silverton Joe & Dana Giegerich •503-931-7824• MLS#733127 $585,000 Home, Land, + Bonus! 3bd/1ba ~ 2040 SF ~ 78.71 Acres - incl. 4 Acre build site ~ Scotts Mills Donna Paradis •503-851-0998• MLS#740065

“These first two months have gone better than I’d expected and I’m very confident in our team,” Santana said. “I’m grateful for the support of friends here that treat me like family.”

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$479,000 Classic Traditional! 3bd/2.5ba ~ 2975 SF ~ .27 ac ~ Silverton Linda Webb •503-508-7387• MLS#738053 $305,000 Panoramic Views! 3bd/2ba ~ 1762 SF ~ 1.01 Acres ~ Scotts Mills Joe & Dana Giegerich •503-931-7824• MLS#738648

LAND & LOTS $114,900-$116,900 Prices Reduced! 14 lots - Pioneer Village Phase 4 ~ .16 ac - .12 ac ~ Silverton Robin Kuhn •503-930-1896• MLS#740832/740834-740845/740990 $339,000 Peaceful Enjoyment! 270.34 special rec acres ~ Scio Donna Paradis •503-851-0998• MLS#735062 $240K Each! Only 4 Estate Lots Left! from 5 Acres to 6.77 Acres ~ Silverton Joe & Dana Giegerich •503-931-7824• MLS#738386/738462/ 738463/738468 $235,000 Super Soil! 21.32 flat ag/farm/ timer/rec acres ~ Molalla Donna Paradis •503-851-0998• MLS#734803 $125,000 Secluded Build Site! 1.51 acres ~ two parcels! ~ Scotts Mills Joe & Dana Giegerich •503-931-7824• MLS#736228

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Sports & Recreation

Aqua Foxes shine

Silverton sends record group to state swim meet

The Silverton High swimming squads turned in a record-shattering performance at the Mid-Willamette Conference district meet Feb. 8 at Osborn Aquatic Center in Corvallis. The Aqua Foxes finished second in the boys competition and third in the girls and will be sending the largest contingent to the state meet in school history. Silverton advanced all six of its relay squads and individuals in nine events to the OSAA meet, which is Feb. 15-16 at the Tualatin Hills Aquatic Center in Beaverton. In addition, the team set school records in five relays and one individual event. “We had a great district and are looking to do even better at state,” Silverton coach Lucky Rogers told Our Town. “No expectations. Just go out and do our best. That is what we do all of the time. We don’t worry about who else Is in the pool. We control what we can control and that is us.” Off to state from Silverton are: • Girls 200 medley relay, Samantha Zurcher, Marie Tolmachoff, Maggie Kelley and Maddie Broyhill. • Boys 200 medley relay, Emmett Bell, Carson Brighton, Cole Runion and Michael Hall. • Girls 50 free, Tolmachoff and Broyhill. • Boys 50 free, David Reeves III and Blake Doerfler. • Girls 100 free, Maggie Kelley and Hailey Kelley. • Girls 200 free relay, Maggie Kelley, Hailey Kelley, Broyhill and Tolmachoff. • Boys 200 free relay, Runion, Brighton, Doerfler and Reeves. • Girls 100 back, Zurcher. • Girls 100 breast, Tolmachoff and Elle Rogers. • Girls 400 free relay, Maggie Kelley, Hailey Kelley, Zurcher and Broyhill. • Boys 400 free relay, Tristan Allen, Kolton Howell, Doerfler and Reeves. The Foxes set schools records in the girls 200 medley relay (1:53.90), girls 200 free relay (1:43.25), boys 200 free relay (1:32.75), girls 400 free relay (3:52.58), boys 400 free relay (3:28.13) and Tolmachoff’s 1:09.18 in the girls 100 breast.

12 • February 2019

West Albany won both titles, with Crescent Valley taking second in the girls team race. And although no team scores were compiled in junior varsity, Silverton won six of the individual events. A total of 71 Aqua Foxes participated, with 40 swimming in at least one varsity event. District wrestling: Silverton finished fifth in the Feb. 8-9 Mid-Willamette Conference district meet at Crescent Valley. The Foxes claimed two individual titles, with undefeated 120-pounder Kaden Kuenzi taking a 14-6 win vs. Haydn Millard of Dallas, and 195-pound Owen Magill dominating Cooper Hise of Dallas 8-1 in their final. Kaden Kuenzi Kaden Kuenzi. JAMES DAY will be seeking his second state title. He won state as a freshman and was runner-up a year ago. Two other Silverton wrestlers made the finals, with Robert Guenther falling to Kadin Thorsted 6-4 at 138 pounds, and Nathan Kuenzi suffering a 13-5 defeat at the hands of Ein Carlos of North Salem at 170. Freshman Jacob Moore took third at 106 for the Foxes. Also scoring for Silverton were Eli Kemble (126), Austin Moore (132), Arte Barsukoff (145), Gerardo Cortes Cruz (160), Josten Richardson (182), Augustus Axmaker (182) and 220-pounders Uriel Cruz and Ben Reed.

Silverton football players William Perry, left, and Levi Nielsen, get set to sign their letters to play college football at Western Oregon University at a ceremony Feb. 6 in the school library. JAMES DAY

championships Feb. 22-23 at the Veterans Memorial Coliseum in Portland. Hoops: The defending Class 2A Kennedy girls basketball team finished a perfect 14-0 Tri-River Conference season Feb. 6 with a 66-19 win against Sheridan. The Trojans, who are 24-1 overall and ranked No. 1 in 2A, will host the Tri-River playoff title game Friday, Feb. 15 against a team to be determined before moving on to the state playoffs. The Trojans will host a game Feb. 23, with a win sending them back to Pendleton for the Feb. 28-March 2 state tournament. The No. 6 Kennedy boys squad closed the league season with a seven-game winning streak that pushed them to a 13-3 record, good for second place behind undefeated Western Christian.

The Foxes finished with 190 points. Perennial power Dallas won the meet with 367.5, followed by Lebanon (296), Crescent Valley (259) and West Albany (197.5).

“Our defense has been great,” coach Karl Schmidtman told Our Town. “We have held teams below 50 points for all seven of those wins. During that stretch, only two teams scored over 40. We are a deep team and we have been able to keep up defensive pressure and energy and that has translated into some easy scoring opportunities off of our defense.”

The top four finishers in each weight bracket qualified for the OSAA state

The Trojans, who finished fourth at Pendleton a year ago, started Tri-River

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playoff play before Our Town’s presstime but seem likely to be playing a home game Feb. 22 with a return trip to Pendleton on the line. Both Silverton teams, meanwhile, are ranked No. 3 in Class 5A as the MidWillamette Conference season enters the home stretch. The boys were 12-1 at Our Town’s presstime, needing just one win in their final three games to clinch its second consecutive league title. The girls, meanwhile, trailed No. 2 Lebanon by one-half game after falling to the Warriors 56-50 on Feb. 6. Both Silverton squads are likely to host state playoff games the first weekend in March. The girls finished third at last year’s state tournament, with the boys taking fourth. Football signings: Feb. 6 was national signing day for high school players to declare their intentions for college, with two players each from Silverton and Kennedy signing letters. Foxes quarterback Levi Nielsen, a fouryear starter for the team, signed to play at Western Oregon, with offensive line teammate William Perry also choosing the join the Wolves. Lineman Nick Suing and tight end Rocco Carley, who helped lead Kennedy to the

Our Town Life


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Sowa, sixth in the 10U Intermediate division at 71 pounds. Others earning points for Silverton were Andrew Kostner Jr. (Pee Wee), Max Bischoff (Pee Wee), Blake Highsmith (Bantam), Andrew Bischoff (Intermediate), Elijah Bischoff (Novice), Damien Rael (Novice), Oscar Marks (Schoolboy), and Thomas Bischoff (Schoolboy). Coaching the squad were Dan Davis, Chris Bischoff, Nick Immler and Jake Marks.

Oregon Kids State Tournament champion Blake Panuke is shown with coach Chris Bischoff after triumphing at Oregon State University earlier this month. SUBMITED PHOTO

Class 2A title, signed with Oregon State University. Youth wrestling: The Silverton Mat Club turned in a series of fine performances Feb. 1-3 at the Oregon Kids State Tournament at the Truax Indoor Center at Oregon State University. Top finishers were Blake Panuke, who took first in the 8U Bantam division at 70 pounds; Steve Powell, second in the 16U Cadet division at 145 pounds; Luke Bischoff, fourth in the 16U Cadet Division at 160 pounds; and Boden

Roth in town: Former Silverton High basketball standout Sam Roth is coming back to Oregon next weekend for a pair of games. Roth, a redshirt sophomore guard for Northwest Nazarene of Nampa, Idaho, will play Thursday, Feb. 21 at Western Oregon and Saturday, Feb. 23 at Concordia of Portland. Both games are at 7:30 p.m. Roth and his Nighthawks are 16-4 overall and 11-3 in the Great Northwest Athletic Conference, one game behind St. Martin’s and one game ahead of Western Oregon. Roth has played in all 20 games and averages 6.1 points and 3.7 rebounds per game. Wurst Run: A 5-kilometer run-walk and a 10-kilometer run are set for Saturday, March 2, as part of the three-day Mt. Angel Volksfest, rebranded this year from its previous Wurstfest moniker. Those registering for the races also will receive festival entry and a complimentary beverage and glass. To register go to http://racenorthwest.com/events. Follow me on Twitter.com @jameshday. Got a news tip? Email me at jamesday590@ gmail.com. Follow Our Town on Facebook.

Free Fishing Weekend in Oregon Feb. 16-17 It’s free to fish, crab or clam in Oregon on Saturday and Sunday, Feb. 16-17 of President’s Day Weekend. During these two days, no fishing licenses or tags (including a Combined Angling Tag or Columbia River Basin Endorsement) are required to fish, crab or clam anywhere in Oregon for both residents and non-residents. All other fishing regulations apply including closures, bag limits and size restrictions. This time of year, the best opportunity will be winter steelhe ad on the coast, stocked hatchery rainbow trout in the Willamette Valley and mid-coast lakes, and ice-fishing in northeast and southeast Oregon. Look for the latest on fishing conditions and regulations at ODFW’s Weekly Recreation Report, which is updated every Thursday. Also see the trout stocking schedule to find out when local lakes are getting stocked with hatchery rainbow trout.

Our Town Life

GENERAL

DRUM LESSONS AND NEW PRE-K MUSIC CLASSES Visit mosaicrhythms.kids.net or call Katey (BM, MAT, Licensed Teacher) 503-991-8166. THE PIRATE’S PARADISE Brush Creek Playhouse, 11535 NE Silverton Road, Silverton. Friday, Feb. 22 at 7 p.m.; Saturday, Feb. 23 at 2 p.m. & 7 p.m.; Sunday, Feb. 24 at 2 p.m.; Friday, March 1 at 7 p.m.; Saturday, March 2 at 2 p.m. & 7 p.m.; Sunday, March 3 at 2 p.m.; Friday, March 8 at 7 p.m.; Saturday, March 9 at 2 p.m. & 7 p.m.; Sunday, March 10 at 2 p.m. Tickets, adults: $10; students/seniors: $8. Available at Books-N-Time at 210 N. Water St. or at the door PETER AND THE STARCATCHER Silverton High School Auditorium, 1456 Pine St., Silverton. Friday, Feb. 15 & Saturday, Feb. 16 at 7 p.m.; Sunday, Feb. 17 at 2 p.m.; Thursday, Feb. 21, Friday, Feb. 22 and Saturday, Feb. 23 at 7 p.m. Tickets, adults: $10; children: $5. Available at the door 30 minutes prior to curtain call or by reservation at 503-873-6331

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HELP WANTED

MT ANGEL JBO BASEBALL Seeks umpires for 2019 season. Training & Liability Insurance provided. Late April – Early July. Must be 16 or over. $40-$45. Email if interested: MtAngelYouthSports@ gmail.com

NOTICES

MT. ANGEL SCHOOL BOARD VACANCY Please visit www.masd91.org to apply.

SERVICES

PRIVATE PIANO LESSONS Openings available for beginning students ages 4 and up in Silverton. Contact Laurel at 509-480-0923 or email smitheducator03@ gmail.com. VISIONS CLEANING Help get your home back from for the holidays. Excellent references. $65-$75 per clean. Organize your home and special projects. Gift Certificates available. 503-607-3247. RDR HANDYMAN & HOME REPAIR SERVICE Installation and repair of fencing, decks,doors, windows, gutter cleaner CCB 206637 licenced, bonded and insured. Call Ryan 503-881-3802. MICHAEL FINKELSTEIN P.E. Civil Engineer 503-873-8215.

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reaches the mailboxes of your neighbors in Mount Angel, Silverton, Scotts Mills, Stayton, Sublimity, Aumsville, Lyons, Mehama ... TO ADVERTISE CALL 503-845-9499 February 2019 • 13


People Out Loud

Brave flights

‘Flying Tiger’ pilot turns 100, folks rewarded for passions

“It is, I believe, the greatest generation any society has ever produced.”

in attendance, and with it he was invited to a roundtable discussion with Vice President Mike Pence.

– Tom Brokaw, author, The Greatest Generation Mr. Brokaw, meet Captain Art Gregg. Really. You need to meet him. He turns 100 on Feb. 16. You will like him. You could write a book about him. Like so many members of the “Greatest Generation,” he is quiet, does not brag about his accomplishments, and feels he served in the United States Army Air Corps during World War II because it was the right thing to do. For those of you old enough to remember the classic 1942 John Wayne movie, Flying Tigers, you will remember the brave, gallant young men fighting in China just prior to the start of the war. Art Gregg never stepped on the movie set and never had a make-up artist. He was, and is, the real deal. Capt. Gregg flew the legendary P-40E Warhawk, the fast fighter planes dubbed “The Flying Tigers” under the command of Lt. General Claire “Lee” Chennault, nicknamed “Old Leatherface.” Art served for four years as a fighter pilot, and spent from April of 1942 to November 1943 overseas, primarily in the CBI theater – China, Burma, and India. He flew 25 missions and received the Air Medal and shot down a Japanese Zero. He was awarded the prestigious “Distinguished Flying Cross” in June 1943. He was in the Officer’s Club when the larger-than-life General Jimmy Doolittle came in with his squadron right after their successful mission bombing Tokyo. Today, he is a soft-spoken, charming

near-centenarian living near the Abiqua outside of Silverton with his daughter, Ann and son-in-law Le Snelling. Just your everyday hero near the head of the class of The Greatest Generation, getting ready to celebrate his 100th birthday with a few hundred close friends, a couple of generals, a State Representative, and receive the thanks of a grateful town, state, and nation, for his service. There will be an open house for his 100th birthday Saturday, Feb. 16, 1:30-4:30 p.m. at the Silverton Senior Center, 115 Westfield, Silverton. Brigadier Generals Donna Prigmore and Mark Crosby with the Oregon Air National Guard will recognize Capt. Gregg, as will State Representative Rick Lewis, Silverton. Congressman Kurt Schrader will have a representative from his office present a gift. Those who wish to send their best are encouraged to send Art a birthday card, notes, memories, anecdotes, and/ or photos to Art Gregg, P.O. Box 891, Silverton, OR, 97381, and those who wish to attend are asked to RSVP to: ArtGregg2030@gmail.com. The still-dashingly handsome and gallant pilot says, “No gifts, please (Just chocolate!).” Overflow parking is offered by the Silverton Baptist Church next

“That experience was unforgettable,” Sanchez said. “It was encouraging to hear from Mr. Pence. I was able to share my experience as a pro-life student activist and had the opportunity to discuss the challenges, controversy, and criticism I face due to my involvement in the pro-life movement. Meeting Vice President Pence was something I never imagined doing.”

Clockwise: Captain Art Gregg celebrates his centenary on Feb. 16. Gregg’s Flying Tiger patch from WWII. What a restored P-40E looks like today. SUBMITTED PHOTOS & ANATOLIY L. FYODOROV © 123RF.COM

to Robert Frost school on Westfield, just below the Senior Center. Cake and refreshments will be served. What else? A huge chocolate cake with a P-40E Warhawk Flying Tiger adorning the top. Marcos Sanchez of Mount Angel, a 2018 JFK graduate and current Chemeketa Community College student, is a passionate Right-To-Life advocate. He currently serves as the founder and president of Chemeketa Students for Life. He was excited to attend the March for Life rally in our nation’s capital in January, with nearly half a million people

Congratulations to the Environmental Biology class at Silverton High School, taught by Alison Stolfus. They wrote a grant application to MAPS Credit Union a few months back, and they won! The class received a $1,000 grant for Stream Enhancement for Silver Creek. According to one of the students, Carleigh McFall, the class will use the money to buy supplies for stream enhancement. Carleigh, a junior, is also starting an Environmental Biology Club at the high school. The students received the check (in gigantic check form) from district staff and MAPS representatives. As Carleigh states, “Ms. Stolfus has inspired me and made a life-long impact on how I view the world and our environment.” She plans to continue her environmental biology studies in college.

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14 • February 2019

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Our Town Life


Silverton Area Chamber of Commerce & Mt. Angel Chamber of Commerce

VISITOR’S GUIDE & Community Profile

• Rich full color pages packed with local beauty

LAST CHANCE f or 2019 Editi

on!

• Distributed by direct mail to every household in Silverton, Mt. Angel and Scotts Mills • Available at visitor centers around the region! • Also available online via

Contact Jim Kinghorn jim.k@mtangelpub.com

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Produced & Published by

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Our Town Life

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February 2019 • 15


SILVERTON HUBBARD

BROKERS ARE LICENSED IN OREGON

TOWN COUNTRY

SILVE IN TOWN N

Micha Christman Office Manager 873-1425

Marcia Branstetter Broker, GRI 873-3545 ext. 318

Kirsten Barnes Broker 503.873.3545 ext 326

Becky Craig Broker 873-3545 ext. 313

Karen Gehrt Broker 503.873.3545 ext 312

Michael Schmidt Principal Broker 873-3545 ext. 314

Meredith Wertz Broker, GRI 873-3545 ext. 324

Ryan Wertz Broker 873-3545 ext. 322

SILVERTON

Chuck White Broker 873-3545 ext. 325

Christina Williamson Broker 873-3545 ext. 315

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#T2517 LOTS OF ROOM 5 BR, 2 BA 2521 sqft Call Michael at ext. 314 $356,900 (WVMLS#741716)

#T2495 VIEWS OF SILVERTON $210,000

Views of Silverton and Willamette Valley. 2 miles from Downtown. Level building site. Majority of property is sloped ground. Well 3.5 gpm when drilled. New 2000 gallon underground holding tank for well. In addition to an old spring fed 9500 gallon reservoir. Pumps installed on well. Standard septic approval. Listing Broker is related to Trustee. Call Michael at ext. 314. (WVMLS# 743882)

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Great location, across the street from Victor Point school, surrounded by farm land, 4 bedroom, 2 bath manufactured home in excellent shape, living room, family room, plus dining area, open to the kitchen, plus shop/garage with office space finished off. Newer exterior siding & paint, newer roof, Large deck to enjoy the sunsets, hot tub. Flat property, fenced, room for all your hobbies and farm animals. Call Meredith at ext. 324 or Ryan at ext. 322. (WVMLS# 744123)

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FOR LEASE/COMMERCIAL FOR RENT TOWN KEIZER WOODBURN SILVERTON BARELAND/LOTS TOWN #T2524 1930’s HOME $379,950 HUBBARD

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Two story 1930’s Home East Hill.CONSTRUCTION 3 bedrooms, IN TOWN NEWonHOME 2 baths, LR w/gas fireplace, formal dining w/original light fixtures, open kitchen w/sun room, unfinished basement, and large double garage with second story storage. Large .31 acre lot; pond; aviary; stone BBQ; Fenced with large trees. Bring your energy and ideas to make this home shine again. Call for appointment today. Call Chuck at ext. 325. (WVMLS# 743464)

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#T2492 COUNTRY HOME 4 BR, 3 BA 2674 sqft 18.27 Acres Call Chuck at ext. 325 $729,950 (WVMLS#743335) #T2493 FIRST TIME ON MARKET 4 BR, 1.5 BA 2937 sqft 3.778 Acres Call Michael at ext. 314 $465,000 (WVMLS#737114) #T2494 BUILDABLE LOT: LOT#3 2.01 Acres Call Michael at ext. 314 $170,000 (WVMLS#737118)

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COUNTRY/ACREAGE TOW

FOR RENT TOWNFOR LEASE/COMMERCIAL SOLD-#T2519 COMPLETELY UPDATED STAYTON/SUBLIMITY TOWNWOODBURN TURNER. 4 BR, 3 BA 2336 sqft Call KEIZER Meredith at ext. 324, Ryan at ext. 322 LAND/ACREAGE COUNTRY $389,900 #T2518 CLOSETOWN FREEWAY ACCESS 3 BR, 2 BA 1221 sqft Call Kirsten at ext. 326 #T2521 GREAT NEIGHBORHOOD AUMSVILLE/TURNER $275,000 COMMERCIAL/INDUSTRIAL IN TOWN NEW ALBANY-3 BR,HOME 2.5 BA CONSTRUCTION 1758 sqft Call MereWOODBURN dith at ext. 324, Ryan at ext. 322 $293,700 COUNTRY/ACREAGE #T2523 1950’s CHARACTER FOR LEASE/COMMERCIAL FOR RENT SALEM-3 BR, 2 BA 1204 sqft Call MereTOWN KEIZER dith at ext. 324, Ryan at ext. 322 $237,600 WOODBURN #T2489 SALEM CLASSIC 1950s 3 BR, 2.5 BA 2224 sqft Call Chuck at ext. 325 $359,950 (WVMLS#734911) BARELAND/LOTS

(WVMLS#741861)

(WVMLS#743207)

#T2514 VALLEY VIEWS 3 BR, 2.5 BA 2399 sqft 2.01 Acres. Turner. Call Meredith at ext. BARELAND/LOTS (WVMLS#743197) STAYTON/SUBLIMITY 324, Ryan at ext. 322 $399,800 (WVMLS#741131) OTHER Rentals COMMUNITIES available in Silverton and #T2515 LOVELY PRIVATE SETTING NEW-#T2526 CUSTOM BUILT HOME 5 Surrounding Areas. For AUMSVILLE/TU more info 3 BR, 2 BA 2163 sqft 5.94 Acres Call Karen BR, 4.5 BA 5144 sqft Call Karen at ext. 312 NEW HOME CONSTRUCTION at IN ext.TOWN 312 or Michael at ext. 314 $460,000 $679,000 (WVMLS#743376) call Micha at 503-873-1425 or see

LAND/ACREAGE

FOR RENT TOWNWOODBURN KEIZER TOWN

LAND/ACREAGE

TOWN

WOODBURN

AUMSVILLE/TURNER

(WVMLS#743464)

NEW-#T2529COMMERCIAL/INDUSTRIAL GREAT LOCATION 4 BR, 2 BA 1848 sqft 2.02 Acres Call MereFOR LEASE/COMMERCIAL dith at ext. 324, Ryan at ext. 322 $398,900

FOR RENT TOWNWOODBURN KEIZER BARELAND/LOTS TOWN

WOODBURN

AUMSVILLE/TURNER

WOODBURN

COMMUNITIE

Spaces for Lease

LIKE US ON FACEBOOK! OTHER COMMUNITIES

(WVMLS#744123)

303 Oak Streetourtownlive.com • Silverton • www.silvertonrealty.com

503.873.3545 • 1-800-863-3545

TRUST THE

W

(WVMLS#742456)

#T2520 HAS IT ALL 5 BR, 3 BA 3488 sqft COUNTRY/ACREAGE (WVMLS#741348) Call Meredith at ext. 324, Ryan at ext. 322 them on our website $635,900 (WVMLS#743078) COMMERCIAL/INDUSTRIAL NEW-#T2529 GREAT LOCATION 4 BR, 2 BA 1848 sqft 2.02 Acres Call Meredith at ext. www.silvertonrealty.com #T2522 NEW CONSTRUCTIONFORVIEWS LEASE/COMMERCIAL 324, Ryan at ext. 322 $398,900 (WVMLS#744123) #T2514 VALLEY TURNER 3 BR, 4 BR, 2.5STAYTON/SUBLIMITY BA 2250 sqft Call Meredith at ext. OTHER 2.5 BA 2399 sqft 2.01 Acres Call Meredith 324, Ryan at ext. 322 $469,000 (WVMLS#743330) #T2495 VIEWS OF SILVERTON LOT#1 3.042 Acres Call Michael at ext. 314 at ext. 324, Ryan at ext. 322 $399,800 High Visibility BARELAND/LOTS $210,000 (WVMLS#743882) (WVMLS#741131) #T2524-1930’s HOME 3 BR, 2 BA 2167 Commercial sqft Call Chuck at ext. 325 $379,950

16 • February 2019

TOW

IN TOWN NEW H BARELAND

Our Town Life


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