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Eau Claire, Leader-Telegram 10/24/2013
August 27, 2014 8:24 pm /
Copy Reduced to 36% from original to fit letter page
L E A D E R - T E L E G R A M
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August 27, 2014 8:19 pm /
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Eau Claire, Leader-Telegram 08/06/2014
August 27, 2014 8:21 pm /
Copy Reduced to 48% from original to fit letter page
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SPORTS 4D Wednesday , August 6 , 2014 LEADER-TELEGRAM
CONTENT FROM AP PAGE DESIGNED AND BUILT BY POSTMEDIA EDITORIAL SERVICES
Is Valhalla the end for Woods?
PGA ChampionshipAnniversaries
Here is a look at some of the anniver-saries of the PGA Championship, the nal major of the season, to be played at Valhalla Golf Club, Louisville, Ky.:
75 years ago (1939): Henry Picard won his second major championship by rallying to beat Byron Nelson at Pomonock Country Club in New York. Picard led most of the day until Nelson tied the match on the 29th hole and took his rst lead with a birdie on the 32nd hole. Picard saved his chances by making a 25-footer on the 34th hole to avoid going 2 down, and then he made a 4-foot birdie putt on the last hole in regulation to square the match. On the rst extra hole, Nelson again had the advantage with a shot into 5 feet, while Picard drove under a movie truck. Picard got free relief, hit his approach to 12 feet and made the putt. Nelson missed his putt.50 years ago (1964): Bobby Nich-olas, a 28-year-old from Kentucky, set the PGA Championship record with a 64 in the opening round at Columbus Country Club. And the records kept right on falling. Nichols went on to a wire-to-wire victory. His 271 set a PGA Championship record that stood for 30 years, until Nick Price had a 269 at Southern Hills in 1994. And it gave Nichols a 3-shot victory over Jack Nicklaus and Arnold Palmer. Nichols had a 1-shot lead over Palmer going into the nal round and closed with a 67. Palmer never won a PGA Cham-pionship, the major that kept him from the career Grand Slam.25 years ago (1989): Payne Stew-art won his rst major championship at Kemper Lakes, outside Chicago, and he needed plenty of help. Dressed in Chicago Bears colors because of his NFL apparel deal, Stewart closed with a 67 and posted a 276. Still, this PGA Championship belonged to Mike Reid, known as ‘Radar’ because of his ac-curacy off the tee. Stewart was in the clubhouse and Reid was in command. But it all fell apart for Reid. He hit into the water and had to scramble for bogey on the 16th. He ubbed a chip and three-putted for double bogey on the 17th to fall 1 shot behind. And he missed a 4-foot birdie putt on the 18th that would have forced a playoff. As tears welled in his eyes, Reid looked reporters and said: “It’s only a game, right?”20 years ago (1994): Nick Price stamped his dominance in the game by winning his second straight major — and third out of the last night — and this time there was no doubt. Price needed a late blunder by Jesper Parnevik to win the British Open a month earlier. At Southern Hills, for the PGA Championship, he opened with a 67 to share the lead with Colin Montgomerie, pulled away with a 65 in the second round and wound up with a 6-shot victory over Corey Pavin. Price rose to No. 1 in the world with the victory. And his 269 set a PGA Championship scoring record that would be broken the following year at Riviera.10 years ago (2004): The only thing missing from Vijay Singh’s greatest season was a major, and he had to work harder than he imagined for this one. The PGA Championship went to Whistling Straits for the rst time, a Pete Dye creation along the shores of Lake Michigan. It delivered great theater. Justin Leonard built a 2-shot lead with 5 holes to play, but his bogey on the 18th dropped him into a three-way playoff with Singh and Chris DiMarco. The only birdie Singh made on Sunday came on the rst of 3 playoff holes. It was enough to carry him to a victory, as Leonard and DiMarco could not make up ground. Singh’s 76 remains the high-est nal round by a PGA champion. Singh nished the hear with 9 PGA Tour wins and became the rst player to earn $10 million in one year.
LOUISVILLE, KY.
Rory McIlroy barely had time to catch his breath, much less celebrate his victory in the
British Open.Just 18 days after McIlroy won
that coveted claret jug, the 25-year-old from Northern Ireland tees it up in the nal major of the year at the PGA Championship with a chance to become only the sixth player to win the nal two majors of the year. He apparently wasn’t satis ed with just one major this year.
“A lot of the goals that I set for myself at the start of the year I’ve achieved already,” McIlroy said. “So that’s when you have to reassess
and say, ‘OK, you've boxed that off. Celebrate it for a couple of days.’ But then you’ve got to move on.
“You’ve got to keep moving forward and keep thinking about what you want to achieve from now until the end of the year. And then at the end of the year, you can really re ect on everything you’ve done and enjoy it.”
As much as McIlroy feels like the year is just getting started, it could be ending for Tiger Woods.
Woods already lost three months to back surgery. The British Open was his rst major of the year, and it showed when he nished 23 shots behind. Barring a quick turnaround, he could miss out on the FedEx Cup playoffs. His season will be over.
In his favor is the venue — Valhalla Golf Club.
The Jack Nicklaus design in Louisville, Ky., has staged three big events, all of them providing great theater. None was more memorable than the 2000 PGA Championship, when Woods survived a shootout on the back nine with Bob May and beat him in a playoff for his third straight major.
May was the consummate journey-man who never won a PGA Tour event, and yet he took on Woods at the absolute peak of his game and nearly beat him. That’s what makes the nal major of the year perhaps the most dif cult to win.
It’s not the golf course that makes it dif cult, it’s the competition.
Even when Dustin Johnson with-drew to take a leave of absence from golf, the PGA Championship still had 99 of the top 100 players in the world ranking. Everyone in the eld, except for the 20 club professionals, believes he has a realistic chance of winning.
That explains why Woods and Vijay Singh are the only multiple winners of the PGA Championship over the last 15 years.
And why no other major has pro-
duced more champions (four) outside the world top 100 since the ranking began in 1986. It explains why Ernie Els described the strength of the eld as a “PGA Tour event on steroids.”
Making it even more dif cult is that scoring typically is easier at this ma-jor. In the heat of summer, conditions tend to be softer. Bring together the best players in the world, and they take dead aim.
“When I get on the rst tee at the PGA, I’m not as nervous as when I get on the rst tee at the Masters, or the U.S. Open or The Open Champi-onship,” Els said.
“I think with the golf course in mind, mentally you know you can score. You can go on scoring runs. And with the players that strong in the eld, you know you have to go low.”
BY DOUG FERGUSONAP GOLF WRITER
This is an uphill par 3 that is guarded by
two bunkers in the front that stretch
around to the left, and another that
guards the back. Anything
long will tumble down a hill and
make par a difficult chore.
The shortest hole is guarded by a deep
bunker in front of the green and a
slippery collection area behind it.
Another bunker is to the left,
with Floyds Fork beyond it, and the green has multiple tiers to make every
hole location require precision off the tee.
A deep bunker protects the left side and a smaller bunker is on the right. Big hitters might want to challenge the left bunker to leave a flip wedge to the green. Anything over the back could dribble into Floyds Fork.
A good drive should set up a
birdie opportunity, although the approach
is into the prevailing wind. A dogleg that
bends sharply to the left with gorse
bushes to the left and fairway bunkers on the
right side, along with a bunker on the inside of the dogleg. The green
is heavily contoured and protected by a new
bunker to the right.
The lowering of the tee makes for a long, uphill tee shot with bunkers squeezing both sides of the fairway. The hole is 50 yards longer than it was for the 2000 PGA Championship. A collection area and two staggered bunkers guard the green.
Par 4 Yards 446
Par 4 Yards 435
Par 4 Yards 350
Par 4 Yards 500
Par 4 Yards 372
Par 5 Y
Yards 508
Par 4 Yards 463
Par 3 Yards 210
Par 5 Yards 542
The signature hole at Valhalla is the
shortest par 4 and might be the most
exciting. The landing area with an iron is
surrounded by six bunkers to
the left. The green is built up nearly 20 feet on large boulders and
surrounded by water. With tees slightly forward,
some might be tempted to reach the green with a
long, flawless tee shot.
Par 3 Yards 217
Par 4 Yards 472
This can be reached in two, but it requires a well-shaped tee shot on this double dogleg. A right-to-left shot is ideal off the tee, provided it avoids a fairway bunker on the right and rough on the left. A left-to-right shot is needed to reach the green, which is protected by a deep bunker and has two tiers.
Par 5 Yards 590
Par 3 Yards 174
The longest par 3 features a two-tiered green with a large bunker guarding the front. There are two large bunkers behind the green, one for the lower tier and one for the upper tier, and either will be a tough spot from which to save par.
A U G . 7 - 1 0
ClubhouseClubhouse
AUG. 7-10
APSOURCE: Valhalla Golf Club
Par 4 Yards 495
The creek again guards the right
side of the fairway on this slight dogleg
to the right, with a tree-covered slope
and deep rough on the left. The 17th tee behind
the green has been lowered, allowing
for a large amphitheater. Two bunkers have been added
around the green.
A relatively benign opening hole that bends to the left, though players should be careful not to hit too close to the left side of the fairway and have trees affecting the second shot. Two bunkers have been added since 2000, one on the front right and one toward the back left.
Brush Run Creek runs down the entire right side of the hole, and the landing zone is framed by a small bunker to the left and a larger bunker to the right. The creek also is in play around the green, which has a bunker to the left.
Valhalla Golf ClubLouisville, Kentucky
7,458 yards • Par 35-36 – 71
Players will have the option of going left or right on a hole that offers a split fairway. Going to the left will shorten the hole by 50 yards, but the landing area is only 26 yards wide andis surrounded by rough and a water hazard. The safer route is right, although the fairway is tight and lined by bunkers.
Par 4 Yards 415
Par 4 Yards 467
Par 3 Yards 205
The PGA Championship returns to Valhalla Golf Club, the first time it’s been played
there since Tiger Woods’ epic three-hole playoff win in 2000. The $10 million
purse for the 2014 tournament pushes the season’s final major ahead of the other
three championships.
Previous PGA Championshipsat Valhalla2000
1996
Tiger Woods66-67-70-67-270 • -18
Mark Brooks68-70-69-70-277 • -11
Slight dogleg to the left, with a finger of Floyds Fork bordering the left side of the fairway and a bunker squeezing the right side. The slopes in the green have been softened to accommodate long irons, but the green is relatively small. Two bunkers guard the left side, and anything too wild might find the creek. A new bunker has been added to the right.
Floyds Fork winds between the tee and the green,
then sweeps around to the
right of the green. The
green is protected by a
large bunker to the left and a
smaller bunker to the right. A small portion
has been added to the back right for possible hole locations, which likely will be the toughest.
The green has been moved back 80 yards since 2000. The hole
is divided by Floyds Fork, and
the first challenge
is to find the fairway. The
second shot will be a long iron to a green guarded by a bunker on
the left side and a collection area on
the right.
Three bunkers border the
right side of the fairway
and two bunkers are on the left. The
difficulty of this hole is the uphill approach
toward the clubhouse. One of the largest
and deepest bunkers on the course is just
right of the green.
The tee shot
must be long and
straight before the hole drops off
toward a green that is elevated. The green has one of the
deepest bunkers on the course to
the right and thick bluegrass rough
to the left.
The second straight major
ends with a par 5. A large bunker
protects the left side of the fairway, with a pond down the right side. A decent shot
will allow most players to go for
the green. The second shot needs
to come in high to an elevated green with a bunker guarding the
entire front portion. The green has severe sloping that runs from the
upper portion to the lower left and right levels.
Illustrations are schematic
AP PHOTO/MARK DUNCAN
TIGER WOODSAP PHOTO/MARK DUNCAN
RORY McILROY
Eau Claire, Leader-Telegram 08/03/2014
August 27, 2014 8:22 pm /
Copy Reduced to 48% from original to fit letter page
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CRBL/DeGrasse has
two RBIs for Eau Claire
group of guys is really satisfying for us older guys,” Pecha said.
The Bears got a quick run in the first inning as Tom Mewhorter sin-gled to drive in Mitch DeGrasse.
Osseo tied it in the second on a Joe Zawacki double, but defensive lapses in the third led to three Eau Claire runs to make it 4-1.
The Merchants would claw back to make it 4-3, but Eau Claire never relinquished the lead and pulled away late as DeGrasse lifted a two-run home run over the left-field wall in the ninth.
DeGrasse finished 2-for-3 with three runs, two RBIs and two stolen bases. Mewhorter was 1-for-4 with a pair of sac flies and three RBIs.
Nathan Kent also went 2-for-4 with a run and an RBI.
“Even when it got to be 4-3, it didn’t seem like we panicked or started to force anything,” Pecha said. “We just played ball like we have all year.”
Staying calm has been the theme for Eau Claire as it finished the first half of the season with a 5-6 record. It hasn’t lost a league game since.
“You see it happen all the time in sports where a team in the second half of the year gets into a groove and they’re able to keep that running,” Pecha said. “I knew that this group was talented enough to have more suc-cess than we were hav-ing. I just knew that if we could put it together that we were as good as any team in the CRBL.”
Second baseman Sam Waters went 3-for-5, third baseman/catcher Josh Anderson went 2-for-4 and shortstop Jesse Brockman was 1-for-2 with a triple, run and an RBI to lead the
Merchants at the plate.Starting pitcher Logan
Boettcher was solid through 6q innings despite surrendering six walks. The southpaw allowed just two earned runs and struck out seven.
It was the first champi-onship game appearance for Osseo, which finished with the best record in franchise history at 17-5.
“If the wild card format stays where two South Division teams can con-tend for the title, I don’t think that this is going to be the last time we see those guys,” Pecha said of the Merchants. “They’re a classy group and an excellent ball team, and it wouldn’t surprise me to see them take this team far into the WBA playoffs.”
The Bears had an unprecedented streak of playing in the champion-ship game every season from 2004-2010.
With a young and tal-ented core returning, could a similar streak be on the horizon?
“We’ll just try to enjoy this one, but we can’t help but think that if we keep a group together that we’re going to be competitive for a while to come here,” Pecha said.
BEARS 9, MERCHANTS 3EAU CLAIRE (9)
AB-R-H-RBI: Sam Janni, c, 5-1-2-0; Brian Menard, rf, 5-1-2-0; Mitch De-Grasse, cf/ss, 3-3-2-2; Tom Mewhorter, 1b, 4-1-1-3; Jim Thill, 3b, 6-1-0-0; Palm-er Buss, lf, 4-0-1-0; Hayden Bowe, ss/p, 3-0-1-0; Nathan Kent, 2b, 4-1-2-1; Reed Pecha, dh, 2-1-1-1; Jack Eck-ardt, cf, 0-0-0-0; Matt Lunde, p, 0-0-0-0. Totals 36-9-12-7.OSSEO (3)
Sam Waters, 2b, 5-0-3-0; Jesse Brockman, ss, 2-1-1-1; Ryan Freitag, cf, 4-0-0-0; Josh Anderson, 3b/c, 4-1-2-0; Jimi Zawacki, lf/3b, 3-0-1-1; Garrett Nix, dh/p, 3-0-0-0; Joe Zawacki, 1b, 4-0-1-1; Logan Boettcher, p/lf, 3-0-0-0; Kyle Hestekin, rf, 3-1-1-0; Kalen Hagen, c, 0-0-0-0. Totals 31-3-9-3.Eau Claire ....103 001 022 — 9 12 0Osseo ..........011 010 000 — 3 9 4
E — Waters 2, Jo. Zawacki, Nix. LOB — Eau Claire 15, Osseo 9. 2B — Menard; Jo. Zawacki. 3B — Brockman. HR — DeGrasse. SB — DeGrasse 2, Kent. SAC — Janni, Mewhorter 2, Bowe; Brockman 2, Ji. Zawacki, Nix.Eau Claire IP H R ER BB SOLunde 3 5 2 2 0 0Bowe, W 6 4 1 1 4 4OsseoBoettcher, L 6q 8 5 2 6 7Nix 23 4 4 3 2 2
WP — Boettcher 3, Nix. PB — Hagen. HBP — by Boettcher (Thill).
from Page 1B
Gordon shows he’s still got it
LONG POND, Pa. (AP) — Jeff Gordon turned a nostalgic weekend at the Brickyard into a powerful reminder that he can still win NASCAR’s biggest races.
Oh, and a fifth championship.
But for all the proof that Gordon is still a driver to contend with in a cham-pionship push, he realizes he’s not in the same physi-cal condition when he won his first Brickyard in 1994. Gordon turns 43 on Monday with an achy back that he feels when settling behind the wheel of the No. 24 Chevrolet.
“It’s not great, that’s for sure,” Gordon said.
Gordon hasn’t been the same since he felt consis-tent, shooting back pain before the Coca-Cola 600 in May. He cut short his practice sessions, had treatments and needed a standby driver.
Gordon had serious issues years ago in his lower spine and returned to full strength thanks to anti-inflammatory medi-cation and workouts with a trainer. He drove in pain during a winless 2008 sea-son and briefly contem-plated retirement.
For all his back woes, Gordon said he never felt the stabbing pain like he did at Charlotte Motor Speedway.
“I don’t think my back is ever going to be the same after what happened at Charlotte,” Gordon said. “I don’t know what exactly transpired there, but it’s not the same. And I have to be much more careful. I’m just having to treat it more with ice and (stimulation) and be more careful and do more stretching. Is it going to flare-up again? It could. But I’m just trying to be more cautious with the things that I do that I feel like contribute to that.”
Gordon never showed any signs of discomfort last weekend at Indy, pull-ing away from Hendrick Motorsports teammate Kasey Kahne on the final restart to win for the sec-ond time this season. Gor-don holds the points lead heading into today’s race at Pocono Raceway, where he’s a six-time winner.
Gordon and Kahne staged a similar battle in last August’s race at Pocono. Unlike last week at Indy, Kahne won the restart and the race. Cruising from the outside, Kahne got the jump he needed, zipped past Gor-don and pulled away with two laps left for the win.
Kahne is winless this season and badly needs one if he wants to make the Chase for the Sprint Cup championship field. Kahne led 70 laps and had the car to beat at Indy until his late fade ended with a sixth-place finish and his car out of fuel.
“It was the first time of the season we have put a full race together,” Kahne said. “From me driving
to them on pit road to pit calls, everything about it was right. That is something that we haven’t done this year. We haven’t even come close to doing that.”
He could be in the mix today — along with Gordon, and Hendrick drivers Jimmie Johnson and Dale Earnhardt Jr. The drivers have won the last four races at the track.
Here are a few things to know about Pocono Raceway:
Sweep city Dale Earnhardt Jr. is
trying to become the first driver to sweep Pocono since Denny Hamlin in 2006. Earnhardt will attempt to capture the second season sweep of his career and first since Talladega in 2002.
Pocono anniversary Richard Petty won the
first NASCAR race held on the tri-oval track — the Purolator 500 — on Aug. 4, 1974. The sec-ond race of each season was added to the sched-ule in 1982. There have been 73 NASCAR Cup races at Pocono. Enter-ing this weekend, 322 drivers have competed in at least one NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race at Pocono Raceway; 222 in more than one. Jeff Gor-don leads all drivers with six wins and 32 different drivers have captured the checkered flag.
Johnson slump With six Sprint Cup
championships, Jimmie Johnson’s definition of a slump is always a bit skewed compared to the rest of the field. Johnson is in a minor one headed into Pocono. He had consecu-tive 42nd-place finishes at Daytona and New Hamp-shire because of wrecks and only finished 14th last week at Indianapo-lis Motor Speedway, tra-ditionally one of his best tracks. Johnson finished sixth in the first Pocono race, the only time he didn’t win in a four-race span (Charlotte, Dover and Michigan).
Brickyard winner may be aging, but he’s a serious title contender
Menard Update
Eau Claire native Paul Menard will start today’s race at Pocono 29th. Menard has an average finish of 20.5 in 15 career Sprint Cup starts at the track. He’ll pilot chassis No. 463 today. That car previously was used at Darlington and the first Pocono race, with finishes of 41st and 26th. Menard comes into today’s race 16th in the season points standings.
“It feels like we just left Pocono and now we’re talking about going back, so it’s definitely spaced very close together,” Menard said in a release. “The rumble strips are really a non-issue. They wanted it to be an issue, but it’s not a problem since we don’t run down there anyways. We definitely learned some things last time that we will apply this time.”
SPRINT CUP UP NEXT: POCONO RACEWAY, NOON TODAY. TV: ESPN.
Associated Press
Jeff Gordon climbs into his car for a Sprint Cup practice session Saturday at Pocono Raceway,in Long Pond, Pa.
ENGLEWOOD, Colo. (AP) — Montee Ball acknowledges he was “a little bit” intimidated by Peyton Manning last year, something he says contributed to his slow start.
Trying to please the famously meticu-lous quarterback is enough to unnerve any rookie, even one who ran for an NCAA-record 83 touchdowns at Wisconsin.
“He did a great job of calming me down, though, keeping me comfortable, working with me after practice,” Ball said. “But I’m still a little nervous, of course. I’m only human.”
A jittery Ball failed to win the starting job last year after he whiffed on Seattle middle line-backer Bobby Wagner in the preseason and Man-ning got squished. Then, after fumbling just twice in 924 carries in college, he matched that total in his first 31 runs in the NFL.
Again, butterflies. “I was nervous, try-
ing to do too much,” Ball said.
That Ball was a bun-dle of nerves around Manning came as some-what of a surprise to offensive coordinator Adam Gase.
“You don’t usually hear anybody saying anything when they’re going through it. Now that we’re a year removed, I’m sure he’s kind reflects back and says, man, I felt like this. But if he was like that, he hid it pretty good,” Gase said Friday. “I just kind of looked at it like he was a rookie and there were a lot of things
going on and he just locked up a little bit.
“And I watch him now and I feel like
he can just play football now.”
Ball finally settled down and by December he had a tight grip on both the football and his role in Denver’s record-breaking offense. He finished his rookie year with 559 yards rushing and four TDs.
“The first half I was a little shaky in there,” Ball said. “I’m man enough to admit that I was making terrible mistakes early on. But it finally came along. Like they say, better late than never. And I took off from there.”
When Knowshon Moreno took his 1,586 all-purpose yards, 14 touch-downs and balky knees to South Beach this off-season, Ball assumed the featured role in the Broncos’ backfield.
Money, health and Ball’s emergence all played a role in let-ting Moreno leave even though none of the Broncos’ remaining run-ning backs had started an NFL game.
Running backs coach Eric Studesville shrugged off the notion that head-ing into a Super Bowl-or-else season without any starting experience in the backfield is risky business.
“Oh, the whole start-ing thing is hard for me, because really the guys that start the game are either on kickoff or kickoff return, you know?” Studesville said. “That’s kind of inconsequential to me.”
NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE
Ball moves past his rookie jitters Former Badger more comfortable as he assumes featured role
Ball
SPORTS Sunday , August 3 , 2014 LEADER-TELEGRAM 6B
Fond du Lac, The Reporter 09/29/2013
August 27, 2014 8:28 pm /
Copy Reduced to 47% from original to fit letter page
www.fdlreporter.com The Reporter, Sunday, September 29, 2013 PAGE C7
WI-5001709066
GET READY FOR SLOPPY KISSES,GET READY FOR SLOPPY KISSES,WALKS IN THE PARK ANDWALKS IN THE PARK AND
CUDDLES IN FRONT OF THE TV.CUDDLES IN FRONT OF THE TV.
Fond du Lac Humane Society,652 Triangle Road
Fond du Lac • 922-8873fdlhumane.org
Purina Adult &Puppy Chow
Purina Cat &Kitten Chow
Fleece Blankets
Paper Towels
Kuranda Beds
save a life...save a life...
volunteers are purrrrfect!!!volunteers are purrrrfect!!!volunteering is rewarding!volunteering is rewarding!
petadopt a
…because you…because youcare.care.
PP
PK
Fl
K
PP
K
BO JANGLESDogMale
Terrier, American Pit Bull/Boxer10 months 21 days
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BEARDogMale
Retriever, Labrador/Mix7 years 3 months 27 days
Sponsored By:Tom, Bev, Squirrel,
and PuppyWI-5001706322
MARCUSDogMale
Coonhound, Treeing Walker/Mix5 years 4 months 16 days
Sponsored By:Tom, Bev, Squirrel,
& PuppyWI-5001706326
GABECatMale
Domestic Shorthair/Mix2 months 4 days
Sponsored By:Amanda Guell
WI-5001706340
BOURBONDogMale
Terrier, Pit Bull/Mix1 year 2 months 30 days
Sponsored By:Amanda Guell
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LEVIDogMale
Terrier, American Staffordshire/Mix2 months 19 days
Sponsored By:Tina & Koda
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TINKERCat
FemaleDomestic Shorthair/Mix
3 months 1 day
Sponsored By:Jerry & Joan Letcher
& BusterWI-5001706299
MAI TAIDogMale
Chihuahua, Short Coat/Mix2 years 3 months 24 days
Sponsored By:Jerry & Joan Letcher
& BusterWI-5001706300
JESSEDogMale
Beagle/Mix8 months 20 days
Sponsored By:In Loving Memory of
Alma Woodruff.Miss You, Your FamilyW
I-5001706302
SNUFFALUFAGISCatMale
Domestic Longhair/Mix3 years 21 daysSponsored By:In Memory of
Granny, Irene Rust, andYour Love for Cats.Miss You, Love YouAlways, Your FamilyW
I-5001706303
AVICat
FemaleDomestic Shorthair/Mix
8 years 21 days
Sponsored By:Max & Cee Cee
WI-5001706318
ROSIEDog
FemaleTerrier, Jack Russell/Mix6 years 8 months 12 days
Sponsored By:Wayne & Dianne StrehlowWI-5001706250
LUNADog
FemaleTerrier, Pit Bull/Purebred
8 years 29 days
Sponsored By:Ozzie
WI-5001706252
JACKDogMale
Chihuahua, Short Coat/Mix5 years 1 month 18 days
Sponsored By:In Memory of Buttons
WI-5001706254
PATCHYCatMale
Domestic Shorthair/Mix1 year 8 months 17 days
Sponsored By:Sharon Peters
WI-5001706261
BEARDogMale
Shepherd/Mix4 years 5 months 8 days
Sponsored By:Kaden Olig & Lou
WI-5001706266
BAILEYDogMale
Spaniel, English Cocker/Mix6 years 17 days
Sponsored By:Ginny & Bob
WI-5001706277
OOGIECatMale
Domestic Longhair/Mix9 years 1 month 15 days
Sponsored By:Carol - In Memory
of BuddyWI-5001706232
JELLY BELLYCat
FemaleDomestic Shorthair/Mix
6 years 21 days
Sponsored By:Ruth Schneider
WI-5001706233
KAMIKAZEDogMale
Collie, Rough/Mix10 years 3 months 7 days
Sponsored By:Leonie Vrtilek
WI-5001706234
CINDERCatMale
Domestic Shorthair/Mix3 years 4 months
Sponsored By:Summer & Puddy
WI-5001706236
BELLDog
FemaleBoxer/Mastiff
6 years 2 months 30 days
Sponsored By:Buster, Boo, and
Blackberry ConnorWI-5001706239
FAITHCat
FemaleDomestic Shorthair/Mix3 years 2 months 15 days
Sponsored By:Dolores A. Kuster
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HANKDogMale
Retriever, Labrador/Mix4 years 6 months 8 days
Sponsored By:Del & Nancy Krumbein
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JASONDogMale
Shepherd/Mix5 years 11 months 9 days
Sponsored By:Bud & June Fontaine
MINNIEDog
FemaleTerrier, American Pit Bull/Mix
6 months 14 days
Sponsored By:Dick & SharonGilgenbach
WI-5001706211
DANTECatMale
Domestic Shorthair/Mix3 months 7 days
Sponsored By:Dick & SharonGilgenbach
WI-5001706213
SASSYDog
FemaleRottweiler/Mix
6 years 2 months 30 days
Sponsored By:In Memory of Bubsy ZahnWI-5001706220
WI-5001706227
PANDADog
FemaleChihuahua, Short Coat/Mix2 years 1 month 18 days
Sponsored By:In Memory of Kassie O.
The Fond du Lac Humane Societyis in need of the following
Fond du Lac, The Reporter 12/15/2013
August 27, 2014 8:29 pm /
Copy Reduced to 36% from original to fit letter page
PAGE A4 The Reporter, Sunday, December 15, 2013 www.fdlreporter.com
GET READY FOR SLOPPYKISSES, WALKS IN THEPARK AND CUDDLES IN
FRONT OF THE TV.
…because you care.volunteers are purrrrfect!!! volunteering is rewarding!
Get Started Today! Call the shelter to discuss volunteer opportunitiesand schedule your volunteer orientation.
Fond du Lac Humane Society, 652 Triangle Road, Fond du Lac• 922-8873 fdlhumane.org
save a life...petpetadopt aadopt a
The Fond du Lac Humane Society is in need of the following
Purina Adult & Puppy Chow Purina Cat & Kitten ChowFleece Blankets Paper Towels Kuranda Beds
RASCALCatMale
Domestic Shorthair/Mix2 years 2 months 6 days
Sponsored by:Santa
WI-5001737778
IRINACat
FemaleDomestic Shorthair/Mix4 years 7 months 1 day
Sponsored by:Richard & Sharon
Gilgenbach
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CAPTAINCatMale
Domestic Longhair/Mix6 years 7 months 1 day
Sponsored by:Richard & Sharon
Gilgenbach
WI-5001739932
AMELIACat
FemaleDomestic Shorthair/Mix4 years 7 months 4 days
Sponsored by:Bentley & Gracie
WI-5001739909
STEPHANIECat
FemaleDomestic Shorthair/Mix4 years 7 months 4 days
Sponsored by:Max & Cee Cee
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DUSTYCatMale
Domestic Shorthair/Mix2 years 7 months 8 days
Sponsored by:Bill & Carol Hanrahan
WI-5001739632
RITZCat
FemaleDomestic Shorthair/Mix4 years 7 months 13 days
Sponsored by:In memory of
Bud & Marge Krug
WI-5001739622
SKITTLESCatMale
Domestic Shorthair/Mix5 years 7 months 3 days
Sponsored by:Jerry & Joan Letcher
and Buster
WI-5001739616
LEONARDOCatMale
Domestic Shorthair/Mix2 years 7 months 8 days
Sponsored by:Amanda Guell
WI-5001739603
MABELCat
FemaleDomestic Shorthair/Mix4 years 7 months 29 days
Sponsored by:Charlie whom was
adopted from the FDLHumane Society
WI-5001739599
ARICat
FemaleDomestic Shorthair/Mix1 year 8 months 10 days
Sponsored by:Ginny & Bob
WI-5001739595
EMMY LOUCat
FemaleDomestic Shorthair/Mix6 years 6 months 10 days
Sponsored by:Doc & Mary Lou Bartelt
WI-5001739627
SOPHIECat
FemaleDomestic Shorthair/Mix5 years 8 months 9 days
Sponsored by:Zoey (formerly Scarlett)
WI-5001739597
POECatMale
Domestic Shorthair/Mix8 years 5 months 2 days
Sponsored by:Santa
WI-5001737776
MUFFINCat
FemaleDomestic Shorthair/Mix1 year 8 months 2 days
Sponsored by:Miles & Sandy Mertens
WI-5001739594
HONDACatMale
Domestic Shorthair/Mix1 year 8 months 9 days
Sponsored by:Miles & Sandy Mertens
WI-5001739593
COOKIECat
FemaleDomestic Shorthair/Mix4 years 5 months 3 days
Sponsored by:Miles & Sandy Mertens
WI-5001739589
PATCHYCatMale
Domestic Shorthair/Mix1 year 11 months 4 days
Sponsored by:Sue & Ginseng
WI-5001737842
ROGERCatMale
Domestic Shorthair/Mix1 year 4 months
Sponsored by:Charlie and Teddy
WI-5001737838
UNOCatMale
Domestic Shorthair/Mix2 years 11 months 7 days
Sponsored by:Virginia Bartell
WI-5001737831
GRACIECat
FemaleDomestic Shorthair/Mix
5 years 16 days
Sponsored by:Bennot GrandchildrenPaul, Jack, Emily, Stu,Bryce, Devan & Olivia
WI-5001737814
LADYCat
FemaleDomestic Shorthair/Mix
4 years 11 months 13 days
Sponsored by:Susan’s Kitties
WI-5001737801
ZEPHERCat
FemaleDomestic Shorthair/Mix
4 years 11 months 24 days
Sponsored by:Wayne & Dianne Strehlow
WI-5001737797
WHIMSYCat
FemaleDomestic Shorthair/Mix7 years 1 month 22 days
Sponsored by:Santa
WI-5001737779
BRETCatMale
Domestic Shorthair/Mix2 years 10 months 7 days
Sponsored by:Kaden Olig & Baby O
WI-5001737934
VICECat
FemaleDomestic Shorthair/Mix
4 years 11 months
Sponsored by:Bennot GrandchildrenPaul, Jack, Emily, Stu,Bryce, Devan, Olivia
WI-5001737816
MILLERDogMale
Retriever, Labrador/Mix5 years 3 days
Sponsored By:Del & Nancy Krumbein
WI-5001739960
TINYDogMale
Retriever, Labrador/Mastiff4 months 28 days
Sponsored By:Max & Cee Cee
WI-5001739902
KERNELDogMale
Poodle, Miniature/Mix5 years 14 days
Sponsored By:Elle Mae & Lily Riederer
WI-5001737773
WOODYDogMale
Terrier, Parson Russell/Mix1 year 21 days
Sponsored By:Ozzie
WI-5001739918
BRODYDogMale
Terrier, American Staffordshire/Mix1 year 29 days
Sponsored By:Shirley, Lyle & Tootie- In Remembrance
WI-5001739896
JAKEDogMale
Siberian Husky/Mix4 years 1 month 12 days
Sponsored By:Jerry & Joan Letcher
and Buster
WI-5001739620
POOHDog
FemaleRetriever, Labrador/Mix6 years 1 month 21 days
Sponsored By:Tom & Bev andSquirrel & PuppyW
I-5001739607
BO JANGLESDogMale
Terrier, American Pit Bull/Boxer1 year 1 month 8 days
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WI-5001737765
NINACat
FemaleDomestic Shorthair/Mix4 years 6 months 21 days
Sponsored by:Christie & Jeff Christie
WI-5001739937
BAILEYDogMale
Spaniel, English Cocker/Mix6 years 3 months 4 days
Sponsored By:In memory of Bubsy Zahn
WI-5001737827
LITTLE BOYDogMale
Chihuahua, Short Coat/Mix2 years 14 days
Sponsored By:“Scruffy” & “Princess”
Gross
WI-5001740654
STORMDogMale
Retriever, Labrador/Mix6 years 2 months 11 days
Sponsored By:Tom & Bev andSquirrel & PuppyW
I-5001739606
TEQUILADog
FemaleTerrier, American Pit Bull/Boxer
3 years 6 months 22 days
Sponsored By:Tina & Koda
WI-5001737788
ABBYDog
FemaleTerrier, American Pit Bull/Retriever,
Labrador5 years 6 months 27 days
Sponsored By:Bob & MaryW
I-5001737767
JACKDogMale
Chihuahua, Short Coat/Mix5 years 4 months 5 days
Sponsored By:In memory of Buttons
WI-5001740893
TOBYDogMale
Shih Tzu/Mix1 year 21 days
Sponsored By:In memory of Spike
WI-5001740894
TILLIECat
FemaleDomestic Longhair/Mix
3 months 22 days
Sponsored By:Christie & Jeff Christie
WI-5001739935
RUFUSCatMale
Domestic Shorthair/Mix2 years 2 months 3 days
Sponsored by:M. Oleson
WI-5001737774
ACECatMale
Domestic Shorthair/Mix8 years 2 months 16 days
Sponsored by:Debbie and John
in memory of Scooty
WI-5001737771
TIGGER IICat
FemaleDomestic Shorthair/Mix3 years 4 months 27 days
Sponsored by:Leonie Vrtilek
WI-5001737770
CAMERONCat
FemaleDomestic Shorthair/Mix4 years 8 months 1 day
Sponsored by:Ken and Julie Loehr
and catsHappy Holidays
WI-5001737766
GEMINICat
FemaleDomestic Shorthair/Mix4 years 6 months 13 days
Sponsored by:In memory of Mittens
WI-5001740892
SALEMCatMale
Domestic Shorthair/Mix4 years 10 months 19 days
Sponsored by:Santa
WI-5001737783
BINKIECatMale
Domestic Shorthair/Mix4 years 10 months 19 days
Sponsored by:Santa
WI-5001737782
ELLACat
FemaleDomestic Shorthair/Mix
5 years 26 days
Sponsored by:Santa
WI-5001737786
AMELIACat
FemaleDomestic Shorthair/Mix
2 years 29 days
Sponsored by:Santa
WI-5001737785
MUNCHKINCat
FemaleDomestic Shorthair/Mix2 years 9 months 8 days
Sponsored by:Bob & Mary
WI-5001737768
WI-5001740007
www.fdlreporter.com The Reporter, Sunday, December 15, 2013 PAGE A5
Fond du Lac, The Reporter 12/22/2013
August 27, 2014 8:30 pm /
Copy Reduced to 47% from original to fit letter page
www.fdlreporter.com The Reporter, Sunday, December 22, 2013 PAGE B5LIFE
A couple of winterbeers now on theshelves show that youdon’t always needspices, herbs, fruit orcrazy alcohol contentsto celebrate the sea-son.
Weyerbacher WinterAle, with an invitinglabel showing a snow-man hoisting a mug, iswhat I think of as a“winter warmer.” Itsalcohol content is notmuch more than a typ-ical American mass-produced beer, allow-ing for a mild sessionbeer that highlightschocolate malt.
The aroma of freshgrain and chocolatenudge your nostrilsupon the pour. It’s anice brown color in theglass with a tan medi-um head.
Chocolate made upthe core of the flavorprofile, with a kiss ofroast and bitterness tooffset the slight sweet-ness and provide somepizzazz. There were nocoffee notes, whichwas a nice change af-ter a number of stoutsI’ve tried the past fewweeks. As the beerwarmed up, more cara-mel malt notes cameforward, and it fin-ished clean and slight-ly dry.
I would drink thisale all year; alas, it isonly expected to be
around through Febru-ary. Weyerbacher isavailable in 18 states,mostly east of the Mis-sissippi River, and adistributor list is atweyerbacher.com.
For those who wanta bit more bite in theirbeer, Goose Island’sSixth Day providedintense coffee bitter-ness in its winter ale. Italso had excellentchocolate flavor, plusmore caramel thanWeyerbacher’s. Theseflavors and any sweet-ness were quickly off-set by the bitterness,with a slight piney hopfinish.
Sixth Day is notice-ably stronger than theWeyerbacher, with an8.3-percent ABV. Thetwo ales made a goodback-to-back pairing,though I recommendstarting out with themilder Weyerbacheroffering first.
Goose Island haswide national distribu-tion; its online BeerFinder link is at goo-seisland.com.
There is certainly nolack of winter seasonaland Christmas-themedbeers currently instores — I had no prob-lem buying myself afew holiday treatswhile shopping forgifts. May all you read-ers have a merryChristmas and a hoppynew beer!
Beer Man’s finalverdict: Weyerbacher
and Goose Island pro-vide plenty of holidaycheer with their winterale offerings.
Todd Haefer of Scandinaviamay be reached [email protected].
By Todd HaeferFor Gannett Wisconsin Media
Weyerbacher deliversale to warm winter
Ocome letus
adore Him
Please join us this Christmas as we celebratethe birth of our Lord and Savior and bring praiseto His name. Service times are listed, andvisitors are always welcome.
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EveryoneWelcome!
December 244:00 pm Family
Christmas Eve Service6:00 pm
Candlelight Service10:30 pm
Candlelight Service
December 2510:00 am Christmas Day
December 299:00 am Service
AscensionLutheran Church
Corner of Pioneer Road& County V 922-3353
OCome,LetUsOCome,LetUsAdoreHim!AdoreHim!
WI-5001738798
WI-5001739003
WI-5001738831
in thein theHOLYLANDHOLYLAND
St. MaryMarytownN10232 Hwy G920-898-4040
Christmas Eve7:30 pm –CHRISTMASCONCERT8:00 pm:MASS
Christmas Day8:30 am –WORSHIP
New Year’s Eve7:00 pm –WORSHIP
New Year’s Day8:30 am –WORSHIP
St. John’sJohnsburg
N9288 Cty W920-795-4316
Christmas Eve10:00 pm –CHRISTMASCONCERT
10:30 pm:MASSChristmas Day
10:30 am –WORSHIP
New Year’s Eve4:15 pm –WORSHIP
New Year’s Day10:30 am –WORSHIP
COMEWORSHIP
WI-5001738552
Pilgrim UnitedChurch of Christ
WI-5001738775
535 STOW STREET, FDL • 921-0415DEC. 244:00 PM • FamilyCandlelightWorship Service9:00 PM • TraditionalCandlelight Service withlessons and CarolsChildcare will beProvidedThe whole family isencouraged to attend
HOPE LUTHERANCHURCH
260 Vincent Street,Fond du Lac
922-5130 • www.lifeathope.org
December 24CHRISTMAS EVE
1:30 pm Family Service3:30 pm Family Service5:30 pm Communion Service7:30 pm Candlelight Service
December 25CHRISTMAS DAY
9:00 amCommunion
Service WI-5
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FirstPresbyterianChurch 1225 4TH STREET ROAD
FONDDU LAC • 922-0425
www.fdlpresbyterian.org
Candlelight Services
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 15Christmas Cantata; 10:30am Service
TUESDAY, DEC. 24 • Christmas Eve5 pm • Contemporary Children’s Love
Feast Service7 pm • Candlelight Service w/Special Music
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 29One Worship Service 9am
WI-5001738824
December 22nd• 9:15am Sunday School,10:30amWorship Service
December 24th • 5:00pm Candlelight Christmas Eve ServiceDecember 29th • 9:15am Sunday School
10:15am Christmas Carol Singspiration10:30amWorship Service
“O Come Let UsAdore Him”CALVARY
BIBLE CHURCH
WI-5001738810
70 E. Pioneer Rd, Fond du Lacwww.CalvaryBiblefdl.org
(920) 921-0530
December 15:8:30am Children’s Christmas Program9:30am - 12:30pm Sugarplum Cookie WalkDecember 24: Christmas Eve4:00pm7:00pmDecember 29:8:30am Sunday Worship20 N. Marr Street(Corner of Division & Marr Streets)
Fond du Lac
921-4949
Weekly Worship: Sunday 8:30amSunday School: 9:40am
WI-5
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December Service Times:Midweek Advent: Wed @ 10am & 7pm
December 4th, 11th, and 18thChristmas Eve -6pm / Day 10amNew Year’s Eve -7pm / Day 10am
Come LearnWhat Child isTHIS!?!
“We preach Christ Crucified...”
New Year’s Eve -7pm / Day 10am
Scan this QR codeto check out our
website!
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This year, Hollywoodreminded us of one longKanyeWest rant —somewhat intelligible yetcomplete nonsense; in-triguing but annoying;and something you want-ed to ignore but justcould not look away.
How else to describethe feeling we had afterwatchingWest and KimKardashian simulate theconception of theirdaughter North Westwith the video “Bound2?” Or hearing aboutanother profane AlecBaldwin meltdown? Orwatching Lady Gaga andR. Kelly grinding upagainst each other on“Saturday Night Live?”Miley twerking withlittle people? Or diges-
ting the news that SimonCowell will be someone’sfather?
It was bewildering,off-putting, jarring — yetentertaining at the sametime. As bad as celebrityantics were this year,they remained our guiltypleasure. We’ll neveradmit it, but these are themoments that had usriveted in 2013.
Isn’t the cover of UsWeekly enough?
KanyeWest had manyrighteous things to rageabout this year, from thefashion industry notgiving him credit forbrilliant, life-changingdesigns like leather jog-ging pants, to not gettingrespect from PresidentObama. But nothingseemed to upset him
Why 2013 wasour year ofguilty pleasuresBy Nekesa Mumbi MoodyAP Entertainment Writer
See CELEBRITY, Page B6
In this Aug. 25 photo, Miley Cyrus performs at the MTVVideo Music Awards at the Barclays Center in New York.From her twerk-a-thon at awards shows to her nearlynude poses to that now infamous tongue, we saw toomany different sides (not to mention the backside) of theformer teen queen. CHARLES SYKES/INVISION/AP
Delavan Enterprise 04/17/2014
August 27, 2014 8:33 pm /
Copy Reduced to 46% from original to fit letter pagePage 16 DELAVAN ENTERPRISE Thursday, April 17, 2014
16
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By Jennifer CesarzCORRESPONDENT In its first game of the sea-son, the Delavan-Darien High School girls soccer team picked up a 2-1 non-conference win over Big Foot on Saturday. The Comets relied on goalie Macie Hill, who had 10 saves
and the duo of senior Bridget Cahill and junior Emily Zugay to help lift them to the win. Just over six minutes into the game, Zugay scored on the assist by Cahill and then the two connected late in the game, but this time Cahill scored on the assist from Zugay, giving
the Comets the 2-1 win. The lone Chiefs goal was scored by Morgan Courier late in the first half. The Comets won’t have an-other game until Monday when they travel to Milton for their second non-conference game of the season.
MICHAEL HALL Delavan Enterprise
Bridget Cahill, of Delavan-Darien High School, heads toward the goal as Ali Mazur of Big Foot High School chases her down.
Coach hopes soccer team has shot at conference title
By Jennifer CesarzCORRESPONDENT The 2014 Delavan-Darien High School girls soccer season kicked off Saturday, and head coach Bruce Mowery has a talented group of players whom he hopes will make a run at the Southern Lakes Conference title. Returning to the lineup is senior Ally Doerr, the Comets leading scorer last year. Doerr was named to the SLC All-Conference First Team. Also returning to the Comets is Ellen Schutt, who was named to the SLC All-Conference Honorable Mention Team for defense. Other seniors that Mowery will look to this year include midfielders Bridget Cahill, Kylie Collins, Irma Garcia and Avery Hembrook. Macie Hill, the Comet’s goalie, is returning as a junior this year and is joined by juniors Emily Zugay, a defender and Amanda Huerta who plays midfield. Mowery hopes that three sophomores will contribute this year to his midfield.
They include Claudia Nieuwenhuis, Alysha Dutton and Luisamaria Torres. The Comets finished third in the conference last year, finishing 6-3 and 10-6-1 overall, and Mowery hopes to improve on that record this year, but knows the conference is a tough one. “Every year the level of competition in the SLC gets better,” Mowery said. “I do not see what I would call any real weak teams in the conference.” Mowery feels that Burlington, who won the conference last year, will make a run for the title again and could see competition from Lake Geneva Badger, Elkhorn, Westosha Central and Union Grove. Weather, spring break and injuries are three issues Mowery says the Comets deal with every spring and he hopes that now that spring break is over his team will be at 100 percent and that the weather will cooperate so they can get out of the gym and on the playing field. A complete schedule can be found at www.southernlakesconference.org.
SportsSoccer team gets win over Big Foot
Delavan Enterprise 04/03/2014
August 28, 2014 8:37 pm /
Copy Reduced to 45% from original to fit letter page
Thursday, April 3, 2014 DELAVAN ENTERPRISE Page 11
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Sports
Track team begins season indoorsBy Jennifer CesarzCORRESPONDENT The weather might not be cooperating, but the Dela-van-Darien High School track and field team was able to get its first meet in – an indoor event at the University of Wiscon-sin-Whitewater on March 21. The top finisher for the Comets was senior Kane Cas-
tel, who took fifth place in the 3,200 meters. Junior Alex Wojciechows-ki finished in seventh place for the Comets in the 55-meter dash, crossing the line in 6.95, earning the Comets’ only scored points of the meet, as the 3,200-meter run Castel ran in does not earn team points. “We gained some valuable
experience and are eager for weather to allow us to get out-side,” first-year D-DHS track coach Jeff Tortomasi. The Comets will be in action again April 11 when they travel to Marshall High School for an invite. For a complete schedule of the season, visit www.south-ernlakesconference.org.
Junior volleyball player commits to UNI Delavan-Darien High School varsity volleyball coach Jean Jacobs knows that junior Katie Jones is a talented vol-leyball athlete. The volleyball coaches at University of North-ern Iowa knew it, too. Jones, a six-footer, was re-cruited and committed to UNI. A starter since her freshman year, Jones has had many acco-
lades while playing on varsity the past three seasons. As a freshman, coach Jacobs saw her potential and relied on Jones to help with the Comets’ defense. Jones’ court sense and ath-letic ability can be partly at-tributed to the years of club vol-leyball, as well as her passion for the game. She plays for the
Wisconsin Juniors Volleyball Club on the 17-1 team. In 2011, Jones made a huge impact on the court with her 96.3 percent serving accuracy, as well as her passing game. In 2012, Jones continued her dominance with 13 aces, 31 kills, 11 blocks and 43 digs in the Southern Lakes Conference matches. She was an all-con-
ference Honorable Mention her sophomore year. As a junior in 2013, Jones continued her growth in in height and volleyball maturity. At 6 feet tall, she has produced 54 aces, 156 kills, 65 blocks and 213 digs. She improved her conference standings and was a
Second Team All-Conference selection this past season. Jacobs expects big things from Jones as a senior in the fall. “She has improved so much over the course of her three years at Delavan-Darien as a starter,” Jacobs said. “I very
rarely have to tell her what to do on the court because we are often on the same page. She is a vocal leader, but also leads by example. She is very much re-spected by her peers. “I have always stated jok-ingly that she plays volleyball 366 days a year.”
SUBMITTED PHOTO Delavan Enterprise
State wrestling Delavan Youth Wrestling Club members who attended the 2014 Kids Folkstyle State Championship in Madison last weekend are alternate Max Hennessey (front, from left) and Mason Hennessey; and Eric Gonzalez (back, from left), Cole Hanson, alternate Jacob Dutton, Jonathan Diaz and Jordan Klosowski.
WSD’s Eby named Coach of the Year Wiscon-sin School for the Deaf Athletic Di-rector Mat-thew Eby has been selected as the Divi-sion II Girls Basketball Coach of the Year by the Na-
tional Deaf Interscholastic Athletic Association. Eby led the girls team to win the Central States Schools for the Deaf conference in-cluding winning eight out of the last 10 games to finish the season with a record of 11-8 – its most winning record since the 1984-85 season. “I am extremely humbled and honored to be named
NDIAA Division II Girls Basketball Coach of the Year in my first year as girls coach,” Eby said. “I am so thankful to WSD girls bas-ketball team, athletics depart-ment for the opportunity to represent Wisconsin School for the Deaf. I also want to thank the young women and my coaching staff who made this all happen.”
Matthew Eby
DePere Journal 12/19/2013
August 28, 2014 8:38 pm /
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THURSDAY , DECEMBER 19, 2013 The De Pere Journal PAGE 5
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I give never-failing advice on all matters of life. I never fail to reunite the separated, or causespeedy and happy marriages. I will lift you out of sorrow and trouble and start you on thepath of happiness and prosperity. There is no heart so sad and dreary that I cannot bring
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2012
Thursday
» “ChristmasAt TheBarn”:5:30 to 8:30 p.m., at Rock K Ranch,2372Day Street (Wisconsin 96),Greenleaf. Sponsored byAlleluiaLutheran Church. Live Nativity inthe barn, a barn band, free hayrides, a bonfire, caroling, facepainting, also free hot cider, hotchocolate and cookies. AlleluiaPuppets show from6 to 6:30,followed by “TheMagic of Christ-mas”with a ventriloquist, pup-pets, clowns andmore from6:30to 8:30. Hot dogs and chipswill befor sale. (920) 257-6399.» Author appearance— EllynM. Baker: 6:30 p.m., at TheReader’s Loft, 2069 Central Court,Bellevue. Baker, a local author andfreelancewriter, will discuss herbook “The Cause: Love&War.”» MartinaMcBride— The Joyof Christmas: 7:30 p.m., at ReschCenter,1901S. Oneida St., Ash-waubenon. (920) 494-3401,ticketstaronline.com.» LaughBoxComedyShow: 8p.m., at TheGreen RoomLounge,353MainAve., downtownDePere. Amix of the best new localcomics and area favorites. $5admission. (920) 983-0966,www.thegreenroomonline.com.
Thursday-Saturday
» Christmaswith theKnights2013: 5:30 cocktails, 6 p.m. dinner,7:30 p.m. showall three days, St.Norbert College’s HendricksonDining Room in F.K. Bemis Inter-national Center, 299 Third St., DePere. Travel with the college’sKnights on Broadway and experi-ence Christmas in NewYork City inthe dinnermusical. Tickets $39.(920) 403-3950, snc.edu/knightsonbroadway.» “White Christmas”: 7:30 p.m.Dec.19 to 21and 2 p.m. Dec. 21, atSt. Norbert College’sWebb Thea-tre, 315 Third St., De Pere. $20admission, evergreenproductions.com.
Friday
» AmandaVernonandDom&Maddie: 7:30 p.m., at CupO’ Joy,232 S. Broadway, downtownGreen Bay. Canned food donationrequested. (920) 435-3269, cupojoy.com.
Friday-Saturday
» ComedyCity: 7:30 and 9:30p.m. both days, at TheGreenRoomLounge, 353MainAve.,downtownDe Pere. Improvcomedy by teams. Late-nightshowat11:15 Saturday. Regularadmission is $12 for adults and $10for students, senior citizens andmilitary personnel. Reservationsrecommended at (920) 983-0966orwww.comedycityonline.com.
Saturday
» Arctic Science Saturday:10a.m. to1p.m., at The Children’sMuseumofGreen Bay, 301N.Washington St., downtownGreenBay. Hands-on science stationsinvolving polar bubbles, snow-flake crystals, instant snowand
more. Complete all of the stationsand receive a prize. Includedwithregular admission: $8 adults andchildren, $7 senior citizens 62 andolder, free15months and young-er. (920) 432-4397, gbchildrensmuseum.org.» Third Saturday Performance—MikeMagee: 7 to 9 p.m., atTheARTgarage,1400 Cedar St.,Green Bay.Magee has beenwriting and performingmusic inbands and solo for several years.Free admission, but a donation of$5 ormore at the door is appreci-ated. Some snacks provided, butattendees can bring their own.(920) 448-6800, www.theartgarage.org.» GreenBay SymphonyOr-chestra—ABrass&OrganChristmas: 7:30 p.m., at St Johnthe Evangelist Catholic Church,413 St. John St., downtownGreenBay. Classical Christmasmusic.Additional parking at St. FrancisCathedral parking lot. Shuttleavailable. Tickets $30. (920)494-3401, ticketstaronline.com.» PerformancebyBobBern-hardt: 7 to10 p.m., at A’s Restau-rant &Music Café,112N. Broad-way, downtownDe Pere. Bern-hardt plays on the baby grandpiano.
Sunday
» OakRidgeBoys Christmas: 3and 7 p.m., UW-Green Bay’sWeidner Center for the Perform-ingArts, 2420Nicolet Drive, GreenBay. Tickets $29 to $47.WeidnerCenter.com, (920) 494-3401.
Monday
» Santa’s Science Lab: noon to1p.m., at The Children’sMuseumofGreen Bay, 301N.WashingtonSt., downtownGreen Bay. Holi-day-inspired science experimentsfor the entire family. Includedwith regular admission: $8 adultsand children, $7 senior citizens 62and older, free15months andyounger. (920) 432-4397, gbchildrensmuseum.org.
Wednesday
» ChristmasDinner: 5 to 7 p.m.,at Crossroads Community Church,520 S. OaklandAve., Green Bay.Free. Call (920) 436-0730 forreservations, rides or deliveries.
Dec. 26
» Performanceby JimCamp-bell: 7 to11p.m., at A’s Restaurant&Music Café,112N. Broadway,downtownDe Pere.
Dec. 27
» OrganConcert: 7 p.m., at St.Francis Xavier Cathedral, 140 S.MonroeAve., downtownGreenBay. Organist DonVerkuillenwillplay French organmusic andmore. Donation to update andrepair the cathedral [email protected].» PerformancebyBoogie Lite:7:30 to11:30 p.m., at A’s Restau-rant &Music Café,112N. Broad-way, downtownDe Pere.
Dec. 27-28
» Gun&Knife Show: 3 to 8p.m. Dec. 27 and 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.Dec. 28, at ShopkoHall, 1901S.Oneida St., Ashwaubenon. $45vendor fee. $7 admission. (715)381-7991.
Dec. 28
» Ecumenical DowntownChristmasChurchWalk: startsat 6:30 p.m. in downtownGreenBay.Walkers start at Grace Lu-theran Church. Bus available forthosewho cannotwalk, begin-ning at 6:15 p.m. at St. FrancisXavier Cathedral. Visit eightdowntownGreen Bay churches,learn a bit of the churches’ histor-ies, hear the story of Jesus’ birthand sing. Final stop is a receptionat St. Francis Xavier Cathedral.Nonperishable food donationssought. (920) 337-0561.
» Performanceby Jerry B’Project: 7 to11p.m., at A’s Restau-rant &Music Café,112N. Broad-way, downtownDe Pere. FrankSinatra songs andmore.
Dec. 28-29
» HmongNewYear Cele-bration: starts at 7 a.m. bothdays, at BrownCounty VeteransMemorial Arena,1901S. OneidaSt., Ashwaubenon. (920) 405-1134.
Ongoing
» Children’sOnly shop: noonto 3 p.m. Dec. 21, at Neville PublicMuseumof BrownCounty, 210MuseumPlace, downtownGreenBay. Children ages 4 to12 invitedto purchase holiday gifts at $3each and have themgift-wrapped.» Gardenof Lights: 5 to 9 p.m.daily, except 5 to 8 p.m. Dec. 22
and 26-30 (closedDec. 24 and 25),at Green Bay Botanical Garden,2600 Larsen Road, Green Bay. $7adults and children13 and olderor $11withwagon ride; $4 ages 5to12 or $8withwagon ride, freeages 4 and younger.» AFrank’s Christmas: 8 p.m.Dec.19-22 and 27-28, and1p.m.Dec.19 and 21, atMeyer Theatre,117 S.Washington St., downtownGreen Bay. This year’s story isabout the classic Prange’s depart-ment store figurines that come tolife. Tickets $32. www.ticketstaronline.com, (800) 895-0071.» National RailroadMuseumFestival of Trees: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.daily until Jan. 5, at NationalRailroadMuseum, 2285 S. Broad-way, Ashwaubenon. $5 admis-sion. (920) 437-7623, ext.12;[email protected].» AHazelwoodHoliday: noonto 4 p.m. Dec. 21-22, at Hazel-woodHistoric HouseMuseum,1008 S.MonroeAve., Green Bay.
$4 adults, $3.50 senior citizens,$2.50 ages 5 to17, free youngerthan 5 andmembers. $10 perfamily. (920) 437-1840, [email protected].» HolidayMemories— Prang-e’s ChristmasWindows: untilJan.13, at Neville PublicMuseumof BrownCounty, 210MuseumPlace, downtownGreen Bay. Seeanimated figures that onceadorned theH.C. Prange’s depart-ment storewindows. ChatwithBruce the Spruce, the talkingChristmas tree: noon to 3 p.m.Dec. 21-22 and 26-29. Decoratethe Tree of Givingwith neworlightly usedwinter items such ashats, gloves, and scarves; itemswill be given to The SalvationArmy.» FridayNight BallroomDances: 8 to11p.m. every Friday,at BruceMarshall’s Dance Club,225 Crooks St., Green Bay. $8 perperson. (920) 494-2822, www.brucemarshalldance.com.
LOCAL EVENTS CALENDAR
Williquette receivesscholar distinction
Greenleaf residentHeatherWilliquette is oneof nine University of Wis-consin-Eau Claire stu-dents who were selectedto participate in the pres-tigious Ronald E. McNairPostbaccalaureateAchievement Program.
The McNair programis a learning communitythat prepares students forcareers in research.
Each year, eight to 12talented UW-Eau Claireundergraduates are rec-ognized for their academ-ic achievements and se-lected by faculty nomina-tion.
McNair scholars planto attend graduate schoolto pursue doctoral de-grees. As undergradu-ates, they engage in twoyears of collaborative re-searchwith faculty,whichgenerally leads topublica-tion and scholarly presen-tations in their respectivedisciplines.
Williquette will pursueresearch focusing on anexamination of the per-ception of the attractive-ness ofmembers of eitherdating pairs or opposite-sex friendship pairs with
April Bleske-Rechek, as-sociate professor of psy-chologyatUW-EauClaire.
Six from UWGB inhonor society
Several residents fromDePerewhoare affiliatedwith University of Wis-consin-Green Bay wereinitiated into The HonorSociety of Phi Kappa Phi,the country’s oldest andmost selective collegiatehonor society for all aca-demic disciplines.
The students includeThea Ahrenholtz, NicoleKattner, Nadia Khalil,Sheena Mesa, Emily Rog-ers and CaseyWegener.
They are among about32,000 students, faculty,professional staff andalumni who are initiatedinto Phi Kappa Phi eachyear.Membership isby in-vitation and requiresnomination and approvalby a chapter.
Only the top 10 percentof seniors and 7.5 percentof juniors, having at least72 semester hours, are eli-gible for membership.Graduate students in thetop10 percent of the num-ber of candidates forgraduate degrees alsomay qualify, as do faculty,professional staff andalumniwhohaveachieved
scholarly distinction.
SNC students totravel abroad
Katrina Geurts of DePere and Hannah Kestlyof Oneida are among 21honors students from St.Norbert College in DePerewhowill be travelingabroadnextmonth as partof the Student HeritageTour.
The students will trav-el to Munich and PraguefromJan. 6 to17.Theywillhave the opportunity totour museums, castles,Norbertine abbeys andhistorical sites, includingthe Dachau concentrationcamp.
The trip is offered bySt. Norbert’s Honors Pro-gram and its Division ofMission and Student Af-fairs.
Science fair Jan. 11at Shopko Hall
Registration is beingtaken until Tuesday, Dec.31, for students ingrades1through 8 to participate inthe Ameriprise Auto &Home Insurance ScienceFair during The EinsteinProjectScienceExponextmonth.
The science expo willbe held Saturday, Jan. 11,
at ShopkoHall inAshwau-benon.
Entry in the sciencefair is free. Students canexhibit as individuals,small groups or class pro-jects. They will be evalu-ated according to the sci-entific method or PHEOC(problem, hypothesis, ex-periment, observation,conclusion).
Awards will be provid-ed by Akzo Nobel Pulp &Performance ChemicalsInc., and Best in Show forthe sixth- to eighth-grad-ers will be awarded ascholarship to MichiganTech University’s Sum-mer Youth Program.
Science fair registra-tion forms are due back tothe Green Bay-based TheEinstein Project by Dec.31. Registration forms,display and safety regula-tions, and judging criteriaare available online atwww.einsteinproject.orgunder theEvents taborbycalling The Einstein Pro-ject at (920) 884-8800.
Entries taken forMLK contest
Students in kindergar-ten through 12th gradeswho live or attend schoolin Brown County can par-ticipate in a poster, poetryand essay contest as part
of the 19th annual BrownCounty Dr. Martin LutherKing Jr. Community Cele-bration.
The event will be heldfrom 10:30 a.m. to noonSaturday, Jan. 18, atNortheast WisconsinTechnical College inGreen Bay. It will featuremusic, dancing, foodandacelebration of King’s lifeand message.
The contest asks stu-dents to reflect on thetheme of this year’s cele-bration,which is“AVisionfor Peace.”
Participants can createan illustration, essay orpoem with awards pre-sented for first throughthird place in four gradelevels. Entries will bejudged based on their re-lation to the theme, origi-nality, grammar, spellingand punctuation, voice/creativity, publishablequality and adherence tocontest rules.
First-prize winnerswill receive an iPad Mini,second-prize winners willreceive a Kindle e-reader,and third-prize winnerswill receive a $50 Barnes& Noble gift card.
The entry form andcontest details are avail-able online at www.browncomlk.org or bycalling (920) 498-6997.
The deadline for submis-sion is 4:30 p.m. Thursday,Jan. 9.
DOT holds stateaviation art contest
The Wisconsin Depart-ment of Transportation’sBureau of Aeronautics isholding its annual state-wide poster contest forchildren 7 to 17 years old.
This year’s theme is“Flying Saves Lives.” Ex-amplesofpossible themesare medical helicopters,relief transport planesand aircraft used to putout wildfires.
All artwork must beoriginal and cannot becomputer generated.
The top three entries inthree different age divi-sions will advance to thenational competition withthe potential to be enteredin the international avia-tion art contest. Statewin-ners also will receive giftcertificates.
Contest rules and theappropriate entry formare available online athttp://dot.wi.gov/travel/air/art.htm. Entries mustbe postmarked by Friday,Jan. 17, and mailed to Ni-cole Wiessinger, WisDOT-Bureau of Aeronautics,P.O. Box 7914, Madison,WI 53707-7914.
SCHOOL BRIEFS
Ellsworth, Pierce County Herald 11/27/2013
August 28, 2014 8:48 pm /
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PAGE 8B | NOVMEBER 27, 2013 PIERCE COUNTY HERALDCL ASS I F I EDS
Ellsworth, Pierce County Herald 12/25/2013
August 28, 2014 8:49 pm /
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Ellsworth, Pierce County Herald 11/20/2013
August 28, 2014 8:53 pm /
Copy Reduced to 46% from original to fit letter pagePAGE 8B | NOVEMBER 20, 2013 PIERCE COUNTY HERALDC L A S S I F I E D S
MISCELLANEOUS WANTED
Looking for donate-able baby cribs, toddler beds & crib mat-tresses to fix & clean up for or-ganizations that help people in need. ALSO ACCEPTING UN-USABLE/THROWAWAY crib mattresses, cribs, & toddler beds, for needed hardware & crib/toddler bed parts. All pro-ceeds from scrap metal taken from cribs/mattresses will be donated to an organization that helps kids in need! Free pick-up. Call Dana: 715-425-5019 * 715-821-0374.
GIVEAWAYS/FREEBIES
Electric Lawnmowers (2), excel-lent condition but, won't start. Free. 612-770-5001, Red Wing.
FREE COSCO JUVENILE CAR SEAT. Good condition. Used three years. (715) 386-7322, Hudson.
FREE RCA Digital TV Converter box. River Falls 715-425-6298
FREE Vanguard Laser Sailboat.
Hull & hull hardware only! Mast step broken, repair kit included. Great winter project! Text or call Chris 715.222.7711. Will deliver locally.
FREE: Office Desk, Black Metal Wood/Formica Pattern Top, L-Shaped. 651-436-1722, Has-tings.
FREE: UPRIGHT PIANO, good condition. Prescott. 715-262-3663.
HIDE-A-BED, full-size. Clean & good condition. FREE! 651-459-9527. St Paul Park.
ORGAN: Lowrey Jamboree with Magic Genie organ. Works! Free to good home, you haul. 651-459-1291. Cottage Grove.
PIANO: Kimball 3/4 Upright Pia-no, all original ivories. Great sound! Free, You Haul! 651-437-4028. Hastings.
TVs: 25" GE & 32" Toshiba. Great for games. Free! 651-436-8540, Lakeland.
SWAP SHOP
SWAP: Pair of Ruger Black-hawks, 357 & 22 Single Six for Oak Firewood. (715)760-0307, NR.
ACCESSORIES
BEDLINER - New Still in Package. 5 foot 9.3 inches Standard Side, Extra Short Bed Heavy Weight $100.00 (715) 425-9142
VEHICLES WANTED
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2000 Nissan Maxima, V6, 163K. Runs/drives good. Good tires. $1800/BO. 651-242-6955 after 5pm. Hastings.
2004 Ford Taurus, runs and drives great. No rust, newer en-gine. $1,500. 715-410-6463, Somerset
SERVICES
LYLE'S CARPET & Linoleum Sales & Installation Down-home prices, in-home shopping. Appt. 651-388-8641
Best Source For JOB LISTINGS
CHIMNEY
FIREPLACE XTRORDINAIR & LOPI Fireplaces, Stoves, Inserts, Wood or Gas Units. Low Overhead Pricing! Also Chimney Cleaning & Repairs. 651-388-8568, 1-800-FIRESIDE (347-3743), www.firesideplus.com.
CONSTRUCTION
LEE HESTNAS CONSTRUCTION,35+ Years Experience! Home Remodeling, Additions, Drywall. Kitchen/Bath Specialists 651.764.1055 MN-Lic#20216510 WI-Lic #1046098
FLOORING
HARDWOOD FLOORS: Installation and Refinishing. FREE Estimates. Experienced. Randy 651-402-1819.
GARAGE DOOR INSTALL
R&R OVERHEAD GARAGE DOOR SERVICE: Res/Com doors, openers, sales, install, repair (715) 792-2416.
HANDYMAN
STEVE'S HANDYMAN SERVICE. Custom Carpentry, Painting, House-hold Repairs/Improvements. De-pendable Service, No Job Too Small! 651-388-6553.
PLUMBING
JEFF KNUDSEN Plumbing/Heating Service. New Residential, Remodel-ing, Commercial. 24-hour Service 651.388.7868 MN Master Plumber Lic.#4188PM
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ROOFING
CHANDLER ROOFING COMPANYAll Types of Roofing! Residen-tial/Commercial. Fully licensed, insured & bonded. 40+years exp! Charlie 715-792-5345, Eric: 651-388-9415 MnRR630961, Wi#864059
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HOME HEALTH CARE
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HOME HEALTH CARE
Peaceful Living LLCProactive, Preventative, Peace of Mind•Licensed Personal Care Agency (WI)•Class A License Home Health Provider (MN)•Home Support Services for all ages and abilities, 2-hour to 24-hours•Medicaid/Personal Care•IRIS•MCOs/Family Care•Adult Family Home (private pay/state funding)•MN Waiver Programs•24-hour Customized Living/ Respite•Morning/Evening Cares•Self Directed Services/Fiscal Agent Services•Basic Personal Bookkeeping and Taxes•Alternative Health Solutions1200 Hosford Street, Suite 107Hudson, WI 54016715-386-7071715-386-0873 (fax)[email protected]
NURSING HOMES
Ellsworth Care CenterWith caring and compassion, Ellsworth Care Center offers a wide range of quality health care services. Our aides, nurses and therapists take pride in delivering the highest level of patient care services, and our staff and residents enjoy the care they give and receive on a daily basis. When it comes time to choose the right nursing home care for your loved one, we encourage you to stop by and visit our facility. We'd love to meet you!403 N. Maple StreetEllsworth, WI 54011715-273-5821rblodgett@ricemanagement.comwww.ellsworthcare.com
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NURSING HOMES
Kinnic Health & Rehab"Serving You From Our Heart." 24 Hour Nursing Care, Specializing in Short-term Rehabilitation, Physical Therapy, Occupational Therapy, Speech Therapy, Wound Care, Long-term Care, and Respite Care. We are conveniently attached to the River Falls Area Hospital and Medical Clinic in a small setting with many caregivers.1663 E. Division St.River Falls, WI 54022(715) 426-6000www.kinnichealthandrehab.com
VISION CARE
Pearle VisionNobody Cares For Eyes More Than Pearle•Hastings office:1757 N Frontage RdHastings, MN 55033(651) 480-8515•Woodbury office:7150 Valley Creek PlazaWoodbury, MN 55125(651) 738-4886www.PearleVision.com
WOMEN’S HEALTH
Earth Mother MidwifeErin Kaspar-Frett, MSM, LM, CPMCombining wisdom of the ages with modern training. Providing prenatal, home birth, newborn and well-woman services in the St Croix Valley, Twin Cities and beyond.Enjoy the safety and comforts of birthing in your own space with a trained care provider, blending tradition with modern knowledge.http://www.natural-news.com/041065_home_births_-midwives_childbirth.html(612)[email protected]
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Health & Wellness Directory SOUTHERNMN & WIListing your communityhealth professionals
Stop pounding the pavement in search of a new joband start checking theclassified job listings.
You’ll zero in on the rightopportunities in no time.
Employment: 888-514-4473
Classifieds: 715-426-1040Fax: 715-425-0152
Scroll to the bottom of the websiteand see what you’re missing.
Same news - any device.
See What’sInside
www.piercecountyherald.com
Eau Claire, The Country Today 10/09/2013
August 29, 2014 4:26 pm /
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On the home farm after corn harvest we turned to making wood. We had three woodstoves to keep fed during the long win-ter, two in the house and one in the pump house, and they were always hungry.
On a Saturday morn-ing, with the morning barn chores finished, Pa and I “shouldered our axes.” He also carried the crosscut saw as we headed out to the woods in back of the house where, while squirrel hunting earlier that fall, we had spotted several dead oaks — good candi-dates for the ax and saw.
We crunched through fallen leaves on our way to the first candidate for cutting, a dead oak with a trunk 3 feet across and 30 feet tall and dead limbs sticking out every which way. Pa walked around the tree once, determining its natural lean — the direction it would most likely fall.
Pa put down the saw, grabbed his double-bitted ax, and took a mighty swing at the tree.
Thwack. He removed the ax and struck the tree again just to the side of where he had previ-ously cut. Thwack. He was notching the tree on the side toward which it should fall — would fall, if his calculations were correct. A pile of wood chips gathered on Pa’s six-buckle rubber boots as he continued chopping.
Then, with the notch-ing finished, he picked up the saw and instructed me to take one end of it. He ran the saw across the side of the tree oppo-site from where he had notched, making the first cutting groove. With the groove complete, Pa and I pulled the saw steadily back and forth, back and forth, always pull-ing, never pushing. If you pushed, the saw pinched.
“Let the saw do the
work,” Pa said. “Don’t force it. Work with it.”
Finally, when I thought I couldn’t pull the saw one more time, Pa said it was time for a break. He stood up and stretched out his back, and I did the same, for pulling a crosscut saw while bent over not only tested your arms but also challenged your back.
After a five-minute break we were back pull-ing on the saw as it slowly bit its way through the giant oak. The tree con-tinued to stand straight and tall, apparently unfazed by either the chopping or the sawing.
“Not long now,” Pa finally said after the saw had made its way through most of the tree and was approaching the notch Pa had made with the ax.
And then, with a crack like a rifle shot, the big old oak began toppling, slowly at first and then more rapidly.
“Timber!” Pa yelled. We yanked the saw away from the tree and jumped out of the way as the mighty oak crashed to
the ground, the sound of its falling echo-ing through the quiet woodlot.
With the tree down, Pa grabbed the crosscut saw again, and we began cutting the larger limbs off the trunk into pieces about twelve or four-teen feet long. We pulled the pieces off to the side to await loading on our steel-wheeled wagon and hauling to the farmstead, where we’d stack them in a pile. Limbs too small for burning we made into brush piles, “a place for a rabbit to live,” Pa said. We did this several Saturdays.
When the pile by the house was 30 or so feet long and 6 to 10 feet tall, Pa stopped cutting trees and hauling limbs. On a Friday evening he began calling neighbors, starting with the saw-yer, Guy York, who lived northwest of our farm and owned a circle saw powered by a big Buick engine. The following Saturday was spent slic-ing the logs and limbs into stove lengths, a dif-
ficult, dangerous job as the big circle saw spun without a guard.
But the job of making wood wasn’t finished. Pa and I now spent many hours splitting the blocks into stove wood size.
Those who claim you are twice warmed when cutting your own wood
are so wrong. We were many times warmed.
Excerpted from “The Quiet Season: Remem-bering Country Winters,” Wisconsin Historical Society Press, 2013. Go to www.jerryapps.com for information about Jerry’s writings and TV work.
After harvest, attention turns to making wood
By Jerry Apps
Stories from the Land
Celebrated rural historian Jerry Apps, who writes a twice-monthly column in The Country Today, recalls the sights, sounds, senti-ments — and yes, chill — of win-ters on the farm in his newest Wisconsin Historical Society Press book “The Quiet Season: Remem-bering Country Winters.”
Apps shares stories growing up and keeping warm on a farm in central Wisconsin in the 1930s and early ’40s. His memories are of a “quieter season ” — a winter world before electricity when farmers milked cows by hand by the light of a kerosene lantern. It was an era when a major part of every win-ter’s work was “making wood” to heat drafty farm homes and rural country schools and when a lack
of indoor plumbing meant every morning began with a rousingly cold dash to an outhouse.
Wisconsin winters then were also a time of reflection, of plan-ning for the next year, and of fami-lies drawing together, Apps recalls, describing how winter influenced farm families and that those who grew up with harsh northern winters are profoundly affected by their memories of “the quiet season.”
Wisconsin Public Television is completing a documentary based on Apps’s “The Quiet Season.” The production, “A Farm Winter with Jerry Apps” will air in early December.
Apps was born and raised on a central Wisconsin farm before
electricity, indoor plumbing and central heating came to the coun-try. He has been a rural histo-rian and environmental writer for more than 40 years and has pub-lished fiction and nonfiction books on many rural topics, including “Limping through Life,” “Old Farm,” “Garden Wisdom,” “Ring-lingville USA,” “Casper Jaggi: Master Swiss Cheese Maker” and “Horse-Drawn Days” for the Wis-consin Historical Society Press.
He is a former county Extension agent and professor emeritus at the University of Wisconsin College of Agricultural and Life Sciences. Jerry and his wife, Ruth, divide their time between their home in Madison and their farm, Roshara, west of Wild Rose.
‘The Quiet Season’ latest Apps book
The Country Today Stories from the Land Wednesday , October 9 , 2013 5B
Eau Claire, The Country Today 10/16/2013
August 29, 2014 4:27 pm /
Copy Reduced to 46% from original to fit letter page
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MADISON (AP) — Wisconsin wildlife offi-cials’ proposal to let people keep wild deer if they pay a fine is get-ting a cool reception from lawmakers, who say it amounts to selling off a public resource.
Republican Gov. Scott Walker told the Depart-ment of Natural Resources to find less controversial ways of handling captive deer following a public outcry when agents seized a deer from a Kenosha animal shelter and eutha-nized it this past summer.
The agency has sug-gested legislators change state law to let people keep deer if they pay a fine and meet certain other require-ments, such as keeping the deer enclosed and getting a veterinarian to check the animal out. The idea has sparked outrage among environmentalists and out-doorsmen. The DNR’s own board has adopted a resolu-tion opposing the idea, and Republican leaders said lawmakers don’t appear interested in creating a bill.
“The action plan as proposed would be very difficult to sell as legis-lation,” said Sen. Neal Kedzie, R-Elkhorn, chair-man of the Senate Natu-ral Resources Committee. “This whole issue of wild game being a resource in the wild and not for pri-vate keeping goes back 100 years. It would be very difficult to reverse that standard.”
It’s currently illegal to capture wild animals in Wisconsin. Licensed rehabilitators can hold deer temporarily but must return them to the wild. Rehabilitators in counties with chronic wasting dis-ease can’t hold deer at all because of concerns about spreading the disease.
The regulations have led to some high-profile conflicts over the past decade. The DNR ordered six deer at an animal shel-ter near Lake Geneva killed in 2004 because at least one of them came from a CWD zone. Then-Gov. Jim Doyle, a Demo-crat, signed a bill sparing the animals.
A pardon from Walker spared another deer in 2011. The DNR had planned to euthanize an orphaned fawn from a CWD zone because the Lake Geneva man who took her in couldn’t legally keep her and
she couldn’t be released. Walker acted after the Chicago Tribune ran a col-umn arguing for the ani-mal’s life.
The latest dust-up started when an Illinois family brought a fawn named Giggles to the Saint Francis Society animal shelter in Kenosha. DNR agents showed up at the shelter with a search war-rant, seized Giggles and killed her. Agency officials said they had no choice because Giggles came from a CWD zone.
The fawn’s fans criti-cized the DNR in blog postings and set up a “Jus-tice for Giggles” Facebook page. Walker ordered his Cabinet heads, includ-ing DNR Secretary Cathy Stepp, to find options to ensure another such inci-dent never happens.
The DNR proposed staff return deer to the wild as long as the animals don’t pose a threat to public or wildlife health. Eutha-nasia would be accept-able only when an animal was sick or posed a health risk. The agency’s board adopted those changes in September.
But the agency also sug-gested legislators change state law to allow people to keep wild deer as pets if they pay a $175 fine and an annual $150 regis-tration fee, keep the deer on at least a half-acre of enclosed land and buy a $450 DNR fencing certifi-cate. Animals would have to pass health checks and their owners would have to plead guilty to a violation in court and pay any addi-tional files related to that.
The idea left environ-mentalists and sports-men’s groups aghast. They argued the plan could spread disease and violates long-held conservation
tenets that wildlife is held in the public trust.
“It’s public relations over science,” said Shahla Wer-ner, executive director of the Wisconsin Sierra Club chapter.
DNR Deputy Secretary Matt Moroney said the agency got the idea from Michigan, which agreed last summer that a fam-ily could keep an illegally held fawn if the animal passed health checks and stayed in an enclosed area. The state also required the family to pay a fee and acknowledged that pos-sessing wildlife is illegal.
Moroney said soci-ety simply won’t tolerate euthanasia anymore.
Still, the DNR board adopted a resolution in September opposing the pet deer plan, calling the proposal an effort to priva-tize Wisconsin’s wild deer.
Board President Pres-ton Cole told The Associ-ated Press the idea violates “wildlife ethics 101.” He plans to convene a discus-sion on whether the DNR is moving away from sci-ence-based policy in favor of more socially accept-able rules.
Legislators also aren’t keen on the idea. Kedzie said he didn’t know of any senators working on a deer-as-pets bill. A spokeswoman for Assem-bly Speaker Robin Vos, R-Burlington, said no one in that chamber was tak-ing up the issue either.
Given that, DNR Lands Division Administrator Kurt Thiede said he hopes those officials will support the agency the next time a deer is seized.
“We still have a situa-tion here where the public doesn’t want us to eutha-nize a domesticated deer,” Moroney said. “If this isn’t the right solution, what is?”
Lawmakers cool to DNR pet deer plan
Mark Schuster only had thought of fishing musk-ies until a month ago. He had seen anglers motor past his pier on Lake Monona. He had seen them catch fish a few feet from where he sat fishing bass, panfish and other fish that were interested in his live bait.
That changed when he hinted to Ilene, his sig-nificant other, that he was interested in trying what he was seeing hap-pen near his pier. Ilene surprised him this sum-mer on his 54th birthday with a gift certificate to purchase a rod, reel and other necessary muskie gear.
In early September the muskies started biting, and it was Schuster who was hooked early one morning.
“I called Ilene on my cellphone from the pier and asked her to get up and bring the camera. I caught a monster,” Schus-ter said.
But that wasn’t the first muskie this muskie angler-come-lately caught using his birthday gift. In fact, during a period of nine days in Septem-ber, Schuster netted four muskies, 30, 33, 44 and 45 inches long, releas-ing them all, as he has done with all the fish he’s caught during his 29 years living in the Madi-son area.
Schuster, the director of human resources at Rural
Mutual Insurance Co. in Madison, started fishing when he was growing up in South Milwaukee. He and his younger brother fished for perch and salmon along Lake Mich-igan’s shore. When they were on family vacations, he always hoped it would be someplace where he could fish. It often was.
Fishing has been a reprieve from dealing with people all day, he said.
“I come home and want to do something that is quiet, soothing and found fishing is the answer,” he said. “During the open water season, I often fish two or three times a week.”
During the peak of muskie season, it may be more often than that now.
Ice fishing has never been Schuster’s thing, and neither has fishing from a boat. Sometimes he’ll walk out on the ice and talk with anglers, but he and cold weather don’t seem to mix.
“Muskie fishing is a little different,” Schus-ter said. “If you’ve ever had a muskie on line start jumping, it’s a different thrill.”
That doesn’t mean he won’t be back fish-ing smaller fish, sitting there relaxing and watch-ing various water activi-ties and hot-air balloons overhead.
“Fishing gives me some time to do a little think-ing about my job too,” he said. “But we usually don’t vacation where I can fish now, so I’ll probably be fishing in one of the Madison lakes instead of traveling out of town.”
Like all longtime anglers, he has fishing stories too.
“Back in South Mil-waukee, my Cub Scout pack was on a fishing outing and I caught the most fish,” he said. “I won a tackle box and still have it.”
Another time, when Schuster was 8, his par-ents told him and his sib-lings they had a surprise. Schuster, the oldest of three at the time, guessed, and hoped, it would be a vacation at a cottage on a lake.
“The surprise was Mother was pregnant,” he said. “Needless to say, I was disappointed, and my new sister has never let me forget it.”
Jerry Davis can be reached at [email protected].
Monona man hooked on muskie fishing
Submitted photoMark Schuster of Madison caught four large muskies from Lake Monona less than a month after beginning to fish for the large predator fish. He displayed a 44-inch musk-ie he caught early last month.
By Jerry Davis
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Leader-Telegram | [email protected]
The early success of hunt-ers and trappers make it likely that the wolf hunting season will be mostly closed, possibly entirely closed, before the most controversial aspect of the hunt — hunt-ing wolves with dogs — is authorized to begin Dec. 2.
As of 2 p.m. Nov. 7, only Zone 3 remains open. This is a relatively narrow zone in northwestern Wisconsin that is a transition between agri-culture and the north woods that includes parts of Burnett, Washburn, Barron, Sawyer, Rusk, Chippewa, Taylor and Price counties.
On Nov. 7, the DNR closed Zone 6 — basically the southern two-thirds of the state, as hunters had regis-tered 30 out of a quota of 30 wolves for the area.
The success rate for Zone 3 so far has been lower than in the rest of the state, and if the current success rate continues, the quota may not be reached by Dec. 2, said David MacFarland, the DNR’s large carnivore specialist.
However, with Zone 3 being the only area left open, it may attract additional hunt-ers and trappers with unfilled wolf permits, he said.
Also, the gun deer hunt is approaching, and deer hunt-ers in the woods are likely to move the wolves around, making it easier for wolf hunters, he said.
The annual deer season also is usually a time an increased number of hunters without permits illegally kill wolves. The DNR does not count illegally killed wolves toward the permit quota, but biologists do take poach-ing and other causes of wolf mortality into account when setting the quotas, MacFar-land said.
Efficient trappers
Hunters have attributed the early success in the wolf season to high numbers of
wolves. They also believe the DNR’s winter estimate of more than 800 adult wolves was low.
MacFarland attributes the increased success to changes in hunter behavior. Wolf per-mit holders learned from last year’s hunt that trapping was the most efficient way to get a wolf. Of the wolves taken so far, nearly 80 percent have been trapped, he said.
Wolves and all wild canine species — foxes and coy-otes — are difficult to trap, but there are 1,800 people with permits trying to trap or shoot a wolf, he noted. As of Nov. 7, 199 wolves had been taken. The goal is 251 wolves.
People with permits also learned from last year’s hunt that zones may close early, so many got an early start, he said.
The wolf season opened Oct. 15 and could potentially run through Feb. 28, but it is likely the quota of 251 wolves will be reached well before that.
Difficult zone
Zone 3 has a quota of 71 wolves. As of Nov. 7 only 18 have been registered.
“To be honest, we’re not really sure why Zone 3 has been so much different than the other units,” MacFarland said. The western part of the zone is generally private farmland, so it may be more difficult for wolf hunters to get access, he noted. Assum-ing the zone is still open on Dec. 2, the amount of private land would make it more dif-ficult, although not illegal, to hunt wolves with dogs in parts of the zone, he said.
MacFarland said he has heard from a couple of peo-ple who were hoping to hunt wolves with dogs who are disappointed so much of the state is closing before Dec. 2 to wolf hunting.
MacFarland noted that to move the date when dogs could be used to earlier in the fall would require action by the Legislature.
Wolf hunt may end before hunters can use dogs Complaints key
to investigationTrapping furbearing
animals can be a way for youngsters to earn money and experience the out-doors in ways that are dif-ferent from hunting or fishing.
Trapper education courses were one of the first steps for Zachery Halverson and Rowen Wipperfurth of Lone Rock to become outdoorsmen. While they knew each other and went to the same school, River Valley, they trapped separately, until recently.
Practical trapper educa-tion came quickly when they learned that not all outdoors activists are law-ful. Some steal from Wis-consin’s natural resources, and some steal from peo-ple who are law-abiding trappers.
“Trap thefts are one of the most difficult cases to make, but one never knows where a tiny bit of infor-mation might lead, how it can be put together with other complaints and citi-zen tips,” said Mike Nice, Department of Natural Resources field warden in Richland County.
Both boys had their first traps stolen just a few days after making sets for musk-rats, mink, raccoons and beavers on nearby streams, rivers and marshes. In a matter of months warden Nice had two complaints, which he believed were unrelated because they occurred months and miles apart.
“I took $300 from my savings account, money I had earned shoveling snow, mowing lawns and doing chores at home,” Zachery said. “That’s how I bought traps.”
Rowen said he had earned money to purchase his traps by working for Oakwood Fruit Farm in Richland County.
Clearly these boys were devastated that their hard-earned money was now in the hands of a thief. What they hoped would be an exciting outdoors experi-ence, one that might turn a little profit, was extremely dis-appointing. But they didn’t give up.
The relatives of both young trappers did the right thing: They reported the incidents to warden Nice, regardless of how fruitless it may have seemed.
“One complaint came in December 2012 from the uncle of a young trap-per. The father of the other boy called me in March to report someone had stolen his son’s traps,” Nice said.
Nice filed that informa-
tion away until he received a tip that someone was shooting beavers and muskrats, which is illegal, and for taking furbearers after the season was closed,
which is also illegal.
Nice and his assistant set their own trap by construct-ing a muskrat decoy, going to the detail of putting greens in the front paws of the rodent. They set the decoy by a bridge the suspect was
thought to frequent. And they waited.
Along came the sus-pect, got out of his vehicle and shot the frozen musk-rat. Moments later he was apprehended.
The suspect admitted stealing traps and also
shining and shooting deer at night. The charges were put before the district attor-ney, the deer case resulted in a stiff fine and revoca-tion of all hunting, trap-ping and fishing licenses for three years. But the trap theft was removed, in part, in a plea agreement, which left the traps in limbo.
But with the admission of theft by the suspect, Nice was able to obtain all of the stolen traps — some of which were the boys’ Christmas gifts — and return them to the boys.
“Maybe the next time someone thinks about stealing a young trapper’s equipment, they will think about how their son or daughter might feel on a beautiful winter morning when all they find along their trap lines are empty sets,” Tom Halverson said.
Jerry Davis can be reached at [email protected].
Stolen traps returned to their owners
Photo by Jerry DavisZachery Halverson, left, and Rowen Wipperfurth both had their first traps stolen last winter. Luckily, Mike Nice, DNR warden in Richland Center, was able to retrieve the boys’ traps for them.
By Jerry Davis
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By Brian DeVore
Land Stewardship Project
Five years into her farming career, Janna Goerdt has learned a lot about how to use sweat equity to coax the most production out of the soils of Fat Chicken Farm near Embarrass, Minn.
But the 40-year-old former journalist has also gotten savvy about how to set some sustain-able limits on both her farm and herself.
“The thing I’ve real-ized is your enthusi-asm can only take you so far,” Goerdt said one recent morning while taking a break from har-vesting vegetables on the former dairy operation. “You have to be realistic about what you can do and what you can keep up doing.”
For Goerdt and other area graduates of the Farm Beginnings course, such smart planning is second nature. That’s because a key compo-nent of Farm Beginnings is to teach students how
to not only develop a business plan and market their products but how to balance growth of a new operation with the finan-cial, physical and techni-cal resources available to the farmer, according to Cree Bradley, course coordinator in the Lake
Superior region.In 2013, the Farm
Beginnings program is marking its 16th year of providing firsthand training in low-cost, sustainable methods of farming. The course is tailor-made for people of all ages just getting started in farming, as well as established farm-ers looking to make
changes in their opera-tions, according to Bradley. Farm Begin-nings participants learn goal-setting, financial planning, enterprise planning, marketing and innovative production techniques.
Classes are led by farmers and other agri-cultural professionals from the area, and Farm
Beginnings graduates are involved in a wide range of agricultural enterprises, including grass-based livestock, crops and community-supported agriculture.
Started in Minnesota, the Farm Beginnings model of farmer-to-farmer, community-based education has been replicated in sev-eral states and serves as a model for the U.S. Department of Agricul-ture’s national Beginning Farmer and Rancher Development Program.
A partnership between the Land Stewardship Project and the Lake Superior Sustainable Farming Association is making the Farm Begin-nings course available in Esko, Minn., beginning this fall.
This is the fifth year the class has been offered in the Lake Superior area, and Brad-ley said the strategic planning portion of the course is particularly important in a region where new farmers often find a huge demand for the local produce, meat and other products they raise.
“A big issue for begin-ning farmers is the idea of dealing with demand,” said Bradley, who operates a CSA pro-duce operation near Two Harbors, Minn. “We talk in Farm Beginnings about building slow. We talk about a strategic business plan.”
Farm Beginnings grad-uates Todd and Kelsey Rothe say they agree that strategic planning is critical. They raise veg-etables on River Road Farm near Ashland for the wholesale market as well as a CSA collective.
Todd, 38, recently re-entered farming after
taking six years off. He said that when he was farming before, he knew how to produce a lot of vegetables but didn’t “handle the numbers” so well and became burned out by the workload.
This is the second year the Rothes have raised produce at their current location; they are cul-tivating about 1½ acres of vegetables on the 30-acre farm, with plans to grow.
“It’s like a lion on a leash,” Todd said. “We could definitely plant every available acre and it would still be sold. But we have to keep that holistic goal in mind of balancing growth with quality of life and developing a sustainable business.”
Kelsey, 29, said Farm Beginnings didn’t so much teach them how to farm as how to manage their enterprise in a way that they could figure out if day-to-day deci-sions were fitting their overall goals of mak-ing a comfortable living while being an asset to the community.
“We want to grow smart, instead of explod-ing,” she said after recently showing off the couple’s collection of hoop houses and move-able greenhouses. “You need to have a plan and get it on paper.”
Three Farm Begin-nings graduates from the Duluth, Minn., area credit the course’s reli-ance on established farmers as instructors as the key to providing the kind of grounding needed to develop realis-tic expectations of a new business.
Lori Anderson, 46, raises vegetables for local markets on Grow-ing Farms, an incubator for new producers across the road from the Uni-versity of Minnesota’s Research and Field Stud-ies Center in Duluth. She grew up on a farm near Kelsey, Minn., and would like to eventu-ally reclaim that now-overgrown land for food production. For the past several years, Ander-son has been involved in her family’s polar fleece accessory business.
“Since I’m in busi-ness, I know that end of it, but when it comes to weather and plants, nothing ever goes by the book — you need to talk to someone who has the experience,” said Anderson while tak-ing a break at Growing Farms with two other Farm Beginnings gradu-ates — Michael Latsch and Jason Aronson. “The farmers are so willing to share information in Farm Beginnings.”
Course teaches new farmers in Lake Superior region how to sustainably grow their business
A fresh start
Submitted photoKelsey and Todd Rothe, with their son, Hans, raise vegetables near Ashland for the wholesale market and a CSA collective. The Rothes are graduates of the Farm Beginnings program.
Applications will be accepted through Oct. 31 for the 2013-14 Lake Superior Farm Beginnings course. Classes will begin Sunday, Nov. 3, and be offered in Esko, Minn.
For more information or to apply, visit www.farmbeginnings.org or contact Cree Bradley at 218-834-0846 or [email protected].
Wednesday , October 23 , 2013 Farm The Country Today 6C
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PAGE 18 • INTER-COUNTY LEADER - NORTHERN CURRENTS, SECTION B • MAY 28, 2014
Students of the Week
Congratulations to all students on a job well done!
Ben Ones has been chosen Fred-eric Elementary School’s student of the week. He is in son of Jeremy and Renee Ones and big brother to Lydia. Ben loves hockey and is a member of the Blizzard hockey team in Siren. Ben likes school, with his favorite class be-ing gym. He is a hardworking student and a class leader among his peers.
Zak Walters has been chosen Luck Elementary School’s student of the week. He is in first grade and the son of Todd and Ronnette Walters. Zak is a rock-star reader and is eager to read books any chance he gets. He is a very active and energetic student and is in-volved in many things, such as All Stars, T-ball and is the water boy for the Luck Cardinals varsity basketball team. Zak is always a great friend.
Joseph Wiltrout has been chosen Siren Elementary School’s student of the week. He is in first grade and the son of Jameson and Kelly Wiltrout. Jo-seph participates in class discussions, is willing to help others, is a leader and a good listener. He enjoys basketball, baseball, football and playing outside. Joseph also enjoys spending time with his family.
Abbi Smith has been chosen Webster Elementary School’s student of the week. She is the daughter of Andy and Katie Smith. Abbi is always doing her best work and helping others without being asked. She is patient and kind. When Abbi is in school she enjoys learning about flowers and whales. At home she enjoys playing with her brothers and sister. When Abbi grows up she wants to work at U.S. Bank.
Sawyer Tietz has been chosen Frederic High School’s student of the week. He is a senior and the son of Joe and Donna Tietz. Sawyer is a great role model who is enthusiastic about learning and actively participates in class. He is involved in FFA and 4-H. Sawyer enjoys farming. He plans on enlisting in the Marine Corps in the future. The greatest influence in his life is Hunter Dodds.
Emily Warren has been chosen Luck High School’s student of the week. She is a junior and the daughter of Scott and Harmony Warren. Emily always completes assignments above and be-yond the requirements. She is involved in FCCLA, choir, solo ensemble, drama club, prom committtee and works at Subway. Emily enjoys painting her nails, taking pictures, baby-sitting and spending time with family and friends.
Elizbeth Stanford has been chosen Siren High School’s student of the week. She is a sophomore and the daughter of Caryn and Travis Stanford. Elizabeth is a hardworking student who has made the A honor roll. She likes to work out, participate in outside activi-ties and act in school plays. Elizabeth is involved in volleyball, track, forensics, band and choir. She plans to go to col-lege after graduating.
Alexis Piepho has been chosen Webster High School’s student of the week. She is a junior and the daughter of Jolene Pirila and John Piepho. Lexi shows maturity and puts a focus on education. She excels in the classroom and through athletics. Lexi is a respon-sible person who makes everyone around her better. She is involved in basketball and enjoys anything athletic.
Jadyn Watt has been chosen Grants-burg Middle School’s student of the week. She is in fifth grade and the daughter of Robyn and Josh Watt. Jadyn helps around the classroom, is patient, kind, hardworking and laughs at the teacher’s jokes. Jadyn loves all of her classes but her favorite activity is anything to do with math. She is also very active with softball, basketball and volleyball.
Kiran Ogilvie has been chosen Unity Middle School’s student of the week. She is in fifth grade and the daughter of Dawn Ogilvie. Kiran puts forth her best effort and works very hard. She is an example for her classmates and is friendly. Kiran participates well in class and is very helpful.
Braeden Siebenthal has been chosen Frederic Middle School’s student of the week. He is in sixth grade and the son of Terry and Tara Siebenthal. Braeden is very polite, kind and has a good sense of humor. He is involved in hockey, football, soccer and helping his dad. Braeden en-joys drawing, squirrel hunting and fishing. In the future he plans on going to college for drafting. The greatest influences in his life are his dad and Peter Chenal.
Andrea Johnson has been chosen Luck Middle School’s student of the week. She is in seventh grade and the daughter of Theresa and Andy Johnson. Andrea is a hardworking student who is involved in class discussion and is nice to have in class. She is involved in FFA, soccer and basketball. She enjoys soc-cer, basketball and hunting. The great-est influence in her life is her sister, Elizabeth.
Alexa Buskirk has been chosen Siren Middle School’s student of the week. She is in seventh grade. Alexa works hard in class, is kind to others and de-voltes her time to band and athletics. Alexa always has a smile on her face and has a lot of fun with life.
Jamin Wilson has been chosen Web-ster Middle School’s student of the week. He is in seventh grade and the son of Jerome and Bonnie Wilson. Ja-min is a thoughtful writer, explores rich vocabulary and is mindful in his written compositions. He is a leader among his peers, pleasant and has a great sense of humor. Jamin is involved in band. He enjoys reading and video games.
Brian Nyland has been chosen Grantsburg Elementary School’s stu-dent of the week. He is in third grade and the son of Brian Nyland. Brian is a hardworking student who is a good listener and always give his best ef-fort in music class. Brian is a very kind young man who respects authority and never needs to be reminded of what he should be doing during library.
Kody Tober has been chosen Unity Elementary School’s student of the week. He is in first grade and the son of Jennifer and Keith Tober. Kody is a hard worker and excels in all academic areas. He is kind and very helpful to his teacher and classmates.
Austin Thayer has been chosen Unity High School’s student of the week. He is a junior and the son of Jaime and Mi-chelle Thayer. Austin’s favorite subject is history. He is involved in drama. Aus-tin enjoys hanging with friends, writing stories, dancing and martial arts.
Frederic
Luck Siren
Webster
Grantsburg
Unity
Olivia Durushia has been chosen St. Croix Falls Middle School’s student of the week. She is in fifth grade and the daughter of Randy and Ann Durushia. Olivia enjoys hunting with bow and ar-row, being outside, fishing and explor-ing. Her favorite subject is art because she likes to draw animals. Olivia is a friendly and studious student. Her smile and willingness to help others makes her an asset in the classroom.
Christopher Loiselle has been chosen St. Croix Falls Elementary School’s stu-dent of the week. He is in third grade. Christopher likes to talk to friends and play with friends at recess. He really likes to learn science because he finds space interesting. Christopher enjoys watching TV, reading and playing with his sisters. When he grows up he wants to be a spy because they have cool gad-gets and can save people.
Avery Buggert has been chosen Grantsburg High School’s student of the week. He is a junior and the son of William Buggert and Carina Walpole. Avery is respectful, friendly, motivated and provides leadership in a posi-tive fashion. He is involved in football, baseball, Link group and is a lifeguard. Avery enjoys archery, snowmobiling, snowboarding, hunting, building things and being outdoors.
St. Croix Falls
Proudly Supporting Our Students
Stop In or Call Us Today 2547 State Road 35, Luck, Wis.
(in the Evergreen Plaza)
www.sterlingbank.ws
Electricity • Propane 1-800-421-0283
www.polkburnett.com
Supporting our area students and theiraccomplishments.
wingsontheweb.org
Helping young people reach towards their goals and promote kindness in a world that sometimes
doesn't remember the significance of it.
Helping people find their way in back in life.
LEADERNEWSROOM.COM
Glenwood City, Tribune Press Reporter 07/30/2014
August 29, 2014 4:38 pm /
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Page 12 - Tribune Press Reporter - Wednesday, July 30, 2014
Andy Pafko ParkPlayground Equipment Dedication
Saturday, August 2nd10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Dedication & Ribbon Cutting at NoonFree Chicken Dinner
sponsored byLegends Pub & Eatery, Menomonie
serving begins at 11:30 a.m. until gone.
A very special Thank You to all these sponsors for making this project a reality!Individual/Family DonorsAmVets Post #72-ConnorsvilleAndrea TonnAnonymous-Leah RuleAssociation of Boyceville CoachesAvis RanneyBen & Carol SchlosserBill & Lonna Borgert FamlyBob & Patty MarletteBonnie & Robert ScheelBrent & Heidi Swenson FamilyBrian & Candace Wolff FamilyBrian & Nicole Scherer FamilyBud & Susan GilbertsonCarroll & Sharon WyssChad, Sonja & Henry ArnoldCharles GordonCindy ShawConnie LystromDave LabereeDavid & Mary ScoreDelores BrezinaDiane BerryDiane VigDon Minor FamilyElizabeth A. MildrupEric & Amanda Rydel FamilyFran & Charol KarnickGarry & Sally HoagGary “Stub” & Lynda SwensonGib KruegerGloria & Joe Pieters FamilyGrant & Keri Peterson FamilyGreg & Jennifer HoldenGreg & Lori Norrgard FamilyGretzlock FamilyHay River Helpers 4-H ClubJamie & Angie LarsonJerry & Judy EvanJim & Irene SchmidtJoe & Jess Boesl FamilyJohn & Geraldine LampmanKaren & Terry EngemanLaRissa Krueger
Lisa KruegerLowell & Betty A. HakansonMike & Sandy Blechinger FamilyMike Kurr Jr. FamilyMr & Mrs Edward PafkoNick & Jennifer Kaiser FamilyO.K. & Roberta J. HedlandPaul & Peggy DanovskyPaul, Julie & Vivian GreeneRIBFEST 2013Rick & LeeAnn Wold FamilyRita MattsonRoberta Mounce MemorialRon MetzgerRonald GruttSharon & Fred SeegerStan, Linda & LeAnna LarsonSteve & Angie Olson FamilySteve & Jolene Bird FamilySteven & Jolene WolffTCE StaffTCE StudentsTony & Amanda Harvey FamilyTony & Jacque Bowell FamilyTravis, Jill & Cambell KittilsonTrinity Lutheran ChurchTrinity Lutheran Church Youth GroupWarren & Lana BensonWendy SchultzWilliam C.& Audrey Anderson
Business/Commercial DonorsBadger DistributionBig River Resources Boyceville LLC.Bill’s DistributingBoesl Potrait DesignBoyceville Area Sno’ Jammers & ATV ClubBoyceville Booster ClubBoyceville Firefighters AssociationBoyceville Wrestling TeamBP-BoycevilleBuckshot’s BarCardinal GlassCedar CorporationCliff’s Cattle Company
Community Foundation of Dunn CountyDunn Energy CooperativeEagles’ NestFatboy’s Eating EmporiumGardner’s GamingGeneral BeerHarnish Excavating & LoggingIndianhead Food DistributorsJ & K ConcreteJennie-O Turkey StoreJohnson Bros DistributingKessler Meat ProcessingKistner’s Korner Inc.Knapp Lions ClubKristo OrthodonticsKyoteesLee’s BeveragesLegends Pub & EateryLoren’s Body ShopMadilyn Bailey MusicMenomonie Lions ClubNextgen CommunicationsNovitzke, Gust Sempf, Whitley & BergmanisOhly AmericasOI/OI Outdoor Ideas Outdoor Inventions, LLCOtto Bremer FoundationPeoples State BankPeoples State Bank EmployeesPork’s Place Prairie North LTD--WheelerQuality Grain ServicesSafe Haven Adult Assisted LivingSchmidt’s ElectricServ Pro--BoycevilleSign ResultsSpecialty Pallet and CrateSyscoTom-Mar Farms (Ann’s Shop) Value ImplementVillage of BoycevilleWal-MartWisconsin Industrial Sand Co.Xcel EnergyYoung At Heart’s Club
Boyceville Lions Clube-clubhouse.org/sites/boyceville. Like us on Facebook
Not responsible for errors or omissions. We are sorry if your name or business is not listed.Please contact a member of the Boyceville Lions Club.
Jefferson County Advertiser 11/27/2013
September 2, 2014 6:42 pm /
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Jefferson County Advertiser 11/27/2013
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Pictures with Santa
Proceeds to benefit TheWaukesha Women’s Center10 a.m. to 1 p.m. and 4 to 6
p.m.$10 per pictureSponsored by and held at
Best Photography
The EnchantedGingerbread Forest
At The Garden MartGingerbread House contest
entries will be on displayDe.c 2 through Dec. 88 a.m. to 8 p.m.5:30 and 6:30 p.m. Kay’s A-
cademy of Dance Inc.Sponsored by JaneWalters -
Coldwell Banker ResidentialReal Estate
Alaskan Malamute DogSled Pull
At Greenridge Center (Bay
View Rd & Greenwald Ct)10 a.m. to 3 p.m.Sponsored by The Bone-
yard Pub & Grille,Bucky’s Fine Meats and
Sausage LLC, Mario’s NaturalRoman Pizza, Safeway PestManagement&VisionCenter -Richard Pearson, O.D.
Marketplace/Craft Fair
At Parkview Middle SchoolOver 120 Crafters/Vendors
on display10 a.m. to 8 p.m.$3 admission adults18&ol-
derSponsored by Johnson
Bank
Vintage Baseball Game
To be played at Field ParkNoon to 1:30 p.m.
Horse-Drawn Carriage
Rides
At Field Park4 to 10 p.m.$5 per person/$15 per fam-
ilySponsored byCitizens Bank
of Mukwonago
Christmas Parade
Starts at 3 p.m.Sponsored by Johnson
Bank
Live Nativity Scene
At St. John’s EvangelicalLutheran Church410 Highway NNWestLive actors and animalsPresentations: 5, 6, 7 & 8
p.m.Children’s Activity Area,Live Music, Free Refresh-
mentsSponsored by St. John’s
Evangelical Lutheran Church
Holiday Entertainment
At Mount Olive Church5:30 to 9:30 pmSponsored by Mount Olive
Church
Fireworks: Can be seenVillagewide
9 p.m.Sponsored by TheDickman
Company, Inc.,John’s Disposal (thank you
Mukwonago for recycling), &BK Home Inspections
East Troy ElectricRailroad’s Santa Train
4:30 to 8 p.mLimited tickets now availa-
ble at the Mukwonago andEast Troy Chamber offices -
$10 per personRoute: Departs Elegant
Farmer’s depot at 4:30 pmto East Troy Railroad depot.
Departs East Troy Railroad de-potat 7:30 pm to return to Ele-
gant Farmer’s DepotSponsored by The East Troy
Electric Railroad
Festival of the Trees
At the Garden MartOn display from Dec. 4 to
Dec. 8Stop by to bid on your fa-
voriteSponsored byOrchardHills
Assembly of GodFor more information, call
theChamber at (262) 363-7758or visit www.mukwonago-chamber.org.Courtesy of Mukwonago
ChamberofCommerce&Tou-rism Center and MukwonagoPublications
Don’t miss out on these sponsored events
DANCING INTO THE HOLIDAY SEASONStaff photo by Carol Spaeth-Bauer
Kay’s Academy of Dance dancers wave to the crowd at last year’s parade.
Jefferson County Advertiser 11/27/2013
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This event is not possiblewithout your sponsorship andsupport.Thankyou fromthebot-tom of our hearts. The events arelisted by alphabetical order of thesponsors/supporters.AM Towing Inc., Anatomy
Shop Physical Therapy Service,Anich's Beer & Liquor, Aptar-Mukwonago, Dynamic Awards,Fork in the Road, Jay's Lanes,Inc., John’s Disposal, Kids Con-nection Child Care, MartensPlumbing & Heating, MorelandOB-GYN Associates, S.C.; Muk-wonago Yamaha Inc., Paul J.Nyffeler, CPA, SC, MukwonagoCommunity Commission, Wal-Mart, Waukesha State Bank,Won-a-go Biking
3-D Greenhouses
Badgerland S Gaugers willhave operating train layout fea-turing American Flyer and S scaletrains, plus Thomas the train 4 to8 p.m. Miss Elane-e-us will haveexclusive jewelry show fromnoonto10 p.m.Debbie Barutha Buyer/Appraiser diamonds, vintage, es-tate sales, buying your unwantedgold/silver jewelry.
Accent on Dance
Accent onDancewill hold twodance shows at St. James ActivityCenter at 6 and 7:30 p.m.
Antiqua Real
Like them on Facebook atwww.facebook.com/Alarcon-Dining, visit them atwww.AlarconRestaurants.com;call them (262) 363-3355. (All ac-tivities are free.)ComplimentaryMexican Hot Chocolate availableall day, so come warm up! Nowthrough the end of 2013, donate a$1ormore for a Balloon &Wish-Tradition for Day of the Wise-men-Dia de los Reyes Magos. Allproceeds will go to Make a WishFoundation ofWisconsin!11a.m.to 1p.m.: Three Kings/Wiseman-Los Reyes Magos story time andcrown making with Ms. Anabring your kiddos to have fun! 5to 8 p.m.: Take a funny picturewith Tomas the Taco (mascot),can make a great holiday card!Festive Holiday Atmosphere tohave a delicious meal, food anddrink specials all day. Also takeadvantage of 20-percent off allitems in their gift gallery.
Army Lake Camp
8:30 a.m. to 1 p.m., Breakfast
with Santa! Cost is $8 for adultsand children over 13, $6 for chil-dren5-12 years of age, and free forchildren 4 and under. Visit withSanta and take home a gift.
BK Home Inspections
Sponsored Fireworks: Can beseen Village-wide at 9 p.m.
Bartle Jewelers
Hosting horse drawn carriagerides 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. to benefitthe food pantry.Best PhotographyPictures with Santa- Proceeds
to benefit The Waukesha Wom-en’s Center- 10 a.m. to1p.m. and4 p.m. to 6 p.m.- $10 per picture
Broadlands Golf Club
Donated gift certificate for 2 -18 hole green fees not includingcart at Broadlands golf club.
Brooklife Church
Noon – 9 p.m., Chili on theMukwonago Square, stop by for abowl of chili, Christmas carolersfrom4 to 6 p.m.At Brooklife, 4 to6 p.m., Birthday Party for Jesus-Kidlife- Celebrate Jesus’ birthdaysinging Happy Birthday and en-joying a delicious homemadecupcake. Petting Zoo- An indoorpetting zoo lambs, chickens, andbunnies. Nativity Photos- A pic-ture with Mary, Joseph, and babyJesus- Black Light Fun Room-First through third grade kids en-joy glow in the dark games- Ava-lanche Maze- Landing- Fourththrougheighthgrade student racetheir way through a giant indoormaze. 4 to 8 p.m., Art and CraftFair- Lobby- Local Artists displayand sell their original creations/masterpieces. 4 to 8 p.m., FamilyPhotos- Lobby- Stop by theBrooklife lobby to take pictures atthe giant frame. 5 to 8:30 p.m.,Food Court Lobby- Enjoy a tastytreat or light dinner from one ofthe local Restaurant booths. 7 to9:30 p.m., Grace Notes Commu-nity Orchestra- Auditorium-Community musicians of all agespreforming Christmas music-7:30 to 10:30 p.m., Status Open-Misc.- Landing- High school stu-dents will enjoy this coffee Houseatmosphere with live music.
Bucky’s Fine Meats &Sausage LLC
Sponsored the Alaskan Mala-mute Dog Sled Pull- At Green-ridge Center (Bay View Road and
GreenwaldCt.) -10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Charlie’s Angels Salon
Darling Diva make over $12,coupon for $2 off, Offering twocertificate packages: Prepay giftcertificates and get discounts.Package #1 of shampoo cut, style,mini facial&manicure $60whichis a 20%off value and package #2:All over color, partial highlight,cut, style, full facial , manicure &pedicure all for $122 which is a30-percent off value. Packagescan be split for individual gift cer-tificates. Hot cocoa and treatsserved while you book your ser-vice 3 to 9 p.m.
Citizens Bank ofMukwonago
Horse-Drawn Carriage Rides-At FieldPark- 4 to10p.m. - $5perperson/$15 per family
Jane Walters - ColdwellBanker Residential RealEstate
Sponsor of The EnchantedGingerbread Forest- GingerbreadHouse contest entries will be ondisplay- Dec. 2 through Dec. 8- 8a.m. to 8 p.m.
Cowboy Kettle Korn LLC
Sweet glazed kettle cookedpopcorn- On the square
East Troy Electric Railroad
Santa Train- 4:30 to 8 p.m.-Limited tickets now available atthe Mukwonago and East TroyChamberoffices - $10perperson-Route: Departs Elegant Farmer’sdepot at 4:30 pm to East TroyRailroaddepot.Departs East TroyRailroad depot at 7:30 p.m. to re-turn to Elegant Farmer’s Depot
End of the Leash
Enter to win a one-night stayfor four guests at the Kalahari inthe Wisconsin Dells. Plus otherraffle prizes and demos through-out the day!
Espresso Love Coffee, LLC
Stop by for a Free slice of 10thAnniversary Cake!
Garden Party Florist
Open at 8:30- Free flowerwithpurchase while supplies last- 20-percent off sale on giftware- instore drawing for a poinsettia-Christmas arrangement & Giftitem- 5 to 8 p.m.- pianomusic byLori Joyce. Garden Mart is also
sponsoring theWindowDecorat-ing Contest.
Inspire Hair Design
Let us inspire you to pamperyourself! Stop in to take advan-tage of some amazing deals: $1/min chair massage, drawings forfree services and luxury productbasket.Pre-book your appointment
the night of Midnight Magic andreceive 20-percent off of that ser-vice. Refreshments will be served
Kay's Academy of DanceInc.
Dance performances at theGarden Mart at 5:30 and 6:30
Johnson Bank
Marketplace/Craft Fair- AtParkview Middle School- Over120 Crafters/Vendors on display-10 a.m. to 8 p.m.. $3 admissionadults 18 and older- ChristmasParade starts at 3 p.m.
John Amato Ford
Generously providing trans-portation for the Christmas Pa-radeJohn’s DisposalSponsored Fireworks: Can be
seen Village-wide- 9 p.m.
KJ Tax & Accounting LLC
Have lunch on us, sign up foryour tax preparation early and re-ceive a $5 subway gift card.
Knights of Columbus
Located on the Square
Light House Tanning
Half off select tanningpackages andmerchandise, 7 a.m.to 7p.m.- Free Food andbeverag-es- enter our drawings- purchaseyour gift certificates today and re-ceive an additional one for a fu-ture purchase. $25 = $5, $50 =$10.
Mario’s Natural RomanPizza
Sponsored the Alaskan Mala-mute Dog Sled Pull- At Green-ridge Center (Bay View Rd. &Greenwald Ct.)- 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Mount Olive Church
5 to 6pmMiddle School&HSOrchestra (Roxanne Carloni)6:15 to 6:45 p.m. HS Choir
(Charlotte Kolby)
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS
Please see EVENTS, Page 4
Submitted photo
Representatives from the Mukwonago Area Chamber, East TroyChamber and the East Troy Electric Railroad get ready for theholidays at the East Troy Electric Railroad.
Jefferson County Advertiser 11/27/2013
September 2, 2014 6:46 pm /
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Embroidered Apparel • Afghans • Sports BagsLetter Jackets • Team Apparel • And More!
Tuesday-Friday 10:00am-5:00pm • Saturday 10:00am -12:00pmEvenings by appointment • Closed Sunday & Monday
305 S. ROCHESTER ST. • MUKWONAGO • 262-363-2373305 S. ROCHESTER ST. • MUKWONAGO • 262-363-2373
dragonflyembwi.com
PHOTO SHIRTSJust Bring Us Your Photo
3922
376-
01
Holiday Open HouseDecember 7th & 8th
Gift Certificates Available
S108W28220 Maple Ave. Mukwonago, WI 53149262-363-4367 www.3dgreenhouses.com
“Premium Grown Poinsettias”Holiday Ornaments and Fine
Collectibles
Dec. 7 • 9am to MidnightDrawings | Refreshments | In-Store Sales | Unique gifts
A Huge Selection of Holiday Items
Midnight Magic at 3D Greenhouse & GiftsMidnight Magic at 3D Greenhouse & Gifts
Exclusive Jewelry Show & Sale One Night Only!!!MISS ELANE-E-US!Noon to 10:00pm
Debbie Barutha, Buyer/AppraiserBuying your unwanted gold & silver jewelry
Vintage, Estate SalesMore Than Just Diamonds!
DE DE DESIGNS 10:00am - MidnightDebbie DeBack Handmade Beaded Jewelry
4307217-01
Badgerland S Gaugers Club will havean operating train layout featuringAmerican Flyer and other S scaletrains, plus Thomas the Train.
Electric TrainsElectric Trainson Display!on Display!Sat. Dec. 7Sat. Dec. 7 thth 4-8pm4-8pm
Stop In for All Your Seasonal Needs and Home Decor...GREAT PRICES!
HandBlownOrnaments from
GermanyFREE Personalizationof Your Ornamentfrom 4-8pm Only
4221
785-
01
MUKWONAGOOFFICELEADER IN SALES VOLUME
2005 - 2012
8 YEARS & StillGoing Strong!
#1 AGENT INMUKWONAGO
SCHOOLDISTRICT
November27,2013
●LakeCountryPublications
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7 to 7:30 p.m.HS Jazz Ensem-ble (Anthony Soyak)7:45 to 8:15 p.m. Mukwonago
Community Choir (John AnelloIII)
Mukwonago Athletic Club
The Mukwonago AthleticClub is pleased to announce aMidnight Magic after-hoursMember Party from 6 to 9 p.m.on Saturday, Dec. 7. Mingle withfellow members and staff to cele-brate the season! Food and drinkswill beprovided.Please feel free tobring any other dish to pass. TheMACwill also be offering the fol-lowing specials all day: 1-monthTrial SilverMembershipGift Cer-tificate for only $25! This is avail-able for new members and mustbe redeemed by February 1st,2014. So you can get out of thecold fight the holiday stress, andget a jump start on your NewYear's resolutions! 1-Month Un-limited Tanning Gift Certificatefor $20. Bothmake great stockingstuffers!
Mukownago Publications
Sponsors of the Official Mid-night Magic Chamber section
and Santa Sighting spots leadingup to the event.Open House 111N. Rochester
St. Serving Hot Cider & Cookies,coloring pages for the kids. Funfor thewhole family Stoponby10am til????? Hope to see you there !
Mukwonago CommunityLibrary
Hosted by: Friends of theMukwonago Community Li-brary- Ornament making 1 p.m.(first 300 children) - Bake Sale 10a.m. to 7 p.m.- Tree Lighting 4/4:30 when parade ends- StoryTeller Music 4 to 7:30 p.m.
Orchard Hills Assembly ofGod
Sponsored the Festival of theTrees at theGardenMart-Ondis-play fromDecember 4 toDecem-ber 8- Stop by to bid on your fa-vorite
ParkviewMiddle School-Marketplace
Marketplace/Craft Fair- Over120 Crafters/Vendors on display-10 a.m. to 8 p.m.- $3 admissionadults 18 and older
Phantom Lake YMCACamp
8 to 11 a.m., Kick off the holi-day season with a visit with Santaat Phantom Lake YMCA Camp’s
Annual Breakfast with Santa! Feelthe holiday spirit around you asyou enjoy an all-you-can-eatbreakfast of pancakes, sausage,
coffee cake, cereal and juice. Costis $6 for adults, $4 for children 5to 12 years old and freefor chil-dren 4 and under. Your children
will have the chance to hand de-liver their letters to Santa and take
EVENTSContinued from Page 3
Staff photo by Carol Spaeth-Bauer
Santa and Mrs. Claus, along with Mukwonago Chamber Executive Director April Reszka (pinkhat) and Chamber member Diane Rombca, count down to light the Christmas tree at theMukwonago Community Library after the Midnight Magic parade last year.
Please see EVENTS, Page 5
Jefferson County Advertiser 11/27/2013
September 2, 2014 6:47 pm /
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4306496-01
MANY GIFT ITEMSFOR THE BIKER
WON-A-GOBIKING
• Air Dynes• Treadmills• Ellipticals• Stationary Bikes
FITNESSEQUIPMENT
BICYCLES• Juvenile Bikes• BMX Bikes• All TerrainBikes• Comfort Bikes• Cross Bikes
MAKE YOURLIST AND
BRINGIT TO...
R
G..
LAYAWAYNOW FORCHRISTMAS
» CYCLECOMPUTERS
» WATERBOTTLES
» BAGS
» RACKS
» HELMETS
» LIGHTS
» PUMPS
» CLOTHING
106 Main St. • Mukwonago,WI
Mon & Wed 9-7; Tues & Thurs 9-5; Fri 9-6; Sat 9-4262-363-4770SKATE
BOARDS
B IG MATTand our entire staff...
Would like towish all of our
Mukwonago Area friendsa great Midnight Magic
Experienceand a WonderfulHoliday Season!
FordCredit 866-262-5550
Every eligilible pre-owned carcomes with Amato’s lifetime
powertrain warranty.Call or stop in for details!
Automotive GroupAutomotive Group
Monday thru Friday 8-8; Saturday 8-5 www.amatoauto.com
Matt WeinstockGeneral Manager
4306
591-
01
LakeCountry
Publications●Novem
ber27,2013
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part in cookie decorating! Be sureto bring your camera so you cancapture your child's joy as they siton Santa's lap and share theirChristmas wishes. To reach thecamp, follow Highway ES toHighway J. The camp is locatedoff Highway J on YMCA CampRoad. For more information, callthe campoffice at (262) 363-4386or visit our website www.phan-tomlakeymca.org
Pieper Porch Winery &Vineyard
Wine tasting from11 a.m. to 5p.m.
Pop’s Kettle Corn
Mukwonago Community Li-brary
Safeway Pest Management
Sponsored the Alaskan Mala-mute Dog Sled Pull At Green-ridge Center (Bay View Rd. &Greenwald Ct.)- 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Siege Paintball LLC
Outdoor glow in the darkpaint ball starting at dusk andother specials.
St. John's Evang. LutheranChurch & School
Live nativity scene 5, 6, 7, 8p.m. Dec. 7- Children’s activityarea, live music, freerefreshments, etc.
St. Joseph Big Bend
Every new family with chil-dren entering K5 through 7thgrade who register for the 2013-2014 school year, will receive theirfirst year of tuition paid in full(must make a two year commit-ment).
The Boneyard Pub & Grille
Sponsored the Alaskan Mala-mute Dog Sled Pull- At Green-ridge Center (Bay View Rd. &Greenwald Ct.)- 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
The Elegant Farmer
Food sampling- in store spe-cials.
The Dickman Company
Sponsored Fireworks: Can beseen Village-wide at 9 p.m.
The Garden Mart
The Enchanted GingerbreadForest- Gingerbread House con-test entries will be on display-Dec. 2 throughDec. 8 - 8 a.m. to 8p.m.-5:30and6:30p.m.-Kay’sA-cademyofDance, Inc.- Festival oftheTreesAt theGardenMart-Ondisplay from Dec. 4 to Dec. 8-Stop by to bid on your favorite.Also the sponsor of our Business
Decorating Contest.
The Grist Mill / Chef toOrder
The Music Café
25-percent off all guitars &s, one day only Dec. 7, livemusic performances.
U.S. Cellular-Wireless nMore
Coffee, cookies, hot chocolate,register to win a gift basket.
Vision Center - Richard R.Pearson, O.D.
Sponsored the Alaskan Mala-mute Dog Sled Pull- At Green-ridge Center (Bay View Rd. &Greenwald Ct.)- 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Warden's Ace Hardware ofMukwonago
Cookies, popcorn, bucket sale(whatever you can fit into bucket,regular, priced items, 20-percentoff) Dec. 7 only. Also sign up andwin a set of two 4 foot Christmastrees.
William JensenAgency-American FamilyInsurance
Serving Hot Chocolate, Star-bucks Coffee, Krispy KremeDonuts, cookies. Giving away allkinds of fun stuff for MidnightMagic!
Staff photo by Carol Spaeth-Baur
Elsa, a 2-year-old Alaskan Malmute, pulls 1,630 pounds towardher owner Matt Sautbine during the Mukwonago Chamber ofCommerce Midnight Magic dog pull.
EVENTSContinued from Page 4
Jefferson County Advertiser 11/27/2013
September 2, 2014 6:47 pm /
Copy Reduced to 83% from original to fit letter page
You can’t beat the quality of...
QualityQuality Custom FramingCustom FramingYour full service frame shop
by appointment only
Call Sue Budzien at 262.492.75213224 Douglas Ave, East Troy
www.qcframer.com
20% offFRAMES & MATTING
Now through 12/15/13. 4305
734-
01
Bob Beisbier • Certified Master Inspector262-993-7755 • www.bkinspects.com
Have your home inspectedby the best!
4285024-01
• Honest, reliable service• Fast, 24/7 response• Weekend appointments available• Action plan to improve your air quality
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• Pre-purchase inspections• Pre-sale inspections• Infrared testing• Radon testing• Home energy tune-up• Mold• VOC testing
Mention thisad and receive$20 OFF any
BK HomeInspections
service.
4308
081-
01Hours: Mon-Sat 9-8 • Sun 10-6Hours: Mon-Sat 9-8 • Sun 10-6www.thegarden-mart.comwww.thegarden-mart.com
GIFTCERTIFICATESAVAILABLE
Location for the Gingerbread House Contest and Festival of TreesLocation for the Gingerbread House Contest and Festival of Trees
• 25% off Christmas Ornaments & Gifts• 25% off Christmas Ornaments & Gifts
• Buy One Get One Free Pet Toys & Treats• Buy One Get One Free Pet Toys & Treats
• Beautiful Poinsettias ( 8 colors Avail. )• Beautiful Poinsettias ( 8 colors Avail. )
• Buy $50 Gift Cert. *Get $10 certificate free• Buy $50 Gift Cert. *Get $10 certificate free*to be used on future visit
Midnight Magic SpecialsValid December 7 Only!
More specials on Facebook &Website
W297 S9115 Hwy. 83 • MukwonagoW297 S9115 Hwy. 83 • Mukwonago262.363.5252262.363.5252
November27,2013
●LakeCountryPublications
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Sandy Lombardo, JohnsonBank- Co-ChairDiane Rombca, Retired from
the Mukwonago Area Schools-Co-ChairPat Hitt - Best PhotographyGretchen Wachowiak - Citi-
zens Bank of Mukwonago
Jane Walters - ColdwellBanker Residential BrokeragePatti Muraczewski - For Pets
SakeCathy Guse - Mukwonago
ChiefPastor Mike Pieart - Orchard
Hill Assembly of God
Bridgette Bender - The Gar-den MartKellyWolf -Wolf FamilyChi-
ropracticApril D. Reszka- Chamber
DirectorBonnie K. Fagan - Chamber
Assistant
Thank you to our Midnight Magic committee
GINGERBREAD DELIGHTStaff photos by Carol Spaeth-Bauer
Marshmallow trees frame the front of this gingerbreadhouse that took first place in the first- throughthird-grade category of the gingerbread housecontest last year. Top: This house took first place inthe family category.
Jefferson County Advertiser 11/27/2013
September 2, 2014 6:47 pm /
Copy Reduced to 83% from original to fit letter page
with the perfect gift—for someone special
with tttthe perfect giffftttwithhhhh tttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttthhhhhhhhhhhe ppppeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeerrfect giffffffffffffffffttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttt—————MakingSpirits Bright
For Every $100Gift Card Purchased,
Receive $20 inWoodhouseCash!
the woodhouse printable gift card order or print online today!
325 bay view rd., mukwonago, wi 53149262.363.8878
Mukwonago.WoodhouseSpas.com
Visit us at Fork in the Road from 2 PM until Midnight
“One of the most beloved Christmas shows ...”
Presented bythe Mukwonago Village Players
and the MHS Drama Department
Ticket available at Miller Pharmacy,Shanahan’s Coffee, Espresso Love Coffee,
by phone at (262) 470-4786, or online atMukwonagoVillagePlayers.org
Produced by special arrangement withThe Dramatic Publishing Company of
Woodstock, Illinois4308180-01
www.mukwonagovillageplayers.org
December 6, 7, 13, 14 at 7:30 PMDecember 15 at 2 PM
Mukwonago High School stage
Directed byPatrick Hitt
LakeCountry
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SANTA’S SLEIGHSubmitted photo
Parade participants enjoy the brisk weather at last year’s Midnight Magic.
Jefferson County Advertiser 11/27/2013
September 2, 2014 6:48 pm /
Copy Reduced to 83% from original to fit letter page
615 S. Rochester St. Mukwonago(next to the Police Station)(262) 363-4055
www.MukwonagoInsurance.com
Auto – Home – Renters – Life – Business
4304673-01
from theWilliam Jensen Agency
Happy Holidays
Christmas atSt. John’s
Midweek Advent WorshipDecember 4, 11, 18 at 6:30 pm.(preceded by supper at 5:30 pm.)Advent Worship Sundays at
8:00 and 10:30 am.
DECEMBER 15Christmas Worship at 6:00 pm.led by St. John’s Lutheran School
DECEMBER 24Christmas Worship at 5:00 pm.led by St. John’s Sunday SchoolChristmas Carol Sing Along
4:30 & 10:30 pm.Christmas Eve Candlelight
Worship 11:00 pm.Christmas Day Worship
at 9:00 am.Christmas Carol Sing Along
8:30 & 10:15 am.
St. John’s Evangelical Lutheran Church410 Hwy NN West, Mukwonago
Join us Sat., December 7 for “Midnight Magic” from 4:30 - 8:30 PM.• Live Nativity Scene • Live actors & animals • Presentations once an hour
(5:00, 6:00, 7:00, 8:00 pm.)
ACTIVITIES INSIDE THE AUDITORIUM• Free Coffee, Hot Chocolate, Desserts • Bake Sale • Craft Sale • Music by Hand Chimes and Choirs • Children’s Craft Area
PARKING AVAILABLE
FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 363-86274305947-01
One-Hour Photo, Tire & LubeDrive-Thru Pharmacy, Vision Center, Hair Care
250 East Wolf Run, Mukwonago262-363-7500
select hours
select hours
All Your Holiday Needs Under One RoofAll Your Holiday Needs Under One RoofOPEN 24 HOURSLarge variety of
Party PlattersAvailable to Order!
Grab a quick meal atWal-Mart Deli or...
eat fresh.TM
3923
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225 Bayview Rd. Mukwonago225 Bayview Rd. Mukwonago1 - 262 - 378 - 46081 - 262 - 378 - 4608 43
08405-01
Mon. - Fri. 8am - 7pm | Sat. 8am - 6pm | Sun. 8am - 5pm
Place Your Holiday Orders Now!Place Your Holiday Orders Now!It’s not too early to shop forIt’s not too early to shop forChristmas Gift CertificatesChristmas Gift Certificatesfor the Holidaysfor the Holidays
Your Full Service Meat Market.Your Full Service Meat Market.Your Full Service Meat Market.$$ Prices comparable to grocery store $$ – Come check us out
Stop in to sign up towin Raffle prize!
November27,2013
●LakeCountryPublications
8
BUSINESS OFTHE MONTH
Submitted photo
Chamber Ambassador ElizabethDyba of The House of Insurancepresents Business of the MonthAward to Allen Buchholz of Hank’sTransportation Company Inc., afamily-owned and -operatedbusiness for several generations.The Mukwonago Chamber greatlyappreciates their continuedsupport of the Chamber, and theirpartnership with the MukwonagoArea Chamber’s Fall Fest andMidnight Magic Event. TheMukwonago Area also appreciatesthe safe delivery of our localstudents going to and from schooleach day in the Mukwonago AreaSchool District.
Art Fest & Silent AuctionSponsored by Orchard Hill
Assembly of GodThe “Festival of Trees” will
be on display at the GardenMart, Highway 83, during theweek of Midnight Magic.Businesses purchased undeco-rated trees, which they will bedecorating, to be judged andauctioned off the day of Mid-night Magic. This will be donevia silent auction. Some of theproceeds will be donated toMukwonago High School toHelp Fund School AssemblyPrograms and to Kabuki Syn-drome Awareness. Thank youto all of the talented localbusinesses who took the op-portunity to participate in oursecond annual decoratingcontest.
FESTIVAL OF TREESAT GARDENMART
Submitted photo
Jefferson County Advertiser 11/27/2013
September 2, 2014 6:48 pm /
Copy Reduced to 83% from original to fit letter page
HANK’STransportation Co., Inc.
Providing Safe TransportationFor Over 60 Years
We also provide transportation for weddings, parties, sporting events, etc.
4305
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262-363-7176 • 262-363-8188118 Pleasant Lake • Mukwonago, WI 53149
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DR. RICHARD R. PEARSONOPTOMETRIST
305 Eagle Lake AvenueMukwonago,2 BlocksWest of Hwy 83
PH: 262.363.7763FAX: 262.363.9763
e-mail: [email protected]
M-F 9:00-5:00 (Closed 12:00-1:00)Sat. 9:00-12:00 • Closed Thursday
Helping Santato SEE for
Over 40 Years!
MERRYCHRISTMAS!
9th annual Mukwonago Yamaha9th annual Mukwonago Yamaha
Midnight MagicMidnight MagicOpen House
December 7th • 10am - 6pm
370 Greenwald Court, Mukwonago 262-363-6480 • www.mukwonagoyamaha.com970 Greenwald Court, Mukwonago 262-363-6480 • www.mukwonagoyamaha.com
• Specials on all Sleds, ATV’s & Motorcycles• Storewide sale on riding gear andaccessories
• Food and drink• Silent auction fundraiser with valuablemotorsport Items to benefit JuvenileDiabetes Research Foundation
4308
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BRING IN THISCOUPON &RECEIVE AFREE GIFT
(while supplies last)
262-363-2212727 Cty Rd NN East, Mukwonago
www.getmacfit.com
Midnight Magicat the MAC!One Day Offer During Midnight Magic*
*If under 18, a parent must be present to redeem. Membership Certificates must be redeemed byFebruary 1, 2014 and are available for new members only. Multiple massage gift certificates can bepurchased, but are limited to one redemption per client/guest. Offers valid December 7th only.
Saturday, December 7th, from 9am-6pm• $25 – 30 Day Silver MembershipCertificate❍ Includes full use of gymand group exercise Classesincluding BODYPUMP!
❍ Great gift for family and friends• $20 – 30 Day Unlimited Tanning GiftCertificate
• $39 – One Hour Massage GiftCertificate
Other Events• After Hours Member Party from6pm-9pm.
• Free workout day for anyone!Followus on
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PRETTY IN PINKAbove: Zoey Krzysik, 1, watches the Midnight Magic parade last year. Right: Andi (left) andAinsley Schuett ride the Schuett Farms float in the Midnight Magic parade last year.
Staff photos by Carol Spaeth-Bauer
Jefferson County Advertiser 11/27/2013
September 2, 2014 6:49 pm /
Copy Reduced to 83% from original to fit letter page
525 S. Rochester Street, Mukwonago 262-363-7617
Get SomeGet Some
CASH!CASH!CASH!CASH!
DRAWINGDRAWINGWIN A PAIR OFWIN A PAIR OF
25ct TW25ct TWDiamond EarringsDiamond Earrings
$310 Value$310 Value
(Stop in December 7th to Register)
FOR 46YEARSA Name You Know andTrust
4304
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We Buy Gold:We Buy Gold:• 10-14-18K Gold• 10-14-18K Gold• Sterling Jewelry• Sterling Jewelry• Diamonds• Diamonds
Carriage Rides toCarriage Rides toBenefit the Food PantryBenefit the Food Pantry
5:30-8:30pm5:30-8:30pm
BARTLE JEWELERSBARTLE JEWELERS LLCLLC
20% OFF20% OFFSTOREWIDESTOREWIDE
SALE!SALE!December 7thDecember 7thOpen 9 AMOpen 9 AMto Midnightto Midnight
www.boneyardwings.com
Happy HourMonday - Thursday
3-6 pm
Banquet Hall available in Sussex! Not too early to BOOK NOW!
A Big Thank You to All of You That Voted Us
Simply the Best Sports Bar & BurgerSimply the Best Sports Bar & Burger
A Family Restaurant & Sports PubTake Out or Dine In!
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Open 11am Daily262-820-0800
215 Bay View RdMukwonago
Open 11 am Daily262-363-WING (9464)
Gift CertificatesMAKE THE
PERFECT GIFT!
We Serve: • Buffalo Wings • Ribs• Burgers • Wraps• Sandwiches
Multiple TV’s to watchyour favorite sports!
4308
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A $3000 purchase.Expires 12-31-12
“Valid only Sunday through Thursday”
$500 Off
play in the snow!pp
A purchase fee of $3.00 may be assessed at the time of purchase. A monthlyinactivity fee of $2.95 may be assessed to your card after 12 consecutive monthsof inactivity. If your card is Lost/Stolen, you may receive a replacement card fora fee of $5 by calling the Customer Service number on the back of your card.Fees subject to applicable law. See Terms and Conditions. This card is issued byMetaBank™, Member FDIC, pursuant to a license fromVisa U.S.A. Inc.(262) 549-8500 • www.WaukeshaBank.com
Visa®
Gift Card!
Make your holiday shopping easy with a
Only $3 to activate atWaukesha State Bank!
Take time to
FRIDAY FISH FRYFish Platter
Crispy breaded Icelandic Codserved with seasoned potato
wedges, fritters, coleslawand applesauce
Pizza & PastaPizza & PastaMario’s RomanMario’s RomanMario’s RomanMario’s Roman
Pizza & PastaPizza & Pasta
Natural
4253
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Thank You for Voting usSimply the Best Pizza
PIZZA ITALIANMenu Features:
Pizza • Calzones • Salads • Specialty Pizzas • Italian SandwichesDeli Sandwiches • Pastas • Italian Dinners • Desserts • Beverages, Beer, Wine
225 Bayview Rd. Mukwonago
Buy 1 Pizza Any SizeGet the Second 1 Free
(Regular Crust • Dine Inor Pick Up Only)
Second Pizza One ToppingNot Valid on Deliveries orPan & Stuffed Pizzas
Two for Tuesday
DELIVERY!262-363-3600
Serving Mukwonago •East Troy • Eagle • Vernon and
Surrounding Areas
November27,2013
●LakeCountryPublications
10
“It’s a Wonderful Night inMukwonago” parade is set for 3p.m., Saturday, Dec. 7, spon-sored by Johnson Bank.The daylongMidnightMagic
event includes a Christmas pa-rade which takes place at 3 p.m.The 21st annualMidnightMagicChristmas Parade’s theme: “It’sa Wonderful Night in Mukwo-nago.”The parade staging area is be-
hind the Mukwonago HighSchool. Parade participantsshould enter from the west en-trance off HighwayNN. The pa-rade will start from theMukwo-nagoHighSchoolparking lot, goeast down Roberts Street, southon Meadow View, east on
MacArthur, south on Highway83 and east onWashington Ave-nue to the Library.The judges’ viewing area will
be in front of Associated BankonHighway 83. Paradeunitswillbe judged in the following cate-gories: Business, Citizen, Non-profit, Youth.Parade organizers want to
keep children safe during the pa-rade, especially when roads canbe slipperydue to theweather, sothey are asking all participantsnot to toss candy from their ve-hicles. Treats should be passedout only by people walking inthe parade. Parents shouldwatch their children so they donot run up to the floats.
If youwould like to participa-te, please stop by or call theMukwonago Area Chamber(262) 363-7758 for your entryform.The chamber office would
like to thank Patti Muraczewskiof ForPet’s Sake for her time andtalent organizing this magicalevent. We also greatly appreciatethe assistance of the Rotary Clubof Mukwonago, and our localDPW, Police & Fire Depart-ments.The Library will hold tree
lighting with Mr. & Mrs. Clausfollowing the parade at approxi-mately 4/4:30p.m.Theywill alsobe hosting live music and a bakesale at that time.
MAGICAL PARADE AT 3
Staff photo by Carol Spaeth-Bauer
Citizens Bank of Mukwonago celebrates its 120th anniversarywith a float in the Midnight Magic parade.
Jefferson County Advertiser 11/27/2013
September 2, 2014 6:49 pm /
Copy Reduced to 83% from original to fit letter pageLake
Country
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11
S101 W34511 Highway LOEagle, WI 53119
(located on Hwy. LO,just west of Hwy. E)
www.masd.k12.wi.us/eves
Call NOW!for more information or for a tour
262.363.6258
“Offers uniqueenvironmental learningexperiences in a warmnurturing environment.”
4305430-01
shorewest.com
1231 S.Rochester St.,Suite 110
Hotline:262.814.1400+ 5-digit PINto receive textor photos toyour cell phone
Marilyn Burns, GRI262-441-0348Associate Vice PresidentBroker AssociateLifetime Member-MillionDollar Club
Offering Professional,Confidential Service!
Fantastic5BR/3BA- ExposedRanch
Vaulted ceiling,banks of windowsthat view 6.96 private wooded acres not in sub. Great viewsfrom your deck. Huge KIT w/partial wall, pantry, 2 islands,new SS appls. Two way FP between LR & dinette. 2nd FPin large 21x34 FR, 3 car garage with stairs to LL. Parking/storage for 10 cars. Outstanding heated outbuilding w/compressor & car lift. Zoned for Business Possibilities.Zoned Agri. Horses welcome. Troy $489,900 PIN#14500
Buy Your Land Now!Get Ready to Buildin the Spring!
16 acres on Sandy Beach Rd. Mukwonago$235,000 pin#13271394 acres in North Prairie
NOW $109,900 (below current appraisal)pin#97090
3.63 acres in Village of MukwonagoNOW 84,900 (Sewer/gutter paid for) pin#98260
4306
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WARDENSHARDWARE
Mukwonago
Your Full Service Hardware StoreHOURS: Daily 7:00-8:00 pm
Saturday: 8:00-6:00 • Sunday: 9:00-5:00Hwy. 83 & NN • Mukwonago
(262) 363-6865www.wardensace.com
BUCKET SALEDecember 7th Only!20% Off Fill a Bag!
4307057-01
Exclusions ApplySee Store For More Details
On reg. priced items in stock only.Sale valid only on Dec. 7th 2013
KJ Tax & Accounting, LLCSERVING THE WATERFORD, MUKWONAGOAND EAST TROY AREAS SINCE 1997
Sound Advice/Reasonable Price
WATERFORD - 501 E. Main Street
Phone: (262) 514-3800Email: [email protected]
Text: (262) 994-3650MUKWONAGO - 105 Lake Street
(Next to Subway)
Phone: (262) 363-2930Email: [email protected]
Text: (262) 994-3650
• Tax Preparation• Bookkeeping• Quickbooks• FinancialPlanningJim Filicetti CPA, OwnerJim Filicetti CPA, Owner
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S93 W30580 County Road NN, Mukwonago, WI 53149 | www.hillsidemukwonago.com | 262.363.8025
A Night In Bethlehem is aA Night In Bethlehem is aFreeFree fun filled community event withfun filled community event with
family activities for everyone.
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Families can tour the village of Bethlehem stopping at boothsalong the way where they work together to make projectsfrom jewelry to pottery to baskets and more.
Or you can try your hand at the classic game of dreidel, stopand color pictures together or just relax and enjoy the buzz ofvillage life at the time of Jesus’ birth.
There will be music throughout the event capped off at7:00 pm with a performance from the Son Lite Orchestra andChoir performing The Hallelujah Chorus from Handel’s Messiah.
December 14th, 4 to 7 pm.December 14th, 4 to 7 pm.
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355 Bay View Road, Mukwonago 262-363-3355
Mexican Latin Homemade Deliciousness - Open 7 Days a WeekHOST / CATER YOUR SPECIAL EVENTS WITH US!
Gift CardsReceive a $5 Gift
with each $30 gift card purchased!Now thru 12/31/13.
www.AlarconRestaurants.com www.facebook.com/AlarconDining
Daily In House Food & Drink Deals!!Daily In House Food & Drink Deals!!
Now through the end of the year.In tradition of Day of the Wise Men-Dia de los Reyes Magos,
Please stop by and donate!
Join Us for Midnight MagicOur Activities Listed on the Midnight
Magic Flyer/Map
FUNDRAISER
JOY TO THE WORLD!
Staff photo by Carol Spaeth-Bauer
The MukwonagoRotary Club bandplays a Christmastune during theMidnight Magicparade last year.
Jefferson County Advertiser 11/27/2013
September 2, 2014 6:50 pm /
Copy Reduced to 83% from original to fit letter page
4305527-01
117 MacArthur DriveMukwonago, WI 53149Telephone: 262-363-7146www.martensplumbing.com
ServingMukwonago
and surroundingcommunities
for over 50 years
ServingMukwonago
and surroundingcommunities
for over 50 yearsfor
Plumbingfor the third consecutive year!
4306
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Horn’s HoganChristmasSpecialsSundays
Dec. 1st & 8th10am-4pm & duringMukwonago’s
MIDNIGHT MAGICDecember 7th5pm-Midnight
American LegionPost 375
627 County NN
(Greetings)
Happy Holidays fromall the helpers at
Horn’s Hogan
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Vision Center-Richard R. Pearson, O.D.305 Eagle Lake Ave., Mukwonago, WI 53149
262-363-7763
Santa was sightedat the VisionCenter- RichardR. Pearson, O.D.scraping snowoff of his sleigh. Santa and the Vision Center- Richard R.Pearson, O.D. have been busy helping Mukwonago see moreclearly. Watch for the scraper giveaway at Midnight Magic!
November27,2013
●LakeCountryPublications
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Small Business Saturday isNov. 30. Come out to Muk-wonago. Shop small.Please visit Mukwonago on
Small Business Saturday, theday we all Shop Small and sup-port small businesses aroundthe country.As a reminder, Mukwonago
is open for business.So stop by on Nov. 30, the
Saturday after Thanksgiving,and do your part to help makethis Small Business Saturday
one of the biggest shoppingdays of the year for small busi-nesses.If you miss Small Business
Saturday, you always have Mid-night Magic as a back-up. Mid-night Magic is one of the mostMagical days to shop local inMukwonago. A special thankyou to those who partner withthe Mukwonago Area Chamberof Commerce to make this daypossible for all.Think Global—Shop Local.
SHOP SMALL
FLAGS HELD HIGHStaff photo by Carol Spaeth-Bauer
The American Legion Post 375 leads the Midnight Magic parade last year.
Jefferson County Advertiser 11/27/2013
September 2, 2014 6:50 pm /
Copy Reduced to 83% from original to fit letter page
S107W28415 E.Wolf Run, Mukwonagoacross fromThe Home Depot
262-363-4200www.herriges.com
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Dean Herriges-Wisconsin’s First Master Certified Remodeler
BESTOFTHESEASONFROMTHE HERRIGES FAMILY
IN MUKWONAGO SINCE 1972
AdditionsKitchensBathroomsRec Rooms
DESIGN/BUILD
@ Brooklife Church4:00–6:00 pm• Birthday Party for Jesus• Indoor Petting Zoo• Live Nativity• Black Light GLOW Party (1st–3rd Grade)• Avalanche Indoor Maze (4th–8th Grade)
4:00–8:00 pm• Art and Craft Fair• Free Family Portraits
5:00–8:30 pm• Food Court
7:00–9:30 pm• Grace Notes Community Orchestra
7:30–10:30 pm• High School Open Mic Night
MIDNIGHTMAG I C
@ Mukwonago Square
Brooklife Church
MidnightMagic.Brooklife.org
Noon–9:00 pm• Chili Tent
December 7th
LakeCountry
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13
TheMukwonago Area Chamber Welcomes itsnewest members! New members are the gift thatkeep on giving!
Newmembers in 2013
KReative Consulting, (262) 391-1899, Muk-wonagoDort's Magic Needle, (262) 363-5008, Muk-
wonagoPT Plus Mukwonago, (262) 363-0555, Muk-
wonagoProvidence Home Lending, NMLS #2297,
(262) 363-7775, MukwonagoHD Financial Services LLC, (262) 951-1457,
MukwonagoJimMacArt.com, (262) 729-6153, East TroyWilliam Jensen Agency-American Family In-
surance, (262) 363-4055, MukwonagoHagenau Auction Service LLC, (262)
490-7107, MukwonagoSTAT Family Services, (414) 254-0984, Muk-
wonagoWorkout Village LLC, (262) 408-1775, Muk-
wonagoDBI Insurance, (262) 363-8650, MukwonagoRural Mutual Insurance Company, (262)
378-5009, MukwonagoAcceleratedPhysicalTherapy, (262) 710-9100,
MukwonagoCountry Porch, (262) 989-9980, MukwonagoAeonAnalyticsLLC, (262) 470-3403,Mukwo-
nagoNX Level Physical Therapy, (262) 378-3035,
WaukeshaCharlie’s Angels Salon, (262) 510-0103, Muk-
wonagoCrivello Carlson, (263) 363-7720, Mukwona-
goHalf-Time Sports Grille, (262) 363-0990,
MukwonagoLight House Tanning, (262) 363-9377, Muk-
wonagoLittle LambsChildCare LLC, (262) 392-3055,
MukwonagoSimply Cupcakes, (262) 470-8823, EagleMorningstar Golfers Club, (262) 662-1600,
WaukeshaAd Quest Promotions Inc., (920) 746-9170,
Sturgeon BayInspireHairDesign, (262) 363-3700,Mukwo-
nago
WELCOME,NEWMEMBERS!
MASCOT MADNESSStaff photo by Carol Spaeth-Bauer
John Webber, 11, greets Mukwonago Chief mascot Rollieduring the 2012 Mukwonago Chamber of CommerceMidnight Magic.
Jefferson County Advertiser 11/27/2013
September 2, 2014 6:51 pm /
Copy Reduced to 83% from original to fit letter pageNovember27,2013
●LakeCountryPublications
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262.363.2558 | espresslovecoffee.com105 N. Rochester St. (Hwy. 83) | Mukwonago
(convenient parking in back)
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
4307829-01
Stop by during Midnight Magic for aFree piece of CakeEnjoy the Holidays!
-from Katie and all the staff
Help us Celebrate Our 10Help us Celebrate Our 10 thth Anniversary!Anniversary!Help us Celebrate Our 10Help us Celebrate Our 10 thth Anniversary!Anniversary!
Coffee Shop
www.medicaleyeassociates.com
4308
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COMPLETE FAMILY EYEWEAR TAILORED TO YOUR LIFESTYLE
Oconomowoc1185 S. Corporate Ct. Dr., Suite 210
(262) 560-0725
Waukesha1111 Delafield St.,Suite 312(262) 542-6669
Mukwonago400 Bay View Rd., Suite D(262) 363-1515
w w w . m e d i c a l e y e a s s o c i a t e s . c o m
Gregory R. Lochen, M.D., F.A.C.S.
Deborah W. Bernstein, M.D., F.A.C.S.
R.R. Flickinger, Jr., M.D., F.A.C.S.
Carolyn P. Butler, M.D., F.A.C.S.
R. Ted Compton, M.D., F.A.C.S.
Waukesha1111 Delafield Street, Suite 312 • 262-547-3352
Oconomowoc1185 Corporate Center Drive, Suite 210 • 262-560-4224
Mukwonago400 Bay View Road, Suite D • 262-363-5333
Wauwatosa201 N. Mayfair Road, Suite 525 • 414-259-1420
4308408-01
Seniors on the Go! is a communit
y
Non-profit basedprogram that has
been
developed to provide transportati
on
services to the non-driving or seld
om
driving ambulatory senior citizens
in
Villages andTowns of:
Waukesha County
www.mukwonagoseniortaxi.org
Chili Party
FUNDRAISERS!
December14th • 10-2
PM
in front ofWalmart
in front ofWalmart
W
ChChililii PaP rtyChChililii PaP rty
UNDRAISERS!
FUNDRAISERS!
0 2PM0 2PM
FirstAnnual
FirstAnnual
Help Us Get Gassed
UpHelp Us G
et GassedUp
for 2014for 2014Help Us G
et GassedUp
Help Us Get Gassed
Up
for 2014for 2014
From home remodels to home additions and more,you can count on Professional Construction, Inc.
for all your construction needs.
108Wilmont Drive,Waukesha 262-363-0886 www.professionalconstructioninc.com
4308
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Open Year Round!Open Year Round!Indoor & Outdoor CoursesIndoor & Outdoor Courses
TTHEHE SSIEGEIEGE PPAINTBALLAINTBALL LLCLLC(262)363-9735After Hours (262)391-3759After Hours (262)[email protected]
Midnight MagicSpecial!Join us for
Glow-in-the-DarkPaintballFrom sunset untilmidnight on ournew city field
Half OffAdmission/Rentalstarting at sunset
S108 W28220 Maple Ave, Mukwonago, WI 53149
4308
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HOLIDAY HATS
Left: Village ofMukwonago PresidentFred Winchowky rides inthe parade.
Staff photos by Carol Spaeth-Bauer
Right: Jessica Wanta ToriPruisheik and AnnaMiller walk in theMukwonago Chamberof Commerce MidnightMagic parade for theMukwonago AthleticClub last year.
Jefferson County Advertiser 11/27/2013
September 2, 2014 6:52 pm /
Copy Reduced to 83% from original to fit letter page
ST. JAMES CATHOLIC PARISH830 County Road NN East Mukwonago, WI 53149
Father Mick Savio Office: 363-7615www.stjamesmukwonago.org email: [email protected]
HOLIDAY MASSESChristmas Eve: 4 & 10 pmChristmas Day: 7 - 9 - 11 amNew Year’s Day: 9 am
Communal Reconciliation heldWednesday, Dec. 18, 7pmAt St. Theresa Parish, Eagle
WEEKEND MASSESSaturday: 4 pmSunday: 8:15 & 10:30 am
WEEKDAY MASSESMonday: 6 pmFriday: 8 amSaturday: 8 am
RECONCILIATIONSaturdays 2:30 - 3 pm
BINGODec. 12, 2013Jan. 9 & 23, 2014Feb. 13 & 27March 13 & 27April 10 & 24May 8 & 22June 12 & 26
BREAKFAST WITH SANTASunday, Dec. 8 from 8 am - noon
FISH FRYsDec. 6, 2013Jan. 3, 2014Feb. 7March 7April 4 & 18May 2
Pancake Breakfastsponsored by theKnights of ColumbusAdults $5.00; childrenages 5 & up $3.00Photos with SantaCarol singing
WARDENSHARDWARE
Mukwonago
4307
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Your Full Service Hardware StoreYour Full Service Hardware StoreHOURS: Daily: 7:00AM-8:00PMHOURS: Daily: 7:00AM-8:00PM
Saturday: 8:00-6:00 • Sunday: 9:00-5:00Saturday: 8:00-6:00 • Sunday: 9:00-5:00
Hwy. 83 & NN • MukwonagoHwy. 83 & NN • Mukwonago(262) 363-6865(262) 363-6865
www.wardensace.comwww.wardensace.com
a set of twoa set of two4 ft. Christmas Trees.4 ft. Christmas Trees.
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Wardens Ace Hardware Gift Certificates.Wardens Ace Hardware Gift Certificates.
Serving Cookies & PopcornServing Cookies & PopcornOpen During Midnight MXXX on Dec. 7thOpen During Midnight MXXX on Dec. 7th
20% OFF BUCKET SALE!20% OFF BUCKET SALE!Regular priced items in stock!Regular priced items in stock!Offers valid on Dec. 7th onlyOffers valid on Dec. 7th only
MUKWONAGO
PUBLICATIONS
DuringMidnight Magic
10 a.m. til ???
111 N. Rochester St.
Hot cider &cookies
Fun for thewhole family
4308462-01
Coloring pagesfor the kids
Hopeto see you!
OpenHouse
LakeCountry
Publications●Novem
ber27,2013
15
Sponsored by Best Photog-raphy (formerly “You-Nique”… same ownership, newname!)With only one more week
left until Midnight Magic onSaturday, Dec. 7, it looks likeSanta is getting a head start onhis holiday checklist. Santa wasspotted at Best Photographywith Mrs. Claus getting theirProfessional Family Portrait
done for their Christmas Cards.“Professional Pictures with San-ta” will be held Saturday, Dec. 7.Two sessions will be offered, themorning session is from 10 a.m.to 1 p.m. and the afternoon ses-sion is from 4 to 6 p.m. Walk-ins are always welcomed. Por-traits are $10 each with proceedsto benefit The Waukesha Wom-en’s Center. Best Photography isat 114 Lake Street
GET A PROFESSIONALPICTUREWITH SANTA
Jefferson County Advertiser 11/27/2013
September 2, 2014 6:52 pm /
Copy Reduced to 83% from original to fit letter page
Join us on December 7, 2013
Midnight MagicCarriage Rides
Sponsored By:
Field Park
4:00 p.m. - 10:00 p.m.
$5 per person or $15 per family
November27,2013
●LakeCountryPublications
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Sponsored by JohnsonBank, the “Marketplace” atPark View Middle School,Highways 83 and NN, will bebigger and better than everthis year, as over 120 crafters/vendors will be on display.There will also be a raffle in-side Marketplace, where youcan purchase tickets (5 for $1,or 6 for $5) to win wonderfulprizes. The marketplace opensat 10 a.m. and goes until 8p.m. Spend the day browsingthroughout the crafts andwares, while enjoying foodand snack. The Gristmill/Chefto Order will be offering a di-verse lunch and dinner menu.There will be a $3 admissionfor adults 18 and older. For acomplete listing of events,please visit the MukwonagoChamber website, www.mukwonagochamber.org.
Shop the marketplace at Park View
Staff photo by Carol Spaeth-Bauer
Laurie Walter (center) of Mukwonago shops for jewelry with her granddaughters Juliana Anderson (left), 6, and Victoria Andersonat the marketplace during Mukwonago Chamber of Commerce Midnight Magic last year.