Appeal tribune. (Silverton, Or.) 1999-current, March 14, 2018, Page 3A, Image 3

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    SILVERTONAPPEAL.COM ❚ WEDNESDAY, MARCH 14, 2018 ❚ 3A
Recycle
Recycling changes
Continued from Page 2A
Beginning March 5, only the following items are allowed in the mixed recycling roll cart:
Among the new no-nos:
❚ Shredded paper. Junk mail, greet-
ing cards and other paper still is accept-
ed, but if it’s shredded, keep it out, Pose-
gate said. And don’t toss in a brown gro-
cery bag full of paper. The bags are recy-
cled separately, so dump them out, fold
and put in on their own.
❚ Plastic jars such as peanut butter or
mayonnaise containers, and plastic
cups, such as yogurt, salsa, cottage
cheese or hummus containers. Only 12
ounce or larger beverage containers or
soap and cleaning product bottles are
now accepted.
❚ Egg cartons.
❚ Take-out clamshells, aseptic milk
and food containers, and freezer food
packaging. “Anything in the fridge or
freezer that touches food at all, throw it
away,” Posegate said.
Even before China’s crackdown, con-
tamination of recyclables was a huge
problem. At Garten Services, between 9
percent and 13 percent of everything
coming in the door is trash that Garten
must pay to dispose of, Posegate said.
The top contaminant: Dirty diapers.
Paper: Newspaper, including inserts; corrugated cardboard; magazines and catalogs; junk and direct mail; cereal and
other small boxes; and office paper.
Other fibers: Corrugated cardboard boxes, cereal boxes, cracker boxes and shoe boxes.
Metal cans: Steel, tin and aluminum cans.
Clean plastic: Beverage bottles that are 12 ounces or larger; soap, shampoo and cleaning solution bottles; and milk, juice
and detergent jugs.
There are no changes to the rules for the red bin.
Other common items include shoes,
clothing, kiddie pools, garden hoses,
huge metal parts, and pots and pans,
Posegate said.
People may think Garten employees
will pick out the items and dispose of
them properly, he said, but that’s not the
case.
“We’ve got a thousand tons of this
stuff coming out of a truck that crushes
it all,” he said. “Maybe we’ll find that
bowling ball, but come on. People have
gotten way out of line with what they
put in there.”
Officials aren’t expecting customers
to catch on to the new rules right away.
“This change in the markets hap-
pened so fast that we don’t even have
updated literature, so we don’t expect
customers to be 100 percent compliant
overnight,” said David Lear, general
manager of the Mid-Valley Garbage and
Recycling Association.
But they would like customers to do
their best, and certainly to keep garbage
out of the blue bins.
“Please be strict with that list,” Pose-
gate said. “Or you’re just giving your
trash to someone else to deal with.”
tloew@statesmanjournal.com, 503-
399-6779 or follow at Twitter.com/Tra-
cy_Loew
David Lear,
years, attending local, regional, and na-
tional conventions for clock and music
box collectors. Both Shirley and Pat
were involved in the life of their church
and of their community.
Shirley is preceded in death by her
husband, Patrick.
She is survived by her daughter,
Becky Hopkins of Silverton and son,
Dan Cavanaugh of Allen, Texas; six
grandchildren: Ian Goetting, Kalah
Goetting, Krista Hopkins, Grady Hop-
kins, Connor Cavanaugh, and Meridan
Cavanaugh.
A Memorial Mass will be held at 11
a.m., March 17, 2018 at St. Paul's Catho-
lic Church in Silverton Oregon. Remem-
brances may be made to First Christian
Church Wednesday Night Dinners, 402
N 1st St, Silverton, OR 97381. Arrange-
ments with Unger Funeral Chapel of Sil-
verton.
Fletcher was born on
September 7, 1926, and he
died on March 3, 2018
He was 91 years old,
and passed away at the
Orchard House in Mt. An-
Fletcher
gel, where he lived with
his wife of 71 years, Ruth.
Prince
Fletcher was born to
parents Jim and Isabel (McCabe) Prince
in Anadarko, Oklahoma; he was 1 of 5
children. Fletcher was raised and at-
tended school in Oklahoma. In 1944, he
joined the Navy at 17 years old; he was a
Seabee, and was stationed on Okinawa,
Japan.
In 1946, Fletcher met Ruth Ann Gann
in the Salinas Valley, California. They
were married on October 7th, 1946, in
Soledad, California. They had 3 chil-
dren. He and his family moved to Ore-
gon in 1962, settling in Silverton. Fletch-
er enjoyed boating, fishing, golfing and
gardening; but most of all spending time
with his family.
He is survived by his wife of 71 years,
Ruth Prince; children: Jimmy (Cathy)
Prince of Silverton, LaDonna (Larry)
Barstad of Silverton and Rob (Dee)
Prince of Woodburn; 10 grandchildren,
19 great-grandchildren and 3 great-
great-grandchildren.
A memorial service was held on Fri-
day, March 9, 2018, at the Silverton As-
sembly of God Church, located at 437 N
James St. Private interment will be held
at a later date at Bethany Pioneer Ceme-
tery. Arrangements by Unger Funeral
Chapel of Silverton.
we lost the first-round game cause we
wanted to go as far as we could, but
coach told us we couldn’t sulk,” said
Nielsen, who had 10 points and seven
rebounds. “We had to bounce back and
do the best we could.”
Sophomore guard David Gonzales (14
points) and sophomore forward Grant
Dunn (11 points) joined Roth and Nielsen
in double figures.
With three starters – Gonzales, Niel-
sen and junior forward Josiah Roth
(Cade Roth’s first cousin) — due back
next season, along with key reserves
like Dunn and junior guard Drake Ulven,
Silverton could be in position to make
another run next season.
“It’s gonna be difficult losing some of
the guys we have, but we definitely have
some young talent on this team coming
up and I’m really excited for next year,”
Nielsen said. “Hopefully we can make it
back (to the state tournament) and be
better.”
Katelyn Trevino’s 3-pointer with 3:55
remaining.
Crescent Valley (24-5) edged in front,
but Lexy Barba’s 3-pointer tied the
game at 42-42 with 42 seconds left.
Cali McClave made two free throws
for the Raiders with 6.7 seconds left to
close the scoring. Trevino was fouled on
a drive to the basket at the 0.2 mark, but
she was unable to convert at the foul
line.
The Panthers, who were making their
first state tournament appearance since
2010, took home the sixth-place trophy.
“It’s kind of an unbelievable feeling
because I never thought from freshman
year that we’d get to this point,” said
Central junior post Annike Riddell, who
had nine points and 13 rebounds. “It’s
really cool that we actually get to experi-
ence this.”
Central and Crescent Valley split two
regular season games in the Mid-Wil-
lamette Conference.
With four starters due back next sea-
son – Riddell, sophomore guard Meagan
Mendazona, and junior guards Eliza-
beth Chavez and Trevino, the future ap-
pears bright for Central.
Barba, a senior guard, led the Pan-
thers with 13 points.
“This change in the markets
happened so fast that we
don’t even have updated
literature, so we don’t
expect customers to be 100
percent compliant
overnight.”
general manager of the Mid-Valley
Garbage and Recycling Association
OBITUARIES
Shirley D. Cavanaugh
June 10, 1932 – March 5, 2018
Shirley D. Cavanaugh, 85, passed
away in her home on March 5, 2018.
She was born on June 10, 1932, to
John and Dolores (Vastine) Kipper in
Rocky Ford, Colorado; she was an only
child. Until she was 13,
Shirley lived in Rocky
Ford, but an early death
by her mother and later
abandonment by her fa-
ther led Shirley to live
with various families in
various places until she
Shirley D.
was 18 and graduated
Cavanaugh
from high school.
On March 17, 1951 she married Patrick
Daniel Cavanaugh Sr. in San Antonio,
Texas; they had a daughter and son. As a
military family, the Cavanaughs lived in
a number of different places including
three years in France and four years in
Germany. After retiring, Pat and Shirley
traveled around the United States for 28
Roundup
Continued from Page 1A
“Thinking back to all the years, it’s
just been a long run and I never thought
it would come (to an end) this fast,”
McCarty said.
Silverton returns three starters next
season – Paradis, Schmitz and sopho-
more post Riley Traeger – so the Foxes
figure to be formidable again.
Boys consolation championship
When Silverton’s dream of winning
the state championship ended in a
quarterfinal loss Wednesday to No. 8
seed Churchill, the Foxes didn’t dwell on
what could have been.
No. 1 seed Silverton (25-2) defeated
No. 5 seed Springfield 67-35 in the con-
solation semifinals Thursday, and cul-
minated an outstanding season Friday
with a 61-50 victory over No. 7 seed
South Albany in the consolation cham-
pionship.
The Foxes, who were state champs in
2015, took home the fourth-place trophy
“I’m so proud of ‘em,” first-year coach
Jamie McCarty said.
“I told ‘em after we lost that first-
round game that this a chance in their
Fletcher Lee Prince
September 7, 1926 – March 3, 2018
life where they’ll look back in 10-15 years
and say, ‘How am I a better person be-
cause of this?’
“We knew we had to get up the next
day and get our head off the pillow as
fast as we could and we had a chance to
get better.”
Silverton led the entire way against
South Albany (21-7), a team they beat by
27 and 25 points in two regular season
matchups en route to going undefeated
in the Mid-Willamette Conference.
In his final high school game, Silver-
ton senior wing Cade Roth had a team-
high 15 points, with six rebounds and
four assists.
“I feel like we really proved ourselves.
We can compete on any level,” said
Roth, the Mid-Willamette Conference
Player of the Year. “Even though we may
not have gotten first, we were gonna get
the next best thing we could.
“I love this group of guys. I wish I
could play with them for another four
years.”
Silverton led 27-18 at halftime and
extended its lead to as much as 17 points
in the third quarter.
The Rebels cut the lead to 57-50 with
1:27 left, but junior forward Levi Nielsen
scored on a fast-break layup and Silver-
ton was not threatened in the final min-
ute.
“Obviously it was disappointing that
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Girls consolation championship
In a tight consolation game final, No.
9 seed Crescent Valley edged No. 3 seed
Central 44-42.
Central (22-6) led 12-3 after a strong
first quarter, but the Panthers lead was
cut to one point at halftime.
Central took its final lead at 37-35 on
ghorowitz@StatesmanJournal.com
or Twitter.com/ghorowitz
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on January 31, 2018 after a year-long
struggle with multiple illnesses. She
was 79. There will be a celebration of her
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Lutheran Church, 290 W Gloucester
Gladstone.
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