2A ● APPEAL TRIBUNE WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 2016 THE WEEK AHEAD THROUGH AUG. 31 House That Beer Built Passport: Gives you access to 30 free pints from 30 local pubs, breweries, and restaurants in the North Willamette Valley. All proceeds from pass- port sales go to North Willamette Valley Habitat for Humanity to help build homes for hard-working, low-income families, various locations throughout the North Willamette Valley. $30. Passports may be purchased through Aug. 1. 503-845-2177, Nwvhabitat.org/the-house-that-beer-built. THROUGH JUNE Borland Gallery: “Intimate Grandeur” Plein Air paintings by 7 of Oregon’s fine artists (Eric Jacobsen, Erik Sandgren, Jim Shull, Celeste Bergin, Carol Hansen, Ulan Moore and Helen Bouchard), through June 26. Gallery hours: 8 a.m. to noon Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Fridays; 9 a.m. to noon Thursdays; noon to 4 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays, 303 Coolidge St., Silverton. Free. 503-873-6728, Silvertonarts.org. White Oak Gallery: “Color through Brush and Thread,” work by painter Peter Fox and fiber artist Carol Heist, through June 28. Gallery hours: 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Wednesdays- Sundays, 216 E Main St., Silverton. Free. 503-399-9193, Thewhiteoak.info. Lunaria Gallery: “Entrance,” a nature themed exhibit featuring pastel paintings by Heidi Henrikson-Miner and torn paper collages by Rebekah Rigsby, through June 27. Gallery hours: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily, 113 N Water St., Silverton. Free. 503-873-7734, Lunariagallery.com. FRIDAY Silvertongues Toastmasters: Develop speaking skills by organizing your thoughts, thinking on your feet and building confi- dence and leadership skills in a friendly and supportive environment. Guests invited, 7:30 to 8:30 a.m., Silverton Community Seventh- Day Adventist Church, 1159 Oak St., Silver- ton. 503-873-4198. FRIDAY THROUGH JUNE 19 “The Cemetery Club”: A dramatic comedy by Ivan Menchell. Three Jewish widows meet once a month for tea before going to visit their husband’s graves. But when Sam the Butcher joins the group, life . . . and the afterlife . . . get complicated, 7 p.m. June 10, 11, 16-18; 2 p.m. June 12 and 19, Brush Creek Playhouse, 11535 Silverton Road NE, Silver- ton. $10; $8 children, students and seniors. 503-508-3682, Brushcreekplayhouse.com. SATURDAY Saturday Lunches: Noon to 1:30 p.m., Trinity Lutheran Church, 500 N Second St., Silverton. Free. (503) 873-2635. JUNE 17 The African Children’s Choir: The pro- gram features well-loved children’s songs, traditional Spirituals and Gospel favorites, 7 to 8:30 p.m., Silverton High School, 1456 Pine St., Silverton. Donations accepted to support African Children’s Choir programs, such as education, care and relief and development programs. 503-873-7353, Africanchildren schoir.com. ESTABLISHED 1880 Previously the Silverton Appeal Tribune & Mt. Angel News Address To Place an Ad 399 S Water St., Silverton, OR 97381 P.O. Box 35 Silverton, OR 97381 Classifieds: call 503-399-6789 Retail: call 503-399-6728 Legal: call 503-399-6791 Phone Call: 800-452-2511 Hours: until 7 p.m. Wednesdays; until 3 p.m. other weekdays 503-873-8385 Fax 503-873-8064 Email JUNE 17-19 sanews@salem.gannett.com Oregon Garden Brewfest: enjoy 60 brew- eries, pouring 120 beers, ciders, and meads from all over the state and across the coun- try. Sip your brew as you wander through our 80 acres of gardens, listen to great regional musicians, and taste amazing food from local vendors, 3 to 11 p.m. June 17; noon to 11 p.m. June 18; noon to 6 p.m. June 19. Minors welcome until 5 p.m. Saturday and all day Sunday, The Oregon Garden, 879 W Main St., Silverton. Advance: $15 per day; $30 3-day pass; $55 VIP. At the door: $15 per day; $20 Saturday evening; $35 3-day pass; $55 VIP; $5 designated drivers; free ages 4 and younger. 503-874-8100, Oregongarde n.org. www.SilvertonAppeal.com Web site Staff President Ryan Kedzierski 503-399-6648 rkedzierski@gannett.com Sports Cliff Kirkpatrick ckirkpatr@salem.gannett.com Advertising Terri McArthur 503-399-6630 tmcarthur@Salem.gannett.com Deadlines News: 4 p.m. Thursday Letters: 4 p.m. Thursday Obituaries: 11 a.m. Friday Display Advertising: 4 p.m. Wednesday Legals: 3 p.m. Wednesday Classifieds: 4 p.m. Friday News Tips The Appeal Tribune encourages suggestions for local stories. Call the newsroom at 503-873-8385 ext. 2. To submit letters to the editor or announcements, call 503-399-6773. Missed Delivery? To Subscribe Circulation Manager Art Hyson ahyson@salem.gannett.com 503-399-6846 To subscribe Call: 800-452-2511 $21 per year for home delivery $22 per year for motor delivery $30 per year mail delivery in Marion County $38 per year mail delivery out of Marion County Main Statesman Journal publication Suggested monthly rates: Monday-Sunday: $22, $20 with EZ Pay Monday-Saturday: $17.50, $16 with EZ Pay Wednesday-Sunday: $18, $16 with EZ Pay Monday-Friday: $17.50, $16 with EZ Pay Sunday and Wednesday: $14, $12 with EZ Pay Sunday only: $14, $12 with EZ Pay In-Oregon mail delivery Weekly rates: Monday-Sunday: $11.95 Monday-Saturday: $7.66 Wednesday and Sunday: $4.33 To report delivery problems or subscribe, call 800-452-2511 Published every Wednesday by the Statesman Journal, 280 Church St. NE, Salem, OR 97301. USPS 469-860, Postmaster: Send address changes to Appeal Tribune, P.O. Box 35, Silverton OR 97381. PERIODICALS POSTAGE PAID: Salem, OR and additional offices. Send letters to the editor and news releases to sanews@salem.gannett.com. JUSTIN MUCH/STATESMAN JOURNAL Terry Crawford of Christmas Valley poses with an agreeable piece of art she found at The Red Bench in downtown Silverton. MICHAEL DAVIS/STATESMAN JOURNAL You don’t have to be a corporate type to like corporate bonds Priceline.com INC 3.257 % Yield to call • Interest paid semiannually • BBB+- rated by Standard & Poor’s Next call: 03/01/2026 @ $100.00 Final Maturity: 06/01/2026 Call or visit your local Edward Jones fi nancial advisor today. www.edwardjones.com Member SIPC ADVISOR LIST Salem Area Vin Searles Jeff Davis Keizer Area Surrounding Area Sheryl Resner Bridgette Justis FINANCIAL ADVISOR FINANCIAL ADVISOR FINANCIAL ADVISOR FINANCIAL ADVISOR South | 503-363-0445 Liberty | 503-581-8580 Keizer | 503-304-8641 Sublimity | 503-769-3180 Michael Wooters Garry Falor Mario Montiel Tim Yount FINANCIAL ADVISOR FINANCIAL ADVISOR FINANCIAL ADVISOR FINANCIAL ADVISOR South | 503-362-5439 West | 503-588-5426 Keizer | 503-393-8166 Silverton | 503-873-2454 Derek Gilbert Chip Hutchings Walt Walker FINANCIAL ADVISOR FINANCIAL ADVISOR Commercial | 503-362-9699 Lancaster | 503-585-4689 FINANCIAL ADVISOR Stayton | 503-769-4902 Creekside Continued from Page 1A Stu says there are now 50-60 of these machines at bars, taverns, restaurants and amusement arcades throughout the United States. There is no evidence yet that premarital coun- selors are using them, but the product is still in its rollout stage. They retail for $599, which is slightly less than six sessions with a rela- tionship counselor. More information is available at kissmeter .com. In other Stu news, the renovation of the cuckoo clock façade outside the theater he owns in Mount Angel is not yet complet- ed. He got sidetracked with other projects. But he hopes to com- plete the job in the fall. You’ll know it’s done when the little bird pops out. Seeking connections Finding a parallel be- tween desert-set Christ- mas Valley and Douglas fir-trimmed Silverton is a tough task. For starters, look at population and landmass: Silverton houses well Next chat What: Creekside Chat Where: Silver Creek Coffee House, 111 Water St., Silver- ton When: 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Wednesday, June 15 (First and third Wednesdays) Stu Rasmussen stands by his coin-operated relationship analyzer. ‘‘ A lot can happen over coffee.” CARLYN REID Owner, Rustic Roots Salon north of 9,000 folks inside a tidy 3.5 square miles; Christmas Valley’s host Lake County holds south of 8,000 spread out over 8,358 square miles – yes, fewer than one human per square mile. Further that juxtaposi- tion by considering that Lake County’s “hub” and county seat, Lakeview, contains roughly 2,300 of the county’s denizens and is situated polar opposite to Christmas Valley; La- keview nears the county’s California-border end while CV tucks up 100 miles north toward the Central Oregon stretch of its boundary. So it’s fairly easy to un- derstand how Terry Crawford’s visit to Silver- ton – a journey of about 225 miles from her Christ- mas Valley home – is a nice getaway for her in terms of scenery and set- ting. Some parallels: the sur- rounding Willamette Val- ley grass-seed production nears peak production – and sneezy pollen – sea- son, while sitting at Silver Creek Coffee Crawford describes Christmas Val- ley alfalfa and hay, urged along by economical and ecological pivot irrigation systems, yielding serious tonnage that’s shipped globally from its remote Lake County environs to varied and distant points around the world. Crawford publishes the monthly “Community Breeze,” from Christmas Valley, has it printed about 95 miles northwest in Bend, then mails it to 1,265 deliverable address- es in the northern region of Lake County. By Tuesday she had put the June issue to bed, sent it to Bend, and had some time to get out and ex- plore a bit, luring her to Silverton. She doubled the opportunity by trailing her son, Stephen, who just purchased an orange 1987 GMC Blazer in the area. Terry pointed out that it’s a good idea to have some backup heading back in a rig of that age: “I told him if it doesn’t pan out, you can always part it out and you’ll make your money back out of it.” It wasn’t her first foray to Silverton; she said she enjoys visiting the town periodically, and the ab- bey in Mt. Angel, and the Chinese and Japanese gardens in Portland, among other points west of the Cascades, which to her are respites away from the expansive des- ert. It also wasn’t her first visit to The Red Bench on Water Street, where she found a black-and-white sketch/painting of vintage equine character that will fit well with the décor back home. She’d soon load the painting up and get ready to head back, pick up her publication and prepare it for the mailing, and give her son one more piece of advice: “He needs to get rid of that General Lee (decal); it’s a cop magnet.” Caitlin Davis Tim Sparks FINANCIAL ADVISOR FINANCIAL ADVISOR West | 503-585-1464 Commercial | 503-363-0445 MARRIAGE LICENSES BIRTHS * Yield effective 06/01/2016, subject to availability and price change. Yield and market value may fl uctuate if sold prior to maturity, and the amount you receive from the sale of these securities may be more than, less than or equal to the amount originally invested. Bond investments are subject to interest rate risk such that when interest rates rise, the prices of bonds can decrease and the investor can lose principal value. Any bond called prior to maturity may result in reinvestment risk for the owner of the bond. OR-0000376172 Marriage license applications with Marion County John Steven Ellingson, 27, Silverton, and Courtney Shaun Webber, 24, Stayton. Kapsoff, Feodore Freddy Nikolai, 22, Silverton, and Joanna John Shubin, 23, Scotts Mills. Charles Thomas Johnston, 21, Keizer, and Hannah Lee Lockman, 22, Silverton. William Lee Vittone, 51, Silverton, and Heather Dianne Lieuallen, 48, Silver- ton. The following are birth announcements submitted to the Silverton Appeal Tribune. For more, go to StatesmanJournal.com/ Records. SALEM HOSPITAL Wiltse, Evelyn Mae: To Jessica and Garrett Wiltse, Silverton, 6 pounds 12 ounces, May 27.