S ERVING THE S ILVERTON A REA S INCE 1880 50 C ENTS ● A U NIQUE E DITION OF THE S TATESMAN J OURNAL V OL . 135, N O . 36 W EDNESDAY , A UGUST 24, 2016 SILVERTONAPPEAL.COM Creekside Chat Tuning up for Silverton Sidewalk Shindig JUSTIN MUCH If you trick your ears, tap your memory a bit and broaden your imagina- tion, you can al- most hear it coming. That magical, early-October Saturday on Silverton streets when an eclectic mix of music permeates the town’s core. Gregg Sheesley stopped into the Creekside Chat Wednesday, Aug. 17, to bring us up to speed on the Fifth Annual Silverton Sidewalk Shindig, which is Oct. 1 this year. Gregg’s lilting enthusiasm for the shindig is seamlessly ac- companied by his humor (”my last name is pronounced sort of like something one would say after stubbing a toe”), a rich un- derstanding and appreciation of cross-sections of musical genres, and his own eclectic life experiences dating back dec- ades. With that background poured into the event at hand, Gregg has teamed with other Silverton denizen doers – Greg Hart, whom he credits with the event’s genesis; Lawrence Stone, whom he calls the event’s spark plug; Ron Nelson, dubbed the event’s cowboy; – to bring this “grassroots, low-key, ad hoc musical scene into down- town.” Added this year in Town Square Park is a children’s ele- ment, spirited by Hilary Dumi- trescu, providing a music the- ory workshop and youth activ- ities ranging from face painting to making your own drum, ka- zoo, cigar-box ukulele or the MICHAEL DAVIS/STATESMAN JOURNAL Gregg Sheesley visits the Creekside Chat at Silver Creek Coffee House to discuss Silverton Sidewalk Shindig. like. It’s never too early to expose the younger set to music, Gregg said, nor is there ever an age or time when music should not be part of the day. To that end, he anticipates nothing short of a “very eclectic day of entertainment (with) 120 aggregate hours of music – some outside and some inside.” Shindig history bears this out as the first Saturday of October in each of these past four years has revealed Silverton down- town emissions of accordion, marimba, ukulele, blues, coun- try western, various ensembles and combos – even the noted Gerle Haggard cowgirl band chimed in. The melodies gener- ally enter the streets as coffee mugs fill and linger into hours just beyond dusk. The kickoff will feature a vigorous brass band in front of the Palace Theater. Of course, other senses will be catered to via local eateries, bistros, watering holes, along with murals. Even the event’s billing poster delivers aesthetic Next chat What: Creekside Chat Where: Silver Creek Coffee House, 111 Water St., Silverton When: 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 7 (First and third Wednesdays) Questions and information: Contact Justin Much, jmuch@StatesmanJournal.com; 503-769-6338, cell 503-508-8157 appeal to the eye. Check the lat- est one out, along with photos from previous shindigs, on Facebook: www.facebook.com/ sidewalkshindig. Learn more or get involved by contacting Hilary, (971) 322- 6093, hilary.dumitres cu@gmail.com. Downtown sees remodel THE OREGON GARDEN/SPECIAL TO THE STAYTON MAIL Students can enjoy hands-on education at Oregon Garden Home School Day. Garden hosts student event ANNETTE UTZ FOR THE APPEAL TRIBUNE SILVERTON COUNTRY HISTORICAL SOCIETY The historic People's Bank was built in 1905 by Louis Ames, who was also a bank director. Ames will be a tap house CHRISTENA BROOKS SPECIAL TO THE APPEAL TRIBUNE You could say Mohsen Salem has the corner on the market when it comes to downtown Silverton real es- tate. Three corners, actually. In February, the Hubbard-based businessman added the 111-year-old Ames Building to the pair of historic buildings at the intersection of Main and Water streets that he’s already bought and rehabbed. Now he’s the owner and developer of the iconic five-sided building at 100 S. Water Street that was Larsen Flynn Insur- ance, but has also been a bank, real es- CHRISTENA BROOKS/SPECIAL TO THE APPEAL TRIBUNE Mo Salem’s purchase of the Ames Building displaced Larsen Flynn Insurance’s Chris DeVito, James Dooley and Rick Schmidt and spurred them to purchase their own building. See REMODEL, Page 3A Study and smiles will be tossed to- gether for The Oregon Garden Home School Day on Wednesday, Sept. 7. It will be an opportunity to get young ones out and about to enjoy some hands-on learning. Several different learning stations will be placed throughout the garden for students age 5 to 15 to explore. Ac- tivities include learning to identify ani- mal tracks, following the clean water pathway, observing and drawing in- sects, making living bean necklaces, birds, the environment and more. The event has been around for the past 10 years and last year drew more than 400 home -school students. “The Oregon Garden Foundation has partnered with the Oregon Forest Resources Institute to provide educa- tion in the garden during the school year,” OFRI Environmental Educator Rikki Heath said. “Many years ago, they decided that they were missing the home school population and decid- ed to start a day where students could get an educational experience while ex- ploring the garden. “We have partnered with many oth- er groups such as Marion Soil and Wa- ter Conservation District, Marion County Master Gardeners, Oregon De- partment of Forestry, Salem Audubon Society, Talk About Trees, Ag in the See GARDEN, Page 3A State declines complaint in ‘dirt’ case CHRISTENA BROOKS SPECIAL TO THE APPEAL TRIBUNE The Oregon Govern- ment Ethics Commission won’t investigate any fur- ther the complaint made by Silver Falls School Board member Todd White against former Chairman Tim Roth for receiving loads of fill dirt from the turf project at the football field this sum- mer. In executive session Aug. 12, commissioners heard a preliminary re- port and didn’t vote to pur- sue an investigation, ac- cording to a letter from Executive Director Ron Bersin. White filed the com- plaint following ground- breaking on the Silver Fox Foundation’s installation of a $1 million artificial turf football field at McGinnis Field. He filed the complaint when he learned that some loads of fill were trucked to Roth’s proper- ty, 2 miles away. White said the dirt was district property that should’ve been offered to the public. The district argued that the project, and thus the dirt, belonged to the Silver Fox Foun- dation, and that it’s common practice for fill dirt to be taken to the nearest available properties. Offi ce Spotlight Commercial/Retail CREEKSIDE COMMERCIAL! $695,000 .65 ac ~ Zoned C3 ~ Downtown MLS#707894 ~ Silverton Connie Hinsdale 503-881-8687 Mike Day 503-931-7327 INVESTORS! 9949 total SF ~ 4 Retail Spaces ~ Downtown MLS#696719 ~ Silverton Dean Oster 503-932-5708 $575,000 Online at SilvertonAppeal.com NEWS UPDATES PHOTOS » Breaking news » Get updates from the Silverton area » Photo galleries BLANK SLATE! INSIDE Births......................................2A Briefs......................................3A Calendar ...............................2A Classifieds..............................3B Life..........................................4A Obituaries .............................3B ©2016 $750,000 2.89 Commercial Acres ~ Great Location! MLS#702436 ~ Silverton Mike Day 503-931-7327 Robin Kuhn 503-930-1896 Printed on recycled paper 119 N. Water St. Silverton, Or 97381 • 503.873.8600 • Harcourtsnworg.com 25