Keizertimes. (Salem, Or.) 1979-current, January 20, 2017, Page PAGE A13, Image 13

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    JANUARY 20, 2017, KEIZERTIMES, PAGE A13
McNary goes 4-4 at Oregon Classic
By DEREK WILEY
Of the Keizertimes
McNary head wrestling
coach Jason Ebbs saw prog-
ress at the Oregon Classic in
Redmond as the Celtics won
their fi nal four dual matches.
After losing its fi rst four
matches to North Med-
ford, Grants Pass, Baker and
Crook County, McNary got
a much-needed victory, 39-
33, over Mazama on Friday,
Jan. 13 to close out the fi rst
day of competition and car-
ried that momentum to Sat-
urday, where the Celtics were
a perfect 3-0.
“We knew we’d have a
hard time but the really cool
thing was, despite the quality
of those programs, we con-
tinued to put 20 to 30 points
up on the board, every single
match,” Ebbs said. “That’s a
really good number for what
we have. We were hanging in
there and doing a good job.”
A freshman came up big in
McNary’s fi rst match of Day
2, a 42-30 victory against
Summit, as Brian Buchholz
got his fi rst varsity win at 182
KEIZERTIMES/Derek Wiley
Wrestling at 132 pounds, Sean Burrows went 6-2 in the Oregon
Classic on Jan. 13-14.
KEIZERTIMES/Derek Wiley
At 152 pounds, Wyatt Kesler went 7-1 for McNary at the Oregon Classic in Redmond with his only
loss coming in a match where he re-broke his nose.
pounds by pinning Dylan
Kaminski.
“Earlier in the dual, we lost
a match that I didn’t think we
were going to lose,” Ebbs said.
“The dual was at risk and he
public notices
NOTICE TO INTERESTED PERSONS
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
THE STATE OF OREGON
FOR THE COUNTY
OF MARION
In the Matter of the Estate of
Richard Duane Barber, Sr.,
Deceased.
Case No. 16PB08736
NOTICE TO
INTERESTED PERSONS
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that the undersigned has
been appointed Personal
Representative of the estate
of the above named decedent.
All persons having claims
against the estate are required
to present such claims within
four months after the date of
fi rst publication of this notice,
to Richard D. Barber, Jr., c/o
Heltzel Williams PC, PO Box
1048, Salem, OR 97308, or
the claims may be barred.
All persons whose rights
may be affected by the
proceeding
may
obtain
additional information from
the records of the court, the
Personal Representative, or
the attorneys for the Personal
Representative.
Dated and fi rst published
January 20, 2017.
\s\Richard D. Barber, Jr.
Personal Representative
Clark B. Williams,
OSB #794415
Heltzel Williams PC
P. O. Box 1048
Salem, Oregon 97308-1048
Attorney for Personal
Representative
1/20, 1/27, 2/3
NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION
REAL ESTATE, LLC
Notice is hereby given that
Patrick Cotter Real Estate,
LLC, whose last known
principal offi ce was located
at 109 Commercial Street NE,
Salem, Oregon 97301, was
dissolved effective December
31, 2016. All persons having
a claim against Patrick Cotter
Real Estate, LLC are required
to present the claim, including
the name of claimant(s),
address, telephone number,
and description of claim
alleged, to William C. Davis,
Pioneer Trust Bank, PO Box
2305, Salem, Oregon 97308.
A claim will be barred unless
a proceeding to enforce the
claim is commenced within
fi ve (5) years after the date of
publication of this notice.
1/20
NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION
PATRICK COTTER
Member Spotlight
New Horizons In-Home Care
The Keizer Chamber of Commerce is pleased
to introduce new members, New Horizons In-
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And you have lots of questions:
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What does it entail?
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How will I feel about bringing a stranger into
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my home, or my mother or father’s home?
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Melissa Gimby, Community Relations Coordinator for New Hori-
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For some, care is ongoing, for others it’s temporary. Clients pay only for
the hours they require. In-home care providers will help you fi nd the
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Dan Ogle, New Horizons owner and president, was born and raised
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and operated one of the area’s fi rst adult foster homes for older adults.
In 1994, Dan began providing in-home care, and these services have
grown steadily for 20 years. Today, New Horizons In-Home Care is the
largest in-home care agency in Oregon—serving Eugene, Salem, Cot-
tage Grove, Florence, Corvallis, Albany and surrounding areas.
The company employs about 1,100 people, and remains locally
owned and operated. Dan Ogle still manages day-to-day operations at
New Horizons. Offi ces are in Salem, Florence, Eugene and Corvallis.
The Keizer Chamber of Commerce is honored to work with Melissa
Gimby, a mother of seven and a grandmother of one, she knows how
to care for family—“As hard as it is to have the conversation, I want to
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New Horizons In-Home Care
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Ad space donated by the Keizertimes
came out with a big W and
pinned his guy. He was fi ght-
ing and he competed. He got
off the bottom and turned
it into a positive spot. That’s
what we’re looking for.”
The Celtics topped Ash-
land 48-18 and South Med-
ford 48-24 in their fi nal two
matches as Ebbs continued to
see improvement.
“Our kids are starting to
pay attention to the sport of
wrestling and starting to use
the lessons we teach,” Ebbs
said.
“Instead of just going out
there and fl opping around
and hoping to win, they’re
actually using the techniques
that we teach. It started pay-
ing off.”
Brayden Ebbs and Wyatt
Kesler led McNary on both
days of the tournament.
At 145 pounds, Ebbs went
8-0 with seven pins. His clos-
et match, a 15-11 decision,
came on Friday against Clay
Keller of Baker.
“That guy’s a really good
wrestler,” coach Ebbs said.
“He (Brayden) got taken
down, couldn’t earn his
points on his feet. He started
the match down 4-0 and by
the time we started the third
round, he was down 11-7 and
ended up turning the guy
twice to win by four. That
was just a good time to get
some hard nose work on the
mat because for a moment
in time he was fl ustered and
managed to use what he’s
good at and win the match.”
Kesler went 7-1 at 152
pounds with his only loss
coming to Grant Leiphart
of Summit in a match Kes-
sler re-broke his nose and was
then pinned.
“I didn’t take time to get
my head back into the match
before I wrestled again,” said
Kesler, who was able to re-
turn and pin his fi nal two op-
ponents. “I just had to get my
mind back focused.”
His proudest win came
against Colton Burkhardt of
Crook County, who Kesler
pinned in the third round.
“I went in there a little bit
timid because Crook Coun-
ty is good but I just went
out there and wrestled my
match,” he said.
Carlos Vincent and Sean
Burrows each went 6-2 at
160 and 132 pounds for the
Celtics. At 170 pounds, Isaiah
Putnam fi nished 5-3.
“The most exciting piece
to the whole puzzle was
every single kid, even our
young kids, by the time we
got done on Saturday, every
single kid had contributed
positively to our team score
at some point during the
tournament,” coach Ebbs
said. “Our young kids are
getting wins and picking up
teams points and that’s what
I needed to see in January to
make sure we’re going in the
right direction.”