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Former Lake Geneva resident subject of Masterpiece TV series

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By Dennis West<br />

On Sunday, March 31, PBS<br />

<strong>Masterpiece</strong> Classic will begin an 8-part<br />

<strong>series</strong> called “Mr. Selfridge,” about the<br />

American department store magnate<br />

who moved to England and founded the<br />

famous establishment that still bears his<br />

name.<br />

Alist <strong>of</strong> the families who owned<br />

property on the shores <strong>of</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong> <strong>Lake</strong><br />

at the turn <strong>of</strong> the 19th century reads like<br />

a Who’s Who <strong>of</strong> American industry and<br />

commerce. Names like Armour, Swift,<br />

Leiter, Fairbank, Harris, Chapin and<br />

Wrigley are recognizable by many<br />

Midwesterners, especially Chicagoans.<br />

Another name, which is perhaps<br />

more famous in Europe today than the<br />

United States, was Harry Gordon<br />

Selfridge, who built and owned Harrose<br />

Hall on the lake’s south shore from 1899<br />

to 1922. It was during this time that he<br />

resigned as general manager <strong>of</strong><br />

Chicago’s Marshall Field & Company<br />

and founded Selfridge’s, which quickly<br />

became England’s premier department<br />

store.<br />

Selfridge was born in Ripon, Wis.,<br />

on Jan. 11, 1858. His father, a storekeeper,<br />

died shortly afterward. The widow<br />

Selfridge obtained a teaching job in<br />

Jackson, Mich., and the two moved there<br />

shortly before the Civil War began.<br />

One source says Selfridge attended<br />

school only through the fifth grade.<br />

Another says he finished high school<br />

and wanted to attend the United States<br />

Military Academy at West Point, but he<br />

was too short. He settled instead for a<br />

job as a dry goods store clerk in Jackson<br />

at $1.50 a week. He later became a bank<br />

clerk at a salary <strong>of</strong> $20 a month.<br />

In 1879, when Selfridge was 21, he<br />

secured a letter <strong>of</strong> recommendation from<br />

Jackson businessman Lawrence Field to<br />

his cousin, Marshall Field, then a partner<br />

in Field & Leiter Dry Goods in Chicago.<br />

Based on his cousin’s glowing recommendation,<br />

Marshall Field gave<br />

Selfridge a job as a clerk in the wholesale<br />

division <strong>of</strong> the company at $10 a<br />

week.<br />

Within a year the ambitious young<br />

man had been promoted to salesman,<br />

first behind the counter and then traveling<br />

to retail establishments throughout<br />

the state.<br />

During this period, Selfridge augmented<br />

his education by constantly<br />

APaper Designed With Readers In Mind March 22 - April 4, 2013<br />

<strong>Former</strong> <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong> <strong>resident</strong> <strong>subject</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Masterpiece</strong> <strong>TV</strong> <strong>series</strong><br />

reading newspapers and books, especially<br />

those about merchants and merchandising.<br />

In 1883, when he was <strong>of</strong>fered a better<br />

job in the wholesale house, he asked<br />

to be transferred to the retail store where<br />

he thought he could put his ideas about<br />

merchandising into effect.<br />

When his supervisor refused to listen<br />

to his ideas, Harry took them directly to<br />

Marshall Field. The great man told<br />

Selfridge’s boss to let him try them, on<br />

the theory that if they worked the store<br />

would make more money; if they didn’t,<br />

it would prove the young man wrong<br />

and end the dispute. And work they did.<br />

Until 1883, the store had only five<br />

telephones. Selfridge tripled that number<br />

immediately and had a switchboard<br />

installed to route calls to every department.<br />

He inaugurated an “annual sale”<br />

on the theory that it was the best way to<br />

clear shelves for new merchandise. He<br />

ripped out high shelving and displayed<br />

piece goods on tables in the center <strong>of</strong> the<br />

aisles so customers could see and examine<br />

them more closely. The hands-on<br />

involvement resulted in huge sales<br />

increases.<br />

The basement <strong>of</strong> the store had been a<br />

repository <strong>of</strong> odds and ends that were<br />

marked down when they didn’t sell. In<br />

1885, Selfridge greatly expanded the<br />

new department and opened it to bargain<br />

hunters. In so doing, he originated the<br />

“bargain basement” that brought thousands<br />

<strong>of</strong> less-well-to-do shoppers into<br />

Field’s who would never have thought to<br />

shop there because they couldn’t afford<br />

it. Many, as their financial circumstances<br />

improved with the growth <strong>of</strong><br />

Chicago, moved from the basement to<br />

other floors <strong>of</strong> the ever-expanding retail<br />

emporium. The bargain basement, which<br />

went through a number <strong>of</strong> name<br />

changes, finally became known as the<br />

budget Center and grossed $25 million a<br />

year.<br />

It was Selfridge who moved the perfume<br />

counter to the front entrance where<br />

its fragrances attracted shoppers from<br />

the outside and made their first impression<br />

<strong>of</strong> the store pleasant and unforgettable.<br />

Selfridge ran big newspaper ads<br />

announcing the arrival <strong>of</strong> merchandise,<br />

new products and price reductions. it<br />

was he who, for better or worse, originated<br />

the Christmas Countdown by plac-<br />

The Selfridge summer home, Harrose, was located next to Harry’s brother-inlaw’s<br />

estate, Ceylon Point, on <strong>Geneva</strong> <strong>Lake</strong>’s south shore. Selfridge had Harrose built<br />

in 1908 and sold it in 1922. (Photo furnished)<br />

Jeremy Piven portrays retailing genius Harry Gordon Selfridge in the PBS<br />

<strong>Masterpiece</strong> <strong>series</strong>, “Mr. Selfridge,” Sundays, March 31 - May 19.<br />

(Photo by John Rogers/I<strong>TV</strong> Studios for <strong>Masterpiece</strong>)<br />

ing ads warning that there were only so<br />

many shopping days until Christmas.<br />

Selfridge insisted that the advertisements<br />

not only eye-catching and informative,<br />

but completely honest. If sale<br />

goods were slightly damaged, or seconds,<br />

the ads said so.<br />

In 1887, Field promoted the 29-yearold<br />

Selfridge to “retail general manager.”<br />

Selfridge moved his mother from<br />

Jackson, Mich., to his apartment on the<br />

Near North Side. He furnished his <strong>of</strong>fice<br />

more elaborately than Field’s, had a barber<br />

come to shave him each morning<br />

and changed clothes three times a day so<br />

that he always appeared fresh and dapper<br />

in frock coat, vest with a gold watch<br />

chain, wing collar and patent leather<br />

shoes. It was as he rushed from department<br />

to department in search <strong>of</strong> retail<br />

perfection, his watch chain swinging<br />

from side to side, that his employees<br />

began to call him “Mile-A-Minute<br />

Harry.”<br />

Selfridge strictly followed his<br />

employer’s maxims, “Give the lady<br />

what she wants” and “The customer is<br />

always right.”<br />

Soon he added departments for wallpaper,<br />

an art gallery, furniture, shoes and<br />

children’s clothing.<br />

Selfridge badgered Field for several<br />

years to open a restaurant in the store on<br />

the premise that, if customers could get<br />

something to eat when they got hungry,<br />

they wouldn’t have to leave and maybe<br />

not return.<br />

Finally, in 1890, Field allowed him<br />

to open a tea room near the fur section<br />

on the third floor. It began with just 15<br />

tables, eight waitresses and four women<br />

in the kitchen. On the first day, only 56<br />

patrons were served. In a year, it had<br />

been enlarged and was serving 1,500 a<br />

day. It eventually became one <strong>of</strong> several<br />

restaurants and dining rooms on the seventh<br />

floor, some decorated with palms,<br />

some with heavy oak tables and carved<br />

chairs, some with open grills where<br />

steaks and chops were broiled in sight <strong>of</strong><br />

the customers, and some serving sandwiches<br />

in tiny baskets with bows on<br />

their handles. Thousands <strong>of</strong> shoppers<br />

dined at Field’s each day.<br />

In 1889, Selfridge asked to be made<br />

a partner. Field reflected on the fact that,<br />

in his six years as manager the inventive<br />

young man had increased the store’s<br />

sales from $4 million to $6.7 million a<br />

year and pr<strong>of</strong>its from $370,000 to<br />

$570,000. Field acquiesced and<br />

advanced his manager the $200,000 he<br />

needed for the partnership, on the provision<br />

that he repay the sum out <strong>of</strong> his<br />

earnings. Secure in his new position, in<br />

November, 1890, Selfridge married<br />

society debutante Rosalie Buckingham.<br />

Selfridge saw the Columbian<br />

Exposition <strong>of</strong> 1893 as the perfect opportunity<br />

to introduce Marshall Field to<br />

hundreds <strong>of</strong> thousands <strong>of</strong> fair-goers<br />

from all over the world. The displays he<br />

created and the merchandising techniques<br />

he used to draw the crowds<br />

worked so well that Field showed his<br />

pleasure by giving him a larger share <strong>of</strong><br />

the store’s pr<strong>of</strong>its.<br />

Harrose Hall<br />

It was this bounty that Selfridge used<br />

to build his estate on <strong>Geneva</strong> <strong>Lake</strong>.<br />

Selfridge was familiar with <strong>Lake</strong><br />

<strong>Geneva</strong>. Field’s former partner, Levi<br />

Leiter, had built his estate, Linden<br />

Lodge, on the north shore in 1880. N.K.<br />

Fairbank, chairman <strong>of</strong> the Chicago club,<br />

had built Butternuts in 1875, and Rosalie<br />

Selfridge’s sister, Anna, had married<br />

Frank Chandler, who moved the fabulous,<br />

hand-built Columbian Exhibition<br />

structure from the island <strong>of</strong> Ceylon to<br />

the south shore <strong>of</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong> <strong>Lake</strong>, where<br />

he had it rebuilt and called it Ceylon<br />

Court.<br />

Selfridge spent some time looking<br />

for the perfect spot for his home, finally<br />

choosing a 47-acre tract next to his<br />

brother-in-law’s, which afforded a view<br />

<strong>of</strong> the entire lake. He combined the<br />

names Harry and Rosalie to call his<br />

estate Harrose Hall.<br />

According to an article in the June<br />

30, 1899 edition <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong><br />

News, the French Gothic style house was<br />

being rushed to completion for summer<br />

occupancy.<br />

(Continued on page 2)


2 — The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013<br />

Selfridge<br />

Continued from page 1<br />

“When completed, the Selfridge<br />

summer home, which has been under<br />

construction for a year, will be one <strong>of</strong> the<br />

most magnificent country places in the<br />

costly circle that surrounds <strong>Lake</strong><br />

<strong>Geneva</strong>,” the reporter wrote.<br />

“The first story and terrace wall are<br />

<strong>of</strong> native stone, mainly Vermont granite,<br />

showing various shades <strong>of</strong> grays, pinks<br />

and yellows. The second story is framed<br />

open timbers <strong>of</strong> selected cypress with<br />

plastered walls between.” The ro<strong>of</strong> was<br />

<strong>of</strong> green tile and the window frames,<br />

watercourse and downspouts were coppered,<br />

which meant they would turn<br />

green with age to complement the ro<strong>of</strong>.<br />

In contrast to the French Gothic<br />

exterior, the interior reflected a distinctly<br />

Moorish influence typical <strong>of</strong> late 19th<br />

century homes.<br />

Agrand staircase hall extended from<br />

the main floor to the ro<strong>of</strong>line 35 feet<br />

above. A large stained glass dome at the<br />

top <strong>of</strong> the hall provided s<strong>of</strong>t, natural<br />

light. To each side <strong>of</strong> the hall were a din-<br />

The actual Harry Gordon Selfridge<br />

disembarking from the Chicago and<br />

North Western’s “Millionaire’s Special,”<br />

which made a run from Chicago to <strong>Lake</strong><br />

<strong>Geneva</strong> every day for the convenience <strong>of</strong><br />

business people who owned property in<br />

the Wisconsin resort city.<br />

(Chicago Daily News Historic Archive)<br />

‘Mr. Selfridge’ on<br />

PBS <strong>Masterpiece</strong><br />

At the unfashionable end <strong>of</strong> London’s<br />

Oxford Street in 1909, an American retail<br />

tycoon arrived to jettison fusty British tradition<br />

and open the biggest and finest<br />

department store the world has ever seen:<br />

Selfridges. Three-time Emmy® winner<br />

Jeremy Piven stars as Harry Gordon<br />

Selfridge, the flamboyant entrepreneur and<br />

showman seeking to provide London’s<br />

shoppers with the ultimate merchandise<br />

and the ultimate thrill.<br />

“Mr. Selfridge” begins the story <strong>of</strong><br />

Mile-A-Minute Harry as he embarks on<br />

his London enterprise.<br />

Emmy® Award-winning writer<br />

Andrew Davies (Pride and Prejudice,<br />

Bleak House) conjures the opulence and<br />

excitement <strong>of</strong> Selfridges and the story <strong>of</strong><br />

its founder, a man <strong>of</strong> exuberant, outsized,<br />

and potentially dangerous, appetite.<br />

Behind Selfridges’ lavish shop windows,<br />

gleaming counters, and majestic doors,<br />

appetite intersects with ambition and<br />

desire not just for Harry, but for his staff,<br />

his family, and the various women drawn<br />

to the store and the man. “Mr. Selfridge<br />

airs Sundays through May 19, at 8 p.m. on<br />

PBS’ MASTERPIECE Classic.<br />

ing room and a 40-by-60-foot “grand<br />

parlor.”<br />

Ceiling lights in the dining room<br />

were hidden from view in a “trough” to<br />

provide gentle, diffused light – perhaps<br />

the first example <strong>of</strong> an indirect lighting<br />

arrangement used in an American home.<br />

Atea arbor at the opposite end <strong>of</strong> the<br />

house was wire-screened and connected<br />

to the butler’s pantry for outdoor meal<br />

service.<br />

The second floor contained nine<br />

“master’s rooms,” four servant’s rooms<br />

and four bathrooms. All <strong>of</strong> the master’s<br />

rooms were finished in mahogany, oak<br />

and birch. The third floor contained a<br />

vaulted 60-by-35-foot ballroom, which<br />

was sometimes used as a makeshift dormitory<br />

to accommodate the overflow <strong>of</strong><br />

guests. There was also a complete photographic<br />

studio, perhaps used to record<br />

portraits <strong>of</strong> visitors.<br />

Not long after Harrose Hall was finished,<br />

Selfridge invited Field employees,<br />

including stock boys, errand girls,<br />

clerks and executives, to his <strong>Lake</strong><br />

<strong>Geneva</strong> estate for a gala picnic and<br />

reception.<br />

In June 1901, Selfridge had a large<br />

greenhouse erected on the property. In<br />

August, Rosalie gave birth to a daughter.<br />

In 1903 Selfridge enlarged his greenhouse<br />

to accommodate what a reporter<br />

called “one <strong>of</strong> the world’s largest and<br />

finest collections <strong>of</strong> orchids and roses.”<br />

Famous window displays<br />

Back in Chicago, Selfridge reinstated<br />

a merchandising strategy used by the<br />

store’s founder, Potter Palmer, but neglected<br />

by Field and Leiter after they<br />

bought him out. Selfridge realized the<br />

value <strong>of</strong> the store’s many display windows<br />

and turned them into the merchandising<br />

and publicity attributes they<br />

remain to this day.<br />

In 1900, Selfridge began supervising<br />

a major expansion <strong>of</strong> what was already<br />

one <strong>of</strong> the world’s premiere shopping<br />

destinations. Field acquired the entire<br />

block on which the store was built. A 12story<br />

building to the north <strong>of</strong> the store<br />

and covering the entire block to<br />

Randolph Street was completed by<br />

September, 1902.<br />

The store was astounding. It seemed<br />

Field and Selfridge had thought <strong>of</strong><br />

everything, not only for customers, but<br />

employees, who enjoyed their own<br />

restaurant, recreation rooms, gymnasium,<br />

locker rooms with separate showers<br />

and a library. All new employees went<br />

through an extensive three-day training<br />

course.<br />

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Ceylon Court was built <strong>of</strong> teakwood on the island <strong>of</strong> the same name as an<br />

exhibit for the 1893 Columbian Exposition in Chicago. Selfridge’s brother-in-law, Frank<br />

Chandler, bought it and had it disassembled, moved by rail to <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong> and<br />

reassembled on the south shore. Selfridge later built his summer home, Harrose Hall,<br />

next door. (Postcard image)<br />

The result was terrific. “In 1901,<br />

before the addition was built,” wrote<br />

Kogan and Wendt in their book, “Give<br />

The Lady What She Wants,” the retail<br />

gross had been $14 million and the net<br />

pr<strong>of</strong>it $989,000. By 1903, retail sales<br />

were $17 million and net pr<strong>of</strong>its $1.4<br />

million.<br />

Despite Selfridge’s accomplishments,<br />

Field seemed to pay more<br />

attention to other executives, notably<br />

John Shedd, who eventually assumed<br />

responsibility for the company after<br />

Field’s death. Mile-a-minute Harry<br />

became increasingly dissatisfied. In<br />

May 1904, he told Field he planned to<br />

buy Schlesinger & Mayer Department<br />

Store, but would stay until the end <strong>of</strong><br />

the year if he so wished. Field told<br />

him he could leave the next day if it<br />

suited him.<br />

Selfridge sold his interest in<br />

Marshall Field for $1 million, borrowed<br />

$4 million from friends and relatives,<br />

and paid $5 million for his new enterprise,<br />

which he named Selfridge &<br />

Company.<br />

Unfortunately, he found the experience<br />

unsatisfying. He missed Marshall<br />

Field and its grandeur, but more than<br />

that he missed his co-workers and the<br />

enthusiasm, pride and skill lacking in his<br />

new employees. He was uncomfortable<br />

fighting with Field’s for customers. “I<br />

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feel I’m competing with my own people,”<br />

he said. Within 90 days, Selfridge<br />

had sold his store to Carson and Pirie<br />

(Scott would come later).<br />

At age 46, Harry Gordon Selfridge<br />

retired. He spent much <strong>of</strong> his summers<br />

growing orchids, playing golf and enjoying<br />

his neighbors at <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong>. He<br />

embarked on travels through Europe.<br />

Mile-a-Minute Harry was trying to slow<br />

down.<br />

Of course it didn’t work. It wasn’t<br />

long before he found a new challenge.<br />

After an extended trip to Europe in<br />

1905, Selfridge explained to a reporter<br />

from the <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong> News that the<br />

strongest impression he had gained<br />

from months <strong>of</strong> contact with<br />

Europeans was “the uniform courtesy<br />

out <strong>of</strong> which seems to grow the factor<br />

<strong>of</strong> honesty in administration. Honesty<br />

is just as much a factor in the life <strong>of</strong><br />

these people as the daily appearance at<br />

their desks,” he said. “They do not<br />

seem to realize that such a thing as<br />

‘graft’ or ‘pull’ is a permissible proposition.<br />

they are not, perhaps, naturally<br />

quick, but they are honest.<br />

It may have been these attributes,<br />

along with his natural restlessness, that<br />

led him to take his merchandising talents<br />

across the ocean to start, at age 50, a<br />

remarkable new career, which we will<br />

explore in the next issue.<br />

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The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013 — 3<br />

Once again it’s time for miscellaneous<br />

items from the notebook, the desk drawer<br />

and what’s left <strong>of</strong> my mind.<br />

I’ve mentioned that, though<br />

Volkswagen makes great cars, someone in<br />

Wolfsburg is a few tappets short <strong>of</strong> an<br />

engine when it comes to naming them. I<br />

didn’t know how they arrived at their<br />

model names, but now that I do I haven’t<br />

changed my opinion.<br />

It turns out that many <strong>of</strong> them are<br />

named for winds. Yup, winds. The Golf<br />

sounds as though it is named for the<br />

“sport,” but it’s based on the German word<br />

for the Gulf Stream and the winds associated<br />

with it. There has also been the<br />

Scirocco (Mediterranean winds from the<br />

Sahara desert), Passat (German for trade<br />

wind), and Jetta (for “Jet Stream”). The<br />

Polo, which hasn’t made it to our shores<br />

yet, is named for the Marco Polo ocean<br />

current and the wind it generates.<br />

The Touareg SUV is named for the<br />

Tuareg (alternative spelling), who are<br />

Berbers, a tribal people who have lived in<br />

North Africa since prehistoric times. They<br />

are <strong>of</strong>ten called “the blue men” because <strong>of</strong><br />

the color <strong>of</strong> their clothes and because the<br />

indigo dye they use ends up getting rubbed<br />

<strong>of</strong>f on their skin.<br />

Does anyone remember a car based on<br />

the German version <strong>of</strong> a Jeep, which was<br />

called the Kubelwagen in Germany? When<br />

they imported it to the U.S., they called it<br />

“The Thing,” which is about as bad as you<br />

can get. I think they should have called it<br />

the Rommel, or Rommelwagen, after Field<br />

Marshal Irwin Rommel, also known as the<br />

Desert Fox, who was in charge <strong>of</strong><br />

Germany’s Afrika Korps during World<br />

War II. Rommel, who was not a Nazi, was<br />

respected by allied commanders as an oldfashioned<br />

military general. He was given<br />

the choice <strong>of</strong> execution or committing suicide<br />

after his part in the 1944 plot to assassinate<br />

Adolph Hitler.<br />

But I digress.<br />

Speaking <strong>of</strong> names, AT&T Business<br />

Solutions has changed its name to YP,<br />

which stands for Yellow Pages. It doesn’t<br />

sound like it. My initial reaction, upon seeing<br />

it, was “Why not?”<br />

• • • •<br />

While reading the book, “The Man<br />

Who Loved China,” by name Simon<br />

Winchester, I began to wonder why the<br />

Chinese, Japanese Koreans and<br />

Vietnamese use chopsticks instead <strong>of</strong><br />

western-style eating utensils.<br />

Surprise! The Chinese used forks long<br />

before they used chopsticks.<br />

Forks made <strong>of</strong> bone have been found<br />

in a burial site <strong>of</strong> the Bronze Age Qijia culture<br />

(2400-1900 BC) as well as later<br />

Chinese dynasty tombs.<br />

Chopsticks originated in ancient China<br />

as early as the Shang Dynasty (1166-1122<br />

BC), replacing the fork.<br />

The first chopsticks were probably<br />

used for cooking, stirring the fire, serving<br />

or seizing bits <strong>of</strong> food, and not as eating<br />

utensils. That use began during the Han<br />

Dynasty (206 BC-220 AD) because they<br />

were considered to be safer to use with<br />

delicate lacquerware than other sharp eating<br />

utensils.<br />

China, Japan, Korea and Vietnam have<br />

had chopsticks as part <strong>of</strong> their traditional<br />

eating utensils for thousands <strong>of</strong> years, but<br />

it wasn’t until the Ming Dynasty (1368-<br />

1644) that they came into normal use for<br />

both serving and eating. Anything too difficult<br />

to eat with chopsticks – such as soup<br />

– is traditionally eaten with a spoon.<br />

An article in The Daily Mail says<br />

“More than 60 billion sets <strong>of</strong> chopsticks<br />

• Hot Dogs<br />

• Polish Sausage<br />

• Potato Sausage<br />

• Andoulle • Kielbasa<br />

• Ring Bologna<br />

• Brats<br />

• Brat Patties<br />

• Ground Beef<br />

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are produced every year in China, so you’d<br />

have thought they would be making<br />

enough. But a chopstick shortage is growing<br />

in the Far East.<br />

Chinese people are being urged to stop<br />

using so many chopsticks due to the burden<br />

they are placing on the world’s forests.<br />

Residents <strong>of</strong> the largest country on the<br />

planet are believed to use an astonishing<br />

80 billion pairs <strong>of</strong> disposable wooden<br />

chopsticks every year.<br />

Bo Guangxin, chair <strong>of</strong> a state-owned<br />

timber company, told the annual parliament<br />

that it was time for China to turn<br />

away from wooden chopsticks and begin<br />

using metal or plastic knives and forks.<br />

He pointed out that since a mature tree<br />

yields around 4,000 pairs <strong>of</strong> chopsticks,<br />

the nation used up the equivalent <strong>of</strong> 20<br />

million trees in the past year.<br />

Now a leading <strong>of</strong>ficial has called for<br />

diners to start reusing their cutlery - and<br />

has even suggested that the Chinese should<br />

turn to knives and forks instead <strong>of</strong> chopsticks.<br />

The chopstick shortage in the Far East<br />

is prompting a U.S. company in Georgia to<br />

start exporting millions to China. Georgia<br />

Chopsticks is producing an incredible two<br />

million sets <strong>of</strong> the utensils every day,<br />

according to a report in the Daily<br />

Telegraph.<br />

The problem exists in part because <strong>of</strong> a<br />

shortage <strong>of</strong> wood in China - and poplar<br />

and sweet gum trees in Georgia are ideal<br />

for chopsticks.<br />

The chopsticks manufactured by<br />

Georgia Chopsticks can be made at<br />

extremely low cost from poplar and sweet<br />

gum trees, which are ideal for chopsticks.<br />

The U.S.-made chopsticks are already on<br />

sale in Chinese supermarkets. The firm is<br />

operating 24/7 to keep up with huge<br />

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demand and wants to export 10 million<br />

pairs a day by the end <strong>of</strong> the year.<br />

But unlike the majority <strong>of</strong> chopsticks<br />

you might see at Chinese restaurants, these<br />

will be marked: “Made in USA.”<br />

• • • •<br />

The average cost <strong>of</strong> wedding in the<br />

United States is now $28,400, except in<br />

Alaska, where it is “only” $15,000. It is<br />

my humble opinion that this is further<br />

pro<strong>of</strong>, if it is needed, that modern culture is<br />

not more advanced than our ancestors’ and<br />

that radio waves are rotting our brains.<br />

• • • •<br />

I am a fan <strong>of</strong> the London Daily Mail,<br />

which now has an excellent Androidfriendly<br />

application, or can be read online<br />

at www.dailymail.co.uk/ While reading an<br />

article the other day, I ran into the following<br />

sentence: “He suffered severe facial<br />

injuries which required stitches and a broken<br />

arm.” It should, <strong>of</strong> course, have been<br />

written, “He suffered a broken arm and<br />

severe facial injuries, which required<br />

stitches.” It goes to prove that it’s not just<br />

us little guys and that even “big city”<br />

newspapers make mistakes.<br />

• • • •<br />

The dome <strong>of</strong> St. Peter’s Basilica in the<br />

Vatican was struck by lightning twice in<br />

the hours following Pope Benedict XVI’s<br />

resignation announcement.<br />

• • • •<br />

AChristian mothers’group has complained<br />

that Geico, the car insurance firm,<br />

is promoting bestiality. Geico’s latest ad<br />

features “Maxwell,” a talking pig, ignoring<br />

the flirtatious advances <strong>of</strong> a young<br />

woman as they sit in a parked car. The<br />

group, One Million Moms, said it is “disgusting<br />

to see how the company takes<br />

lightly the idea <strong>of</strong> bestiality.” Don’t these<br />

(Continued on page 23)<br />

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4 — The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013<br />

From New World pope, a mix<br />

<strong>of</strong> old teaching and new spirit<br />

By David Horsey<br />

For the first time in history, the Roman<br />

Catholic Church has a pope from the New<br />

World, but liberal American Catholics<br />

should not expect Pope Francis to stray far<br />

from the old theology. Some things are<br />

excitingly different about this new pontiff.<br />

On matters <strong>of</strong> birth control, abortion,<br />

homosexuality, celibate priests and the<br />

role <strong>of</strong> women in the church, however, he<br />

is no revolutionary.<br />

When Argentina’s Cardinal Jorge<br />

Mario Bergoglio stepped out on the<br />

Vatican balcony as the new pope on<br />

Wednesday evening, all he was required to<br />

do was wave and give a blessing. Instead,<br />

he began with a witty reference to the fact<br />

his fellow cardinals had picked someone<br />

from the far side <strong>of</strong> the planet to become<br />

bishop <strong>of</strong> Rome. Then, before giving his<br />

own blessing to the city and the world —<br />

“urbi et orbi” — he asked the multitude in<br />

St. Peter’s Square to bless him. His humor,<br />

humility and kindly smile immediately<br />

endeared him to the faithful and marked a<br />

contrast will his chillier German predecessor,<br />

Benedict XVI.<br />

In Latin America, the conclave’s<br />

choice was met with wild enthusiasm<br />

because he is one <strong>of</strong> their own. Picking the<br />

first non-European pope in more than<br />

1,200 years was a timely decision given<br />

that the majority <strong>of</strong> Catholics are no longer<br />

European. Almost half live in Latin<br />

America, and Africa is where the church is<br />

experiencing dramatic growth.<br />

There is great hope among those who<br />

admire the social teachings <strong>of</strong> the church<br />

that Pope Francis will put the struggles and<br />

needs <strong>of</strong> the poor in the developing world<br />

at the top <strong>of</strong> his public agenda. In<br />

Argentina, he is known as a man <strong>of</strong> the<br />

people who shunned the limousines and<br />

palaces enjoyed by past cardinals and<br />

instead rode public transit and lived in a<br />

The<br />

Circulation<br />

Ed Breitenfield<br />

Karen Breitenfield<br />

George Paulsen<br />

Beacon<br />

WEST PUBLISHING & ADVERTISING INC.<br />

P.O. Box 69 • Williams Bay, WI 53191-0069<br />

(262) 245-1877 • Fax 245-1855<br />

e-mail: beaconnews@charter.net<br />

Web Site: www.readthebeacon.com<br />

Dennis West Editor and Publisher<br />

Kathi West V.P. and Treasurer<br />

Advertising Manager<br />

Mark West<br />

Composition Manager<br />

Wendy Shafer<br />

Perspective<br />

modest apartment where he cooked his<br />

own meals. He has been a critic <strong>of</strong> the corrupt<br />

politics and greedy economic policies<br />

<strong>of</strong> the powerful and rich. If he puts the<br />

authority <strong>of</strong> the Roman Catholic Church<br />

on the side <strong>of</strong> exploited workers and the<br />

destitute in the barrios, Francis could have<br />

a significant humanizing influence on the<br />

world economic order.<br />

Much has already been made <strong>of</strong> the fact<br />

he chose Francis as his pontifical name,<br />

another first in the long line <strong>of</strong> popes. The<br />

assumption is he wanted to take on the<br />

name <strong>of</strong> St. Francis <strong>of</strong> Assisi, the favorite<br />

saint <strong>of</strong> the poor and marginalized. This,<br />

too, would be a good sign, a very clear<br />

assertion <strong>of</strong> where his priorities will lie.<br />

It is entirely possible that, as the first<br />

Jesuit to be elected pope, he also had in<br />

mind another Francis — St. Francis<br />

Xavier, who, with St. Ignatius Loyola,<br />

founded the Jesuit order in the 16th century.<br />

Xavier began the bold missionary tradition<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Jesuits, traveling to India,<br />

Southeast Asia and Japan, before he died<br />

at the age <strong>of</strong> 46 while waiting for permission<br />

to enter China.<br />

The evangelizing work <strong>of</strong> Xavier<br />

could be a model for Pope Francis. During<br />

Benedict’s years as pope, selling the message<br />

<strong>of</strong> the church became a priority to<br />

counteract the rise <strong>of</strong> secularism in the<br />

West and the sharp drop in the number <strong>of</strong><br />

parishioners, priests and nuns in Europe<br />

and the United States. Francis will almost<br />

certainly carry on this work and, because<br />

<strong>of</strong> his humility and social concern, will<br />

probably be a better salesman than his<br />

predecessor.<br />

Still, Francis will not be selling a new<br />

product. On theological issues, the new<br />

pope’s pronouncements during his years<br />

leading the church in Buenos Aires were<br />

entirely traditional.<br />

(Continued on page 5)<br />

Correspondents<br />

Marjie Reed<br />

<strong>Geneva</strong> West<br />

Parker Cross<br />

By Lee H. Hamilton<br />

Over the past few weeks, as the<br />

deadline for the congressionally mandated<br />

budget cuts known as the “sequester”<br />

came and went, we got a taste <strong>of</strong> how<br />

difficult cutting<br />

federal spending<br />

actually<br />

turns out to be.<br />

The news is<br />

disconcerting:<br />

thousands<br />

fewer food<br />

safety inspections,<br />

some<br />

70,000 fewer<br />

kids in early<br />

education pro-<br />

grams, people<br />

with mental ill-<br />

ness losing access to treatment, civilian<br />

employees <strong>of</strong> the military furloughed,<br />

ships and aircraft going without maintenance...<br />

It’s a long and dispiriting list.<br />

Yet as painful as the sequester might<br />

be, most policy-makers know that it is<br />

not the main event when it comes to our<br />

fiscal challenges. Discretionary spending,<br />

the kind getting cut in the sequester,<br />

amounts to less than a third <strong>of</strong> federal<br />

spending.<br />

That’s not what many people<br />

believe, <strong>of</strong> course. Whenever I give talks<br />

about the federal budget I’m taken aback<br />

by where my listeners think most <strong>of</strong> our<br />

money gets spent. At two meetings<br />

recently, members <strong>of</strong> the audience stood<br />

up to complain that if we just cut what<br />

we give away to other countries in foreign<br />

aid, we could resolve our budget<br />

issues. This isn’t even close to the truth:<br />

altogether, we spend well less than 1<br />

percent <strong>of</strong> the federal budget on foreign<br />

aid.<br />

If you think <strong>of</strong> federal spending as a<br />

pie, by far the biggest slices go to Social<br />

Security and unemployment support,<br />

Medicare, Medicaid, and other health<br />

programs, which altogether make up<br />

well over half. Military spending<br />

accounts for about another quarter,<br />

while the next biggest slice, about 7 percent,<br />

is for interest on the federal debt –<br />

a figure that will explode in upcoming<br />

years. Everything else we think <strong>of</strong> as the<br />

federal government – spending on highways<br />

and the aviation system, money for<br />

student loans and other education programs,<br />

housing, food stamps, medical<br />

research and, yes, foreign aid – comes in<br />

at less than one-fifth <strong>of</strong> the total.<br />

The biggest driver <strong>of</strong> growth in federal<br />

spending, as Nate Silver <strong>of</strong> The New<br />

Where our money goes<br />

Lee Hamilton<br />

All telephone numbers<br />

published in The Beacon<br />

are in area code 262<br />

unless otherwise indicated.<br />

York Times pointed out in a thoughtful<br />

analysis in January, is entitlements:<br />

Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security and<br />

other social insurance programs. This is<br />

especially true <strong>of</strong> health-care, which<br />

accounted for about half <strong>of</strong> the increase<br />

in federal spending relative to the economy<br />

over the past 40 years. We cannot<br />

get control <strong>of</strong> federal spending without<br />

reining in health-care spending – and<br />

though its rate <strong>of</strong> increase has slackened<br />

over the past few years, no one knows<br />

whether it’s a permanent or temporary<br />

change.<br />

So if Congress and the White House<br />

are serious about tackling federal spending,<br />

then the piece they left out <strong>of</strong> the<br />

sequester – entitlement reform – must be<br />

on the table. But it’s been hard to tell<br />

from their actions that they’re really<br />

serious. Members <strong>of</strong> Congress have<br />

been taking to the airwaves for weeks to<br />

decry the sequester’s meat-cleaver<br />

approach to budget-cutting, yet most <strong>of</strong><br />

them voted for it. That’s because it’s<br />

simpler to impose across-the-board cuts<br />

than to make discriminating judgments<br />

about individual programs. Members<br />

find it easy to demand cuts in federal<br />

spending in the abstract, but painfully<br />

difficult to cut specific programs.<br />

Americans as a whole do, too: a<br />

recent Pew Center poll found they<br />

approve cutting government spending in<br />

general, but when asked about specific<br />

programs, they want to boost funding or<br />

keep it the same. Americans are<br />

demanding that government cut spending<br />

without cutting actual programs.<br />

This is why it takes extraordinary<br />

leadership to address our fiscal issues.<br />

Americans may bear some responsibility,<br />

but our leaders have not leveled with<br />

us about what it takes to get a sensible<br />

budget and put the economy on a path to<br />

recovery. I am hard-pressed to think <strong>of</strong><br />

an example <strong>of</strong> government failure to<br />

match our political leaders’ inability to<br />

lead us to a solution.<br />

Their prolonged fighting is causing<br />

businesses to hesitate, workers to remain<br />

in limbo, and an economy that needs a<br />

boost to continue to stutter. They are<br />

denying us the ability to invest in our<br />

future, promote economic growth, and<br />

deal with the many other challenges our<br />

nation faces. Let’s stop the blame game<br />

and get to work.<br />

Lee Hamilton is Director <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Center on Congress at Indiana<br />

University. He was a member <strong>of</strong> the U.S.<br />

House <strong>of</strong> Representatives for 34 years.


The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013 — 5<br />

By Dave Bretl<br />

It isn’t unusual for a visitor to a<br />

Walworth County Board meeting to<br />

remark that the meeting moved along more<br />

quickly than they expected. I always invite<br />

everyone who makes this observation to<br />

come back later and watch one <strong>of</strong> our committee<br />

meetings. Eleven standing committees,<br />

whose role it<br />

is to advise the<br />

county board,<br />

meet most<br />

months. Each <strong>of</strong><br />

their meetings<br />

usually lasts longer,<br />

sometimes<br />

hours longer, than<br />

our monthly<br />

board meeting.<br />

Virtually all <strong>of</strong> the<br />

items that end up<br />

on the board agenda<br />

have been<br />

The Outagamie County effect<br />

David Bretl<br />

discussed in detail at these committee<br />

meetings.<br />

An important reason why board meetings<br />

are relatively short is because a<br />

majority <strong>of</strong> the entire board can usually be<br />

found at any given committee meeting. In<br />

addition to attending meetings <strong>of</strong> the committees<br />

to which they are assigned, a number<br />

<strong>of</strong> supervisors sit in the audience at<br />

other committee meetings, as well. A few,<br />

including our board chair, attend nearly<br />

every committee meeting. The hours spent<br />

by these supervisors in the various committee<br />

meetings improve their understanding<br />

<strong>of</strong> the issues and provide them with the<br />

opportunity to modify proposals to their<br />

liking before the topic moves to the full<br />

board.<br />

Of all the county board’s standing<br />

committees, the executive committee can<br />

best be described as its “Jack <strong>of</strong> all trades.”<br />

Policy areas within the purview <strong>of</strong> this<br />

committee developed over time, <strong>of</strong>ten<br />

because a particular duty didn’t fall within<br />

the job description <strong>of</strong> another committee.<br />

As a result, topics before the executive<br />

committee range from public safety to economic<br />

development.<br />

One <strong>of</strong> the executive committee’s<br />

many jobs is to make recommendations to<br />

the full board as to whether the county<br />

should take a position on pending state<br />

legislation. Requests to take a stand on<br />

statewide issues are occasionally made by<br />

our own supervisors or staff. Many issues,<br />

however, are first brought to our attention<br />

by another county, in the form <strong>of</strong> a resolution<br />

forwarded to our clerk.<br />

Outagamie County, located a few<br />

hours to our north, is, by far, our most prolific<br />

correspondent. Their board cranks out<br />

so many advisory resolutions, complete<br />

with a computerized cover sheet detailing<br />

each roll call vote, that I feel I know their<br />

36 supervisors, personally. I’m not sure<br />

what their postage bill looks like at the end<br />

<strong>of</strong> the year, but each resolution indicates<br />

that it is to be sent to every Wisconsin legislator<br />

and county. Two Outagamie resolutions<br />

were up for discussion at our March<br />

executive committee meeting, and I<br />

noticed three more in the queue for April.<br />

Some issues identified by that board<br />

include the following:<br />

Concealed-carry loophole. When legislation<br />

was passed in 2011 that allowed<br />

citizens to carry concealed weapons, provided<br />

they had first obtained a license<br />

from the Department <strong>of</strong> Justice, an unintended<br />

consequence was created. Authors<br />

<strong>of</strong> the law wanted to be clear that license<br />

holders would not be able to take their<br />

guns into schools. Unfortunately, the prohibition<br />

was so broadly written that it<br />

applies to <strong>of</strong>f-duty police <strong>of</strong>ficers. A police<br />

liaison <strong>of</strong>ficer for example, who works<br />

armed in a high school all day, could technically<br />

face arrest if he picked up his children<br />

at an elementary school after his shift<br />

had ended. While I’m not sure any <strong>of</strong>ficer<br />

has been arrested under this law, it puts<br />

<strong>of</strong>ficers in a difficult position. The<br />

Outagamie Board is suggesting that the<br />

legislation be fixed. Our committee will<br />

take up the issue next month.<br />

Corrections alternatives. Pointing<br />

out the rapid growth in the cost <strong>of</strong> corrections,<br />

the Outagamie County Board urged<br />

other counties to join them in asking the<br />

Governor to re-examine policies that have<br />

led to historically high incarceration rates<br />

in Wisconsin. The state spent $1.3 billion<br />

in 2011 locking up prisoners. This represents<br />

more than a six-fold growth in<br />

spending since 1990. Not only does all <strong>of</strong><br />

this spending increase state taxes, but it<br />

has a trickle-down effect on county budgets,<br />

as well.<br />

Parole violators, as well as those<br />

defendants waiting for trials and sentencing,<br />

drive up local costs. The resolution,<br />

which passed our executive committee in<br />

March, urges State lawmakers to look at<br />

alternatives to incarceration for low-risk<br />

prisoners. Increased funding for treatment<br />

courts, for example, which have a proven<br />

track record in breaking the cycle <strong>of</strong><br />

recidivism, could actually improve public<br />

safety at a lower cost to taxpayers.<br />

Collecting from prisoners. Another<br />

way to save tax dollars is to collect the cost<br />

<strong>of</strong> incarceration from the prisoners themselves.<br />

Under current law, a county has<br />

one year to begin a civil action in circuit<br />

court to seek reimbursement <strong>of</strong> the costs it<br />

incurred in housing a prisoner. Outagamie<br />

County is seeking support for a change to<br />

the law that would extend the statute <strong>of</strong><br />

limitations for these collections to two<br />

years. Walworth County will take up the<br />

issue in April.<br />

While they have added more than a<br />

few hours to our meetings, I’m glad we’re<br />

on Outagamie County’s mailing list. It’s<br />

tempting to take a cynical view and conclude<br />

that no one in Madison cares about<br />

what Walworth County thinks. I don’t<br />

know what effect our advisory resolutions<br />

have on the legislative process, but one<br />

thing is true: our views won’t be known if<br />

we don’t at least try.<br />

The opinions expressed in these<br />

columns are those <strong>of</strong> the author and not<br />

necessarily those <strong>of</strong> the Walworth County<br />

Board <strong>of</strong> Supervisors.<br />

Retirement taxes should be retired<br />

By State Sen. Neal Kedzie<br />

For many, working decades towards<br />

a stress-free retirement is both a personal<br />

and financial goal. However, an<br />

uncertain economy coupled with the rising<br />

cost <strong>of</strong> living makes it difficult to<br />

save for retirement, and may require<br />

some to keep working beyond their<br />

planned retirement<br />

age.<br />

When retirement<br />

finally<br />

comes, many<br />

are dismayed<br />

to learn their<br />

retirement<br />

income is<br />

taxed. Retirees<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten have a<br />

very limited<br />

income as it is,<br />

thus watching<br />

more <strong>of</strong> those<br />

Neal Kedzie<br />

hard-earned dollars disappear is very<br />

frustrating.<br />

Many Wisconsin cities have been<br />

named best places to live but not best<br />

places to retire. An on-line MarketWatch<br />

Wall Street Journal report says<br />

Wisconsin’s low unemployment rate,<br />

top-notch university system, friendly<br />

communities, lower cost <strong>of</strong> living, and<br />

low home prices are positives as a place<br />

to retire. However, it also mentions the<br />

negatives, including inclement weather<br />

and high state and local taxes.<br />

Wisconsin has many favorable qualities,<br />

but it must re-establish its position<br />

as a place where more retirees can call<br />

home. Several years ago, Wisconsin<br />

took a good first step by ending the state<br />

taxation on Social Security benefits. I<br />

was proud to co-author the legislation to<br />

do so and finally see it enacted into law.<br />

But that effort was only one piece <strong>of</strong> the<br />

taxation puzzle, and it is my hope others<br />

will soon become a reality.<br />

For years, high taxes have been<br />

pushing many retirees out <strong>of</strong> Wisconsin,<br />

taking their resources with them.<br />

According to the national Tax<br />

Foundation, retirees who leave the state<br />

represent a net loss <strong>of</strong> more than $2 billion<br />

adjusted gross income between<br />

2000 and 2010. In addition, retirees<br />

heading for more tax-friendly states<br />

result in lost business for Wisconsin<br />

companies, less in-state capital for business<br />

investment and job creation, and a<br />

loss <strong>of</strong> taxpayers who had been supporting<br />

state and local governments. In<br />

order to address this problem, I have re-<br />

David Horsey<br />

Continued from page 4<br />

The fresh image he projected in his<br />

first moments on that Vatican balcony was<br />

appealing. Still as he raised his hand to the<br />

rain-soaked crowd, he was backed by a<br />

phalanx <strong>of</strong> old, conservative, white men in<br />

red cardinals’ robes. It should not be for-<br />

introduced two bills to keep retirees<br />

here.<br />

The first is Senate Bill 81, which<br />

increases the personal exemption older<br />

taxpayers may claim. Currently, a personal<br />

exemption <strong>of</strong> $250 may be<br />

claimed by taxpayers 65 and older.<br />

Under my bill, the current exemption<br />

remains, however for those between the<br />

age <strong>of</strong> 70 and 75, a $300 personal<br />

exemption could be claimed, while anyone<br />

75 and older could claim a $350 personal<br />

exemption. In short, as you get<br />

older, you get more relief from your<br />

taxes.<br />

The second bill, Senate Bill 82,<br />

expands and increases the tax exemption<br />

<strong>of</strong> income a person receives from a pension<br />

or retirement plan. Under current<br />

law, the first $5,000 <strong>of</strong> an individual’s<br />

retirement income is exempt from taxation,<br />

but only if the person is 65 years or<br />

older and their adjusted gross income is<br />

$15,000 or less, $30,000 or less, if married.<br />

Under my bill, the current exemption<br />

would remain in place through tax<br />

year 2014, however starting in tax year<br />

2015, the exemption would no longer<br />

discriminate based on age or household<br />

income.<br />

Furthermore, in tax year 2016, the<br />

exemption would increase from $5,000<br />

<strong>of</strong> retirement income to $10,000; in tax<br />

year 2017, the exemption amount would<br />

increase to $15,000, and when fully<br />

implemented in 2018, the first $20,000<br />

<strong>of</strong> an person's retirement income would<br />

be exempt from taxation. According to<br />

the Legislative Fiscal Bureau, the vast<br />

majority <strong>of</strong> individuals who derive<br />

income from a pension or retirement<br />

fund are around the $20,000 annual<br />

level. Thus, Senate Bill 82 would greatly<br />

benefit a much wider population than<br />

what the current exemption <strong>of</strong>fers.<br />

Since my first days in <strong>of</strong>fice, I have<br />

heard the concerns <strong>of</strong> older taxpayers<br />

who struggle to stay in their home, and<br />

in this state, due to ever-increasing<br />

taxes. By allowing them to keep more <strong>of</strong><br />

their money, we could ensure their day<br />

to day expenses can be met, reward a<br />

lifetime <strong>of</strong> hard work, and make<br />

Wisconsin the place they can truly call<br />

home.<br />

Sen Kedzie can be reached in<br />

Madison at P.O. Box 7882, Madison, WI<br />

53707-7882 or by calling toll free 1 800<br />

578-1457. He may be reached in the district<br />

at (262) 742-2025 or online at<br />

www.senatorkedzie.com.<br />

gotten that, only minutes before, Francis<br />

was one <strong>of</strong> them.<br />

Two-time Pulitzer Prize winner David<br />

Horsey is a political commentator for the<br />

Los Angeles Times. Go to latimes.<br />

com/news/politics/top<strong>of</strong>theticket/ to see<br />

more <strong>of</strong> his work.<br />

©2013, David Horsey<br />

Distributed by Tribune Media<br />

Services.


6 — The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013<br />

Business, Tax Tax<br />

& Investment<br />

Martin Group receives award<br />

Konica Minolta Business Solutions<br />

U.S.A., Inc. has announced that Martin<br />

Group <strong>of</strong> <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong> has been honored<br />

with a 2013 Pro-Tech Service<br />

Award, which recognizes those Konica<br />

Minolta dealerships that demonstrate the<br />

highest commitment to customer support<br />

and satisfaction.<br />

“Providing excellent service has<br />

become increasingly important in our<br />

industry, and we are committed to assuring<br />

the highest performance standards<br />

across our organization,” says James<br />

Ingrassia, Vice P<strong>resident</strong>, Solutions<br />

Support Division, Konica Minolta<br />

Business Solutions U.S.A. “The Pro-<br />

Tech Service Award represents Konica<br />

Minolta’s gold standard for service competence<br />

and pr<strong>of</strong>iciency. There is no<br />

higher honor for an authorized Konica<br />

Minolta dealer partner, and Martin<br />

Group should be very proud <strong>of</strong> its<br />

achievement.”<br />

An eight time Pro-Tech Service<br />

Award winner, Martin Group, headed by<br />

Investors still plowing into bonds<br />

despite exhilirating stock rally<br />

By Andrew Tangel<br />

Los Angeles Times<br />

NEW YORK – Even as stocks reach<br />

all-time highs, investors continue to<br />

pour into bonds.<br />

Some on Wall Street have speculated<br />

investors would embark upon a “great<br />

rotation,” pulling their money out <strong>of</strong><br />

bonds and putting them into stocks as<br />

interest rates rise and the economy<br />

improves.<br />

Rick Rieder, chief investment <strong>of</strong>ficer<br />

<strong>of</strong> fixed-income at investment giant<br />

BlackRock Inc., believes investors will<br />

instead draw from their “tremendous<br />

amount” <strong>of</strong> sidelined cash to invest in<br />

stocks.<br />

“It won’t come out <strong>of</strong> fixed-income,”<br />

Rieder said.<br />

Investors have been growing more<br />

optimistic as economy shows more stability<br />

and the threat <strong>of</strong> financial shock<br />

fades, Rieder said.<br />

“People feel more comfortable every<br />

day to take a bit <strong>of</strong> risk,” Rieder said.<br />

A stock-market rally this year<br />

pushed the Dow Jones industrial average<br />

to new record highs last week, with the<br />

broader Standard & Poor’s 500 index<br />

flirts with a new all-time high. Investors<br />

have been returning to stocks following<br />

five years <strong>of</strong> pulling out <strong>of</strong> the stock<br />

market.<br />

But they are also continuing to pour<br />

into bonds, according to data from the<br />

Investment Company Institute.<br />

Investors put $32.8 billion into bond<br />

mutual funds in January, compared to<br />

$37.9 billion into stock funds that<br />

month, ICI data show.<br />

In the week ending March 6,<br />

investors put $6.4 billion into bond<br />

funds, more than double the $2.9 billion<br />

they put into stock funds the same week,<br />

Taking License<br />

In Badgerland, we like to call a spade<br />

a spade, except when it’s a license plate.<br />

P<strong>resident</strong> John Stensland, is dedicated to<br />

delivering pr<strong>of</strong>essional, reliable service<br />

and maximum performance for Konica<br />

Minolta’s award-winning lines <strong>of</strong> digital<br />

imaging products.<br />

To attain the Pro-Tech standard, each<br />

element <strong>of</strong> Martin Group’s operation<br />

was evaluated and measured, including<br />

its management skills, inventory control<br />

systems, technical expertise, dispatch<br />

systems, and customer satisfaction ratings.<br />

“The Pro-Tech Service Award is a<br />

mark <strong>of</strong> distinction that we are proud to<br />

showcase, as it symbolizes our commitment<br />

to <strong>of</strong>fering the best business practices<br />

in our marketplace,” said Stensland.<br />

“This award certifies to our customer<br />

base that we have the skills, people,<br />

and systems to keep their Konica<br />

Minolta equipment operating at the<br />

highest level <strong>of</strong> productivity. Fewer than<br />

five percent <strong>of</strong> all Konica Minolta<br />

branches or direct operations earn this<br />

award.”<br />

ICI data show.<br />

Demand for fixed-income investments<br />

remains strong, and is only likely<br />

to grow in coming decades as the<br />

world’s population ages and the working-age<br />

population decreases, Rieder<br />

said. Much <strong>of</strong> the demand will come<br />

from insurance companies and pension<br />

funds, he noted.<br />

The problem, though, is that the<br />

Federal Reserve and other central banks<br />

around the world have pushed interest<br />

rates to historic lows in unprecedented<br />

attempts to prop up the global economy<br />

by flooding it with easy money.<br />

“We are in a historic time,” Rieder<br />

said in an interview. “Fixed-income used<br />

to be a stable, low-risk asset class.”<br />

Now, with bond prices rising and yields<br />

at historic lows, he said, “The risk has<br />

picked up significantly.”<br />

As interest rates drift higher,<br />

investors needing income from their<br />

portfolios will need search outside <strong>of</strong><br />

traditional fixed-income investments,<br />

such as Treasury bonds and top-notch<br />

corporate bonds, he said.<br />

Investors will have to seek out other<br />

types <strong>of</strong> fixed-income investments, such<br />

as bank loans, which are similar to highyield<br />

corporate bonds, and asset-backed<br />

securities, Rieder said.<br />

Continued demand for yield from<br />

fixed-income will give rise to bonds<br />

with floating interest rates, he said.<br />

Investors will have to diversify aggressively<br />

to mitigate the risk <strong>of</strong> rising interest<br />

rates.<br />

“In a traditional fixed-income<br />

space,” Rieder said, “there are not<br />

enough attractive investments to fund<br />

retirement.”<br />

©2013 Los Angeles Times<br />

Distributed by MCT Information<br />

Services.<br />

Beacon publisher Dennis West is jealous <strong>of</strong> this amazingly long hearse<br />

owned by Adams Family Memories. Margaret and James Adams specialize in photographs<br />

and videos in old-time costumes and settings. Located in historic downtown<br />

Delavan, they are open Saturdays from 12-7 p.m. or by appointment. Check their website<br />

at www.adamsfamilymemories.com. (Beacon photo)<br />

February housing market numbers<br />

impressive, Realtors report<br />

By Pary Murray<br />

The Wisconsin Realtors Association<br />

(WRA) is reporting strong home sales<br />

for February, during what is traditionally<br />

the slowest time <strong>of</strong> year for real estate<br />

transactions.<br />

The WRA’s latest monthly report<br />

says sales <strong>of</strong> existing homes in<br />

Wisconsin rose nearly 12 percent compared<br />

with last February.<br />

David Clark, a Marquette University<br />

economist and a consultant with the<br />

Realtors Association, says houses are<br />

Business briefs<br />

Shorewest, Realtors has named<br />

Oneida Wheeler <strong>of</strong> the Delavan <strong>of</strong>fice<br />

and Renne Koepselto in the Mukwonago<br />

<strong>of</strong>fice to the 2012 P<strong>resident</strong>’s Club. The<br />

award is presented to associates with at<br />

least $7,200,000 in closed volume or 47<br />

closed units. Associates who were<br />

1409 SOUTH SHORE DR.<br />

DELAVAN<br />

Spacious 4BR, 2BA lake home with 120 feet<br />

<strong>of</strong> panoramic lake frontage. 3 car detached<br />

garage and large waterfront deck.<br />

$ 799,000<br />

selling faster than they did during the<br />

height <strong>of</strong> the recession.<br />

“So those inventory numbers are<br />

coming down and the median prices<br />

have started moving up,” says Clark.<br />

“They are still quite low by historical<br />

standards, but they’re certainly starting<br />

to move up, and another bit <strong>of</strong> good<br />

news for buyers is that mortgage rates<br />

are at pretty low levels.”<br />

Clark says those low rates are<br />

reserved for well qualified or first time<br />

buyers. Wisconsin Public Radio News<br />

named to the 2012 Executive Club, for<br />

associates with at least $4,800,000 in<br />

closed volume or 37 closed units, were<br />

Dorothy Gerber, Kathy Baumbach,<br />

Diane Krause and Jane Dulisse in the<br />

<strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong> <strong>of</strong>fice and Margaret<br />

Nichols in the Mukwonago <strong>of</strong>fice.<br />

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The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22 2013 — 7<br />

Wisconsin’s checkbook is online<br />

By Mike Simonson<br />

In a step toward open government,<br />

Wisconsin has opened its checkbook to<br />

anyone who wants to look. It’s called<br />

“Open Book Wisconsin.”<br />

“Open Book” is two years in the making,<br />

promised by Governor Walker as a<br />

way to make state government transparent.<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Administration Secretary<br />

Mike Huebsch says there was a lot <strong>of</strong><br />

information from all state agencies to<br />

enter.<br />

“We’re basically putting the state’s<br />

checkbook on the Internet,” said Huebsch.<br />

“The power <strong>of</strong> this particular program will<br />

be to provide information to any taxpayer<br />

who wants to sit in front <strong>of</strong> his or her computer,<br />

unlike anything even a governor has<br />

had ever before.”<br />

“Open Book” gives Internet access to<br />

anything the state spends, although it will<br />

be a work in progress. Huebsch says<br />

they’ve been giving it a test run, just in<br />

case it comes back to bite them.<br />

“I'm not afraid,” he says. “I’m certain<br />

it will. There are items that appear, such as<br />

where we are spending money with Joe’s<br />

Liquor Store. What we didn’t know until<br />

we looked into it is that Joe’s Liquor Store<br />

is actually the local BP station and it’s<br />

doing business as Joe’s Liquor Store. So<br />

while we may be purchasing gas at the BP<br />

station, we’re actually writing the check to<br />

Joe's Liquor Store.”<br />

Huebsch says this will be a first-<strong>of</strong>-itskind<br />

website in the country. State employee<br />

salaries and fringe benefits will be<br />

added in the coming months. A few names<br />

will be kept <strong>of</strong>f to protect certain people,<br />

however, such as undercover law enforcement<br />

agents or victims <strong>of</strong> domestic abuse.<br />

Wisconsin Public Radio News<br />

CERTIFIED MUSIC TEACHER<br />

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Receiving awards at the Delavan Chamber <strong>of</strong> Commerce banquet on Jan. 31<br />

were (from left) Dawn Meinschock, CSI Media and Leslie Roanhouse, Willowfield<br />

Nursing & Rehabilitation for the Apprentice Program; Pete Krieger, Pete’s Porting<br />

Service, for Cars Time Forgot; and John Scherer, Alder Group, P<strong>resident</strong>’s Award.<br />

(Photo furnished)<br />

Mercy Health System named<br />

top Safe Sitter ® teaching site<br />

Wisconsin Mercy Health System<br />

was recently recognized a top teaching<br />

site in 2012 by Safe Sitter®, Inc. Mercy<br />

earns this recognition for its dedication<br />

to teaching adolescents the necessary<br />

responsibilities <strong>of</strong> nurturing and protecting<br />

children.<br />

Mercy Health System first implemented<br />

its Safe Sitter program in 1995.<br />

Last year alone, Mercy graduated 108<br />

area teenagers in its program.<br />

Furthermore, Mercy has taught 734<br />

since 2008. Mercy Health System’s Safe<br />

Sitter programs are taught in <strong>Lake</strong><br />

<strong>Geneva</strong>, Janesville and Clinton.<br />

“We are proud to call Mercy Health<br />

System a registered Safe Sitter teaching<br />

site,” said Safe Sitter executive director<br />

Sally Herrholz. “Their ranking as a top<br />

25 site means they have earned the distinction<br />

<strong>of</strong> training the most young<br />

teens, 11 and older, among our 850-plus<br />

teaching sites.”<br />

Safe Sitter is a medically accurate<br />

babysitting training program. It’s a twoday<br />

curriculum that teaches 11-13 year<br />

olds the responsibilities <strong>of</strong> caring for<br />

young children. Safety issues, child<br />

development, rescue breathing and first<br />

aid are discussed.<br />

To register for an upcoming Safe<br />

Sitter class, call (888) 39-MERCY toll<br />

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8 — The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013<br />

Friends and founders <strong>of</strong> the Good Earth Church <strong>of</strong> the Divine (standing, from<br />

left) Pastor Simone Nathan, Pastor Nansi Hawkins, Jeanne Phelan, Len Butkus, Terry<br />

Skiba (seated) Roger Nathan, Mary Bub, Julie Ryan, Betty Sanders and Janice<br />

Peterson admire the quilt Phelan created for the church. The church has found a permanent<br />

home in the barn at Michael Fields Agricultural Research Institute in East Troy.<br />

(Photo furnished)<br />

Good Earth Church will<br />

celebrate Easter in a barn<br />

A new faith community will host<br />

Easter Services at 10 a.m. on Sunday,<br />

March 31 – but not in a church. Michael<br />

Fields Agricultural Institute (MFAI) is<br />

now the home <strong>of</strong> the Good Earth Church<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Divine. The progressive Christian<br />

community will meet at W2493 County<br />

Road ES, in East Troy.<br />

“It might seem strange to hold Easter<br />

Services in a barn, “says Pastor Simone<br />

Nathan, “but this is a barn like no other.<br />

The mission <strong>of</strong> the Good Earth Church <strong>of</strong><br />

the Divine and the mission <strong>of</strong> Michael<br />

Fields Agricultural Institute are parallel.<br />

One body <strong>of</strong> work is from science and the<br />

other from theology. We are blessed to<br />

find ourselves in a nationally respected<br />

research center.”<br />

Friends and founders <strong>of</strong> the Good<br />

Earth Church now received a hand-quilted<br />

spring farm scene, created by Jeanne<br />

Taking License<br />

Restaurateurs have a message for<br />

cheeseheads. It could be wurst.<br />

Is this less classy, but just as potentially<br />

filling?<br />

We be talkin’ good Cajun cookin’ in<br />

the great state <strong>of</strong> Louisiana.<br />

Phelan, to be used in services. The creaturely<br />

world and the land itself are respected<br />

in the prayers and works <strong>of</strong> the church.<br />

Humanity has inherited a good creation,<br />

and part <strong>of</strong> its spiritual task is to repair<br />

environmental damage and work for the<br />

thriving <strong>of</strong> all life.<br />

“The Main Barn at Michael Fields<br />

<strong>of</strong>fers warm, graceful space that is beautiful<br />

and uplifting,” said Nathan. “There<br />

is plenty <strong>of</strong> parking, a ramp, an elevator,<br />

kitchen and bathrooms. The church is the<br />

only open and affirming, barrier-free and<br />

Just Peace community <strong>of</strong> the UCC in<br />

Walworth County, with our special mission<br />

<strong>of</strong> environmental compassion.”<br />

More information may be obtained by<br />

calling (262) 348-0764 or visiting the<br />

church website at www.goodearth church<strong>of</strong>thedivine.org.<br />

Retirement ‘tweeners’ may<br />

be down, but not out<br />

By Jill Schlesinger<br />

The Great Recession wreaked havoc on<br />

financial lives across the country, but some<br />

age groups suffered especially deep losses.<br />

For many who were over 65 when the bad<br />

times began, portfolios were already positioned<br />

defensively in cash and bonds, which<br />

helped shield them from steep losses. Those<br />

under 40 may have seen retirement accounts<br />

erode, but at least they could count time as a<br />

friend in recovering lost ground.<br />

But it’s those people in between – currently<br />

aged 45 to 60 years old – who really<br />

took a shellacking and, as a result, have been<br />

forced to make big changes to their retirement<br />

plans. I like to think <strong>of</strong> this group as the<br />

“retirement tweeners,” who, like their much<br />

younger counterparts, are trying to navigate<br />

an awkward, <strong>of</strong>ten precarious phase <strong>of</strong> their<br />

lives.<br />

Retirement tweeners were the focus <strong>of</strong> a<br />

recent Conference Board report, “Trapped on<br />

the Worker Treadmill?” which found that 62<br />

percent <strong>of</strong> those surveyed are planning to<br />

work longer. That’s a significant increase<br />

from just two years earlier, when the group<br />

found that 42 percent <strong>of</strong> respondents expected<br />

to put <strong>of</strong>f retirement.<br />

The results surprised the report’s coauthor<br />

Gad Levanon, who had assumed that<br />

improving stock and housing markets would<br />

at least keep the numbers close to where they<br />

were in 2012. “It’s disconcerting that the two<br />

years in which the U.S. economy seemed to<br />

finally, if fitfully, turn the corner also left so<br />

many more workers compelled to change<br />

their retirement plans late in their careers.”<br />

The report found that a toxic mix <strong>of</strong> job<br />

loss or salary reduction, investment account<br />

declines and home equity erosion led to the<br />

increase. These factors have caused<br />

Americans <strong>of</strong> all age categories to rethink<br />

when they might retire. According to the<br />

Employee Benefit Research Institute,<br />

Americans’ confidence in their ability to<br />

retire comfortably remains at historically low<br />

levels.<br />

If everyone lost ground during the recession<br />

and has emerged from it wounded either<br />

financially or emotionally, why is this particular<br />

age group so affected? Looking at the<br />

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numbers, the unemployment rate for those<br />

aged 45-60 remains about two percentage<br />

points below the current national rate <strong>of</strong> 7.9<br />

percent, but if someone in this age group<br />

loses his or her job, the chances <strong>of</strong> securing<br />

another one within a year is much lower than<br />

younger job applicants.<br />

Meanwhile, as job searches linger on,<br />

many in the group have been forced to deplete<br />

savings and raid retirement accounts. As<br />

always, the timing on a fire-sale is rarely good,<br />

so many panic-stricken near-retirees simply<br />

sold out <strong>of</strong> their stock positions, regardless <strong>of</strong><br />

whether the market was high or low.<br />

Even if personal situations improved,<br />

many were reluctant to jump back in to the<br />

markets. As a result, 62 percent <strong>of</strong> 45- to 60year-olds<br />

reported at least a 20 percent decline<br />

in the value <strong>of</strong> their financial assets since the<br />

start <strong>of</strong> the crisis, despite the stock market rising<br />

120 percent from the March 2009 lows.<br />

“The cumulative effect <strong>of</strong> drawing down assets<br />

in hard times - including the loss <strong>of</strong> future<br />

gains during the recovery - helps explain the<br />

current plight <strong>of</strong> older workers,” said Ben<br />

Cheng, the other author <strong>of</strong> the Conference<br />

Board report. “Even as economic conditions<br />

improve, many are still relying on assets to get<br />

by. And even those who’ve made it through the<br />

worst find themselves needing to work past<br />

retirement age to rebuild savings.”<br />

Another factor in the trend toward delaying<br />

retirement was found in the expectations<br />

for savings and investments. The report notes<br />

that low interest rates on savings accounts,<br />

certificates <strong>of</strong> deposit and government bonds<br />

has forced many pre-retirees to recalculate<br />

their future potential retirement income<br />

stream. Where many once thought 5 percent<br />

interest was “safe,” the current interest rate<br />

environment has pushed that number down<br />

to 2 percent. Instead <strong>of</strong> assuming more risk<br />

with higher yielding bonds, stocks or alternative<br />

investments, many would much prefer to<br />

work longer.<br />

And while their path back to secure<br />

retirement is a long and winding one, retirement<br />

tweeners can still reach their goals<br />

through research, careful planning and, most<br />

importantly, patience.<br />

©2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.<br />

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Burlington<br />

(262) 763-7665<br />

Waterford<br />

(262) 534-2200<br />

Union Grove<br />

(262) 878-1441<br />

Elkhorn<br />

(262) 723-3259<br />

Salem<br />

(262) 843-3557<br />

Twin <strong>Lake</strong>s<br />

(262) 877-2505<br />

Genoa City<br />

(262) 279-0509<br />

Delavan<br />

(262) 740-2545<br />

<strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong><br />

(262) 248-8778


The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com<br />

Health & Fitness<br />

March 22 2013 — 9<br />

The Walworth County Literacy Council’s fourth annual Adult Spelling Bee was<br />

held March 7 at the Monte Carlo Room. Pictured above is the winning team <strong>of</strong> Dustin<br />

Busson-Sokolik and Lisa Karner, sponsored by Grand <strong>Geneva</strong>. (Photo furnished)<br />

Health & Fitness<br />

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LG police to host blood drive<br />

There are many reasons to give<br />

blood. Blood donations save and<br />

improve lives <strong>of</strong> patients in need.<br />

Volunteering to give blood also provides<br />

an opportunity to participate in a<br />

rewarding personal experience.<br />

The City <strong>of</strong> <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong> Police<br />

Department has joined forces with<br />

BloodCenter <strong>of</strong> Wisconsin to host a<br />

blood drive on Thursday, March 28 from<br />

2 to 7 p.m. at the <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong> City Hall,<br />

626 <strong>Geneva</strong> St., <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong>.<br />

Donors can schedule an appointment<br />

by visiting www.bcw.edu/LGPD, by calling<br />

1-877-232-4376 or (414) 937-6199.<br />

Appointments are preferred to ensure a<br />

quick and convenient donation, but<br />

walk-ins are also welcome.<br />

Last October teenagers Cassandra<br />

By Dr. Bernice Elliott<br />

Community Chiropractic Center<br />

How Does Spinal Decompression<br />

improve spinal disc injury?<br />

When there<br />

is damage or<br />

injury to a spinal<br />

disc many times<br />

there is loss <strong>of</strong><br />

“imbibition”. A<br />

simple explanation<br />

<strong>of</strong> imbibition<br />

is the<br />

process <strong>of</strong> how a<br />

disc receives<br />

nutrients. In a<br />

healthy spinal<br />

disc, imbibition<br />

occurs naturally with daily body motions<br />

and activity that cause a pumping action<br />

and allow the nutrients and fluid into the<br />

disc.<br />

When a disc has poor imbibition it will<br />

become nutrient deprived and dehydrated.<br />

This in turn can increase the chances <strong>of</strong><br />

injury.<br />

Contributing factors to loss <strong>of</strong> imbibition<br />

include subluxations in your spine,<br />

repetitive motions, core muscle imbalance<br />

or weakness and excessive stress or trauma<br />

to your spine.<br />

One <strong>of</strong> the benefits <strong>of</strong> spinal decom-<br />

www.genevacrossing.com<br />

201 Townline Road, <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong><br />

and Courtney were involved in a car<br />

accident that could have taken their<br />

lives. Courtney had compound fracture<br />

in her arm, while Cassandra suffered<br />

multiple injuries, requiring many surgeries<br />

and several units <strong>of</strong> blood.<br />

Thankfully, today she is back in high<br />

school, enjoying dances and football<br />

games. Donna is grateful for the blood<br />

her daughter received, and is now a<br />

donor herself.<br />

Anyone 17 or older who is in general<br />

good health and meets eligibility<br />

requirements is encouraged to donate<br />

blood. Parental consent is required for<br />

16-year-olds to donate. The entire<br />

process takes about an hour. Donors<br />

should bring a photo ID that includes<br />

birth date.<br />

Health Through Chiropractic<br />

Dr. Bernice Elliott<br />

WALWORTH<br />

262-275-6154<br />

Kenosha Street & Hwy. 67<br />

ELKHORN<br />

262-743-2223<br />

pression is to help restore imbibition. The<br />

computer controlled traction device is programmed<br />

to deliver a gentle stretching and<br />

relaxing <strong>of</strong> the spine, which restores the<br />

pumping action to the disc. This in turn resupplies<br />

the disc with nutrients and blood<br />

contact that can help the disc heal from the<br />

inside out.<br />

Other benefits <strong>of</strong> spinal decompression<br />

is the decrease <strong>of</strong> pressure in the disc,<br />

which can enhance the drawing in <strong>of</strong> a<br />

bulge and help take the pressure <strong>of</strong>f a<br />

”pinched” spinal nerve.<br />

Patients with chronic low back pain, sciatica,<br />

neck pain, arm pain, disc bulges and<br />

herniated disc have had great success with<br />

Decompression Therapy.<br />

The combination <strong>of</strong> decompression<br />

therapy, spinal correction, and rehabilitation<br />

<strong>of</strong> the muscle system can restore function<br />

and get you back to your active<br />

lifestyle.<br />

Call Dr. Bernice Elliott at Community<br />

Chiropractic Center for free consultation<br />

or demonstration.<br />

Dr. Elliott can be found at Community<br />

Chiropractic Center in Walworth. Call<br />

(262) 275-1700 today to make your<br />

appointment.<br />

This column is sponsored by<br />

Community Chiropractic Center.<br />

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10 — The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013<br />

Mercy Health Line<br />

April is Foot Health Awareness Month<br />

Most <strong>of</strong> us don’t give much<br />

thought to our feet, until they start giving<br />

us trouble. Almost 75 percent <strong>of</strong><br />

Americans will have foot problems in<br />

their lifetime. Unlike other parts <strong>of</strong> our<br />

bodies, feet really take a pounding, literally.<br />

They’re stuffed into ill-fitting<br />

footwear for hours on end, are <strong>subject</strong><br />

to viruses like warts and fungi like athlete’s<br />

foot, are easily injured when we<br />

walk barefoot, and <strong>of</strong>ten bear the first<br />

signs <strong>of</strong> more serious health problems<br />

like arthritis, diabetes, anemia, kidney<br />

problems, gout, and nerve and circulatory<br />

disorders.<br />

The average person walks several<br />

miles a day, adding up to almost<br />

115,000 miles or more over a lifetime.<br />

The pressure exerted by walking is<br />

more than a person’s body weight;<br />

running can triple or quadruple that<br />

pressure. As the miles add up, so does<br />

the wear and tear. That’s why many<br />

foot problems tend to occur as we age.<br />

Ill-fitting shoes are the major cause<br />

<strong>of</strong> foot problems. Many <strong>of</strong> us wear<br />

shoes that are too small, too narrow in<br />

the toe box, pointed, poorly-made,<br />

worn out or have an excessively high<br />

heel. Foot problems caused or aggravated<br />

by ill-fitting shoes include blisters,<br />

bunions, corns and calluses, hammertoes,<br />

ingrown nails, heel pain and<br />

neuromas.<br />

You don’t have to be an athlete to<br />

be concerned about finding and wearing<br />

comfortable and well-fitting<br />

footwear. Taking the time and investing<br />

the money to purchase quality<br />

shoes, boots and sandals is time and<br />

money well spent. Here are some tips<br />

on choosing proper footwear:<br />

•Determine your needs. Will you<br />

wear your shoes to run 20 miles a<br />

week,<br />

to the <strong>of</strong>fice or factory, to a formal<br />

event, to the beach, to play racquet<br />

sports? Of course you wouldn’t wear<br />

steel-toed work boots to the beach, but<br />

you may think that your walking shoes<br />

are good enough for running, your<br />

<strong>of</strong>fice shoes will work fine for a day at<br />

the shopping mall, or your cheap tennies<br />

will do for a full day <strong>of</strong> cycling,<br />

which is not always the case.<br />

•Where to shop. Reputable stores<br />

specializing in certain types <strong>of</strong><br />

footwear are the best places to purchase<br />

shoes that will best meet your<br />

needs. For example, uniform stores<br />

carry footwear for employees who are<br />

on their feet all day. Remember that<br />

“one style fits all” doesn’t apply to<br />

shoes. Knowledgeable employees can<br />

help you determine your foot type<br />

(flat, normal or high-arched) and then<br />

suggest the size, style and type <strong>of</strong> shoe<br />

you need.<br />

• When to shop. Shop for shoes late<br />

in the day when your feet are at their<br />

largest.<br />

• How to shop. Always take along<br />

the socks or hosiery you’ll be wearing<br />

with the shoes, and if you wear<br />

orthotics, take those as well. Most <strong>of</strong><br />

us have one foot bigger than the other<br />

so choose the size for the bigger foot.<br />

Try on both shoes and walk more than<br />

just once around the store. Wiggle<br />

your toes and make sure your big toe is<br />

one thumb width from the front <strong>of</strong> the<br />

shoe. Feel for areas that are being<br />

pinched or rubbed. If your feet feel<br />

cramped or the shoe feels tight, don’t<br />

count on them to stretch; well-fitted<br />

shoes don’t require a “breaking in”<br />

period. Avoid shoes with heels in<br />

excess <strong>of</strong> two inches.<br />

Feet flatten as we age so you may<br />

need to increase your shoe size as you<br />

get older. Weight gain and pregnancy<br />

change foot size too. Your athletic<br />

shoe size may differ from your dress<br />

shoe size. If you’re unsure about your<br />

size, ask a clerk to measure your feet<br />

while you stand.<br />

If, despite purchasing new shoes<br />

that fit well, you are still experiencing<br />

problems, see a board certified podiatrist;<br />

a physician who specializes in<br />

the treatment <strong>of</strong> foot and ankle problems.<br />

As mentioned earlier, your feet<br />

mirror your general health so you<br />

could have something more serious<br />

going on. Foot pain is NOT normal so<br />

don’t ignore it. Untreated foot problems<br />

can lead to larger complications,<br />

including a change in your gait, which<br />

can lead to knee, hip and spine problems.<br />

And if you’re the fix-it-yourself<br />

type, know that improper self treatment<br />

can turn a minor problem into a<br />

major one.<br />

People with diabetes have special<br />

concerns regarding their feet. About<br />

60 to 70 percent <strong>of</strong> people with diabetes<br />

have mild to severe forms <strong>of</strong> diabetic<br />

nerve damage that can impair<br />

feelings <strong>of</strong> pain in the foot. Foot disease<br />

is the most common complication<br />

<strong>of</strong> diabetes leading to hospitalization.<br />

If you have diabetes, it is extremely<br />

important that you work closely<br />

with your doctors and diabetes educators.<br />

Between appointments, examine<br />

your feet daily for signs <strong>of</strong> redness,<br />

warmth, blisters, ulcers, scratches,<br />

cuts and nail problems. Check<br />

between toes, the entire bottom <strong>of</strong> the<br />

foot and around the ankle. Call your<br />

doctor immediately if you experience<br />

any injury to your feet. Even minor<br />

injuries are an emergency for people<br />

with diabetes.<br />

Our feet are biological masterpieces<br />

that serve us well when we<br />

serve them well. They deserve to be<br />

pampered with regular exercise (walking<br />

is the best form <strong>of</strong> exercise for the<br />

feet), daily hygiene, properly fitted<br />

shoes and medical attention when<br />

needed.<br />

Mercy HealthLine is a paid column.<br />

For information on this or<br />

dozens <strong>of</strong> health-related questions,<br />

visit the Mercy Walworth Hospital and<br />

Medical Center at the intersection <strong>of</strong><br />

Highways 50 and 67, call (262) 245-<br />

0535 or visit us at www.Mercy-<br />

HealthSystem.org.<br />

Touring the Open Arms Free Clinic in Elkhorn are (from left): Destination<br />

Imagination team member Maddy Aradillas; Clinic Director Sara Nichols; DI team<br />

members Anegla Pieroni; Jimmy Lei; Kendra Pease; Hailey Dupee; and not shown,<br />

Destination Imagination Team coach Dawn Dupee. (Photo furnished)<br />

Destination Imagination students<br />

visit Open Arms Free Clinic, Inc.<br />

Students from Badger High School’s<br />

Destination Imagination, a team-based<br />

creative problem solving program, visited<br />

Open Arms Free Clinic, Inc. on March 4,<br />

to learn more about how the clinic serves<br />

the community. The students plan to make<br />

a video about the clinic for their upcoming<br />

Destination Imagination competition.<br />

Open Arms Free Clinic, Inc. is a<br />

501(c)(3) not-for-pr<strong>of</strong>it volunteer medical<br />

clinic located in Elkhorn across from the<br />

high school. The clinic <strong>of</strong>fers non-emer-<br />

Since Birth,<br />

I Have Been Happier Than<br />

My Best Friend, Joey.<br />

The Only Difference Is<br />

My Mom & Dad Take Me To<br />

FONTANA FAMILY<br />

CHIROPRACTIC!<br />

gent health care to people who live or<br />

work in Walworth County, are at or below<br />

200 percent <strong>of</strong> the federal poverty level,<br />

and have no health insurance.<br />

Eligibility Screening takes place on<br />

Wednesdays from 2-7 p.m. Clinic hours<br />

are Thursdays from 2-7 p.m.<br />

To learn more about OpenArmsFree<br />

Clinic, Inc., visit their website at www.openarmsfreeclinic.org<br />

or their Facebook<br />

page at https://www.facebook.com/Open<br />

ArmsFreeClinic.<br />

450 MILL STREET • SUITE 102 • FONTANA, WI 53125<br />

(262) 275-5005<br />

www.fontanafamilychiropractic.com


The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013 — 11<br />

New car is hypnotizing,<br />

and can sniff out donuts<br />

By Celia Rivenbark<br />

I bought a new car this week. My<br />

beloved convertible had developed an<br />

unfixable leak and I was sick <strong>of</strong> vacuuming<br />

out inches <strong>of</strong> water and waiting for carpet<br />

that smelled like basketball feet to dry<br />

out.<br />

I didn’t<br />

want to put an<br />

ad on Craig’s<br />

List only to<br />

have somebody<br />

buy it<br />

and come back<br />

to my house<br />

the next week<br />

wanting a full<br />

refund plus all<br />

the bacon in<br />

my refrigerator.<br />

Which<br />

would totally<br />

have been deserved,<br />

by the way.<br />

Celia Rivenbark<br />

So I decided that the only fair thing to<br />

do would be to trade it in to a dealer.<br />

Dealers are used to dealing with unhappy<br />

customers, the kind who would return a<br />

car like mine and whine about how the car<br />

needs “brakes that work,” “windows that<br />

go up and down” and “other mechanical<br />

necessities.”<br />

I didn’t need the hassle so I did the<br />

only honorable thing and traded the car in<br />

with full disclosure about its flaws (honestly).<br />

Duh Hubby <strong>of</strong>fered to go with me but<br />

I told him that wouldn’t be necessary. The<br />

days <strong>of</strong> a woman needing a man to go with<br />

her to the car dealership to make sure she<br />

didn’t get hoo-doo’ed were a thing <strong>of</strong> the<br />

past. Things are different now, I told Duh.<br />

For heaven’s sake, Danica Patrick’s on the<br />

pole at Daytona, I told him. No, not that<br />

pole, I added when he looked confused.<br />

Fast forward a few hours and I’m not<br />

sure what happened. I walked into the<br />

dealership a confident, educated consumer<br />

and came out skipping and giggly over the<br />

fact that the front seats in my new car are<br />

heated AND cooled. I went into the dealership<br />

armed with facts and bottom lines and<br />

no small amount <strong>of</strong> research and came out<br />

squealing, “You had me at cooler inside<br />

the glove compartment!”<br />

Who ever heard <strong>of</strong> such wonderfulness?<br />

I signed lots <strong>of</strong> pieces <strong>of</strong> paper (“sign<br />

here ... and here ... oh, and here ... and just<br />

one more ...”) and read none <strong>of</strong> them. It’s<br />

nothing short <strong>of</strong> a miracle that one <strong>of</strong> them<br />

wasn’t headlined “Agreement to Advertise<br />

New Car Sale by Standing Outside<br />

Dealership Wearing Nothing But Chaps<br />

and Coconut Bra.”<br />

The salesman could tell he was dealing<br />

with a literate, informed consumer so he<br />

showed me how you can download an app<br />

that will let the car know when the hot<br />

doughnut sign comes on at the nearest<br />

Krispy Kreme store.<br />

America, she’s a great country.<br />

I was a horrible negotiator and they<br />

could smell it on me. Or maybe that was<br />

just the basketball feet. Either way, I failed<br />

to get a good deal but I did get a great car.<br />

A car that can find hot doughnuts.<br />

Paperwork done, I drove <strong>of</strong>f the lot and<br />

cast a quick glance back at my nine-yearold<br />

convertible all alone under a sodium<br />

vapor light and looking like the world’s<br />

most depressing car ad. I’ll miss “Sally.”<br />

Until the next time it rains.<br />

Celia Rivenbark is the author <strong>of</strong> the<br />

New York Times best-seller, “You Don’t<br />

Sweat Much for a Fat Girl.”<br />

SATURDAY, APRIL 13 • GAINING AWARENESS<br />

SUNDAY, APRIL 14 • CREATING INTENT & FOCUSED ACTION<br />

8:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.<br />

Cost (lunch included): Saturday & Sunday $ 199<br />

(Early Registration before March 15, $ 175)<br />

Saturday or Sunday Only $ 125<br />

(Early Registration before March 15, $ 99)<br />

To register or get more information, go to:<br />

www.essential-yoga.net/about.html or call 262-949-YOGA (9642)<br />

Kym Moore, Branch Manger <strong>of</strong> Educators Credit Union in Elkhorn receives a<br />

plaque from Paul Yakowenko, Walworth County Firefighters Association P<strong>resident</strong> and<br />

firefighter with Bloomfield Fire and Rescue. (Photo furnished)<br />

Firefighters Association recognizes<br />

ECU for use <strong>of</strong> WCFA Smokehouse<br />

The Walworth County Firefighters<br />

Association recently recognized local<br />

businesses for their proactive approach to<br />

promoting fire and life safety through the<br />

use <strong>of</strong> the association’s Fire Safety<br />

Smokehouse and Sprinkler Demonstration<br />

Trailer. A certificate plaque was presented<br />

to Kym Moore for having the W.C.F.A.<br />

Smokehouse at each <strong>of</strong> the last six annual<br />

block parties sponsored by Educators<br />

Credit Union each year.<br />

“This shows that they care about the<br />

Fire Safety <strong>of</strong> children as well as adults in<br />

their community” says Paul Yakowenko<br />

P<strong>resident</strong> <strong>of</strong> the association for the past 18<br />

years. “They are doing their part to keep<br />

the community safe from the dangers <strong>of</strong><br />

smoke and fire by having us demonstrate<br />

what happens when fire strikes and what to<br />

do and not to do. We accomplish this<br />

through the use <strong>of</strong> our Smokehouse at<br />

events like theirs and it is a very value able<br />

tool. They are a very community orientated<br />

organization and we are grateful to<br />

them for that.”<br />

This year the Block Party is scheduled<br />

for May 18 from 12-3 p.m. at the Elkhorn<br />

Business Centre Parking Lot.<br />

Mercy Walworth Hospital to<br />

<strong>of</strong>fer Zumba and yoga classes<br />

Mercy Walworth Hospital and<br />

Medical Center now <strong>of</strong>fers Zumba and<br />

Yoga fitness classes in its community<br />

education rooms.<br />

Zumba classes will take place on<br />

Tuesdays from 6-7 p.m. Zumba incorporates<br />

the hottest Latin dances and<br />

rhythms from around the world. In this<br />

class, participants will rev up their cardiovascular<br />

fitness and let their hips fly,<br />

proving it’s possible to sweat and have<br />

fun at the same time.<br />

Hatha Yoga classes will take place<br />

on Thursdays from 6-7 p.m. Hatha<br />

Yoga emphasizes relaxation and<br />

stress reduction, while toning and<br />

creating a lasting mind and strong<br />

body connection. It uses traditional<br />

breathing patterns to quiet the mind<br />

and soothe the soul. Attendees should<br />

take a Yoga mat.<br />

The cost for 10 classes is $60, 5<br />

classes is $30 and 3 classes is $18.<br />

Registration and punch card purchase<br />

are required prior to beginning classes.<br />

Anyone who wants to register should<br />

call (608) 756-6100 or (888) 39-<br />

MERCY.<br />

Featuring Natural & Organic Products from<br />

• Earth Friendly • Seventh Generation<br />

• Nordic Naturals • Carlson • Enzymatic Therapy<br />

• New Chapter and much more!<br />

PLAZA PHARMACY<br />

603 E. <strong>Geneva</strong> Street, Elkhorn, WI<br />

(262) 723-8444 • Fax (262) 723-8760


12 — The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013<br />

“In my practice, I spend quality time with<br />

my patient, which allows us to form a solid<br />

bond and trusting relationship. I believe in fully<br />

educating each expectant mom during her<br />

prenatal care. This allows her to calmly enter<br />

her birthing experience with confidence in her<br />

body and trust in her care provider.”<br />

Jill Edwards, CNM, MS<br />

Certified nurse midwife<br />

Mercy Walworth Hospital and Medical<br />

Center welcomes certified nurse midwife,<br />

Jill Edwards, RN, to its obstetrics/<br />

gynecology staff. Jill joins Carol Gilles,<br />

MD, board certified obstetrics and<br />

gynecology. Jill is a member <strong>of</strong> the<br />

American College <strong>of</strong> Nurse Midwives.<br />

Her areas <strong>of</strong> special interest include:<br />

• General gynecological care<br />

and procedures<br />

• Holistic women’s health care<br />

• Family planning services<br />

• Education and preventive care<br />

• Patient advocacy<br />

• Childbirth<br />

• Postpartum care<br />

Jill welcomes new patients. For<br />

more information, or to make and<br />

appointment, call (262) 245-0535<br />

or toll-free (877) 893-5503.<br />

With all our heart. With all our mind.<br />

Mercy Walworth Hospital and Medical Center | Hwys. 50 and 67, <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong> MercyHealthSystem.org


The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22 2013 — 13<br />

Congratulating Inspiration Ministries <strong>resident</strong> Troy Gehrig (with certificate) on<br />

a presentation to the Walworth-Fontana Rotary Club are (from left) David Lindelow,<br />

Vice P<strong>resident</strong> <strong>of</strong> Walworth-Fontana Rotary; Bob Klockars, Past P<strong>resident</strong> <strong>of</strong><br />

Walworth-Fontana Rotary; Dr. Jeremy Bria, P<strong>resident</strong> <strong>of</strong> Walworth-Fontana Rotary;<br />

John Henderson, Past P<strong>resident</strong> <strong>of</strong> the Elkhorn Rotary Club; and Robin Knoll, Past<br />

P<strong>resident</strong> <strong>of</strong> the Walworth– Fontana Rotary Club. Gehrig and Knoll presented a program<br />

about Inspiration Ministries, which is located at the corner <strong>of</strong> Highway 67 and<br />

County Trunk F in the Town <strong>of</strong> Walworth. Inspiration Ministries is a Christian- based<br />

<strong>resident</strong>ial community that serves adults with physical and cognitive disabilities. IM<br />

seeks to enable people with disabilities to live independently while promoting interdependent<br />

relationships. Inspiration Ministries’ Resale Shop, special events and volunteer<br />

opportunities draw thousands <strong>of</strong> people to the Walworth campus each year.<br />

(Photo by Bob Rauland)<br />

Want to wish someone a happy anniversary, birthday, or<br />

other occasion? A private-party ad this size is just $15,<br />

including color artwork or photo.<br />

Call 245-1877 to place your ad and pay by credit card. We<br />

accept Visa, MasterCard, Discover and American Express.<br />

Facts about raspberry ketone<br />

By Barbara Quinn<br />

Wouldn’t it just be wonderful if a pill<br />

could instantly dissolve <strong>of</strong>f all our extra<br />

pounds? Some claim to have found it in a<br />

supplement called raspberry ketone.<br />

Others warn us to look at the facts.<br />

Here’s what we know about raspberry<br />

ketone, thanks to some smart investigation<br />

by dietitian intern Marian Crockett:<br />

Claim: “Raspberry ketone is the primary<br />

aroma compound <strong>of</strong> red raspberries.”<br />

Fact: True. Raspberry ketone (also<br />

referred to as RK) is a chemical compound<br />

that gives raspberries their fruity fragrance.<br />

Food and cosmetic manufacturers<br />

add it to their products for this purpose.<br />

Claim: “Research has shown that raspberry<br />

ketone can help with weight-loss<br />

efforts, especially when paired with regular<br />

exercise and a well-balanced diet <strong>of</strong><br />

healthy and whole foods.”<br />

Fact: Regular exercise and a well-balanced<br />

diet do indeed help with weight loss<br />

efforts. Raspberry ketone has not been scientifically<br />

studied in humans, so it’s anyone’s<br />

guess whether it aids weight loss.<br />

Claim: “Raspberry ketone causes the<br />

fat within your cells to get broken up more<br />

effectively, helping your body burn fat<br />

faster.”<br />

Fact: Perhaps if you are a rat. One<br />

study tested RK on six obese male rats and<br />

compared it to six other rats. The rats fed<br />

RK were more likely to lose weight.<br />

Another study exposed RK to fat cells in a<br />

test tube and found that RK stimulated the<br />

breakdown <strong>of</strong> these cells.<br />

Claim: “The recommended dose <strong>of</strong><br />

raspberry ketone for weight loss is 100<br />

milligrams per day.”<br />

Fact: Who knows? No human studies<br />

have yet been done. (I think I already said<br />

this.) And if we extrapolate the dosage<br />

given in the six-obese-male-rat study, it<br />

would translate to several thousand milligrams<br />

in humans.<br />

By Shamane Mills<br />

According to a new report, excessive<br />

drinking costs Wisconsin $6.8 billion<br />

every year.<br />

Mercy Healthy Image Weight Management Program<br />

Your resource for healthy weight management and weight-related health problems<br />

Program basics:<br />

• Nutrition assessment and follow-up<br />

visits with a registered dietitian<br />

certified in adult weight management<br />

• Lifestyle education: dining, cooking,<br />

holidays, travel<br />

• Exercise assessment and prescription,<br />

two follow-up assessments from an<br />

exercise physiologist and two free<br />

personal training sessions<br />

To learn more, register for an upcoming<br />

information meeting: (608) 741-3825.<br />

MercyHealthSystem.org<br />

ADDITIONS<br />

Contact<br />

CHUCK HUETTIG<br />

275-2200<br />

Chuck@HomeDesignMfg.com<br />

Free information meetings<br />

Mercy Walworth Hospital and Medical Center<br />

lower level conference room<br />

Second Thursday <strong>of</strong> each month<br />

4:30-5:30 pm<br />

Mercy Healthy Image is led by<br />

Jean A. Ibric, MD<br />

Claim: “Raspberry ketone product is<br />

made from ingredients that are 100 percent<br />

natural, ensuring that there are no negative<br />

side effects.”<br />

Fact: Rattlesnakes are 100 percent natural<br />

and can still bite you. Some concern<br />

has been expressed that RK is chemically<br />

similar to a stimulant called “synephrine”<br />

which can increase heart rate and blood<br />

pressure ... not a good idea for anyone with<br />

a heart condition.<br />

Claim: RK “slices up fat molecules so<br />

it burns easier ...”<br />

Fact: RK’s chemical structure is also<br />

similar to capsaicin _ the heat-generating<br />

substance in hot peppers. In a test tube, RK<br />

appears to stimulate a protein that breaks<br />

down fat.<br />

Claim: “Raspberry ketone is a miracle<br />

fat burner in a bottle.”<br />

Fact: Raspberry ketone is a “miracle<br />

money maker” in a bottle. Unless you are<br />

an obese male rat, it is way too early to<br />

draw any conclusions about the effectiveness<br />

or safety <strong>of</strong> RK as a weight loss aid.<br />

A recent review article in the<br />

International Journal <strong>of</strong> Sports Nutrition<br />

concluded: “There is no strong research<br />

evidence indicating that a specific supplement<br />

will produce significant weight loss,<br />

especially in the long term. Weight-loss<br />

supplements containing metabolic stimulants<br />

(such as caffeine, ephedra, or<br />

synephrine) are most likely to produce<br />

adverse side effects and should be avoided.”<br />

(Barbara Quinn is a registered dietitian<br />

and certified diabetes educator at the<br />

Community Hospital <strong>of</strong> the Monterey<br />

Peninsula. Email her at bquinn@chomp<br />

.org.)<br />

©2013 The Monterey County Herald<br />

Distributed by MCT Information<br />

Services<br />

Alcohol abuse costs state billions<br />

a board certified family medicine doctor who<br />

specializes in safe, medically supervised weight loss.<br />

The $6.8 billion figure takes into<br />

account lost productivity, health costs and<br />

crime. The report was prepared by the<br />

University <strong>of</strong> Wisconsin (UW) Population<br />

Health Institute.<br />

The release <strong>of</strong> the report took place in<br />

five Wisconsin cities at the same time. At<br />

each event were people attesting to the<br />

devastating effects <strong>of</strong> alcohol abuse —<br />

people like cops, judges, and emergency<br />

room physicians.<br />

Doctor Jeff Poth<strong>of</strong>, an assistant pr<strong>of</strong>essor<br />

<strong>of</strong> medicine at UW-Madison's School<br />

<strong>of</strong> Medicine and Public Health, says<br />

excessive drinking is not just a problem for<br />

alcoholics. He points out that most <strong>of</strong> UW<br />

Hospital's trauma patients with alcoholrelated<br />

accidents have never been ticketed<br />

for operating a vehicle while intoxicated.<br />

“They’re thinking, ‘This can’t happen<br />

to me. I’m not an alcoholic. This is a problem<br />

for the select few.’ And the truth is, is<br />

that’s just not true,” says Dr. Poth<strong>of</strong>.<br />

Agroup called Health First Wisconsin<br />

says alcohol consumption in Wisconsin is<br />

30 percent higher than the national average.<br />

Some communities, like Two Rivers,<br />

have made headway in lowering drinking<br />

rates. Health First Director Maureen<br />

Busalacchi, says they started by scrapping<br />

policies that encouraged drinking.<br />

“The Two Rivers City Council used to<br />

give barrels <strong>of</strong> beer to the graduating senior<br />

class,” said Busalacchi. “So change can happen,<br />

and now they have seen over time in<br />

Manitowoc County a decrease in youth consumption<br />

<strong>of</strong> alcohol.”<br />

To help reduce drinking in the general<br />

population, a state council on alcohol and<br />

drug abuse has a number <strong>of</strong> recommendations.<br />

They include raising the tax on beer<br />

and alcohol, setting up sobriety checkpoints,<br />

and limiting the number <strong>of</strong> local<br />

alcohol permits.<br />

Wisconsin Public Radio News


14 — The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013<br />

Walworth County agency works<br />

to reduce falls in older adults<br />

The Walworth County Aging &<br />

Disability Resource Center (ADRC) and<br />

partners are working to reduce the number<br />

<strong>of</strong> falls in Wisconsin. Falls are the<br />

leading cause <strong>of</strong> injury and death for<br />

older Americans. Falls threaten a<br />

senior’s safety and independence and<br />

generate enormous economic and personal<br />

costs.<br />

However, falling is not an inevitable<br />

result <strong>of</strong> aging. Through evidenced<br />

based interventions, practical lifestyle<br />

adjustments, and community partnerships,<br />

the number <strong>of</strong> falls among seniors<br />

can be substantially reduced.<br />

Stepping On is a workshop <strong>of</strong>fered<br />

by the ADRC <strong>of</strong> Walworth County. The<br />

workshop helps older adults prevent<br />

falls. The workshop is for two hours,<br />

once a week for seven weeks, April 10<br />

through May 22, from 9 to 11 a.m. at the<br />

<strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong> City Hall, 626 <strong>Geneva</strong> St,<br />

<strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong>.<br />

Stepping On will help participants<br />

identify why they fall and different ways<br />

to prevent falls, including strength and<br />

balance exercises, home safety check<br />

suggestions and a medication review.<br />

The workshop is for people who<br />

have fallen and for people who fear<br />

falling. Participants will leave with more<br />

strength, achieve better balance, and<br />

experience a feeling <strong>of</strong> confidence and<br />

independence as a result <strong>of</strong> performing<br />

various activities and sharing with the<br />

group, personal experiences about falls.<br />

The program was developed by Dr.<br />

Lindy Clemson <strong>of</strong> Sydney, Australia, to<br />

help older adults learn ways to prevent<br />

falls. It was brought to the United States<br />

by Dr. Jane Mahoney, Executive<br />

Director <strong>of</strong> the Wisconsin Institute for<br />

Healthy Aging, with funding from the<br />

Centers for Disease Control and other<br />

partners. The research has found that<br />

5K to run on 5/18<br />

The Walworth County Employee<br />

Wellness Council will sponsor a Get Fit<br />

5K run/walk on Saturday, May 18, at the<br />

Kettle Moraine Nordic Trail (white loop).<br />

This fun, family orientated 5K, is designed<br />

bo be a way to support the Wellness<br />

Council’s mission on improving employee<br />

wellness, and is open to the public. The<br />

event will take place rain or shine.<br />

Registration will begin at 8 a.m., with<br />

the race starting at 9. Kettle Moraine trails<br />

are located just <strong>of</strong>f <strong>of</strong> Hwy H in Lagrange<br />

Township. A Wisconsin State Park sticker<br />

will be required for each vehicle on race<br />

day. A daily pass can be purchased that day<br />

for $7.<br />

Entry fees will be $15 for walkers, $20<br />

for runners, and $5 for children ages 6-12,<br />

(prices will increase by $5 after May 8th).<br />

Everyone who pre-registers will receive a<br />

free tee shirt.<br />

Log on to www.co.walworth.wi.us for<br />

a registration form or call Dale Wilson at<br />

741-4949 for more information.<br />

LGSO to perform<br />

La Traviata 4/16<br />

Romance, drama, and tragedy take to the<br />

concert hall stage Saturday, April 6, when<br />

the <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong> Symphony Orchestra<br />

will perform La Traviata. The orchestra’s<br />

concert production <strong>of</strong> Giuseppe Verdi’s<br />

opera will feature soloists from the Lyric<br />

Opera <strong>of</strong> Chicago as the colorful characters<br />

Violetta, Alfredo, and Germont. The<br />

concert will begin at 7:30 p.m. at Calvary<br />

Community Church in Williams Bay.<br />

Adult tickets to La Traviata are $10;<br />

students through high school are free.<br />

Tickets may be purchased at www.<br />

<strong>Lake</strong><strong>Geneva</strong>Orchestra.org or by calling<br />

(262) 359-9072.<br />

people who complete the workshop have<br />

a 31 percent reduced rate <strong>of</strong> falls.<br />

Contact Kris Ruf, Prevention<br />

Specialist, at 741-3309 to register for the<br />

workshop. Pre-registration is required.<br />

S ER<br />

Army Pvt. James Laitila has graduated<br />

from Basic Combat Training at Fort<br />

Leonard Wood, Waynesville, Mo.<br />

During the nine weeks <strong>of</strong> training,<br />

Laitila received instruction in drill and<br />

ceremony, weapons, rifle marksmanship<br />

qualification, bayonet combat, chemical<br />

ERVICE VICE N EWS<br />

EWS <br />

warfare, field training and tactical exercises,<br />

marches, military courtesy, military<br />

justice, physical fitness, first aid, and<br />

Army history, traditions, and core values.<br />

A2012 graduate <strong>of</strong> Big Foot High<br />

School, Laitila is the son <strong>of</strong> Stacy and<br />

Alan Laitila <strong>of</strong> Walworth.


The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013 — 15<br />

Tankless water heater saves money<br />

By Angie Hicks<br />

For years, traditional gas-powered<br />

tank water heaters have been one <strong>of</strong> the<br />

biggest energy hogs in the home. With<br />

tank heaters, you have to pay to heat water<br />

you aren’t even using.<br />

Not so with a tankless water heater.<br />

“It’s truly an on-demand hot water<br />

heater,” said Kyle Whelpley, operations<br />

manager for J.F. Denney Plumbing and<br />

Heating Inc. in Leavenworth, Kan. “It<br />

does nothing until you turn on your hot<br />

water. So, when you’re at work, it simply<br />

hangs on the wall and doesn’t cost you one<br />

penny, compared to a 40- or 50-gallon tank<br />

you pay to heat while you’re away from<br />

the house. Here in the Midwest, a 50-gallon<br />

natural gas water heater’s yearly cost is<br />

about $360. A (comparably-sized gas tankless)<br />

is about $190.”<br />

Tankless water heaters are a fraction <strong>of</strong><br />

the size <strong>of</strong> tank systems – roughly the size<br />

<strong>of</strong> a circuit breaker box – and mount to a<br />

wall instead <strong>of</strong> taking up valuable space in<br />

the basement or garage.<br />

“Some people really like the fact they<br />

have their space back, once they get a tankless<br />

installed,” said Rob Evans <strong>of</strong> Mr.<br />

Rooter <strong>of</strong> Columbus, Ga.<br />

The most popular benefit <strong>of</strong> a tankless<br />

water heater, though, is an almost endless<br />

supply <strong>of</strong> hot water it provides by heating<br />

the water via an internal heat exchanger.<br />

“A tankless water heater is designed so<br />

that, if you wanted to, you could take a<br />

shower from 8 a.m. until midnight at 115<br />

degrees and it won’t move one degree,”<br />

Whelpley said. “It’s truly endless hot<br />

water.”<br />

Though gas tankless water heaters cost<br />

about twice as much as their conventional<br />

predecessors – ranging from $2,500 to<br />

$5,000 on average – they are easily<br />

repairable compared to a tank unit that<br />

usually needs to be replaced when it fails.<br />

Tankless heaters last 20 years on average<br />

and are more energy efficient, making<br />

them more environmentally friendly than<br />

the traditional models. Qualifying tankless<br />

water heaters are eligible for a $300 federal<br />

tax credit. Some utility providers also<br />

<strong>of</strong>fer rebates for qualifying purchases.<br />

“A tank water heater lasts about nine<br />

years on average,” Evans said. “A tankless<br />

generally lasts twice that long. So, even<br />

though the initial upfront costs can be<br />

quite a bit, over the long haul it’s cheaper<br />

Spring Home and Garden<br />

because you don’t have to replace the<br />

water heater nine years down the road.”<br />

Electric tankless heaters are available<br />

as well, but use a lot <strong>of</strong> power and typically<br />

require the electrical service to be<br />

upgraded. Electric heaters are best for limited<br />

use, such as a small apartment or a<br />

point-<strong>of</strong>-use application like a dedicated<br />

sink where you need plenty <strong>of</strong> hot water.<br />

Tankless water heaters require minimal<br />

maintenance, other than periodic<br />

flushing to descale them <strong>of</strong> mineral<br />

buildup. A plumber can do that service,<br />

typically for around $100 to $150. A handy<br />

homeowner can clean the system with<br />

vinegar if he or she follows the manufacturer’s<br />

recommended guidelines for<br />

descaling. It’s also recommended homeowners<br />

have a water s<strong>of</strong>tener to reduce<br />

scale buildup.<br />

“You can tell a difference on ones that<br />

have water s<strong>of</strong>teners and ones that don’t<br />

have water s<strong>of</strong>teners,” Whelpley said.<br />

“When you heat the water that quickly,<br />

you bring the calcium out even quicker.”<br />

Tankless water heaters do require venting<br />

and should be placed close to gas lines<br />

to operate at their highest efficiency. A<br />

licensed plumber who has a good history<br />

<strong>of</strong> working with tankless heaters can help<br />

ensure it’s installed correctly and is properly<br />

sized to accommodate your family’s<br />

needs.<br />

“The biggest thing is to make sure you<br />

get somebody that knows tankless and<br />

deals with tankless day in and day out,”<br />

Whelpley said. “The biggest thing I see is<br />

people go to (a big box hardware store)<br />

and see a tankless and say, ‘I’ll take that,’<br />

but they don’t know that you have to size<br />

it for the house. How many shower heads<br />

do you have? How many Jacuzzi tubs do<br />

you have? If you go buy one <strong>of</strong>f the shelf<br />

that’s a 5-gallon a minute when you really<br />

need a 9-gallon a minute and you have one<br />

person taking a shower in the master bathroom<br />

and another person goes to take a<br />

shower in the guest bathroom, you won’t<br />

have (enough water pressure).”<br />

Angie Hicks is the founder <strong>of</strong> Angie’s<br />

List, the nation’s most trusted resource for<br />

local consumer reviews on everything from<br />

home repair to healthcare.<br />

© 2013, http://www.angieslist.com/<br />

Distributed by MCT Information<br />

Services<br />

WATER HEATER TUNE UP<br />

CHECK & INSPECT:<br />

$ 69<br />

• Burner<br />

• Pilot<br />

• Venting<br />

• Safety Valve<br />

FLUSH ENTIRE UNIT<br />

(The flush will remove the calcium and rust sediment thus extending the life <strong>of</strong><br />

your water heater and giving your home a quicker and cleaner<br />

hot water response).<br />

FREE PLUMBING INSPECTION<br />

<strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong>, WI<br />

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Milwaukee County Zoo’s Jaguar cubs are now on exhibit. They were recently<br />

named B’alam and Zean in a contest open to the public. (Photo furnished)<br />

Milwaukee Zoo’s jaguar cubs<br />

are more than just cute babies<br />

By Chuck Quirmbach<br />

Some newly-named jaguar cubs<br />

have brought genetic diversity to the<br />

Milwaukee County Zoo.<br />

The two cubs were born last<br />

November, the first <strong>of</strong> their species to be<br />

born there in 38 years. The zoo just<br />

announced the new names <strong>of</strong> the cubs,<br />

based on the results <strong>of</strong> a contest: B’alam<br />

and Zean.<br />

But scientists at the zoo say these<br />

cubs are more than just a cute tourism<br />

draw. Large mammals curator Tim Wild<br />

says the cubs’ father is a wild-born<br />

jaguar, roughly 14 years old, captured in<br />

Belize after killing some livestock. The<br />

zoo no longer takes in many wild animals,<br />

due to various concerns, including<br />

the difficulty in getting import permits.<br />

Wild says the cubs help bring genetic<br />

diversity to North American zoos.<br />

“All the jaguars in zoos in North<br />

America are managed as a group,” says<br />

Wild. “So anytime you bring new genes<br />

into that population, it adds new bloodlines<br />

and it kind <strong>of</strong> spreads things out a<br />

little better. It brings inbreeding down.”<br />

Wild says the diversity can help deal<br />

with change.<br />

“With changing environments and<br />

changing habitats with more diversity,<br />

you have animals out there that are<br />

going to be adaptable,” he explains.<br />

“Disease is one <strong>of</strong> those things. Some<br />

animals might better be able to handle a<br />

disease that runs through a population.”<br />

Wild says the cub’s father is very<br />

healthy, making it unlikely he brought in<br />

any problems or passed them on to his<br />

<strong>of</strong>fspring. Wild also says he hopes the<br />

breeding success in Milwaukee shows<br />

the importance <strong>of</strong> the wild jaguar population<br />

in Belize, which may discourage<br />

ranchers and farmers there from wanting<br />

to shoot the animals.<br />

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16 — The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013<br />

Five easy steps to a low maintenance, eco-friendly landscape<br />

By Melinda Myers<br />

It’s possible to create a beautiful<br />

landscape and be kind to the environment<br />

even with a busy schedule and<br />

while staying within budget. “All it<br />

takes is a bit <strong>of</strong> planning and a few low<br />

maintenance strategies,” says gardening<br />

expert and author Melinda Myers.<br />

Myers recommends these five strategies<br />

to create a low maintenance ec<strong>of</strong>riendly<br />

landscape this season.<br />

Be Waterwise<br />

Save money on the water bill, time<br />

spent watering and this precious<br />

resource, water. Start by growing<br />

drought tolerant plants suited to your<br />

growing environment. Once established<br />

they will only need watering during<br />

extended dry spells. Mulch with shredded<br />

leaves, evergreen needles, woodchips,<br />

or other organic matter to conserve<br />

moisture, reduce weeds, and<br />

improve the soil as they decompose.<br />

Fertilize with a low nitrogen fertilizer,<br />

like Milorganite, that promotes slow<br />

steady growth instead <strong>of</strong> excessive<br />

greenery that requires more water. Plus,<br />

it won’t burn even during drought.<br />

Put rainwater to work all season long<br />

by using rain barrels to capture rainwater<br />

<strong>of</strong>f your ro<strong>of</strong> or directly from the sky.<br />

Recycle Yard Waste<br />

Minimize the amount <strong>of</strong> yard waste<br />

produced, reuse what can be in other<br />

areas <strong>of</strong> the landscape and recycle the<br />

rest as compost. These are just a few<br />

strategies that will save time bagging,<br />

hauling, and disposing <strong>of</strong> yard debris.<br />

And better yet, implementing this strategy<br />

will save money and time spent buying<br />

and transporting soil amendments,<br />

since it will be created right in the backyard.<br />

Mulching with shredded leaves, evergreen needles, woodchips, or other organic<br />

matter will conserve moisture, reduce weeds, and improve the soil as they decompose.<br />

(Photo furnished)<br />

Start by leaving grass clippings on<br />

the lawn. The short clippings break<br />

down quickly, adding organic matter,<br />

nutrients and moisture to the soil. Grow<br />

trees suited to the growing conditions<br />

and available space. That means less<br />

pruning and fewer trimmings that will<br />

need to be managed.<br />

Make Compost at Home<br />

Recycle yard waste into compost.<br />

Put plant waste into a heap and let it rot.<br />

Yes, it really is that simple. The more<br />

effort put into the process, the quicker<br />

the results.<br />

Do not add insect-infested or diseased<br />

plant material or perennial weeds<br />

like quack grass, annual weeds gone to<br />

seed, or invasive plants. Most compost<br />

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piles are not hot enough to kill these<br />

pests. And do not add meat, dairy, or<br />

bones that can attract rodents.<br />

Manage Pests<br />

A healthy plant is the best defense<br />

against insects and disease. Select the<br />

most pest-resistant plants suited to the<br />

growing conditions and provide proper<br />

care.<br />

Check plants regularly throughout the<br />

growing season. It is easier to control a<br />

few insects than the hundreds that can<br />

develop in a week or two. And when<br />

problems arise, look for the most ec<strong>of</strong>riendly<br />

control. Start by removing small<br />

infestations by hand. Consider traps, barriers,<br />

and natural products if further control<br />

is needed. And as always be sure to<br />

read and follow label directions carefully.<br />

Energy Wise Landscape Design<br />

Use landscape plantings to keep<br />

homes warmer in the winter and cooler<br />

in the summer. Homes will have a more<br />

comfortable temperature throughout the<br />

seasons and energy costs will be<br />

reduced.<br />

Plant trees on the east and west side<br />

<strong>of</strong> a house to shade windows in the summer<br />

and let the sun shine in and warm it<br />

up through the south-facing windows in<br />

winter.<br />

Shade air conditioners, so they run<br />

more efficiently and be sure to collect<br />

and use any water they produce for container<br />

gardens.<br />

Incorporate these changes into gardening<br />

routines and habits over time.<br />

Soon these and many more strategies<br />

that help save time and money while<br />

being kind to the environment will seem<br />

to occur automatically.<br />

Nationally known gardening expert,<br />

<strong>TV</strong>/radio host, author & columnist<br />

Melinda Myers has more than 30 years<br />

<strong>of</strong> horticulture experience and has written<br />

more than 20 gardening books,<br />

including “Can’t Miss Small Space<br />

Gardening.” She hosts the nationally<br />

syndicated Melinda’s Garden Moment<br />

segments which air on more than 115<br />

<strong>TV</strong> and radio stations throughout the<br />

U.S. She is a columnist and contributing<br />

editor for Birds & Blooms magazine and<br />

writes the twice monthly “Gardeners’<br />

Questions” newspaper column. Myers<br />

also has a column in Gardening How-to<br />

magazine. She has a master’s degree in<br />

horticulture, is a certified arborist and<br />

was a horticulture instructor with tenure.<br />

Her web site is www.melindamyers.com/


The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013 —17<br />

Grow up, not out, with<br />

square-foot gardening<br />

By Kathy Van Mullekom<br />

No matter how you garden – on the<br />

cheap or with wallet wide open – it’s<br />

wise to garden the smart way.<br />

In the edible garden, smart means<br />

finding ways to maximize your harvest<br />

and minimize your workload and planting<br />

space.<br />

These three new gardening books<br />

outline ways to do just that. Each provides<br />

helpful how-to details – not just<br />

pretty photos.<br />

GROW UP, NOT OUT<br />

Raised beds and containers get lots<br />

<strong>of</strong> attention, but vertical gardening is<br />

one <strong>of</strong> the easiest and most practical<br />

ways to grow edibles.<br />

Vertical gardening means people living<br />

in condos, apartments and other<br />

places with limited yard space can reap<br />

the benefits <strong>of</strong> fresh food, according to<br />

Chris McLaughlin, author <strong>of</strong> “Vertical<br />

Vegetable Gardening.”<br />

Besides the traditional trellises and<br />

arbors, the book shows how to grow on<br />

common household items you can recycle<br />

or reuse for free: broken baby gates<br />

that can be folded side up and spread to<br />

create an A-frame, crib springs turned on<br />

their ends, ladders with boards put<br />

across the rungs to holds pots, shoe bags<br />

filled with soil, tin tub gardens you can<br />

hang and 5-gallon buckets that are suspended<br />

from trees or poles.<br />

Chris also shows how to turn wire,<br />

twine and other materials into arbors,<br />

teepees, fences and A-frames to support<br />

vining, twining, twisting plants. Even a<br />

kiddie pool filled with soil becomes a<br />

small garden. There are lists <strong>of</strong> materials<br />

and directions on how to make each, and<br />

pr<strong>of</strong>iles identify 30 veggies, fruits and<br />

herbs best suited for vertical gardening.<br />

MAKE EVERY FOOT COUNT<br />

Square-foot gardening took root 30<br />

years ago when Mel Bartholomew<br />

penned his first book on how to garden<br />

less to get more – for example, 48 crops<br />

from two 4-by-6-foot boxes.<br />

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the Square Foot Gardening Foundation<br />

(www.squarefootgardening.org) and<br />

recently released two new books on the<br />

topic – the “Square Foot Gardening<br />

Answer Book” and the “All New Square<br />

Foot Gardening, Second Edition.”<br />

The answer book draws on hundreds<br />

<strong>of</strong> questions he’s heard over the years,<br />

including how to garden in a shady yard,<br />

how to calculate the potential yield from<br />

a square-foot garden, how to deter pests<br />

and how to rotate crops for maximum<br />

results.<br />

He also addresses common problems<br />

all gardeners can relate to: The gnats in<br />

my square-foot garden are a real bother;<br />

how can I deal with them? Make a spray<br />

by mixing 1 part vodka with 3 parts<br />

water. No, don’t drink it; spray the area<br />

infested by the gnats. You can check<br />

whether you’ve gotten rid <strong>of</strong> the gnats<br />

by cutting a potato in half and leaving it<br />

in the area. If, after a week, the potato is<br />

still clean, your gnat problem is gone.<br />

POT UP A GARDEN<br />

In “Grow Your Own in Pots,” Kay<br />

Maguire features 30 step-by-step projects<br />

using vegetables, fruits and herbs.<br />

She shows how to sprout seed potatoes<br />

in egg cartons and then grow them<br />

in recycled, porous bags or large tubs;<br />

spinach in a window box; rhubarb in old<br />

garbage cans; and beans and sweet corn<br />

as companion plants in a tub.<br />

Her chapter on Garden Soil 101 is<br />

particularly helpful because healthy soil<br />

makes a healthy plant. You’ll like her<br />

“compost sandwich,” which uses layers<br />

<strong>of</strong> newspaper, cardboard, yard debris<br />

and topsoil to create the best <strong>of</strong> best beds<br />

for growing anything.<br />

“Growing your own makes you<br />

happy, healthy, and it’s fun, too,” writes<br />

Kay.<br />

©2013 Daily Press (Newport News,<br />

Va.)<br />

Distributed by MCT Information<br />

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Attendees look over auction items at last year’s Elkhorn Area Women's Club<br />

Card & Game Night. This year’s event will be held Wednesday, April 24 at the Monte<br />

Carlo Room to raise monies for Elkhorn Area High School scholarships. The evenings<br />

festivities will start at 6:30 p.m. with a raffle/basket review. The cost <strong>of</strong> $12 per person<br />

includes desserts and finger food. Tickets for the Chance Bucket Raffle, as well as a<br />

chance to win a $100 cash payout, will be available, as well as a Silent Auction <strong>of</strong> items<br />

to bid on. Admission tickets are available from club members. Contact Dee Smudde at<br />

723-3178 to book a table for this fun event. (Photo furnished)<br />

Extend the life <strong>of</strong> your tools<br />

(StatePoint) Birds are chirping,<br />

flowers are blooming and do-it-yourselfers<br />

are kicking their home improvement<br />

projects into high gear. At the<br />

heart <strong>of</strong> any handy job in or around the<br />

house is a high-quality set <strong>of</strong> tools.<br />

“Even great tools won’t work as well<br />

or last forever if they aren’t treated with<br />

care,” warns Chris Barker, Technical<br />

Manager at Royal Purple, a manufacturer<br />

<strong>of</strong> premium synthetic lubricants.<br />

So what can DIY-ers do to extend the<br />

life <strong>of</strong> their valuable tools?<br />

Store Properly<br />

Good organization is not just about<br />

saving time when you’re looking for the<br />

proper tool, or even just about saving<br />

space in your garage or shed. Good<br />

organization can go a long way toward<br />

keeping tools in proper working order<br />

for longer.<br />

So never leave tools scattered about<br />

where they are susceptible to getting<br />

dinged or could be the cause <strong>of</strong> an accident.<br />

Install shelving units and invest in<br />

a quality toolbox that meets your size<br />

and portability needs.<br />

Proper storage away from the elements<br />

can also protect metal tools from<br />

rust and wooden handles from rot. Be<br />

sure to clean and dry all tools before<br />

storing them and maintain a cool and dry<br />

climate in your workshop or garage.<br />

Maintain Regularly<br />

Use a versatile product to lubricate<br />

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and provide continuous protection. It is<br />

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Maintaining your tools and lawn<br />

equipment with regular lubrication will<br />

protect them against wear, rust and corrosion<br />

and can actually improve the condition<br />

<strong>of</strong> metal surfaces. More information<br />

can be found at www.ProtectParts.<br />

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Use Correctly<br />

Most tools are designed to perform<br />

specific functions. Using the wrong tool<br />

for a job can pose a safety hazard to you<br />

and those around you. By using your<br />

equipment incorrectly, you can make the<br />

tool less effective for its intended use.<br />

Be aware, even with good maintenance<br />

habits, tools will need to be replaced<br />

over time.<br />

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18 — The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013<br />

An exhibitor tweaks a few connections while setting up for the 2013 Model Train<br />

Show at the American Legion Hall in Delavan on March 8. (Beacon photo)<br />

DAR presents American History<br />

Awards at <strong>Lake</strong>land School<br />

The Samuel Phoenix Chapter,<br />

Daughters <strong>of</strong> the American Revolution,<br />

presented American History Awards at<br />

<strong>Lake</strong>land School <strong>of</strong> Walworth County,<br />

Elkhorn on March 1. The topic for the<br />

essay contest was “Forgotten Patriots<br />

Who Supported the American Struggle.”<br />

The essays covered <strong>subject</strong>s such as:<br />

Francis Marion, Swamp Fox; Sybil<br />

Ludington, Female Paul Revere;<br />

William Dawes, Rider who Spread the<br />

Same Message as Paul Revere; Crispus<br />

Attucks, First Casualty <strong>of</strong> the American<br />

Revolution; Deborah Sampson, Soldier;<br />

Esther Reed and Sarah Bache,<br />

Daughters <strong>of</strong> Liberty Group.<br />

Teachers involved in the project<br />

were Joanne Suchy and Irene Straz.<br />

Music instructor Sue Harig led the students<br />

in patriotic songs. The essay judge<br />

was Ione Tindle, Walworth with alternate<br />

judges, Joan Johnson, Allen<br />

Lehman, Walworth and County<br />

Historian Doris Reinke, Elkhorn. Nancy<br />

Lehman, DAR American History<br />

Chairman and Past State DAR Historian,<br />

presented the awards. Kathleen Murray,<br />

Past DAR Treasurer, presented a check<br />

to the History Department. Jennifer<br />

Coon, Junior DAR Member and JAC<br />

Chairman, assisted in the certificate presentations.<br />

The Jr. High: Medalists <strong>of</strong> the<br />

American History Essay Contest were:<br />

Angie Bishop, Nick Taylor and Jessie<br />

Stoll with runners-up being Destiny<br />

Brobst, Will Griffin, Aaron Rasmussen,<br />

Jordan Allen and Cody Recob.<br />

The high school level medalists were<br />

Austin Frischmann and Greg Webel with<br />

runners-up being Christopher Thompson<br />

and Sean Jacobs.<br />

The <strong>Lake</strong>land School Junior<br />

American Citizens Group, received first<br />

place awards from Samuel Phoenix<br />

Chapter and Wisconsin State DAR<br />

Society for their November Voter<br />

Education and Voting Day Project. The<br />

entry has advanced to the North-Central<br />

District Contest.<br />

“All the students at <strong>Lake</strong>land School<br />

are to be congratulated on their enthusiasm<br />

for and knowledge <strong>of</strong> American history,”<br />

said Lehman.<br />

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Easter and Christmas are two days <strong>of</strong><br />

great Spiritual significance on the<br />

Christian calendar – we’ll touch on that a<br />

bit later – but they are also days <strong>of</strong> sweet<br />

treats, family fun and great food.<br />

My brothers, six and eight years older<br />

than I, had<br />

reached the age<br />

where looking for<br />

Easter baskets<br />

was no big thing.<br />

My father told my<br />

mother the boys<br />

were too old for<br />

Easter baskets.<br />

Mom pushed for<br />

“just one more<br />

year, honey.”<br />

Against his<br />

better judgment,<br />

dad agreed.<br />

Easter basket skullduggery<br />

Marjie Reed<br />

Mom realized dad was right when she<br />

couldn’t even wake the boys to look for<br />

their baskets. Eventually, they stumbled<br />

out <strong>of</strong> bed, since they had to get ready for<br />

church anyway, and to make mom happy,<br />

started looking for their baskets.<br />

Unbeknownst to my one brother (and<br />

my parents), the other had secretly dyed<br />

some eggs. After his brother fell asleep<br />

Saturday night, the perpetrator found and<br />

infiltrated the other’s basket with his eggs.<br />

“Oh, what a thoughtful thing to do,”<br />

you say. One young teenage boy being<br />

thoughtful to another? To quote Sherlock<br />

Holmes, “Skullduggery was afoot.”<br />

Both the boys eventually found their<br />

baskets and, <strong>of</strong> course, the comparison<br />

started. One definitely had more colored<br />

eggs than the other; he was elated.<br />

They sat on their beds and began<br />

cracking the hardboiled eggs and wolfing<br />

them down. All <strong>of</strong> a sudden, there was a<br />

groan as the brother with the most eggs<br />

cracked another one and found out it hadn’t<br />

been boiled at all. Raw egg ran all over<br />

his bed and the guilty party took <strong>of</strong>f running<br />

towards my room.<br />

Then things really ran amuck. I was in<br />

the midst <strong>of</strong> a raw-egg war. Colored raw<br />

eggs flew past me as my annoyed, egg<br />

covered brother aimed for retaliation. My<br />

room was in the direct line <strong>of</strong> fire.<br />

A couple <strong>of</strong> the eggs hit the hot radiator<br />

in my room and began to fry as the<br />

mess ran down the free standing heater.<br />

My brothers were in a boatload <strong>of</strong> trouble.<br />

Mom and dad burst into my room and,<br />

smelling fried eggs and seeing colored<br />

shells everywhere, I remember my dad’s<br />

famous loud words to my mom, “I told<br />

you they were too old for Easter baskets!”<br />

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I enjoyed the rest <strong>of</strong> that Easter day<br />

twirling in my new dress, enjoying the<br />

shine on my new patent leathers, and biting<br />

the ears <strong>of</strong>f my chocolate bunnies.<br />

My brothers, on the other hand, were<br />

scrubbing radiators and washing sheets.<br />

Oh, yeah, that was the last year they got<br />

Easter baskets.<br />

Now along that same line let me tell<br />

you what we do with colored eggs.<br />

Believe it or not, we don’t boil them at all;<br />

however, we don’t throw them, either. We<br />

dye dozens and dozens <strong>of</strong> raw eggs and it<br />

works out great.<br />

We started this when the kids were<br />

each between three and four. We told them<br />

they were not hard boiled and to be gentle.<br />

It worked out fine.<br />

Try it with your kids or grandkids.<br />

Don’t just say your kids will break them<br />

all; give them some direction as to how to<br />

handle the eggs gently and let them go.<br />

You’ll be pleasantly surprised and it’s a<br />

treat to see all the colors every morning<br />

when you open the box to scramble or fry<br />

eggs.<br />

Expect a couple to break and don’t<br />

freak out if they do. They are eggs and<br />

we’ve all broken our share, so relax and let<br />

the kids have fun.<br />

One more hint my daughter taught me<br />

about dying eggs with less mess is to use<br />

an old flannel-backed tablecloth and cover<br />

the table, flannel side up.<br />

Then when spills occur, the flannel<br />

soaks it up. If the cloth has raw egg on it,<br />

just fold it up and toss it out when you’re<br />

finished; if it’s just wet from dye, let it dry<br />

and use it again next year.<br />

Dear God,<br />

The world celebrates rebirth at Easter.<br />

It occurs in spring when the natural world<br />

is waking up from a long, cold, lethargic<br />

winter.<br />

Many <strong>of</strong> us need to wake up from our<br />

spiritual lethargy, as well, and Easter<br />

Sunday is the perfect time to do so.<br />

As the kids find their Easter baskets,<br />

enjoy some colored eggs and nibble the<br />

ears <strong>of</strong>f their chocolate bunnies, remind us<br />

parents to keep an eye on the clock so we<br />

can get our family to church on time.<br />

Easter is a joyous day – help us to be<br />

sure our kids know the real reason for the<br />

season, the resurrection <strong>of</strong> Christ from the<br />

tomb.HE LIVES!<br />

Amen<br />

Marjie Reed lives in Harvard, Ill., with<br />

her husband, Bob. They have been married<br />

nearly 45 years and have three children<br />

and eight grandchildren. Contact Marjie<br />

at mreedbeacon@sbcglobal.net.<br />

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The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013 —19<br />

Girl Scout exhibit open in East Troy<br />

The East Troy Area Historical<br />

Society is sponsoring an exhibit on Girl<br />

Scouts and camps in the Walworth<br />

County area. The exhibit is open through<br />

Memorial Day on Saturdays from 11<br />

a.m. - 3 p.m., Wednesdays from 9 a.m. -<br />

noon and by appointment for groups <strong>of</strong><br />

scouts who wish to view it.<br />

The exhibit includes a silent film<br />

from 1918, a hall filled with local and<br />

historical items to view, a scavenger<br />

hunt and activities that girls can take<br />

home to do.<br />

The Historical Society is located on<br />

the historic square in the heart <strong>of</strong> East<br />

Troy, on Church Street just <strong>of</strong>f <strong>of</strong> HWY<br />

120 and ES. Check the website<br />

etahs.org.<br />

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The Word<br />

Detective<br />

By Evan Morris<br />

Dear Word Detective: When did the<br />

term “gypsy” become associated with<br />

dancers in American musical theater?<br />

Thanks for a good question. I was<br />

vaguely familiar with the usage before I<br />

started to look into it, but I’ve actually<br />

learned a number <strong>of</strong> interesting things<br />

while poking around for details.<br />

“Gypsy” is a fascinating word in its<br />

own right. In its original (and properly<br />

capitalized) sense, it refers to a nomadic<br />

people who originated in northwestern<br />

India and first appeared in Europe in the<br />

early 16th century. When Gypsies eventually<br />

made it to England, they were called<br />

“gipcyan” (later modified to “gypsy”),<br />

which was a shortening <strong>of</strong> “Egyptian,”<br />

the popular impression being that they<br />

hailed from North Africa. The “gypsies”<br />

called themselves “Roma” or “Romani,”<br />

from “rom,” the word for “man” in their<br />

language, Romany.<br />

Today there are an estimated four million<br />

Roma in Europe and large populations<br />

in both North and South America.<br />

Historically, the Roma have frequently<br />

been the target <strong>of</strong> discrimination,<br />

exploitation, deportation and even extermination<br />

in their host countries, where<br />

they were popularly imagined to make<br />

their livelihood by theft and deceit.<br />

Popular prejudice against the Roma is<br />

<strong>of</strong>ten assumed to have given us the verb<br />

“to gyp,” meaning “to cheat or deceive”<br />

(as well as the noun, meaning “a thief”),<br />

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(in front <strong>of</strong> Wal-Mart)<br />

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• Hibachi Tables<br />

262.740.2223 • 262.740.2224<br />

Hours: Mon.-Thurs. 11:00-10:00; Fri. & Sat. 11:00-11:00; Sun. 4:00-9:30<br />

but there is reason to doubt that explanation.<br />

“Gyp” in this sense didn’t appear<br />

until the late 19th century, and it appeared<br />

in the US, where the Roma were not all<br />

that common. “Gyp” in the “cheat” sense<br />

may actually come from “gippo,” an<br />

much older term for a kitchen worker<br />

(from the French “juppeau,” a kind <strong>of</strong><br />

short tunic).<br />

The reputation <strong>of</strong> the Roma for<br />

nomadic wandering underlies several<br />

uses <strong>of</strong> “gypsy” in colloquial English.<br />

“Gypsy cabs” in large cities are taxicabs<br />

that, while either unlicensed or licensed<br />

only to operate “on call,” roam the streets<br />

illegally picking up fares. A “gypsy<br />

truck” is one operating in an area where it<br />

has no home depot. Other businesses and<br />

occupations operating in an unlicensed<br />

and/or sporadic fashion, such as small<br />

logging operations, are also tagged with<br />

the adjective “gypsy.”<br />

I have been, as yet, unable to pin<br />

down a debut date for “gypsy” in the<br />

sense <strong>of</strong> “a dancer or chorus member in<br />

the company <strong>of</strong> a musical play,” but,<br />

based on what I have found, I’d be willing<br />

to bet that the term dates back to at<br />

least the 1940s, and quite possibly much<br />

earlier. Oddly enough, I have yet to find a<br />

dictionary that even lists “gypsy” in this<br />

sense, which is odd, since it’s hardly<br />

obscure. In any case, the term “gypsy” in<br />

the theatrical sense comes from the fact<br />

that dancers or chorus singers work in<br />

one show during its run (on Broadway,<br />

for instance), and then move on to another,<br />

frequently performing in many dozens<br />

<strong>of</strong> shows in the course <strong>of</strong> their careers.<br />

Some “gypsies” eventually, after years <strong>of</strong><br />

hard work, graduate to starring roles and<br />

fame; the actress, singer and dancer Chita<br />

Rivera is perhaps the most notable example<br />

<strong>of</strong> starting out as a “gypsy” and ending<br />

up a major star.<br />

You’d think that the peripatetic nature<br />

<strong>of</strong> such a career would dictate a somewhat<br />

individualistic lifestyle, but apparently<br />

not. Gypsies stick together. A fascinating<br />

CBS Sunday Morning report from<br />

2012 (www.cbsnews.com/video/<br />

watch/?id=7411210n) showcased the<br />

pre-show opening night Broadway ritual<br />

<strong>of</strong> the “Gypsy Robe,” in which the<br />

“gypsy” with the most show credits is<br />

honored with a robe festooned with the<br />

logos <strong>of</strong> all the shows in which previous<br />

winners have performed.<br />

©Evan Morris<br />

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The Conservancy is a 501(c)3 not-for-pr<strong>of</strong>it organization supported by contributions and community volunteers


20 — The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013<br />

This pooch has a nose for Easter eggs. Maybe his young master taught him how<br />

to sniff them out so he could beat the other hunters to the quarrry.<br />

• LILIES • CENTERPIECES • SILK ARRANGEMENTS<br />

Easter is Sunday, March 31<br />

Florist<br />

www.flowerswishingwell.com<br />

COMMUNITY CHURCH OF FONTANA<br />

United Church <strong>of</strong> Christ<br />

275 Kinzie Avenue<br />

Fontana, Wisconsin 53125<br />

(262) 275-2808<br />

invites you to join us<br />

Palm Sunday ~ March 24, 10 am<br />

Maundy Thursday ~ March 28, 7 pm<br />

Good Friday ~ March 29<br />

7 pm service at Williams Bay UCC<br />

Easter ~ March 31<br />

6:30 am Sunrise Easter Service in Reid Park<br />

10 am Easter Resurrection Service<br />

All Are Welcome - Handicapped Accessible<br />

www.com m unitychurch<strong>of</strong>fontana.com<br />

WE DELIVER DAILY TO ELKHORN,<br />

DELAVAN, LAKE GENEVA &<br />

LAKELAND MEDICAL CENTER<br />

26 S. Wisconsin St.<br />

Elkhorn, WI<br />

(262) 723-6677<br />

Holy Communion Episcopal Church<br />

invites you to join us<br />

EASTER SUNDAY, MARCH 31<br />

at 10:00 a.m.<br />

The service is followed by an<br />

Easter Egg Hunt for kids.<br />

We are Accepting All People, Sharing God s Love, Teaching God s Ways. Come and See! Everyone is Welcome Here.<br />

320 BROAD STREET, LAKE GENEVA • (262) 248-3522<br />

BREAKFAST<br />

Baked Blueberry French Toast<br />

Fajita Skillets<br />

Chicken, Steak or Combo<br />

Avocado Omelette<br />

$ 4.00 Bloody Marys<br />

LUNCH<br />

Baked Ham<br />

with Sweet Potatoes<br />

Baked Chicken<br />

with Mashed Potatoes<br />

includes<br />

Soup or Salad, Bread, Rolls & Dessert<br />

PLUS REGULAR MENU<br />

Catering for any Occasion Available<br />

RESERVATIONS SUGGESTED<br />

1 N. Lincoln Street<br />

Elkhorn, WI 262-723-1599


The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013 — 21<br />

These two sisters gearing up for Easter must live somewhere down south.<br />

This year’s early Easter may mean snow bunnies are still in fashion here.<br />

It’s Like Going Back Home<br />

COME AND WORSHIP<br />

at the small church with the big heart<br />

Saturday 4:30 p.m. Nontraditional<br />

Sunday 9:00 a.m. Informal<br />

For information, call our Lay Leader<br />

Joe Reynders at 763-9455<br />

SPRING PRAIRIE METHODIST CHURCH<br />

1/4 mile east <strong>of</strong> Hwy. 120 on Hwy. 11 in Spring Prairie<br />

The confusion <strong>of</strong> Easter<br />

Easter may be the most confusing<br />

holiday <strong>of</strong> the year. Ask anyone when<br />

Easter is next year and the odds are 10 to<br />

1 he or she won’t know. If you had asked<br />

them the same question about this year’s<br />

date for Easter earlier in the year, you<br />

would have elicited the same response.<br />

The dates, by the way, are: 2013,<br />

March 31; 2014, April 20; 2015, April 5.<br />

The reason for the confusion is that<br />

Easter and the holidays that are related<br />

to it are moveable feasts, in that they<br />

don’t fall on a fixed date in the<br />

Gregorian or Julian calendars (both <strong>of</strong><br />

which follow the cycle <strong>of</strong> the sun and the<br />

seasons). Instead, the date for Easter is<br />

determined on a lunisolar calendar similar<br />

to the Hebrew calendar. Get it?<br />

The early church fathers wished to<br />

keep the observance <strong>of</strong> Easter in correlation<br />

to the Jewish Passover. Because the<br />

death, burial, and resurrection <strong>of</strong> Jesus<br />

Christ happened after the Passover, they<br />

wanted Easter to always be celebrated<br />

subsequent to the Passover. And, since<br />

the Jewish holiday calendar is based on<br />

solar and lunar cycles, each feast day is<br />

movable, with dates shifting from year<br />

to year. .<br />

The First Council <strong>of</strong> Nicaea (325<br />

AD) established the date <strong>of</strong> Easter as the<br />

first Sunday after the full moon (the<br />

Paschal Full Moon) following the March<br />

equinox. Ecclesiastically, the equinox is<br />

reckoned to be on March 21 (even<br />

though the equinox occurs, astronomically<br />

speaking, on March 20 in most<br />

years), and the “Full Moon” is not necessarily<br />

the astronomically correct date.<br />

In Western Christianity, using the<br />

Gregorian calendar, Easter always falls<br />

on a Sunday between March 22 and<br />

April 25, inclusively. The following day,<br />

Easter Monday, is a legal holiday in<br />

many countries with predominantly<br />

Christian traditions.<br />

Eastern Orthodox Christians compute<br />

the date differently, as do other<br />

organizations. Attempts to reconcile the<br />

dates between all <strong>of</strong> these factions have<br />

met with little success and there is little<br />

probability that it will happen in the<br />

future.<br />

Many Americans follow the tradition<br />

<strong>of</strong> coloring hard-boiled eggs and giving<br />

baskets <strong>of</strong> candy. The Easter Bunny is a<br />

popular legendary anthropomorphic<br />

Easter gift-giving character analogous to<br />

Santa Claus in American culture. On<br />

Easter Monday, the P<strong>resident</strong> <strong>of</strong> the<br />

United States holds an annual Easter egg<br />

roll on the White House lawn for young<br />

Ye Olde Hotel IN<br />

44 TH YEAR<br />

(262) 763-2701<br />

children. New York City holds an annual<br />

Easter parade on Easter Sunday.<br />

In some countries where Christianity<br />

is a state religion, or where the country<br />

has large Christian population, Easter is<br />

a public holiday. Some European and<br />

other countries in the world also have<br />

Easter Monday as a public holiday.<br />

In Canada, both Easter Sunday and<br />

Easter Monday are public holidays. In<br />

the province <strong>of</strong> Quebec, either Good<br />

Friday or Easter Monday (although most<br />

companies give both) are statutory holidays.<br />

Two days before Easter Sunday, on<br />

Good Friday, is a public holiday as well.<br />

In Denmark, Finland, Norway and<br />

Sweden, both Easter Sunday and Easter<br />

Monday are public holidays. It is a holiday<br />

for most workers except some shopping<br />

malls that stay open for half day.<br />

Many businesses give their employees<br />

almost a week <strong>of</strong>f, which is called Easter<br />

break.<br />

In the United States, Easter Sunday<br />

is a flag day but because Easter falls on<br />

a Sunday, which is already a non working<br />

day for federal and state employees,<br />

it has not been designated as a federal or<br />

state holiday. Few banks that are normally<br />

open on regular Sundays (have<br />

you ever seen one <strong>of</strong> those?) are closed<br />

on Easter. Some retail stores, shopping<br />

malls, and restaurants are closed on<br />

Easter Sunday, although this practice is<br />

declining.<br />

Good Friday, which occurs two days<br />

before Easter Sunday, is a holiday in 12<br />

states. Even in states where Good Friday<br />

is not a holiday, many financial institutions,<br />

stock markets, and public schools<br />

are closed. Historically, schools have<br />

given extended spring breaks <strong>of</strong> one to<br />

two weeks around the Easter holiday,<br />

but this practice has been declining in<br />

favor <strong>of</strong> fixed one-week recesses around<br />

Washington’s Birthday and in late April.<br />

So why do we have the Easter Bunny<br />

as a symbol <strong>of</strong> Easter? And why, since<br />

rabbits are mammals and don’t lay eggs,<br />

does the bunny traditionally bring eggs –<br />

colored, no less – on Easter.<br />

It turns out that the egg-toting Easter<br />

bunny evolved from a mythic German<br />

goddess named Ostara, (Oestre / Eastre)<br />

who was the Germanic Goddess <strong>of</strong><br />

Springtime.<br />

Eggs, like rabbits and hares, are fertility<br />

symbols <strong>of</strong> antiquity. Since birds<br />

lay eggs and rabbits give birth to large<br />

litters in the early spring, these became<br />

symbols <strong>of</strong> the rising fertility <strong>of</strong> the<br />

earth at the March Equinox.<br />

A THING IS RIGHT WHEN IT TENDS TO PRESERVE THE INTREGITY, STABILITY AND<br />

BEAUTY OF THE BIOTIC COMMUNITY. IT IS WRONG WHEN IT TENDS OTHERWISE.<br />

Aldo Leopold (1887-1948)<br />

GOOD EARTH CHURCH OF THE DIVINE (UCC)<br />

Services at Michael Fields Agricultural Institute, Sundays at 10:00 a.m., W2493 Cty. Road ES, East Troy WI<br />

Are you alive at the crossroads <strong>of</strong> words about God and works for the Earth?<br />

CALL (262) 348-0764 • www.goodearthchurch<strong>of</strong>thedivine.org<br />

LYONS<br />

Hwy. 36-Halfway between <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong> & Burlington<br />

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DAILY SPECIALS.................... $ 10.00<br />

FRIDAY FISH FRY................... $ 10.95<br />

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WEDNESDAY<br />

Lasagna or<br />

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THURSDAY<br />

New York<br />

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$ 12.95<br />

Filet $ 14.95<br />

SATURDAY<br />

Prime Rib<br />

$ 18.95 &<br />

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SERVING at 11:30 A.M.<br />

Ham Dinner $ 12.95<br />

Prime Rib $ 18.95 • Leg <strong>of</strong> Lamb $ 14.95<br />

PLUS REGULAR MENU<br />

Children under 12: $ 5.95


22 — The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013<br />

Kathy Baumbach<br />

Shorewest Realtors ®<br />

Shorewest Realtors<br />

Shorewest-<strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong><br />

623 Main Street<br />

<strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong>, WI 53147<br />

Jane Dulisse<br />

Keefe Real Estate, Inc.<br />

Ryan Simons<br />

Beloit Snappers mascot, Snappy, visits with Wileman Elementary School students<br />

to welcome them into Snappy’s Reading Club. (Photo furnished)<br />

Students at Darien Elementary School<br />

and Wileman Elementary School are<br />

among approximately 7,000 peers from<br />

throughout Southern Wisconsin and<br />

Northern Illinois participating in Snappy’s<br />

Reading Club.<br />

The club, sponsored by the Beloit<br />

Snappers Minor League Baseball team and<br />

McDonald’s, is encouraging students<br />

throughout the region to read, read and<br />

read some more.<br />

Teachers and schools can sign up to be<br />

a part <strong>of</strong> the club. Students are encouraged<br />

to “Read around the bases.”<br />

For every base they reach, or every<br />

goal they accomplish, the Beloit Snappers<br />

provide prizes to those readers, said<br />

Natalie Tobey, director <strong>of</strong> community relations<br />

for the team.<br />

Individual teachers can decide the<br />

requirements for students to reach certain<br />

bases. One teacher might require students<br />

Kathy Baumbach<br />

Assistant Sales Director<br />

OFFICE: (262) 248-1020<br />

DIRECT: (262) 248-5564 ext. 127<br />

CELL: (262) 745-5439<br />

kbaumbach@shorewest.com<br />

www.shorewest.com<br />

Shorewest Realtors ®<br />

Shorewest Realtors<br />

Shorewest-<strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong><br />

623 Main Street<br />

<strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong>, WI 53147<br />

Jane Dulisse<br />

OFFICE: (262) 248-1020<br />

DIRECT: (262) 248-5564 ext. 204<br />

CELL: (262) 206-5532<br />

jdulisse@shorewest.com<br />

www.shorewest.com<br />

Darien, Wileman students<br />

to ‘Read Around the Bases’<br />

Ryan Simons<br />

Realtor Associate<br />

LAKEFRONT SPECIALIST<br />

CELL: (608) 852-3156<br />

OFFICE: (262) 728-8757<br />

rsimons@keeferealestate.com<br />

Keefe Real Estate, Inc.<br />

1155 E. <strong>Geneva</strong> Street<br />

Suite A<br />

Delavan, WI 53115 www.delavanlakeproperty.com<br />

Richard Geaslen<br />

to read a certain number <strong>of</strong> books within a<br />

time period. Another might require students<br />

read a certain number <strong>of</strong> hours. It’s<br />

completely up to the teachers, Tobey said.<br />

At the end <strong>of</strong> the school year, teachers<br />

provide their students’ “stats” to the team,<br />

and the team awards the prizes — a<br />

Reading Club pencil for making it to first,<br />

a ruler for making it to second, a game<br />

ticket to a Snapper’s home game for third,<br />

and a half-price ticket plus a McDonald’s<br />

Happy Meal for making it around the<br />

bases.<br />

Tobey and Snappy, the team’s mascot,<br />

visited with students at Darien Elementary<br />

(March 8) and Wileman Elementary<br />

(March 14) to explain Snappy’s Reading<br />

Club and the importance <strong>of</strong> reading,<br />

weather that’s in the classroom, or on the<br />

baseball field.The students also listened to<br />

Tobey read the popular baseball book,<br />

“Casey at the Bat.”<br />

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CELL: (262) 949-1660<br />

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The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013 — 23<br />

Westwords<br />

Continued from page 3<br />

women have enough to worry about without<br />

something like this? Does anyone<br />

remember when the word Christian wasn’t<br />

synonymous with wacko?<br />

• • • •<br />

And we thought Muslim countries<br />

were bad. According to the New York<br />

Times, in India, about 100,000 women are<br />

burned to death each year by husbands or<br />

families. Another 125,000 die from<br />

injuries inflicted in domestic violence<br />

that’s never reported to police.<br />

• • • •<br />

The U.S. is not a student-friendly<br />

place. According to HuffingtonPost. com,<br />

college textbooks have risen in price by<br />

812 percent since 1978, far outpacing even<br />

the 559 percent increase in tuition and fees<br />

over the same period. The average student<br />

at a four-year college pays $655 per year<br />

for textbooks and supplies.<br />

• • • •<br />

According to The New Yorker magazine,<br />

last year, for the first time, the percentage<br />

<strong>of</strong> U.S. women with tattoos – 23<br />

percent – surpassed that <strong>of</strong> men, at 19 percent.<br />

• • • •<br />

Some prices from a grocery ad in 1913<br />

were: milk, 32 cents a gallon; eggs, 30<br />

cents a dozen; bacon 33 cents a pound;<br />

potatoes, 9 cents for 5 pounds and; sirloin<br />

steak, 24 cents a pound. Of course, the<br />

average annual wage in 1913 was $1,296,<br />

or $24.92 per week.<br />

• • • •<br />

The question <strong>of</strong> the week is “what was<br />

Noah’s last name?” According to one website,<br />

“Noah would have had a surname in<br />

accordance with Semitic practice. Noach’s<br />

father was Lamech, thus Noah would have<br />

been known as Noach ben Lamech, Noah<br />

son <strong>of</strong> Lamech. But after many years <strong>of</strong><br />

research, we recently decided that his last<br />

name would have either been Carpenter or<br />

Arkwright.<br />

Delavan Alderman Ryan Schroeder, Ava and Debra Cross serve up corned beef<br />

and cabbage, roast chicken and more during the Delavan Lions Club St. Patrick’s Day<br />

fundraiser on Sunday, March 17 at The Village Suppere Club. (Beacon photo)<br />

NOW, WHEN<br />

EVERY<br />

DOLLAR<br />

COUNTS...<br />

...IS NOT THE TIME<br />

TO BE<br />

WASTING MONEY<br />

ON INEFFECTIVE<br />

PROMOTION.<br />

Advertising in<br />

is<br />

LESS EXPENSIVE AND<br />

MORE COST-EFFECTIVE<br />

THAN MANY OTHER<br />

AREA PUBLICATIONS.<br />

Call<br />

245-1877<br />

for details<br />

245-1877<br />

Real Estate Advertising in The<br />

Beacon is effective because it doesn’t<br />

get lost in the clutter <strong>of</strong> hundreds <strong>of</strong> other<br />

ads. Call 245-1877 today for rates.<br />

This lavish interurban trolley, originally manufactured for the Sheboygan Light<br />

Power & Railway in 1908 and meticulously restored by East Troy Electric Railroad volunteers<br />

in 2005, can be seen at the museum in East Troy. (Photo furnished)<br />

East Troy Electric Railroad<br />

announces summer events<br />

Celebrating 106 years <strong>of</strong> riding the<br />

rails through Southeast Wisconsin’s Kettle<br />

Moraine countryside, the East Troy<br />

Electric Railroad has planned a number <strong>of</strong><br />

special events for the upcoming season<br />

showcasing its stable <strong>of</strong> interurban rail<br />

treasures, as well as the addition <strong>of</strong> a pizza<br />

train to its dinner train schedule allowing<br />

young rail fans the opportunity to dine<br />

aboard former coaches <strong>of</strong> the Chicago<br />

South Shore & South Bend Railroad. [The<br />

foregoing won the longest-sentence-<strong>of</strong>the-year<br />

award. Editor.]<br />

A variety <strong>of</strong> antique trolleys and<br />

interurban coaches that once whisked passengers<br />

from major cities to surrounding<br />

towns and nearby summer retreats will be<br />

featured during the season including<br />

Chicago’s workhorse “El” cars that<br />

debuted in the 1920s, a rare trolley built<br />

for the Milwaukee Transport Company in<br />

1920 and a lavish interurban trolley from<br />

1908 originally manufactured for the<br />

Sheboygan Light Power & Railway.<br />

All special events are included in the<br />

daily unlimited ride fare: $12.50 for adults;<br />

$10.50 for seniors; $8.00 for children ages<br />

three – 11; children under three, free.<br />

The East Troy Electric Railroad, one <strong>of</strong><br />

only three electric interurban railways in<br />

the U.S. that have maintained electric<br />

operations for more than 100 years, is<br />

home to over 20 rail treasures including<br />

open cars, locomotives, streetcars and<br />

interurban coaches. The railroad continues<br />

to be operated and managed by a<br />

legion <strong>of</strong> volunteers committed to the<br />

operation and preservation <strong>of</strong> historic trolleys<br />

and interurban railcars.<br />

The 2013 summer events calendar<br />

includes:<br />

North Shore Day<br />

June 22<br />

Celebrate the famed North Shore Line<br />

that once whisked passengers from<br />

Milwaukee to Chicago and all points inbetween.<br />

Photos and memorabilia <strong>of</strong> the<br />

North Shore Line, which ceased operation<br />

50 years ago, will be on display including<br />

a retrospective from noted railroad photographer<br />

John Gruber from the Center for<br />

Railroad Photography & Art in Madison.<br />

Historians from Classic Trains magazine<br />

will also be on-hand to discuss the interurban<br />

era and classic railroading in general.<br />

Avariety <strong>of</strong> historic railcars will be on display<br />

and ferrying passengers from the railroad’s<br />

depot and museum to the turn <strong>of</strong> the<br />

century-styled terminal at the renowned<br />

Elegant Farmer. North Shore Day will<br />

serve as the launch <strong>of</strong> a fundraising campaign<br />

to restore Chicago North Shore and<br />

Milwaukee Railroad coach 761, which<br />

will be on display during the event.<br />

Chicago Day<br />

July 27<br />

Celebrate Chicago’s railway history<br />

during Chicago Days as the East Troy<br />

Electric Railroad features its collection <strong>of</strong><br />

rapid transit cars that once whisked people<br />

around Chicago and its suburbs. Riders <strong>of</strong><br />

Chicago’s “L” line prior to 1978 will<br />

remember the iconic 4000-<strong>series</strong> cars with<br />

its interesting interiors, old-time light fixtures,<br />

walkover leatherette seats and<br />

“bowling alley seating at the ends. The<br />

historic Pullman-built cars <strong>of</strong> the famed<br />

Chicago South Shore & South Bend<br />

Railroad will also be running the rails during<br />

the weekend ferrying passengers from<br />

the railroad’s historic depot and museum<br />

to the turn <strong>of</strong> the century-styled terminal at<br />

the renowned Elegant Farmer.<br />

Milwaukee Day<br />

September 21<br />

Home to the last remaining streetcar<br />

from the Milwaukee Electric Railway &<br />

Light Company still in operation, the East<br />

Troy Electric Railroad celebrates<br />

Milwaukee’s rich railcar history during<br />

Milwaukee Days. Joining the 1920 built<br />

streetcar, which once whisked <strong>resident</strong>s<br />

from the greater Milwaukee area to the<br />

ballpark and shopping centers, is a 1907<br />

line car equipped to respond to trolley<br />

emergencies. Also featured during the<br />

weekend is L8, a stately locomotive built<br />

in 1935 that once served as a secondary<br />

work car called on to help in track maintenance<br />

and brush cutting, as well as serving<br />

as a yard goat and backup locomotive.<br />

Dinner Trains<br />

Recreating the time when commuter<br />

trains <strong>of</strong>fered lavish meals served on china<br />

atop white table cloths. The East Troy<br />

Electric Railroad <strong>of</strong>fers guests a two-hour,<br />

four-course exquisite dining experience.<br />

Home to the last remaining electric<br />

interurban dining car train in North<br />

America, dinner train service for the 2013<br />

season will take place on June 15,<br />

September 14 and 28, and October 5, 12,<br />

19 and 26. Tickets are $72 per person and<br />

prepaid reservations are required.<br />

New this year, the railroad’s familyfriendly<br />

pizza train will ride the rails on<br />

June 13 and August 17. The two-hour<br />

casual dining experience, taking riders<br />

from the railroad’s historic depot to<br />

Phantom <strong>Lake</strong> in Mukwonago, WI and<br />

back, includes pizza, beverage and garlic<br />

bread. Ticket price varies per number in<br />

party. Prepaid reservations are required.<br />

The East Troy Electric Railroad’s dining<br />

cars are former coaches <strong>of</strong> the Chicago<br />

South Shore & South Bend Railroad. Built<br />

in 1927 and acquired by the railroad in the<br />

early 1990s, each Pullman car underwent<br />

extensive renovation by museum volunteers<br />

resulting in mahogany trimmed, beautiful<br />

Art Deco interiors complemented by<br />

an exterior color scheme featuring the railroad’s<br />

colors <strong>of</strong> red and silver.<br />

For complete details on all East Troy<br />

Electric Railroad special events and dinner<br />

trains, visit www.easttroyrr.org.


24 — The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013<br />

By Kathi West<br />

I was at a quilt shop this week when a<br />

woman came in and asked for help with<br />

colors for her quilt. A friend <strong>of</strong> mine said<br />

she only buys kits with the fabric included<br />

because she doesn’t like to choose the colors.<br />

Another friend said she had to match<br />

the colors in her bedroom.<br />

Some people make quilts with only<br />

two colors, maybe three. They might get<br />

adventurous and use four or five colors.<br />

My first quilt had four in it. I still like it but<br />

I like my quilts to have a lot more colors<br />

now. They are much more interesting and<br />

can go with any colors in any room. If your<br />

quilt is pleasing to you then it is the right<br />

colors for you. It doesn’t matter what others<br />

think or do.<br />

We all have a certain color sense. My<br />

favorite color has always been red. And I<br />

think all reds go together if you have<br />

enough <strong>of</strong> them. There are quilters that disagree<br />

with me. But I don’t care. Red is sort<br />

<strong>of</strong> a neutral color. All colors go with red.<br />

Don’t be afraid to play with color. If you<br />

like red with orange, use it. When I was a<br />

kid, my mom said green and blue don’t go<br />

together. Well in my world they do. One <strong>of</strong><br />

my very favorite quilts is green and blue;<br />

lots <strong>of</strong> different greens and blues.<br />

My quilts and my flower gardens are<br />

getting more alike every year. I have every<br />

color in the rainbow in both. There is no<br />

right or wrong. If one color stands out too<br />

much, use more <strong>of</strong> it. If your quilt lacks<br />

spark add a bright colored fabric like yellow<br />

or lime green. (not too much just a little).<br />

Scrap quilts are much more interesting<br />

than a red and white quilt or a blue and<br />

white quilt. They are nice, and I have a<br />

couple <strong>of</strong> each, but they’re boring. One<br />

look and you’ve seen the quilt. A scrappy<br />

quilt with hundreds <strong>of</strong> different fabrics and<br />

colors you can look at a very long time and<br />

not get tired <strong>of</strong> it.<br />

QUILTING EVENTS<br />

April 4-6 Sewing and Quilting Expo,<br />

at the Shaumberg Convention Center in<br />

Shaumberg, Ill., is sponsored by Fons and<br />

Porter Love <strong>of</strong> Quilting. There will be classes,<br />

workshops, quilt exhibits, trunk shows,<br />

demos, and fantastic shopping. For more<br />

information visit www.sewingexpo.com or<br />

call 1-800-699-6309.<br />

April 6-7, “Here’s to Hollywood,<br />

Movies, Books, Fairy Tales” Crazy<br />

Quilters Quilt Show will be at Parkview<br />

Middle School, at 930 N. Rochester, in<br />

Mukwonago. There will be more than 300<br />

quilts on display, a vendors mall, and a bed<br />

turning <strong>of</strong> scrap quilts. This is a judged<br />

show with cash prizes. There are two raffles,<br />

a Bernina sewing machine and a<br />

queen size bed quilt. Kathy Kippers will<br />

appraise quilts by appointment, call (262)<br />

662-3451. If you would like to enter a quilt<br />

in the show go to www.mukwonagocrazyquolters.com<br />

or call Cindy<br />

Osinski at (414) 91603761 0r<br />

cosinski@wi.rr.com for more information<br />

and entry forms.<br />

April 7-9, Prairie Heritage Quilter<br />

Show in Sun Prairie will be held at St.<br />

Albert’s Catholic Church. This is a judged<br />

show.<br />

April 24-27, AQS Quilt Show will be<br />

held at the Paducah McCraken County<br />

Pieces <strong>of</strong> Time was presented at the 2012 Madison Expo. There must be at<br />

least 50 different fabrics in this quilt. It’s a quilt you can look at and study for a long<br />

time. (Beacon photo)<br />

Expo and Convention Center in Paducah,<br />

Ky. There will be lectures, workshops, and<br />

special events. This is a juried and judged<br />

show, which means only the best quilts<br />

from around the word are in this show.<br />

QUILT GUILD MEETINGS<br />

Chocolate City Quilters meet the second<br />

Monday <strong>of</strong> each month at 6:30 p.m. in<br />

the Burlington High School library, 400<br />

McCanna Parkway.<br />

The Crazy Quilt Guild Quilters meet<br />

the second Wednesday <strong>of</strong> each month at 7<br />

p.m. in the First Congregational Church,<br />

231 Roberts Drive in Mukwonago.<br />

The Harvard Village Quilters meet the<br />

third Wednesday <strong>of</strong> the month at 1 p.m. at<br />

Trinity Lutheran Church 504 East Diggins<br />

Street Harvard, Ill. Guests are Welcome.<br />

Quilts <strong>of</strong> Valor Quilt Group meets the<br />

second Tuesday <strong>of</strong> each month at 6 p.m. at<br />

This hawaiian sampler was at the Paducah show in 2011. It's a great example<br />

<strong>of</strong> my contention that all reds (hues and tints) go together. (Beacon photo)<br />

Ellen Weber’s Shed, 2789 Theater Road,<br />

Delavan. This group makes quilts for men<br />

and woman who have served in the military.<br />

Bring your sewing machine, fabric to<br />

make a QOV quilt or a quilt that you have<br />

started and any sewing tools you will need.<br />

The Scrappers Quilt Guild meets on the<br />

third Tuesday, <strong>of</strong> every month, at 6:30 p.m.<br />

in the Lions Field House on Hwy 67 (north)<br />

in Williams Bay. Bring your latest project to<br />

show and tell. Guests are always welcome.<br />

The Stone Mill Quilters meet the third<br />

Wednesday <strong>of</strong> each month at 6:30 p.m. at<br />

the Congregational Church in Whitewater,<br />

130 S. Church Street, but enter through the<br />

door on Franklin <strong>of</strong>f Main Street.<br />

If you have some quilting news to<br />

share with quilters in the greater Walworth<br />

County area, e-mail me at The Beacon,<br />

kbeacon@charter.net, or send a note to<br />

P.O. Box 69, Williams Bay, WI 53191.<br />

Make sure you send it about a month<br />

before the event. I will try to get it into the<br />

next issue.<br />

Raindance is the name <strong>of</strong> this colorful quilt. It was displayed at the AQS Show<br />

in Paducah in 2011. Look for all the animals in this quilt, lions, tigers and bears, oh my.<br />

Also snakes, crabs, giraffes and more decorate this masterpiece. (Beacon photo)


The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013 — 25<br />

Pet Questions and Answers<br />

By Marc Morrone<br />

Q: My female cat has a habit I would<br />

like to better understand. We have a big<br />

basket <strong>of</strong> assorted stuffed animals in the<br />

master bedroom. Every time she is left<br />

home alone, she takes one or both <strong>of</strong> the<br />

toy guinea pigs from the basket and leaves<br />

them near our front door. There are dogs,<br />

cats and other animals in the basket, but<br />

she only selects the guinea pigs. Why?<br />

A: Many cats will kill rodents and<br />

leave them for their human companions to<br />

find. Since the shape <strong>of</strong> a rodent is instinctive<br />

knowledge for a cat, perhaps the cat is<br />

picking out only the guinea pigs to leave as<br />

gifts for you. This answer suggests the cat<br />

is cognitively thinking about the situation.<br />

Some scientists would take issue with that<br />

and say the cat picked up the guinea pigs<br />

randomly and dropped them by the door<br />

randomly as it was wandering about in the<br />

house just before its human caretakers<br />

came home.<br />

Because the humans made such a fuss,<br />

the cat learned to do this in exchange for<br />

the drama and positive reinforcement.<br />

I think the answer falls somewhere in<br />

the middle. I agree that pets act a lot more<br />

instinctively than we would like to believe,<br />

but I also am sure that their life <strong>of</strong> leisure<br />

allows them the time and inclination to<br />

learn to act a lot more cognitively than<br />

mere instinct would allow.<br />

Q: I would like to know the correct<br />

way to feed my pit bulls. Is once-a-day<br />

feeding OK or is it better to feed them<br />

twice a day? I do not want them to get<br />

overweight, and everybody tells me something<br />

different.<br />

A: Growing up, I was always told by<br />

other dog keepers that an adult dog should<br />

be fed only once a day, in the evening.<br />

That caused both me and my dogs a lot <strong>of</strong><br />

stress – me because I love to feed animals<br />

and my dogs because they liked to eat.<br />

However, I soon started to feed them<br />

twice a day, and they did just fine. They<br />

never got too heavy from this routine, and<br />

were not scrounging around for food all day.<br />

How much to feed the dog each time<br />

varies from dog to dog. Some pet keepers<br />

I know just leave a dish <strong>of</strong> dry dog food<br />

out for the dogs all day, and their dogs eat<br />

a bit here and there to keep them satisfied<br />

during their waking hours. However, there<br />

are dogs that would eat as much food as is<br />

<strong>of</strong>fered – and the dish, too, if that were<br />

possible.<br />

If the feeding schedule you have chosen<br />

suits you and your dog and if your vet<br />

says your dog is the perfect weight for its<br />

build, then that is the routine you should<br />

continue to use.<br />

Q: I know my African gray parrot<br />

needs to be misted every day, but he has so<br />

much powder in his feathers that I could<br />

stand there for an hour misting him until<br />

my hand hurts and he is still dry. Is there<br />

any other way to get him wet? Some people<br />

say to take the bird into the shower<br />

with me, but who has time for that?<br />

A: When I was a kid, I worked in a garden<br />

center. When we were mixing the peat<br />

moss potting soil for seeds to be planted<br />

in, my boss would mix some dish soap in<br />

with it to wet it instantly. Otherwise, the<br />

water would just run <strong>of</strong>f it and we could<br />

never get to work.<br />

Pet stores sell shampoos made just for<br />

birds, and I always add some to my birds’<br />

misting bottles to wet them instantly.<br />

Q: My 7-year-old Dachshund-mix<br />

licks at everything - her furniture, her bed,<br />

and she even licks leaves during walks. I<br />

believe poor Goldie was kept in a crate for<br />

many hours as a puppy. Do you have any<br />

insights on her behavior?<br />

A: Dr. Ilana Reisner, a veterinary<br />

behaviorist in Philadelphia, Pak., explains<br />

that persistent licking can be coined a “displacement<br />

behavior,” sort <strong>of</strong> letting <strong>of</strong>f<br />

steam, as an outlet for anxiety, much as<br />

nail biting can be for people. However,<br />

since your dog seems so intent, more<br />

might be going on.” One determination <strong>of</strong><br />

seriousness is to assess if your dog can<br />

easily be distracted from licking and<br />

redircted to another behavior, such as com-<br />

“Our mission is to provide a rescue and home for abused, abandoned,<br />

retired and injured large felines, exotics and ho<strong>of</strong>ed animals.<br />

Sharon, WI 53585-9728<br />

ADMITTANCE SATURDAYS & SUNDAYS TO MEMBERS ONLY!<br />

FIND OUT HOW YOU CAN BECOME A MEMBER AND VOLUNTEER,<br />

visit our website www.votk.org<br />

We are a Federal and State licensed (501c3), not for pr<strong>of</strong>it educational organization.<br />

QUALITY, COMPASSIONATE PET CARE<br />

BY A CARING & FRIENDLY STAFF!<br />

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1107 Ann Street, Delavan • www.Delavan<strong>Lake</strong>sVet.com<br />

Seamus is another recent addition to The Beacon household. He found this file<br />

box to be a perfect hiding place, especially with the “window” provided by the handle<br />

flap so he can see who’s coming (below). (Beacon photo)<br />

ing when you call her.<br />

Lots <strong>of</strong> folks might jump to the idea<br />

that Goldie has a compulsive disorder, and<br />

certainly that possibility exists. However,<br />

Reisner says to first rule out a medical<br />

explanation (which most likely explains<br />

the licking), particularly a possible gastrointestinal<br />

issue, or even chronic tonsillitis.<br />

Scoping with biopsies will rule out the<br />

stomach issue and visually looking at<br />

throat will rule out the other. Crazy as it<br />

sounds, a food allergy is also possible.<br />

Reisner suggests you keep a log to<br />

determine what Goldie licks and when to<br />

determine if there's any pattern. This information<br />

might help a veterinarian.<br />

Meanwhile, it can do no harm to<br />

enhance your dog’s enrichment. Feed<br />

Goldie from various Kong or food dispensing<br />

toys. You might even stuff food<br />

inside toys and then hide them around the<br />

house, so she can sniff them out. Also, take<br />

Goldie for daily walks on-leash, not only<br />

for exercise but also to sniff what's new in<br />

the ’hood.<br />

“Teach Me How<br />

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Tues., Wed. & Thurs. 9:00 am-6:00 pm<br />

Fri. 9:00 am-5:00 pm; Sat. 8:00 am-3:00 pm


26 — The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013<br />

Aram Public Library, 404 E. Walworth<br />

Ave., Delavan. Hours are 9:30 a.m. to 8 p.m.<br />

Monday through Thursday, 9:30 a.m. to 5:30<br />

p.m. on Friday, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Saturday,<br />

and Sundays from 1 to 5 p.m. The library will<br />

be closed on March 29 and 31.<br />

• Youth Art Show during the month <strong>of</strong><br />

March. The artwork will be displayed in the<br />

Children’s Department for the entire month.<br />

• Storytime with Miss Kris - Wednesdays<br />

and Fridays at 10 a.m.<br />

•Tiny Tots Time, for children from birth<br />

through age 3, meets Wednesdays at 10 a.m.<br />

Preschool Storytime, for children age 3 to 6,<br />

meets Fridays at 10 a.m. Themes for this<br />

month are: April 3 and 5, Let’s Make Music;<br />

April 10 and 12, Sea Life; April 17 and 19,<br />

Bicycle Fun; April 24 and 26, Family Life.<br />

• LEGO Club, Monday, April 1 and<br />

April 15 at 4 p.m. Give our LEGO blocks a<br />

workout by building anything from a<br />

dinosaur to a spaceship. Work in teams or<br />

individually, give your creation a name, then<br />

see it displayed in the Children’s Library.<br />

•Exploration Art Studio, Tuesday, April<br />

9 at 4 p.m. This month we’re working with<br />

feathers! All materials provided.<br />

•Nibbles <strong>of</strong> Nutrition - Mondays, April<br />

15 through May 6 at 10 a..m. Enjoy listening<br />

to stories with a special preschooler (3-6<br />

years old) in your life? Would you like your<br />

child to try new or different healthy foods?<br />

Join us for the four-week <strong>series</strong> Nibbles <strong>of</strong><br />

Nutrition. There will be stories, activities,<br />

and snacks. Presented by the UW Extension.<br />

Registration is required.<br />

• Elephant and Piggie Party, Saturday,<br />

April 20 at 1 p.m. Love Elephant and Piggie<br />

as much as we do? Come celebrate with us.<br />

There will be lots <strong>of</strong> hilarious stories, food,<br />

and a super fun craft.<br />

• Peep Art for Teens and Tweens,<br />

Thursday, April 11, 6 p.m. Everybody knows<br />

what Peeps are – super sugary little chicks or<br />

rabbits in a variety <strong>of</strong> colors. But do you ever<br />

feel like maybe they’re not reaching their full<br />

potential? Do you ever think they could be<br />

something more? Join us for Peep Art and<br />

show us whatcha got. All materials provided.<br />

•Knitting Club for all ages and experience<br />

levels meets the first two Mondays and<br />

the last two Wednesdays <strong>of</strong> each month at 6<br />

p.m. Each session is led by an experienced<br />

knitter. Bring your own project to work on,<br />

share your expertise, and learn from other<br />

knitters.<br />

•Microwave Magic, Tuesday, April 16<br />

from 3 to 4 p.m. Learn to prepare a variety <strong>of</strong><br />

quick main dishes, breakfasts, and snacks in<br />

this class taught by the UW Extension.<br />

You’ll leave with new ideas to add variety to<br />

your quick meals. Registration is required.<br />

•Birds, Bees, Butterflies and Blossoms,<br />

Wednesday, April 17 from 2 to 4 p.m. Join<br />

UW Extension Horticulturist Chrissy Wen<br />

and learn to design your garden to attract the<br />

beautiful and beneficial B’s: birds, bees and<br />

butterflies. The program is open to the public,<br />

free <strong>of</strong> charge, and snacks will be provided.<br />

• Aram Book Club: “Still Life by Louise<br />

Penny,” Thursday, April 18 at 6:30 p.m.<br />

Chief Inspector Armand Gamache is called<br />

to the scene <strong>of</strong> a suspicious death. The locals<br />

are certain it’s a tragic hunting accident and<br />

nothing more, but Gamache smells something<br />

foul in these remote woods, and is certain<br />

that someone more sinister than a careless<br />

bowhunter is to blame.<br />

• Facebook for Beginners, Tuesday,<br />

April 23 from 1 to 2 p.m. Learn how to sign<br />

up for Facebook, manage your account<br />

including security, “friend” people, upload<br />

pictures, create wall posts, and other basic<br />

activities. Participants must have an e-mail<br />

account and know how to use it.<br />

Registration is required.<br />

• Living Better with Less Without<br />

Feeling Deprived, Thursday, April 25 from<br />

6:30 to 8 p.m. Gain a new perspective on<br />

City <strong>of</strong> Delavan Librarian Amber McCrae speaks to the Delavan-Darien Rotary<br />

Club on March 4, during their regular meeting at <strong>Lake</strong> Lawn Resort. She spoke about<br />

how technology has greatly expanded the number <strong>of</strong> magazines available at Aram<br />

Public Library. A s<strong>of</strong>tware program called Zinio allows readers to access magazines<br />

electronically in a ‘flip the pages’ style on computers, tablets, I-Pads, etc. The Zinio<br />

s<strong>of</strong>tware program is licensed by the <strong>Lake</strong>shore Library System and is accessible with<br />

a library card from any internet location. ZInio solves the problem <strong>of</strong> hard copy shortages,<br />

explained Amber, as well as raising magazine circulations from 135 in 2011 to<br />

1,300 in 2012. The biggest advantage <strong>of</strong> Zinio is the unlimited availability <strong>of</strong> almost 100<br />

<strong>of</strong> the most popular magazines – to anyone with a library card. (Photo furnished)<br />

decluttering, one that goes beyond cleaning<br />

out drawers to reconsidering your relationship<br />

to your belongings. Examine your<br />

beliefs about needs vs. wants and how your<br />

attitudes relate to today’s fast-paced world.<br />

Clutter Coach Kathi Miller returns to help<br />

attendees learn simple strategies for living a<br />

more sustainable, earth-friendly life. Registration<br />

is required.<br />

• Knitting Club, Wednesday, March 27 at<br />

6 p.m. For all ages and experience levels,.<br />

• The library now owns a batterypowered<br />

portable scanner that you may<br />

check out to use in the library. Scan your<br />

pictures or documents into the device,<br />

then use the cord provided to plug into<br />

your laptop or one <strong>of</strong> the library’s public<br />

computers and transfer or print your<br />

scans. The scanner checks out for a period<br />

<strong>of</strong> two hours from the Adult Services<br />

desk. You must have a valid SHARE<br />

library card in order to use it.<br />

• Kindle E-reader. Take our Kindle on<br />

vacation with you this year. The Kindle can<br />

now be checked out for 21 days, just like a<br />

book. It’s a great lightweight alternative to<br />

large print books; adjust the print to the size<br />

that works best for you. Plus, to update our<br />

Kindle with titles that you want to read,<br />

we’re taking requests. Leave your purchase<br />

suggestions at the Adult Services desk, and<br />

ask about checking out the Kindle.<br />

• Disc Cleaning Service. Extend the life<br />

<strong>of</strong> your favorite DVDs, CDs, and other discs.<br />

Bring your audio, video, or game discs to the<br />

library for cleaning on Saturdays between 1<br />

and 2:30 p.m. Library staff will clean them<br />

for you for $3 per disc. Stop at the Adult<br />

Services desk for more information about<br />

this service.<br />

• Would you like to get library news by email?<br />

Contact the library at 728-3111 or<br />

email interlib@aramlibrary.org to sign up.<br />

<br />

Barrett Memorial Library, 65 W.<br />

<strong>Geneva</strong> St., Williams Bay. Open Mon. and<br />

Wed. 9 a.m. - 7 p.m.; Tues., Thurs., Fri. 9<br />

a.m. - 6 p.m.; Sat. 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. Check the<br />

library’s new Web site at www.williamsbay.<br />

lib.wi.us/<br />

• Story Times Tuesdays at 10 a.m and<br />

FRED SCHUBERT<br />

REALTOR®, Broker<br />

262-949-7199<br />

fred@rauland.net<br />

Thursdays at 1:30 p.m. Same books and<br />

crafts both days.<br />

• Scrabble Club 10 a.m. - noon<br />

Wednesdays.<br />

• Knitting Circle, Wednesdays 1-3 p.m.<br />

All skill levels welcome. Take a project to<br />

work on.<br />

• The Saturday Morning Book Club<br />

meets the second Saturday <strong>of</strong> the month at 10<br />

a.m. The April 13 book discussion will be on<br />

“A Short History <strong>of</strong> Nearly Everything” by<br />

Bill Bryson. The May 11 book discussion will<br />

be on “Killing Kennedy” by Bill O’Reilly.<br />

• Story times, Tuesdays 10 a.m. and<br />

Thursdays 1:30 p.m. Same books and crafts<br />

both days<br />

• “What Are Teens Reading?” book group<br />

meets the third Wednesday <strong>of</strong> the month at 7<br />

p.m. This group is for parents to read and<br />

review teen books. Stop at the library to pick<br />

from a great selection <strong>of</strong> YA books.<br />

• Ongoing sale <strong>of</strong> a great selection <strong>of</strong><br />

used books. Browse Barret for Books.<br />

All programs are free and open to the public<br />

unless otherwise indicated. Call 245-2709<br />

or e-mail wmsbay@williamsbay.lib. wi.us.<br />

<br />

Brigham Memorial Library, 131 Plain<br />

St., Sharon.<br />

• Story Time, Wednesdays, 9:30 – 10:30<br />

a.m. A theme will unite a story and craft.<br />

Snacks will be available.<br />

• Young adult book club, every second<br />

Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. – 7:30 p.m.<br />

<br />

Darien Public Library, 47 Park St.,<br />

Darien. Hours: Mon-Thurs 10 a.m. - 7 p.m.,<br />

Sat. 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. 882-5155.<br />

• Wireless Internet now available. Bring<br />

your laptop and ask at the desk how to access<br />

the wireless connection.<br />

• Ongoing book sale.<br />

• The schedule for our popular free adult<br />

computer classes is now available. Stop in or<br />

call 882-5155 for information.<br />

<br />

East Troy Lions Public Library, 3094<br />

Graydon Ave., East Troy.<br />

• Book club, 6:30 p.m., first Tuesday <strong>of</strong><br />

each month.<br />

• Story time, 11 – 11:45 a.m., for children<br />

and their caregivers. Registration required.<br />

• Story Time, Fridays, 11:30 a.m., for<br />

ages 18 months – 4 years.<br />

For more information, call 426-6262.<br />

<br />

Fontana Public Library, 166 Second<br />

Ave., Fontana.<br />

• Happy-to-Be-Here Book Club, first<br />

Thursday <strong>of</strong> each month, 1 p.m.<br />

• Evening Book Club, third Thursday <strong>of</strong><br />

each month, 6:30 p.m.<br />

All programs are free and open to the<br />

public unless otherwise indicated. Call 275-<br />

5107 for more information.<br />

<br />

Genoa City Public Library, 126 Freeman<br />

St., Genoa City.<br />

• The Genoa City Library Friends will<br />

host a demonstration <strong>of</strong> unique English and<br />

European floral designs by Joanne Wright,<br />

owner <strong>of</strong> Lilypots in <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong>, on April<br />

22, at 7 p.m. at the Genoa City Village Hall,<br />

715 Walworth St., Genoa City, and is free<br />

and open to the public. Refreshments will be<br />

served.<br />

• Story time and craft time, Fridays, 10<br />

a.m. For kids ages 3-5 and siblings.<br />

• Ongoing book sale. Donations <strong>of</strong> new<br />

or slightly used books, including children’s<br />

books, may be dropped <strong>of</strong>f at the library.<br />

All programs are free and open to the<br />

public unless otherwise indicated. Call 279-<br />

6188 for more information.<br />

<br />

<strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong> Public Library, 918 W.<br />

Main St., <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong>. Phone 249-5299<br />

or visit the Library’s website at<br />

www.lakegene va.lib.wi.us.<br />

• The reading <strong>series</strong> “Poems by the<br />

<strong>Lake</strong>” will continue in the Smith Meeting<br />

Room on Wednesday, April 10 at 6:30 p.m.<br />

The program will be led by Alisha Benson,<br />

who received her MFA in Creative Writing:<br />

Poetry from Bowling Green State University.<br />

Those who attend the program are invited to<br />

read their favorite poems aloud on any <strong>subject</strong><br />

or simply listen. The theme is hometown<br />

poetry and participants are encouraged<br />

to share poems about <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong> and other<br />

homes or towns, real or imaginary. Benson<br />

will share examples <strong>of</strong> classic and contemporary<br />

home-town poetry. She will also introduce<br />

a writing technique inspired by<br />

Thornton Wilder’s “Our Town,” which is the<br />

selection for the local 2013 Big Read, and<br />

“The Triggering Town” by Richard Hugo.<br />

Free copies <strong>of</strong> Poetry Magazine’s April 2013<br />

issue, donated by the Poetry Foundation, will<br />

be available on a first-come basis. The<br />

library’s collection <strong>of</strong> books by United States<br />

Poet Laureates will be available to check out<br />

on the night <strong>of</strong> the reading. Everyone is welcome<br />

to attend this program at no charge.<br />

• Preschool story time Tuesdays and<br />

Fridays from 10:30 – 11 a.m. Children ages<br />

2-5 years are especially encouraged to attend<br />

this half hour reading program. However,<br />

families and children <strong>of</strong> all ages are also<br />

invited. Each week, library staff read aloud<br />

stories that are <strong>of</strong>ten based on a seasonal<br />

theme. The event may include singing, dancing,<br />

and other participatory activities.<br />

• Generations-on-line computer tutoring is<br />

now available for senior citizens. Tutors will<br />

be available Tuesdays from 10 – 11 a.m. and<br />

Wednesdays from 2 – 3 p.m. in the library’s<br />

reference room. The goal <strong>of</strong> the program is to<br />

provide seniors with beginning computer skills<br />

and to interest them in exploring elementary<br />

uses <strong>of</strong> the World Wide Web and e-mail.<br />

Interested senior citizens may sign up at<br />

the reference desk or call the Library at 249-<br />

5299 to make a reservation. Volunteer tutors<br />

are made possible by the Retired and Senior<br />

Volunteer Program (RSVP). The laptop computer<br />

used for the tutoring sessions was made<br />

possible by a grant received by <strong>Lake</strong>shores<br />

from the Racine Community Foundation and<br />

administered by Generations on Line.<br />

(Continued on page 28)<br />

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The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013 — 27<br />

Plan ahead. Look through the calendar to<br />

make advance reservations for events that<br />

require them. Phone numbers are in area<br />

code (262) unless otherwise indicated.<br />

• • • •<br />

FRIDAY, MARCH 22<br />

Fish fry, 4:30-7 p.m., St. Benedict’s<br />

Parish Hall, 137 Dewey Avenue, Fontana.<br />

Baked and fried Icelandic cod, potato pancakes,<br />

french fries, hushpuppies, green<br />

beans, applesauce, coleslaw, c<strong>of</strong>fee, tea, milk<br />

and homemade desserts at a cost <strong>of</strong> $10 for<br />

adults, $5 for children, or $30 for a family.<br />

SATURDAY, MARCH 23<br />

Elkhorn Easter Egg Hunt. Registration<br />

and games at 9 a.m.; Easter Egg Hunt begins<br />

at 9:30 a.m. at the Elkhorn Area High School<br />

Athletic Lobby. Age groups are 0-3, 4-6 and<br />

7-10. Bring your camera for photos with the<br />

Easter Bunny. Please consider bringing a<br />

non-perishable food item for the Elkhorn<br />

Food Pantry or a donation for the <strong>Lake</strong>land<br />

Animal Shelter.<br />

February Sky, a husband and wife duet,<br />

will perform at UU Church <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Lake</strong>s in<br />

from 7-9 p.m. See the article on page 28 for<br />

more information.<br />

SATURDAY, MARCH 23<br />

Easter Egg Hunt, 9 a.m., East Troy<br />

High School, East Troy.<br />

Easter Egg Hunt, 10 a.m., Brookwood<br />

Middle School, 1020 Hunters Ridge Dr.,<br />

Genoa City. Call 877-2220 with questions.<br />

Easter Egg Hunt, 10 a.m., Star Center<br />

School, W1380 <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong> Hwy., <strong>Lake</strong><br />

<strong>Geneva</strong>.<br />

SATURDAY, MARCH 30<br />

Easter Egg Hunt, 10 a.m., West Park,<br />

Hwy. 14 and North Road, Darien.<br />

Easter Egg Hunt, 10 a.m., Phoenix<br />

Park, Wisconsin and 2nd streets, Delavan.<br />

Easter Egg Hunt, 10 a.m., Duck Pond<br />

Recreation Area, Wild Duck Road, Fontana.<br />

Call 275-2117 or log on to www.bigfoot<br />

recreation.org<br />

Easter Egg Hunt, 10 a.m., Lions Park,<br />

Highway 67, north, Williams Bay.<br />

<strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong> Jaycees Easter Egg Hunt<br />

10:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m., Seminary Park, <strong>Lake</strong><br />

<strong>Geneva</strong>. Log on to www.lakegeneva jaycees.org.<br />

TUESDAY, MARCH 26<br />

Used Computers & Books Sale, 8:30<br />

a.m. - 5 p.m., room 112 in the South Building<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Gateway Technical College Elkhorn<br />

Campus for a variety <strong>of</strong> deskjet and laser<br />

printers, desktop systems with LCD monitors,<br />

Macs, laptops and miscellaneous<br />

peripherals. Cash only. All equipment is sold<br />

as is, no s<strong>of</strong>tware included.<br />

<strong>Geneva</strong> <strong>Lake</strong> Museum Tuesdays at Two<br />

workshop; Dolls, Dolls, Dolls; bring one and<br />

talk about who they are and where they fit<br />

into our lives today and in the past. Free to<br />

museum members, $5 for non-members.<br />

<strong>Geneva</strong> <strong>Lake</strong> Museum, 255 Mill St. (intersection<br />

<strong>of</strong> Mill and Main), <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong>. Call<br />

248-6060 or email staff@genevalakemuse<br />

um.org to make a reservation.<br />

<strong>Lake</strong>land Audubon Society presents<br />

“Wisconsin's Wood-Warblers: The<br />

Butterflies <strong>of</strong> the Bird World” 7 p.m. in the<br />

Lion’s Field House, Highway 67, north,<br />

Williams Bay. Wayne Rhode has had the<br />

good fortune to spend the last six years photographing<br />

many <strong>of</strong> the three dozen warbler<br />

species which nest in or migrate through the<br />

Badger State, and these images will form the<br />

backbone <strong>of</strong> his presentation on warblers. He<br />

will also feature tips for locating warblers,<br />

identifying them, and photographing them.<br />

He has also promised to bring several books<br />

about warblers, so be sure to take a good look<br />

at the literature that's available. Don’t forget<br />

to bring your own tips and questions; ample<br />

time will be provided for interaction - as we<br />

all gear up for the warbler migration in May!<br />

There will be complementary c<strong>of</strong>fee and<br />

tea, plus snacks both before and after the program.<br />

The public is invited, free <strong>of</strong> charge.<br />

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 27<br />

Used Computers & Books Sale, 8:30<br />

a.m. - 5 p.m., room 112 in the South Building<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Gateway Technical College Elkhorn<br />

Campus for a variety <strong>of</strong> deskjet and laser<br />

printers, desktop systems with LCD monitors,<br />

Macs, laptops and miscellaneous<br />

peripherals. Cash only. All equipment is sold<br />

as is, no s<strong>of</strong>tware included.<br />

SATURDAY, MARCH 30<br />

Easter Egg Hunt, Phoenix Park,<br />

Washington and S. 2nd streets in the city <strong>of</strong><br />

Delavan. The hunt will begin at 10 a.m. The<br />

Easter Bunny will be present to greet the area<br />

children and will also make appearances in<br />

the stores in Delavan. The Delavan - Delavan<br />

<strong>Lake</strong> Area Chamber <strong>of</strong> Commerce sponsors<br />

the Easter Egg Hunt. Candy, eggs and special<br />

treats will be supplied by Delavan <strong>Lake</strong>s<br />

Veterinary Clinic, Andes Candies, Comfort<br />

Suites, Wal-Mart, and McDonalds.<br />

SUNDAY, MARCH 31<br />

Easter Egg Hunt, 11:30 a.m. and 1:30<br />

p.m., The Abbey Resort, 269 Fontana Blvd.,<br />

Fontana. Call 275-9000, or log on to<br />

www.theabbeyresort.com for more info.<br />

Easter Egg Hunt, 10-11 a.m., <strong>Lake</strong><br />

Lawn Resort, 2400 E. <strong>Geneva</strong> St., Delavan,<br />

Call 728-7950 or log on to www. lakelawnresort.com<br />

for more information.<br />

Easter Egg Hunt, 1 p.m., Grand<br />

<strong>Geneva</strong> Resort, 7036 Grand <strong>Geneva</strong> Way,<br />

<strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong>. Call 248-8811, or log on to<br />

www.grandgeneva.com<br />

MONDAY, APRIL 1<br />

Networking Event. Join Young<br />

Auditorium for a tourism and chamber networking<br />

after hours event with refreshments<br />

at 6 p.m., a Wisconsin Department <strong>of</strong><br />

Tourism update from David Spiegelberg at<br />

6:30 p.m., then stay for the premiere screening<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Whitewater episode <strong>of</strong> Milwaukee<br />

Public <strong>TV</strong>’s “Around the Corner” with John<br />

McGivern. RSVP to Ben Strand at 472-6224<br />

or email strandb@uww.edu.<br />

TUESDAY, APRIL 2<br />

<strong>Geneva</strong> <strong>Lake</strong> Museum Tuesdays at Two<br />

workshop; learn about Lorine Niedecker. Free<br />

to museum members, $5 for non-members.<br />

<strong>Geneva</strong> <strong>Lake</strong> Museum, 255 Mill St. (intersection<br />

<strong>of</strong> Mill and Main), <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong>. Call<br />

248-6060 or email staff@genevalake museum.org<br />

to make a reservation.<br />

Walworth County Genealogical Society,<br />

6:30 p.m. at the Community Centre, 826<br />

<strong>Geneva</strong> St, Delavan, will feature Patricia<br />

Boyd <strong>of</strong> Photographs, Restorations &<br />

Composites in “Bring Those Photos Back To<br />

Life.” Bring a faded, old or damaged picture,<br />

black or white or color and experience hands<br />

on manipulation to bring your photograph<br />

back to life. The program is free to the public.<br />

Refreshments will be provided. For information,<br />

call Deb Ketchum at 215-0118.<br />

FRIDAY, APRIL 5<br />

Blood Drive sponsored by the Williams<br />

Bay High School Student Council from 7<br />

a.m. until 12:30 p.m. The Blood Center <strong>of</strong><br />

Wisconsin will be collecting blood donations<br />

from anyone who is 16 years old (with parent<br />

consent) or older and in good health. Walkins<br />

will be accepted but appointments are<br />

encouraged. To schedule an appointment,<br />

please call the school at 245-6224. The<br />

process will take approximately one hour.<br />

Donors should bring a photo ID that includes<br />

birth date.<br />

Senior Travel Club <strong>of</strong> Walworth Co.,<br />

10-11 a.m. in the Community Room at<br />

Matheson Memorial Library in Elkhorn.<br />

Continue signup for the May 17 trip to The<br />

Bartlett Mandir, Bartlett , Ill., and begin signing<br />

up for the June 12 trip, “Brewsin’ to<br />

Cruising” a Milwaukee River Cruise.<br />

Program for this meeting will be Dr.<br />

Solverson from the Eye Physicians &<br />

Surgeons Clinic, Elkhorn. Visitors and new<br />

members are always welcome. Membership<br />

is $15/year. Call Rachel at 743-1555 with<br />

questions.<br />

Limber Timbers Square Dance Club,<br />

7:30-10 p.m. in the cafeteria <strong>of</strong> Elkhorn<br />

Middle School, 627 E. Court St. (Hwy. 11),<br />

Elkhorn. $5 adults, $2 children. For information<br />

call Karen or Jose at 275-6373 or Barb at<br />

(608) 883-2017. Caller, Bob Asp, cuer, Jerry<br />

Buckmaster.<br />

SUNDAY, APRIL 7<br />

Women’s Extravaganza, 12-4 p.m.<br />

Enjoy a fun filled afternoon at Staller<br />

Winery, located at W8896 Cty Rd. A in<br />

Delavan, with 20 exhibitors, raffles, door<br />

prizes, food and wine available as well as<br />

items for sale and demonstrations.<br />

Admission is $2 or non-perishable food<br />

items for the food pantry.<br />

TUESDAY, APRIL 9<br />

<strong>Geneva</strong> <strong>Lake</strong> Museum Tuesdays at Two<br />

workshop; Carpenters Tools. Free to museum<br />

members, $5 for non-members. <strong>Geneva</strong> <strong>Lake</strong><br />

Museum, 255 Mill St. (intersection <strong>of</strong> Mill<br />

and Main), <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong>. Call 248-6060 or<br />

email staff@genevalakemuseum.org to make<br />

a reservation.<br />

THURSDAY, APRIL 11<br />

Friends <strong>of</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong> Theater fundraiser<br />

featuring Chicago Tribune columnist and<br />

WBEZ Radio personality Rick Kogan, in his<br />

program, “Off The Record,” 7 p.m., Badger<br />

High School auditorium. A Q&A and meet<br />

and greet book signing will follow the talk.<br />

The evening will begin with music from<br />

Williams Bays’ own Rock Central. Tickets<br />

are $20 for adults and $10 for students. To<br />

order, go to www.friends<strong>of</strong> genevatheater.org.<br />

FRIDAY, APRIL 12<br />

Walworth County Fur and Feather<br />

Swap, 7-10 a.m., Walworth County<br />

Fairgrounds, Hwy. 11 East, Elkhorn. The<br />

swap features a variety <strong>of</strong> small animals and<br />

pets, including chickens, turkeys, waterfowl,<br />

rabbits, caged birds, goats and gerbils, related<br />

crafts and equipment. Buyers are encouraged<br />

to come early for the best selection.<br />

Admission is $1, children under 12 free. A<br />

lunch stand will be available on the grounds.<br />

The place for adults and children to enjoy the<br />

familiar while discovering new and unusual<br />

types birds and small animals.<br />

~ ~ ~ Ongoing events ~ ~ ~<br />

American Legion Auxiliary meeting,<br />

6:45 p.m. on the second Monday <strong>of</strong> each<br />

month at the Legion Hall on Second Street in<br />

Delavan. The group raises money for scholarships<br />

and to send gifts at Christmas time<br />

to the servicemen and women that are hospitalized<br />

due to injuries while in combat.<br />

Smelt and fish fry, 5:30-7:30 p.m.,<br />

fourth Friday <strong>of</strong> the month at the Delavan<br />

American Legion, 111 S. Second St. in<br />

Delavan. $8.50 for smelt, tilapia, salads and<br />

dessert. Full bar available.<br />

Attention horse lovers – Walworth<br />

County Boots and Saddle Club is looking for<br />

new members. Meetings take place at 7 p.m.,<br />

second Saturday <strong>of</strong> each month for potluck<br />

and to plan events. Sugar Creek Town Hall,<br />

N6641 Co. Road H, Elkhorn. Call Fred<br />

Campisano, 716-6355 for more information.<br />

<strong>Geneva</strong> <strong>Lake</strong> Museum, Saturdays 10<br />

a.m. - 4 p.m. in January and February, 255<br />

Mill St, <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong>. Call 248-6060.<br />

East Troy Area Historical Society<br />

exhibit on Girl Scouts and camps in the<br />

Walworth County area. The exhibit is open<br />

through Memorial Day on Saturdays from 11<br />

a.m. - 3 p.m., Wednesdays from 9 a.m. - noon<br />

and by appointment for groups <strong>of</strong> scouts who<br />

wish to view it. The exhibit includes a silent<br />

film from 1918, a hall filled with local and<br />

historical items to view, a scavenger hunt and<br />

activities that girls can take home to do. The<br />

exhibit is located on Church Street just <strong>of</strong>f<br />

HWY 120 and ES on the historic square in<br />

the heart <strong>of</strong> East Troy. Check the website<br />

etahs.org.<br />

Women <strong>of</strong> all ages who enjoy singing<br />

are invited to visit Spirit <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Lake</strong>s Sweet<br />

Adelines International chorus. Discover just<br />

how fun it is to sing with Sweet Adelines<br />

International. Tuesday Nights 7 p.m. at<br />

Horticultural Hall in <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong>.<br />

OFA-LG, meets at 6:30 p.m. the fourth<br />

Monday <strong>of</strong> each month at Caribou C<strong>of</strong>fee in<br />

<strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong>. Come join us for discussion<br />

and updates on the happenings in<br />

Washington, D.C.<br />

Walworth County AARP #5310 meets<br />

the fourth Tuesday <strong>of</strong> the month from 9:30-<br />

11:30 a.m. at Peoples Bank, 837 Wisconsin<br />

St, Elkhorn. The speaker for March is Mike<br />

McMcabe ,director at Wisconsin democracy<br />

campaign .The public is always welcome.<br />

Contact Jim at 642-5694.<br />

Southern <strong>Lake</strong>s Masonic Lodge #12,<br />

1007 S. 2nd St., Delavan. Stated meetings<br />

are second and fourth Mondays at 7 p.m.<br />

<strong>Geneva</strong> Masonic Lodge #44, 335 <strong>Lake</strong><br />

Shore Dr., <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong>. Regularly stated<br />

meetings, second and fourth Tuesdays, 7:30<br />

p.m. 725-3062.<br />

Ice Age Trail Alliance, monthly meeting,<br />

third Tuesday <strong>of</strong> each month 7 p.m. at U.S.<br />

Bank, Elkhorn (Downstairs in the community<br />

meeting room, enter at the back door).<br />

Home-brew Club, 7 - 9 p.m., <strong>Lake</strong><br />

<strong>Geneva</strong> Brewing Emporium, 640 W. Main<br />

Street, <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong>, meets the third<br />

Wednesday <strong>of</strong> every month. Call 729-4005<br />

for more information.<br />

Butchers Model Car Club 4H models<br />

project meetings take place on the third<br />

Saturday <strong>of</strong> the month from 10 a.m. - 2 p.m.<br />

at the Delavan Community Center, 826<br />

<strong>Geneva</strong> St., led by 4H scale models key advisor<br />

Keith Reimers. Bring models for display<br />

and projects to work on. Sale and swap items<br />

are also welcome. The club also hosts the 4H<br />

scale models project and young people in the<br />

project are encouraged to attend. Call Keith<br />

at 728-1483 for more information.<br />

Walworth County Toastmasters Club<br />

meets the 1st and 3rd Wednesday <strong>of</strong> every<br />

month from 6:30 to 8 p.m., at VIP Services,<br />

811 E. <strong>Geneva</strong>, Elkhorn. Check www.wal<br />

worthcountytoastmasters.com.<br />

Bingo, second and fourth Thursday <strong>of</strong><br />

the month at the Delavan American Legion<br />

hall, 111 S. 2nd St. Doors open at 5:30 p.m.,<br />

a 15-game session begins at 6:30.<br />

Progressive session follows. $1 face, progressive<br />

pot grows until it is won. $100 consolation<br />

prize.<br />

Bingo, first Monday <strong>of</strong> the month at the<br />

Town <strong>of</strong> Delavan Community Park,<br />

Highway 50 and South Shore Drive. Doors<br />

open at 6 p.m. and a 15-game session begins<br />

at 7 p.m. Plenty <strong>of</strong> parking and food/beverages<br />

available.<br />

Bingo, St. Andrew Parish in Delavan.<br />

The games will be played on the first Friday<br />

<strong>of</strong> every month, with doors opening at 6 p.m.<br />

and play starting at 7 p.m. For more info see<br />

www.standrews-delavan.org.<br />

(Continued on page 30)<br />

Puzzle Answers<br />

JUMBLE ANSWERS<br />

BASIS TESTY QUAINT STOLID<br />

What the wine collector invested in —<br />

“LIQUID” ASSETS<br />

KIDS’ JUMBLE<br />

FAN BELL CORN WORM<br />

What do you call a cow eating grass? —<br />

ALAWN “MOOER”<br />

©2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc.<br />

BOGGLE ANSWERS<br />

RAINY WINDY<br />

SNOWY SUNNY<br />

STORMY CLOUDY<br />

©2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc.


28 — The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013<br />

February Sky to sing in March<br />

The longtime favorite, February Sky,<br />

a singing duo consisting <strong>of</strong> Phil Cooper<br />

and Susan Urban, will perform again at<br />

the UU Church <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Lake</strong>s in Elkhorn<br />

on Saturday, March 23 from 7-9 p.m.<br />

According to Lilli Kuzma, host <strong>of</strong><br />

WDCB Public Radio’s “Folk Festival,”<br />

“February Sky, a duo consisting <strong>of</strong> Phil<br />

Cooper and Susan Urban, combines the<br />

musical talent and chemistry <strong>of</strong> Phil’s<br />

traditional influences and beautiful gui-<br />

Library Notes<br />

Continued from page 26<br />

For more information, call the library at<br />

249-5299 or visit the Library Web site, www.<br />

lakegeneva.lib.wi.us.<br />

<br />

Matheson Memorial Library, 101 N.<br />

Wisconsin St., Elkhorn. Open Monday -<br />

Thursday 9 a.m. - 8 p.m., Friday 9 a.m. - 6<br />

p.m. and Saturday 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. 723-2678.<br />

• Free Movie Night showing <strong>of</strong> “Les<br />

Miserables” on April 12 at 6:30pm. Starring<br />

Hugh Jackman, Russell Crowe and Amanda<br />

Seyfried, this epic film follows an escaped<br />

convict seeking redemption while being hunted<br />

for decades by the police. Based on the<br />

novel by Victor Hugo and Tony Award-winning<br />

musical. Winner <strong>of</strong> three Academy<br />

Awards, including Best Supporting Actress<br />

Anne Hathaway. Admission, popcorn and<br />

soda are all provided by the Friends <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Library. Rated PG-13. Children under the age<br />

<strong>of</strong> 13 must be accompanied by an adult.<br />

• The library hosts two book clubs per<br />

month. The Page Turners meet on the first<br />

Wednesday <strong>of</strong> the month at 6:30 p.m. and the<br />

Afternoon Book Club meets on the third<br />

Wednesday <strong>of</strong> the month at 2 p.m. You can<br />

check out a copy <strong>of</strong> the book club selection 3-<br />

4 weeks prior to the book club meeting. All<br />

meetings are held at the library and are facilitated<br />

by staff librarians.<br />

• Story times are about 30 minutes and are<br />

filled with books, songs and more. Each week<br />

will bring something new. No registration<br />

required. Toddlers on Tuesday at 10 a.m. and<br />

11 a.m.; Books n Babies on Thursday at 10<br />

a.m.; Preschool age on Wednesday at 10 a.m.;<br />

and Tiny Tots 2nd and 4th Monday at 6:30<br />

p.m. We Explore, ages 3+, Friday 10 a.m.<br />

• The Lego Building Club for all ages<br />

meets every other Thursday at 3:30 p.m. in the<br />

community center. Each meeting will feature<br />

a different building theme. Creations will be<br />

displayed in the library and online. Lego<br />

donations greatly appreciated. Messy Art Club<br />

meets on the alternate Thursday at 3:30 p.m.<br />

• Elkhorn Area Writers’ Group, Tuesdays<br />

from 6-8 p.m. in the Mary Bray Room, upper<br />

level <strong>of</strong> the library, for anyone who wishes to<br />

share their writing. Each member is allowed<br />

equal time to share work with others: poems,<br />

manuscripts, short stories, etc. Please bring<br />

at least five copies <strong>of</strong> each selected work for<br />

review. We all benefit from the power <strong>of</strong> collaboration.<br />

Questions? Email: elkhornrice<br />

@gmail.com.<br />

• The Walworth County Genealogical<br />

Society Library is open Tuesdays from 10<br />

a.m – 3 p.m. and by appointment, which can<br />

be made by calling the WCGS librarian at<br />

215-0118. A board member will always be<br />

there to render assistance if needed. To<br />

obtain membership information or find literature<br />

regarding Walworth County, visit walworthcgs.com.<br />

All programs are free and open to the<br />

public unless otherwise indicated. Call 723-<br />

2678 or visit www.elkhorn.lib.wi.us for more.<br />

<br />

Twin <strong>Lake</strong>s Community Library, 110<br />

S. <strong>Lake</strong> Ave., Twin <strong>Lake</strong>s. 877-4281. Hours:<br />

Monday - Wednesday 10 a.m. -8 p.m., Thurs.<br />

10 a.m. - 4 p.m. Friday – Sunday 12-4 p.m.<br />

• Senior C<strong>of</strong>fee Hour, 10-11:30 a.m. on<br />

the second Wednesday <strong>of</strong> each month will<br />

feature healthy refreshments, programs for<br />

tar work with Susan’s stellar songwriting,<br />

delivering songs that tell stories <strong>of</strong><br />

lives and feelings, resonate with messages<br />

<strong>of</strong> social justice, and entertain with<br />

quirky humor that adroitly exposes<br />

human nature.”<br />

UU Church <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Lake</strong>s is located at<br />

319 N. Broad St. in Elkhorn. The cost is<br />

$10 at the door and includes refreshments<br />

and drinks. For more information,<br />

call 723-7440 or visit www.uulakes.org.<br />

seniors, good conversation, and <strong>of</strong> course,<br />

c<strong>of</strong>fee.<br />

• LEGO Building Club for all ages. No<br />

registration required. For those who love to<br />

build with Legos, want to stretch their creativity<br />

and meet other kids who love to build.<br />

We’ll provide the Legos. You provide the<br />

creativity. When you’re finished building,<br />

we’ll put your creations on display. Well also<br />

have DUPLO blocks available for kids ages<br />

5 and younger. Tuesday, April 16, 5:30 – 7<br />

p.m.; Saturday, May 11, 10:30 a.m. – 12:30<br />

p.m.<br />

• Alphabet Themed Story Time: Letter<br />

Q, Thursday, April 4, 11:30 a.m.<br />

• Books & Boogie, ages 2-5 10:30-11<br />

a.m., Thursdays, March 28, April 11, 25,<br />

May 9. No registration required. Bounce on<br />

in for Books & Boogie. We’ll read stories,<br />

sing songs, and move and groove.<br />

•Baby Time, Friday, April 19. Ages<br />

birth - 2, 10:30 - 11 a.m. No registration<br />

required. Join us for songs, activities, and<br />

even a story or two perfect for babies. Baby<br />

Time is a great place for babies and caregivers<br />

to meet.<br />

• Bedtime Storytimes, Tuesday, April 30,<br />

ages 1 - 5, 6:30 – 7 p.m. No registration<br />

required. Can’t make it to morning story<br />

time programs? Check out our special<br />

evening story times for quiet, calming stories,<br />

perfect for winding down the day. Kids<br />

can a pair <strong>of</strong> comfy pajamas and bring their<br />

favorite stuffed animal.<br />

<br />

Walworth Memorial Library, 101<br />

Maple Ave., Walworth. Open Mon. and Wed.<br />

10 a.m. - 8 p.m., Tues., Thurs., Fri. and Sat.<br />

10 a.m. - 5 p.m.<br />

Now <strong>of</strong>fering wireless Internet service.<br />

• Knitting and crocheting classes,<br />

Saturdays, 10:30 a.m. Call for details.<br />

• Preschool Story Hour, Fridays, 9:45 –<br />

10:30 a.m., for preschool-age children and<br />

their caregivers. The hour will include stories,<br />

snacks, crafts and more.<br />

• Book Club for adults, third Saturday <strong>of</strong><br />

each month, 9:30 – 10:30 a.m.<br />

• Digital downloads <strong>of</strong> electronic books<br />

(e-books) are growing in popularity and the<br />

library is participating with the <strong>Lake</strong>shores<br />

Library System in a statewide program to<br />

buy $1 million in new content in 2012 for the<br />

Digital Download Center (http://dbooks.<br />

wplc.info) sponsored by the Wisconsin<br />

Public Library Consortium. You can also<br />

access the Digital Download Center through<br />

your library’s online catalogue.<br />

Available to all Wisconsin <strong>resident</strong>s, the<br />

Digital Download Center <strong>of</strong>fers e-books,<br />

audio books, videos and music that you can<br />

download to devices such as iPods and other<br />

MP3 players, Kindles, Sony eReaders,<br />

Nooks and iPads, to name just a few. For a<br />

complete list <strong>of</strong> supported devices, visit the<br />

Digital Download Center and use the link<br />

near the bottom <strong>of</strong> the left column. While all<br />

new titles will not be available immediately,<br />

the purchase <strong>of</strong> new titles has already begun<br />

and will continue throughout 2012 and<br />

beyond.<br />

All programs are free and open to the<br />

public unless otherwise indicated. Call 275-<br />

6322 for more information.<br />

<br />

Librarians and Friends Groups: Send<br />

information about upcoming library events<br />

by mail to: The Beacon, P.O. Box 69,<br />

Williams Bay, WI 53191; by fax to 245-1855;<br />

or by e-mail to dbeacon@charter.net.<br />

Ayoungster is fascinated by the intricate model train layouts during the Sixth<br />

Annual Model Train Show, March 8-10, at the American Legion Hall in Delavan.<br />

(Beacon photo)<br />

Delavan Easter egg hunt and more<br />

The annual Easter Egg Hunt, is<br />

scheduled for Saturday, March 30 at<br />

Phoenix Park. The hunt will begin at 10<br />

a.m. The Easter Bunny will be present to<br />

greet the area children. The Easter<br />

Bunny will also make appearances in the<br />

stores in Delavan.<br />

The Delavan - Delavan <strong>Lake</strong> Area<br />

Chamber <strong>of</strong> Commerce sponsors the<br />

Easter Egg Hunt. Delavan <strong>Lake</strong>s<br />

Veterinary Clinic, Andes Candies,<br />

Comfort Suites, Wal-Mart, and<br />

McDonalds supplied the candy, eggs,<br />

and special treats.<br />

In addition to the hunt, Easter<br />

Baskets will be placed in Delavan businesses<br />

the week <strong>of</strong> March 25. The baskets<br />

will have numbers assigned to them.<br />

Children ages 3-9 years need to register<br />

at the Delavan Chamber <strong>of</strong>fice, 52<br />

E Walworth Ave. or call the <strong>of</strong>fice at<br />

728-5095 to receive a number corresponding<br />

to a business Easter Basket.<br />

Once the child receives a number and a<br />

list <strong>of</strong> businesses with the baskets,<br />

he/she will then go to the businesses in<br />

search <strong>of</strong> the basket. There are a limited<br />

number <strong>of</strong> baskets available. It will be a<br />

first come first serve basis for children<br />

to sign up to receive numbers. There is<br />

no cost to participate, but there is a limit<br />

<strong>of</strong> two per household. For more information,<br />

contact the Delavan Chamber <strong>of</strong><br />

Commerce at 728-5095 Monday<br />

through Friday from 9 a .m. - 3 p.m.<br />

The Delavan – Delavan <strong>Lake</strong> Area<br />

Chamber <strong>of</strong> Commerce sponsors many<br />

activities including Cars Time Forgot,<br />

which will take place on July 14. The<br />

chamber welcomes new businesses,<br />

sponsors business seminars, and speakers,<br />

promotes holiday events and provides<br />

networking opportunities. For<br />

event listings log on to www.delavan<br />

wi.org.<br />

The annual Delavan – Delavan <strong>Lake</strong><br />

Area Chamber <strong>of</strong> Commerce annual<br />

auction will take place on May 31. It<br />

will be held at <strong>Lake</strong> Lawn Resort and is<br />

the chamber’s biggest fundraiser.<br />

Proceeds from the auction help fund the<br />

many activities and community events<br />

<strong>of</strong>fered by the chamber.<br />

If anyone would like to donate to the<br />

auction or attend, please contact Jackie<br />

Busch, Executive Director at the<br />

Chamber <strong>of</strong>fice.<br />

For more information contact the<br />

Delavan - Delavan <strong>Lake</strong> Area Chamber<br />

<strong>of</strong> Commerce at 728-5095.<br />

See listings for area Easter Egg<br />

Hunts in What’s Happening on page 27.<br />

Slice <strong>of</strong> One Topping Pizza & Drink<br />

Let<br />

Us<br />

Cater<br />

Your<br />

Next<br />

Event<br />

$ 3.95 - Served All Day!<br />

Dine In Carry Out Delivery Catering Williams Bay Dock Delivery - Boating and Ice Fishing<br />

659 E. <strong>Geneva</strong> Street, Williams Bay, WI • Phone: 262-245-9132 • 262-245-9133 Fax: 262-245-9035<br />

Mon. - Thurs. 10:30AM-12:00PM; Fri. & Sat. 10:30AM-1:00AM (Summer Hours) Winter 11:00PM Sun. 10:30AM-10:00PM<br />

PIZZA: Thin Crust, Chicago Stuffed Pizza Pie,<br />

Bobby Sr. Famous Pan Pizza Pie, Calzones<br />

• ITALIAN ICE & GELATO • APPETIZERS • SALADS<br />

• HOMEMADE SOUP & CHILI (seasonal)<br />

• KID S MENU $ 4.75 • SANDWICHES<br />

• BURGERS: 1/3 lb. Char-Broiled Burgers<br />

• CHICAGO HOT DOGS The Real Deal<br />

• CHICKEN & RIB DINNERS • PASTA DINNERS<br />

• SHRIMP & FISH DINNER<br />

$ 5.00 OFF<br />

WITH ANY PURCHASE<br />

OF $ 30.00 OR MORE!<br />

This <strong>of</strong>fer not valid with any other<br />

conjunction. Good only at Sanfratello’s


The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013 — 29<br />

Members <strong>of</strong> the Williams Bay Women’s<br />

Banquet committee say plans<br />

are well underway for the 2013 event.<br />

This year’s Banquet, mysteriously<br />

named “R4,” will take place at the<br />

<strong>Geneva</strong> National Ballroom on Tuesday,<br />

May 7 from 5:30 – 9 p.m.<br />

The banquet is an annual event that<br />

brings local women together for an<br />

evening <strong>of</strong> fun and comraderie. This will<br />

be the 86th annual banquet and, according<br />

to chair Linda Choyce, is shaping up<br />

to be a fun and memorable evening.<br />

Tickets are available from any member<br />

<strong>of</strong> the comittee, as well as a few area<br />

businesses. Tickets are limited to 200<br />

seats this year, so those planning to<br />

attend should get theirs early. For more<br />

information call Linda Choyce at 949-<br />

5903. For ticket information, call Sally<br />

Gerson at 245-0920, Halina Marra at<br />

245-9373 or Betsy Arney at 245-2691.<br />

(Photo furnished)<br />

Novel packed with interesting people and places <strong>resident</strong>s will recognize<br />

By Dennis West<br />

Using the pen name Clyde Deighton,<br />

local businessman Anthony Navilio has<br />

written a highly enjoyable, readable and<br />

informative book about the southern lakes<br />

area.<br />

“Murder at the French Country Inn” is,<br />

as the title indicates, a mystery set at<br />

Navilio’s hotel on <strong>Lake</strong> Como. The hostelry,<br />

once known as the <strong>Lake</strong> Como Hotel,<br />

has a fascinating history that is tied to<br />

famous Chicago gangsters who dominated<br />

the headlines during and after Prohibition.<br />

Local <strong>resident</strong>s and frequent visitors<br />

will feel right at home as Navilio/Deighton<br />

uses actual names <strong>of</strong> locations and people<br />

in his novel. He even talks about the Inn’s<br />

owner – himself – in the third person, providing<br />

humorous incites into his own character.<br />

A few <strong>of</strong> the people in the novel have<br />

been given pseudonyms, but most are<br />

readily identifiable.<br />

The story revolves around the exploits<br />

<strong>of</strong> the fictional Town <strong>of</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong> Police<br />

Chief, who is known only by his nickname,<br />

Chief. Contrary to what one would<br />

expect, he didn’t get the nickname when<br />

he became a cop, or even a police chief,<br />

but from his neighborhood buddies when<br />

he was a kid in Chicago.<br />

Many years later, fed up with life as a<br />

cop in the big city, he decides to return to<br />

the <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong> area where he spent his<br />

childhood summers. Here, he enjoys the<br />

laid-back lifestyle <strong>of</strong> a divorced male<br />

whose main company, outside <strong>of</strong> work, is<br />

his dog.<br />

But the peace is shattered when a murder<br />

is committed at the French Country<br />

Inn. A subsequent shooting, mugging and<br />

other plot-intensifiers leave the reader<br />

guessing, and a surprise ending will<br />

delight even the most jaded mystery fan.<br />

Perhaps the most surprising aspect <strong>of</strong><br />

the book is the quality <strong>of</strong> the writing.<br />

Dialogue is tight and snappy and the tale<br />

moves right along from beginning to end.<br />

The French County Inn, known as the<br />

<strong>Lake</strong> Como Hotel during the 1920s and<br />

30s when Chicago gangsters used it for a<br />

handy hideaway, has enough interesting<br />

history for at least two novels. And readers<br />

will find the facts behind the legend in an<br />

appendix that details the real life stories <strong>of</strong><br />

such figures as Baby Face Nelson, John<br />

Dillinger, George “Bugs” Moran, and his<br />

wife, Lucille, who divorced her gangland<br />

hubby to marry <strong>Lake</strong> Como Hotel owner<br />

Hobart Hermansen.<br />

Hermansen deserves his own book. He<br />

Spring Break & Easter Week at <strong>Lake</strong> Lawn<br />

- Live entertainment EVERY NIGHT 3/22 – 3/31<br />

- $5 pitchers <strong>of</strong> Miller Lite with purchase <strong>of</strong> food and drink specials<br />

- Basketball bracket pool - enter team choices through the sweet 16<br />

Win a Free Party with Friends ($100 worth <strong>of</strong> apps)<br />

EASTER SUNDAY CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH THE ROCK AND THE RABBI<br />

Frontier Restaurant<br />

Sunday, March 31st | 9:30 am - 3:00 pm<br />

- Carved Cocoa C<strong>of</strong>fee Crusted Roast<br />

Beef, Peppercorn Beef Demi Glace<br />

- Rosemary Garlic Rotisserie<br />

Leg <strong>of</strong> Lamb, Fresh Mint Lamb<br />

Reduction Sauce<br />

- Custom, Chef Made Omelet Bar<br />

- And Much, Much More...<br />

* Mothers receive a flower and glass <strong>of</strong> champagne<br />

A musical story telling about Peter and Jesus<br />

March 28th & 29th<br />

Buffet 5:30 - 6:30 pm | <strong>Lake</strong> Lawn Room<br />

Show 7:00 pm | <strong>Geneva</strong> Ballroom<br />

BUFFET DINNER & THEATER SHOW<br />

Adult $40 | Child (12 & under) $20<br />

VIP seating available<br />

RESERVATIONS HIGHLY RECOMMENDED call 262.725.9155 Call 262.728.7950 or Visit <strong>Lake</strong>LawnResort.com<br />

2400 EAST GENEVA STREET DELAVAN, WISCONSIN | LAKELAWNRESORT.COM | 800.338.5253<br />

was the gambling kingpin <strong>of</strong> Walworth<br />

County for several decades, with a monopoly<br />

on slot machines that must have had<br />

the blessing <strong>of</strong> local law enforcement<br />

authorities. A house just west <strong>of</strong> the French<br />

Country Inn still features a garage and a<br />

room used for counting money on the<br />

lower level.<br />

Accounts exist in newspaper files <strong>of</strong><br />

police chases that ended when hoodlums<br />

seemed to disappear from Highway 50<br />

somewhere near the road that led down to<br />

<strong>Lake</strong> Como and Hermansen’s hideout.<br />

Navilio became interested in the history<br />

in the mid-1980s when he acquired the<br />

French Country Inn. The more he learned,<br />

the more fascinated he became until, one<br />

day on a trip to Italy, the plot gelled and he<br />

began putting words to paper. When he<br />

returned home he finished the book, incorporating<br />

much <strong>of</strong> the hotel’s history into<br />

the plot.<br />

The result is a fun read, especially for<br />

those who are familiar with the people and<br />

places that crop up throughout.<br />

An interesting note is that Navilio<br />

chose the pen name Clyde Deighton for his<br />

first foray into authorhood by using his<br />

middle name and an alternative spelling <strong>of</strong><br />

the city in which he attended college,<br />

Dayton, Ohio.<br />

The 360-page paperback book is<br />

priced at $16 and can be purchased at The<br />

French Country Inn, Cornerstone Shoppe<br />

and Breadloaf Book Shop in <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong>,<br />

Bayside Motel and Clearwater Day Spa in<br />

Williams Bay or online at www.french<br />

countryinnshop.com/<br />

Rick Kogan to<br />

headline funder<br />

Friends <strong>of</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong> Theater will present<br />

a fundraiser featuring Rick Kogan in<br />

his show, “Off the Record,” on Thursday,<br />

April 11 at 7 p.m. in the Badger<br />

High School auditorium.<br />

“This promises to be an exciting<br />

evening with well-known Chicago<br />

Tribune columnist and WBEZ radio<br />

personality Rick Kogan,” said FOGT<br />

marketing director Lily Miceli. “As<br />

‘a Voice <strong>of</strong> Chicago’ Rick brings to<br />

<strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong> stories featuring his<br />

life in journalism and radio.”<br />

A Q&A and meet and greet book<br />

signing will follow the talk. The evening<br />

will begin with music from Williams<br />

Bays’ own Rock Central (http://rockcentral.org).<br />

“Our Mission is to save and restore<br />

the historic <strong>Geneva</strong> Theater and create a<br />

community arts center for the <strong>Lake</strong>s<br />

Area,” said Miceli.<br />

Tickets are $20 for adults and $10<br />

for students. To order tickets go to<br />

www.friends<strong>of</strong>genevatheater.org.<br />

The<br />

Good Humour Section<br />

begins on page 34.<br />

No joke.


30 — The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013<br />

What’s Happening<br />

Continued from page 27<br />

Bingo, St. Francis de Sales Church, 148<br />

W. Main Street, <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong>. First and<br />

Third Wednesdays <strong>of</strong> the month. Doors open<br />

at 5:30, bingo starts 7. Refreshments available.<br />

Games include 50/50, Pull Tabs,<br />

Progressive. For info call Mary or Bill<br />

Gronkeat (847) 840-8878.<br />

Civil Air Patrol, Walco Composite<br />

Squadron, meets every Thursday from 6:30<br />

to 8:30 p.m. at the Elkhorn National Guard<br />

Armory, 401 East Fair St., Elkhorn. Visit<br />

www.gocivilairpatrol.com/ or call Maj. Robert<br />

Thomas at (262) 642-7541.<br />

Authors Echo Writers group meeting,<br />

7 p.m., first and third Tuesday <strong>of</strong> every<br />

month, Grace Church, 257 Kendall St.,<br />

Burlington. Call Frank Koneska at 534-6236.<br />

Clogging lessons, beginning and intermediate<br />

level adult classes, Tuesday<br />

evenings, Walworth County Gymnastics and<br />

Dance Center, 213 E. Commerce Court,<br />

Elkhorn. Adults <strong>of</strong> all ages are welcome. Call<br />

Shannon McCarthy at 742-3891 or email<br />

wccdirector@elknet.net.<br />

Beginning youth clogging lessons (Tiny<br />

Tots ages 3 – 5 at 4 p.m./Youth ages 6 & up<br />

at 4:30 p.m.) at Walworth County Gymnastics<br />

and Dance Center, 213 E Commerce Court,<br />

Elkhorn. For more information: www.walworthcountycloggers.com<br />

or 742-3891.<br />

Yerkes Observatory, 373 W. <strong>Geneva</strong><br />

St., Williams Bay. The observatory <strong>of</strong>fers<br />

free, 45-minute tours, Saturdays, 10 a.m., 11<br />

a.m. and noon as well as night sky observations<br />

for a fee <strong>of</strong> $25. Visitors may also view<br />

the Quester Museum, which covers some <strong>of</strong><br />

the observatory’s history. For more information,<br />

call 245-5555 or e-mail rdd@yerkes.uchicago.edu.<br />

Support Our Troops rally, 11 a.m.,<br />

Mondays, second floor <strong>of</strong> the Government<br />

Center (formerly the Walworth County<br />

Courthouse), downtown Elkhorn on the<br />

square. The names <strong>of</strong> servicemen and service<br />

women with ties to Walworth County who<br />

are currently serving in Iraq and Afghanistan<br />

will be read. Call Bob Webster at 275-6587<br />

ALL-YOU-CAN EAT<br />

FRIDAY FISH FRY<br />

$ 7 99<br />

Beer battered with homemade<br />

potato pancakes or your<br />

choice <strong>of</strong> potato, coleslaw<br />

& soup or salad<br />

262-723-1599<br />

Open 11:00 a.m. - 9:00 p.m.<br />

1 N. LINCOLN STREET • ELKHORN, WI<br />

The Village SUPPER<br />

ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT<br />

ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT<br />

FRIDAY FRIDAY FISH FISH FRY FRY<br />

$ 11.75 11.75<br />

Your Choice <strong>of</strong> French Fries<br />

or Potato Pancakes and<br />

All The Fixins!<br />

CLUB<br />

1725 South Shore Dr., Delavan<br />

728-6360<br />

for more information.<br />

• • • •<br />

Cards and games, Mondays, 1 – 4 p.m.<br />

Darien Senior Center, 47 Park St., Darien.<br />

Call 882-3774.<br />

Thursday Senior Card Club, 11:30<br />

a.m. - 3:30 p.m., Matheson Memorial<br />

Library Community Room, Elkhorn. Bridge,<br />

500 or bring your own group. Call Judy at<br />

723-1934 or Liz at 723-5036 for more information.<br />

Bridge, (open to new members), every<br />

Tuesday 9:30 - 11:30 a.m., <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong> City<br />

Hall, second floor conference room.<br />

Bridge - every Tuesday, 12:30-3:30<br />

p.m., <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong> City Hall, second floor<br />

conference room.<br />

~ HEALTH AND FITNESS ~<br />

Intentional Meditation Circle brings<br />

together the Intender’s Group and Meditation<br />

Circle, both <strong>of</strong> which have proven benefits<br />

for your life. Group meets weekly on Fridays<br />

5:30-6:30 p.m. at Essential Yoga, 422 N<br />

Wisconsin St, Elkhorn. All levels welcome;<br />

come as your schedule allows. Free-will<br />

<strong>of</strong>fering accepted. For more information contact<br />

Laurie Dionne Asbeck, 745-4051. Check<br />

Essential Yoga’s website, www.essential<br />

yoga.net, weekly for schedule changes.<br />

Alanon self help program, 6:30 p.m.<br />

Tuesdays, VIP building, 816 E. <strong>Geneva</strong> St.,<br />

across from Elkhorn High School in Elkhorn.<br />

Mindfulness and Loving kindness<br />

Meditation each Thursday, 7-8 p.m., at<br />

Elkhorn Matheson Memorial Library<br />

Community Center Room, 101 N. Wisconsin<br />

St. Beginners and experienced practitioners<br />

are always welcome. No registration is nec-<br />

FRIDAY FISH FRY<br />

3 MILES NORTH<br />

OF DOWNTOWN<br />

LAKE GENEVA<br />

OPEN FOR LUNCH<br />

Se Habla Espanol<br />

111 PARK AVENUE, WALWORTH, WI<br />

262-275-9400 • DINE-IN • CARRY OUT<br />

Sun.-Thurs. 11:00 a.m.-10:00 p.m.; Fri. & Sat. 11:00 a.m. - 11:00 p.m.<br />

DELIVERY AVAILABLE ALL DAY:<br />

FONTANA, SHARON, DARIEN AND ALL WALWORTH AREA<br />

BAKED OR FRIED FISH<br />

Homemade Potato Pancakes or<br />

Corn Fritters and All The Trimmings<br />

$ 11.95<br />

Limited Menu Available<br />

SERVING 4:00-9:00 P.M. EVERY FRIDAY<br />

EARLY BIRD $ 10.95<br />

4:00 - 6:00 p.m.<br />

7377 Krueger Road, <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong>, WI<br />

262-348-9900<br />

www.hawksviewgolfclub.com<br />

essary, just drop in. Meditation is practice for<br />

being more awake and attentive in our daily<br />

lives. Sponsored by Wisconsin Blue Lotus, a<br />

meditation group led by Buddhist nun<br />

Vimala (Judy Franklin). For more information,<br />

call 203-0120, or visit www.bluelotustemple.org.<br />

Spiritual Discussion Group to be held<br />

on four Tuesdays at 6:30 p.m. (March 19,<br />

26, April 2 and 9) at the UU Church <strong>of</strong> the<br />

<strong>Lake</strong>s, 319 N Broad St., Elkhorn. What<br />

does “spirituality” mean to you? Explore<br />

the many forms it takes in our world. All<br />

voices, thoughts and religions are welcome<br />

to join these non-denominational discussions<br />

assisted by a highly experienced<br />

facilitator. Just bring an open mind and a<br />

desire to share your thoughts, experiences<br />

or personal journeys in an informal group<br />

discussion format. Please try to make all<br />

four sessions. There is no charge but call<br />

Joan at 684-5050 or email<br />

ecowings08@gmail.com to reserve a spot.<br />

Post Traumatic Stress Disorder Group,<br />

third Thursday <strong>of</strong> the month, 7 p.m., at<br />

Delavan American Legion Post 95, 111<br />

South Second Street, Delavan. The group is<br />

led by Dr. John Jansky. This group is made<br />

up <strong>of</strong> people who have PTSD for many different<br />

reasons, they are not all veterans.<br />

Everyone is welcome.<br />

Diabetes Support Group meets at 6<br />

p.m. on the second Monday <strong>of</strong> the month,<br />

April through October at Aurora <strong>Lake</strong>land<br />

Medical Center, Highway NN, Elkhorn. This<br />

group is for adults with insulin or non-insulin<br />

dependent diabetes and their family/support<br />

person. The purpose is to provide support<br />

at<br />

North Shore Bar & Grill<br />

ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT FISH<br />

$ 10.95<br />

Choice <strong>of</strong> French Fries,<br />

Homemade Potato Pancakes or Pasta<br />

KARYN & JOE ROSSI<br />

2001 North Shore Drive, Delavan<br />

and education to the person with diabetes to<br />

help manage this chronic disease. The group<br />

is facilitated by a registered nurse. Call the<br />

diabetic educator at 741-2821 for more info.<br />

Breast Cancer Support Group meets<br />

the first Wednesday <strong>of</strong> the month at 4 p.m. at<br />

Aurora <strong>Lake</strong>land Medical Center, Highway<br />

NN, Elkhorn. The group addresses the fears<br />

and adjustments faced by women with breast<br />

cancer.<br />

(Continued on page 31)<br />

WELCOME TO THE BEACON’ S<br />

FRIDAY NIGHT FISH FRY GUIDE<br />

SEAFOOD • STEAK<br />

New Chef • Nightly Specials<br />

FRIDAY NIGHT<br />

Blue Roughy All You Can Eat $ 10.95<br />

Perch or Walleye Dinner $ 12.95<br />

We also feature an Oyster Bar, Salmon & More<br />

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(262) 742-5042<br />

Open Wed.-Fri. 4 p.m.-9 p.m. • Sat. 5 p.m.-9 p.m.<br />

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$ 11.99 HAPPY HOUR<br />

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check out<br />

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MARCH 1 - MARCH 31<br />

CLOSED EASTER<br />

Includes choice <strong>of</strong><br />

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(262) 723-8021


The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013 — 31<br />

Feeding the multitude during the Delavan Lions Club St. Patrick’s Day corned<br />

beef, cabbage and roast chicken fundraiser at The Village Supper Club on Sunday,<br />

March 17 are (from left) Diane Morrison, Dick Hummel and Cindy Bickle. (Beacon)<br />

What’s Happening<br />

Continued from page 30<br />

It encourages participants to develop a positive<br />

attitude about the future and discuss common<br />

concerns after being treated for breast<br />

cancer. Contact Leann Kuhlemeyer at 741-<br />

2677 for more information.<br />

Stroke Support Group provides emotional<br />

support through opportunities to interact<br />

with others who have experienced stroke.<br />

Informational programs will also be provided<br />

on topics related to stroke/brain attack. The<br />

group welcomes individuals newly diagnosed<br />

and those with a history <strong>of</strong> stroke. Family,<br />

friends and caregivers are also encouraged to<br />

join. The group meets the third Monday <strong>of</strong><br />

every month from 6 – 7:30 p.m. Call Pat<br />

Positano at 741-2402 for further informantion.<br />

Free blood pressure screening, courtesy<br />

<strong>of</strong> The Walworth County Public Health<br />

Department on the 1st and 3rd Wednesday <strong>of</strong><br />

every month from 9 – 10 a.m. at the<br />

Walworth County Public Health <strong>of</strong>fice, located<br />

at the east entrance <strong>of</strong> the Department <strong>of</strong><br />

Health and Human Services building,<br />

W4051 County Road NN, Elkhorn. The<br />

screenings are open to all. Contact the Health<br />

Department at 741-3140 for more information.<br />

Free blood pressure screening, last<br />

Friday <strong>of</strong> every month, 2 - 4 p.m., Williams<br />

Bay Care Center, 146 Clover St., Williams<br />

Bay.<br />

Narcotics Anonymous meetings in the<br />

southern lakes area. Call (877) 434-4346<br />

(toll free) for times and locations.<br />

White River Cycle Club, 7 p.m., VIP<br />

Services, 811 E. <strong>Geneva</strong> St., Elkhorn, second<br />

Tuesday <strong>of</strong> each month. Contact Mike Lange<br />

for more information at 723-5666.<br />

<strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong> Alzheimer’s support<br />

group, 6:30 p.m., third Wednesday <strong>of</strong> the<br />

month. Arbor Village <strong>of</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong> Crossing,<br />

201 Townline Road, <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong>. Call<br />

Andy Kerwin at 248-4558.<br />

Alzheimer's/Dementia support group,<br />

third Wednesday <strong>of</strong> the month at 4 p.m.,<br />

Delavan Community Bank Community<br />

Center located at 826 E. <strong>Geneva</strong> Street in<br />

Delavan. Call Bob Holland at 472-0958 or<br />

Arlene Torrenga at 728-6393 with questions.<br />

Alzheimer’s Support Group, first<br />

Thursday <strong>of</strong> the month, 1:30 p.m.,<br />

Hearthstone/Fairhaven, 426 W. North Street,<br />

Whitewater. Facilitators: Janet Hardt,<br />

Darlene Zeise 473-8052. Respite care is<br />

available with no advance notice.<br />

Clinton, Wisconsin • 800-895-3270<br />

Parkinson’s Disease support group, 1<br />

p.m., second Monday <strong>of</strong> every month, Lower<br />

level conference room, Fairhaven Retirement<br />

Community, 435 W. Starin Road,<br />

Whitewater. Contact Julie Hollenbeck, 431-<br />

4772, or by email at jhollenbeck2<br />

@wi.rr.com.<br />

Huntington’s Disease Support Group<br />

for anyone affected by Huntington’s Disease,<br />

meets the third Saturday <strong>of</strong> the month on the<br />

lower level, conference rooms A and B, <strong>of</strong><br />

Froedtert Hospital, 9200 W. Wisconsin Ave,<br />

Milwaukee. Call (414) 257-9499 or go to<br />

www.hdsawi.org for more information.<br />

Harbor <strong>of</strong> Hope grief support group,<br />

first Thursday <strong>of</strong> each month, 3 - 4:30 p.m.,<br />

Aurora VNA <strong>of</strong> Wisconsin, 500 Interchange<br />

North, <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong>. 249-5860.<br />

NAMI, The National Alliance on Mental<br />

Illness, Support Group, first and third<br />

Wednesday from 6-7 p.m. at the Health and<br />

Human Services building on Co. NN,<br />

Elkhorn. Call 495-2439 for more info.<br />

A support group called “Entouch,”<br />

(Encouraging others Touched by suicide),<br />

meets at 6:30 p.m. on the fourth Tuesday <strong>of</strong><br />

the month at Riverwood Church, 6919<br />

McHenry St., Burlington. The group is for<br />

those who have lost a loved one to suicide.<br />

Attendees do not need to attend the church<br />

or, indeed, have any religious affiliation.<br />

Everyone is welcome. Call 758-0886 for<br />

more information.<br />

Families Anonymous (FA), a 12-Step,<br />

self-help support program for parents, grandparents,<br />

relatives, and friends who are concerned<br />

about, and affected by, the substance<br />

abuse or behavioral problems <strong>of</strong> a loved one,<br />

meets every Thursday evening at 7 p.m. at<br />

the First Congregational United Church <strong>of</strong><br />

Christ, 76 S. Wisconsin St., Elkhorn. Enter<br />

through the double glass doors on W. <strong>Geneva</strong><br />

St. Parking is available on the street or the<br />

parking lot west <strong>of</strong> the church. Additional<br />

information may be obtained by calling<br />

(262)215-6893, Maureen at 723-8227 or<br />

through the Families Anonymous website:<br />

www.FamiliesAnonymous.org.<br />

Take Off Pounds Sensibly (TOPS),<br />

Tuesdays 8-9 a.m. Community Center, 820 E<br />

<strong>Geneva</strong> St., Delavan. Encourages nutrition<br />

and exercise with a positive attitude. Guests<br />

are welcome, no weekly meeting fee.<br />

Contact Marilyn Wilkin at 249-0304.<br />

T.O.P.S. (Taking Off Pounds Sensibly)<br />

Tuesdays 9:15 - 9:35 a.m., Community<br />

Center, U.S. Bank, 101 E. Walworth St.,<br />

Elkhorn (call 723-3791 with questions) and<br />

Tuesdays 5:30 - 6 p.m., United Methodist<br />

Church, corner <strong>of</strong> 2nd and Washington<br />

Streets, Delavan.<br />

Jim Peck<br />

AAUW to present ‘Much Ado<br />

About the English Renaissance’<br />

The <strong>Geneva</strong> <strong>Lake</strong> Branch <strong>of</strong> the<br />

American Association <strong>of</strong> University<br />

Women invites the public to attend<br />

“Much Ado About the English<br />

Renaissance,” the second program in the<br />

AAUW Speaker’s Series.<br />

Tickets are now available for the<br />

event to be held at Horticultural Hall,<br />

330 Broad Street, <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong>, on<br />

Thursday, April 18 at 7 p.m.<br />

The program provides a return to the<br />

Renaissance with Lady Anne Bacon,<br />

attendant to Her Majesty Queen<br />

Elizabeth, portrayed by <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong><br />

historical performer Chris Brookes, who<br />

has arrived from the court <strong>of</strong> Queen<br />

Elizabeth to describe life in sixteenthcentury<br />

England from clothes, customs,<br />

and entertainments to mayhap e’en some<br />

secrets and scandals.<br />

From the royal schoolroom to the<br />

formal presence chamber, Lady Bacon<br />

has seen it all. She educated her son<br />

Francis Bacon, traveled with the Queen<br />

on Progress, and lived during the times<br />

<strong>of</strong> Shakespeare, Raleigh, Drake, and<br />

Walsingham. Dressed in period clothing<br />

and using her traveling basket full <strong>of</strong><br />

necessaries, Chris Brookes captures the<br />

essence <strong>of</strong> a Renaissance courtier's life.<br />

Chris Brookes, a <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong><br />

native, performs one-woman, research -<br />

based shows for schools, clubs, organizations,<br />

libraries, and senior centers. She<br />

owns more costumes than clothes in<br />

order to bring history and literature to<br />

life for her recreations <strong>of</strong> literary and<br />

historical figures from a variety <strong>of</strong> time<br />

periods: the Dark Ages, the Renaissance,<br />

Victorian times, and the 1860’s to the<br />

1960’s.<br />

She has performed as Lady Bacon at<br />

the Bristol Renaissance Faire and has<br />

played a variety <strong>of</strong> characters with several<br />

community theater companies. In<br />

her other life, she taught literature and<br />

social studies at <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong> Middle<br />

School.<br />

Delavan Chamber <strong>of</strong> Commerce<br />

to sponsor Easter basket hunt<br />

The Delavan – Delavan <strong>Lake</strong> Area<br />

Chamber <strong>of</strong> Commerce will host an<br />

Easter Basket Hunt. Easter Baskets will<br />

be placed in Delavan businesses the<br />

week <strong>of</strong> March 25. The baskets will<br />

have numbers assigned to them.<br />

Children ages 3-9 years need to register<br />

at the Delavan Chamber <strong>of</strong>fice, 52<br />

E Walworth Ave. or call the <strong>of</strong>fice 728-<br />

5095 to receive a number corresponding<br />

to a business Easter Basket. Once the<br />

child receives a number and a list <strong>of</strong><br />

~ ART, LITERATURE THEATER, MUSIC ~<br />

Live entertainment, Saturday and<br />

Sunday 2-5 p.m., Village Supper Club, 1725<br />

South Shore Drive, Delavan. 728-6360.<br />

Live Music Fridays 9 p.m. to midnight,<br />

Champs Sports Bar & Grill, 747 W Main St.,<br />

<strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong>. No cover charge. Call 248-6008,<br />

or log on to www.foodspot.com/champs.<br />

Karaoke, 9 p.m. - 12 a.m., Snug Harbor<br />

<strong>Lake</strong>front Campground Pub and Restaurant,<br />

Highway A and P (not the food store)<br />

Richmond, Wis. Call (608) 883-6999 or log<br />

on to www.snugharborwi.com for details.<br />

Live Entertainment, 9 p.m. - midnight<br />

Fridays and Saturdays, Hemingway’s,<br />

N3270 County Hwy H, <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong>. Call<br />

348-1200, www.hemingwaysport<strong>of</strong>call.com.<br />

Live Entertainment, Fridays and<br />

Saturdays, 7:30 - 11 p.m., Bella Vista Suites,<br />

335 Wrigley Drive, <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong>. 248-2100,<br />

Chris Brookes as Lady Bacon<br />

In 2008, she produced an educational<br />

DVD, “Introduction to the<br />

Elizabethan Age,” and in 2012, after<br />

years <strong>of</strong> study, she co-authored and published<br />

an alternative history <strong>of</strong> the legend<br />

<strong>of</strong> King Arthur, “Arthur <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Gododdin,” with Michael Ferenz. Both<br />

the DVD and book will be available for<br />

sale and signing following the program<br />

or through www.litlady.com.<br />

Brookes serves on the <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong><br />

Public Library Board <strong>of</strong> Trustees and is<br />

secretary <strong>of</strong> the Friends <strong>of</strong> the LGPL.<br />

She teaches for Road Scholar and<br />

Cardinal Stritch University, and is a<br />

member <strong>of</strong> the Wisconsin Humanities<br />

Council and DPI Speakers Bureaus,<br />

Northlands Storytelling Network,<br />

AAUW, DAR, Walworth County<br />

Genealogical Society, and The Friends<br />

<strong>of</strong> the <strong>Geneva</strong> Theater.<br />

Call 348-9510 to reserve tickets or<br />

order online from brownpapertick<br />

ets.com. Adults $15, students $5.<br />

Money raised at the event will benefit<br />

the scholarship fund and other activities<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Branch.<br />

businesses with the baskets, he/she will<br />

go to the businesses in search <strong>of</strong> the basket.<br />

There are a limited number <strong>of</strong> baskets<br />

available. It will be a first come first<br />

serve basis for children to sign up to<br />

receive numbers. There is no cost to participate,<br />

but there is a limit <strong>of</strong> two per<br />

household.<br />

For more information, call the<br />

Delavan Chamber <strong>of</strong> Commerce at 728-<br />

5095 Monday through Friday from 9<br />

a.m. - 3 p.m.<br />

www.bellavistasuites.com<br />

Fireside Dinner Theater in Fort<br />

Atkinson presents “Footloose,” through April<br />

14. When Chicago teenager Ren McCormack<br />

moves to the small town <strong>of</strong> Bomont he is<br />

shocked to find a gloomy place where dancing<br />

has been outlawed by the city fathers. He<br />

sets out to change the law and the minds <strong>of</strong><br />

the town council and bring laughter and fun<br />

back to the town. His journey is the basis for<br />

a vibrant and entertaining musical. First a<br />

popular film and then a fabulous Broadway<br />

show, “Footloose” is filled with high energy<br />

singing, heart-pounding rhythms, and some<br />

<strong>of</strong> Broadway’s most spectacular dancing. It is<br />

a show that features such hit songs as “Let’s<br />

Hear it For the Boy,” “I Need a Hero” and the<br />

well known title song. Call 800-477-9505 or<br />

log on to www.firesidetheatre.com for complete<br />

information .<br />

“An optimist is a person who<br />

starts a new diet on Thanksgiving Day.”<br />

Irv Kupcinet


32 — The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013<br />

Transportation<br />

ransportation<br />

Lincoln’s 2013 MKZ propounds luxury, relativity*<br />

By Susan Carpenter<br />

It takes more than good genes to survive<br />

almost 100 years in the U.S. auto<br />

business. It requires grit, stamina, courage<br />

and, in the case <strong>of</strong> Lincoln, a tremendous<br />

amount <strong>of</strong> chutzpah to “introduce” a company<br />

that’s been around longer than the<br />

light switch. Like 111-year-old geriatric<br />

Cadillac and the even more elderly 114year-old<br />

Buick, Lincoln is part <strong>of</strong> an automotive<br />

old folks club that refuses to go<br />

gently into the night.<br />

With its 2013 MKZ, Ford’s luxury division<br />

kicks <strong>of</strong>f a four-model reinvention<br />

strategy designed to appeal to buyers who<br />

are younger than the brand’s 65-year-old<br />

median age but still AARP-eligible.<br />

Unusual as it seems to reboot a legacy<br />

brand with a redo instead <strong>of</strong> an entirely new<br />

model, the MKZ makes a certain amount <strong>of</strong><br />

sense. In the seven years it’s been on the<br />

market, the midsize sedan has become<br />

Lincoln’s best-seller. It is also part <strong>of</strong> the<br />

fast-growing, entry-level luxury segment.<br />

What luxury means, <strong>of</strong> course, is relative.<br />

In the case <strong>of</strong> the MKZ, it means a car<br />

that forgoes dramatic exterior design for<br />

creature comforts and safety features in a<br />

vehicle priced ever-so-slightly out <strong>of</strong> reach<br />

<strong>of</strong> mere plebes. The version I tested cost<br />

$49,585.<br />

The first vehicle to emerge from<br />

Lincoln’s dedicated design studio in<br />

Detroit, the 2013 MKZ sports a slightly<br />

more aerodynamic and edgy style than the<br />

outgoing model with a large panoramic<br />

ro<strong>of</strong>, LED brake lights that extend across<br />

the entire rear end and a split-wing grille<br />

vaguely reminiscent <strong>of</strong> a Beemer. Still, its<br />

most significant innovations are technological.<br />

The base model MKZ is powered by a<br />

2.0-liter inline-four cylinder engine. I was<br />

The 2013 Lincoln MKZ shares its platform and most systems with the Ford<br />

Fusion. (Courtesy <strong>of</strong> Sam VarnHagen/Lincoln/MCT)<br />

driving the 3.7-liter V-6, which was<br />

responsive <strong>of</strong>f the line and felt completely<br />

comfortable cruising the carpool lane at<br />

speed. It did, however, yield an abysmal<br />

21.7 mpg. A hybrid model more than doubles<br />

the car’s fuel economy to an EPA-estimated<br />

45 mpg and is priced the same as<br />

the gas model, which starts at $36,800.<br />

In an effort to streamline its controls<br />

and simplify its interior, Lincoln has<br />

moved the MKZ’s gear selector next to the<br />

eight-inch touch screen which accesses the<br />

car’s three drive modes, as well as the<br />

entertainment, navigation, climate and<br />

phone systems. The car’s push-button start<br />

tops a vertical stack <strong>of</strong> buttons for park,<br />

reverse, neutral, drive and sport, the result<br />

<strong>of</strong> which is more space at the driver’s right<br />

elbow for various cubbies.<br />

Astandard feature on all three trims <strong>of</strong><br />

the MKZ is Lincoln Drive Control, which<br />

automatically adjusts the suspension,<br />

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steering, engine, transmission, traction and<br />

stability control settings based on driver<br />

inputs. Lincoln says the suspension settings<br />

alone are updated 50 times a second,<br />

including on the all-wheel drive version I<br />

inadvertently tested on the dirt and sand<br />

access roads leading into an <strong>of</strong>f-highway<br />

vehicle recreation area on a recent weekend.<br />

Even at speeds exceeding 60 mph, the<br />

MKZ held its ground without skidding into<br />

the scrub.<br />

One <strong>of</strong> Lincoln’s goals is to distinguish<br />

the brand through personalization. To that<br />

end, Lincoln is comping buyers with three<br />

years <strong>of</strong> live operator assistance accessible<br />

through Sync Live. With the press <strong>of</strong> a button,<br />

drivers are connected to a real human<br />

being who can send custom navigation to the<br />

car and provide them with addresses, similar<br />

to GM’s OnStar. That same information is<br />

also accessible through the car’s built-in nav,<br />

but it can’t be operated while driving.<br />

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As a whole, the MKZ is so safety-conscious<br />

it’s borderline hypochondriac. In<br />

addition to a lane departure warning system<br />

integrated into the side mirrors, there’s<br />

long-range radar that senses what’s in front<br />

<strong>of</strong> the car and auto-adjusts the speed to<br />

avoid a fender bender, as well as a camera<br />

integrated into the rearview mirror that<br />

reads the road’s lane markers and alerts<br />

drivers to hazards with blindingly bright<br />

lights and dramatic beeps.<br />

Considering all the money spent<br />

“introducing the Lincoln Motor<br />

Company” with its “new” MKZ, the car<br />

doesn’t feel like a dramatically different<br />

direction for the company. The five-door<br />

five-seater is comfortable. It’s spacious<br />

with a good amount <strong>of</strong> head- and legroom,<br />

front and back. It’s nicely finished with<br />

understated black leather seats and colormatched<br />

s<strong>of</strong>t plastic touch points on the<br />

interior door panels and dash. It’s easy to<br />

drive. But ultimately the MKZ lacks distinction<br />

other than the fact that Lincoln, 96<br />

years into its existence, has become something<br />

<strong>of</strong> a novelty.<br />

2013 LINCOLN MKZ<br />

• Powertrain: Sequential multiport<br />

electronic fuel injection, 3.7-liter, V-6,<br />

DOHC, 4 valves per cylinder, intake variable<br />

camshaft timing, 6-speed automatic<br />

transmission, all-wheel drive<br />

• EPA fuel economy estimate: 18 city,<br />

26 highway<br />

• Road test fuel economy: 21.7 mpg<br />

combined<br />

• Base price: $35,925<br />

• Price as tested, including destination<br />

charge: $49,585<br />

©2013 The Orange County Register<br />

(Santa Ana, Calif.)<br />

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The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013 — 33<br />

Motor vehicles may be the one exception to mail-order sales success<br />

By Larry Printz<br />

In an era when most any item can be<br />

bought online, you have to wonder why<br />

you can’t buy a car from Ford.com and<br />

have it shipped to your door. Well, that’s<br />

due to automotive franchise laws. Still, it’s<br />

not a new idea. In fact, it’s almost as old as<br />

the automobile, but it never succeeded.<br />

A century ago, one <strong>of</strong> the most important<br />

books in any home was the Sears,<br />

Roebuck and Co. mail-order catalogue. If<br />

an item appeared in this weighty tome, it<br />

was pro<strong>of</strong> that it had become mainstream.<br />

In 1908, the same year that Ford Motor<br />

Co. introduced the Model T, Sears introduced<br />

the Runabout, item number<br />

21R333. This gas-powered, two-cylinder<br />

high-wheeler produced 10 horsepower and<br />

carried two people down the road without<br />

the benefit <strong>of</strong> doors, windows, windshield,<br />

heater or seat belts. It cost $395 – or<br />

approximately $9,200 today.<br />

It was designed by Alvaro Krotz who,<br />

after designing it, developed a car that ran<br />

on both gasoline and electricity. Sears<br />

wasn’t interested, so Krotz left and<br />

attempted to build it on his own. He had no<br />

success.<br />

In the meantime, Sears’ buggy proved<br />

popular with customers, but not with company<br />

accountants. Production <strong>of</strong> the car<br />

ceased in 1912 after it was revealed that it<br />

was being sold at a loss.<br />

Despite that, 40 years later, the idea resurfaced.<br />

Blame Theodore Houser, the vicep<strong>resident</strong><br />

<strong>of</strong> merchandising for Sears who,<br />

in 1949, sat on the board <strong>of</strong> Kaiser-Frazer,<br />

an upstart automaker launched after World<br />

War II by steel magnate Henry J. Kaiser.<br />

That year, Kaiser-Frazer sales had<br />

withered under the assault <strong>of</strong> all-new models<br />

from General Motors, Ford and<br />

Chrysler. Financial prospects dimmed.<br />

Houser <strong>of</strong>fered to sell a Kaiser-Frazer car<br />

under Sears’ Allstate brand, but he wasn’t<br />

sure Kaiser's current models were a good<br />

If you ordered a Sears Allstate automobile, you got a Henry J with a different<br />

name on it. Selling cars by mail order didn’t go over and Sears abandoned the project.<br />

fit.<br />

In an effort to remain solvent, Kaiser-<br />

Frazer borrowed $44 million from the<br />

Reconstruction Finance Corporation with<br />

the stipulation that the automaker build an<br />

affordable small car. That car, introduced<br />

in 1951, was the Henry J, modestly named<br />

after the company’s founder.<br />

In an era when bigger was better, this<br />

plain two-door fastback’s 181-inch length<br />

– an inch longer than a 2013 Toyota<br />

Corolla – must have seemed spectacularly<br />

small. And its 68-horsepower four-cylinder<br />

engine couldn't compete against the<br />

likes <strong>of</strong> Olds-mobile’s 135-hp Rocket V-8,<br />

although an 80-hp six-cylinder engine was<br />

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Arrangements were made to slap Allstate<br />

badges and some unique trim on the Henry<br />

J and have Sears sell it for 1952.<br />

Prices for the Allstate started at $1,395<br />

– or $12,355 today. Considering that a<br />

trunk lid and glove box weren’t standard<br />

on base models, Allstates were pricey. An<br />

additional $65 bought a full-size<br />

Chevrolet, while an extra $29 netted a fullsize<br />

Ford. Is it any wonder that only 1,566<br />

Allstates were sold? When a mere 797<br />

found buyers in 1953, Sears pulled the<br />

plug.<br />

Some might blame the Allstate’s failure<br />

on the car’s compact size, its styling or<br />

its price tag. However, the Henry J sold in<br />

much greater numbers and held its own for<br />

four model years. The difference is the<br />

Henry J was sold through dealers, not a<br />

catalogue.<br />

Let’s face it: Few things in life are as<br />

exciting as going to a car dealer and selecting<br />

a new car or truck from a row <strong>of</strong> shiny<br />

new sheet metal. And, given the cost<br />

involved, it's not something that can be<br />

taken care <strong>of</strong> with a click <strong>of</strong> the mouse.<br />

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34 — The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013<br />

Opening April 1 st<br />

Mark Angevine, MD<br />

Internal medicine<br />

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839 N. Wisconsin St., Elkhorn<br />

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Family medicine<br />

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Since 1883, Mercy has grown to touch the lives <strong>of</strong> millions <strong>of</strong><br />

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We have healed bodies, mended families and saved lives.<br />

Today, Mercy is proud to <strong>of</strong>fer its services to the <strong>resident</strong>s <strong>of</strong><br />

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Mercy Elkhorn Medical Center staff looks forward to serving you<br />

and your family. To make an appointment, please call (262) 741-1400.<br />

Building our future together<br />

Over the next few months, you will see many great things happening<br />

and many great doctors arriving at your new Mercy Elkhorn Medical<br />

Center. Mercy medical staff starting April 1:<br />

Bradley Fideler, MD<br />

Orthopaedic<br />

surgery<br />

Carol Gilles, MD<br />

Obstetrics/<br />

gynecology<br />

James Knavel, MD<br />

Orthopaedic<br />

surgery<br />

Craig Lyon, MD<br />

Orthopaedic<br />

surgery


The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com<br />

Pickles by Brian Crane<br />

March 22, 2013 — 35<br />

Laughing Matter<br />

“Hey, buddy,” said Bill<br />

as he caught up with Gus<br />

on the way back to camp.<br />

Are all the rest <strong>of</strong> the guys<br />

out <strong>of</strong> the woods yet?”<br />

“Yup,” said Gus.<br />

“All six <strong>of</strong> them?”<br />

“Yup, all six.”<br />

“Then,” said Bill, his<br />

chest swelling with pride,<br />

“I’ve shot a deer.”<br />

☺ ☺ ☺<br />

“What’s you name?”<br />

the cop asked a truck driver<br />

he had just pulled over.<br />

“ ’Tis on the side <strong>of</strong> me<br />

truck,” said the driver.<br />

“It’s obliterated,” said<br />

the cop.<br />

“Yer wrong,” said the<br />

driver. “ ’Tis O’Brien.”<br />

☺ ☺ ☺<br />

“Yes, she’s married to<br />

a lawyer, and a good honest<br />

fellow, too,” answered<br />

a man to a query about a<br />

good-looking woman.<br />

“My goodness!” said<br />

the other. “Bigamy.”<br />

☺ ☺ ☺<br />

“What would I get,”<br />

asked the man who had<br />

just insured his property<br />

against fire, “if this building<br />

burned down tonight?”<br />

“I would guess,” said<br />

the insurance agent,<br />

“about 10 years.”<br />

☺ ☺ ☺<br />

“This program will do<br />

half you work,” said the<br />

computer salesman.<br />

“Good,” said the customer.<br />

“I’ll take two.”<br />

☺ ☺ ☺<br />

“Are you looking for<br />

work?” asked the employment<br />

agent.<br />

“Not necessarily,”<br />

replied the man, “but I’d<br />

like a job.”<br />

☺ ☺ ☺<br />

“Why are you carrying<br />

only one plank when all<br />

the others are carrying<br />

two,” a foreman asked a<br />

laborer.<br />

“I’m not sure,” the<br />

worker replied, “but I<br />

think it’s because they’re<br />

too lazy to make two trips.<br />

☺ ☺ ☺<br />

“You can’t get better<br />

no matter where you go,”<br />

said a tobacconist, holding<br />

up a box <strong>of</strong> cigars.<br />

“You’re right,” said<br />

the customer. “I smoked<br />

one last week and I’m not<br />

better yet.”<br />

☺ ☺ ☺<br />

Two friends met on the<br />

street after not seeing each<br />

other for some time. One<br />

<strong>of</strong> them was using crutches.<br />

“What’s the matter<br />

with you?” asked the first<br />

man.<br />

“Traffic accident,”<br />

answered his friend.<br />

“When did that happen?”<br />

“Oh, about six weeks<br />

ago.”<br />

“And you still have to<br />

use crutches?”<br />

“Well, my doctor says<br />

I could get along without<br />

them, but my lawyer says<br />

I can’t.”<br />

☺ ☺ ☺<br />

A judge was leaving<br />

the bench when he<br />

slipped, bumped down<br />

several steps and landed<br />

on the floor.<br />

“An alarmed bailiff<br />

ran to help him up and<br />

said, “I hope your honor<br />

isn’t hurt.”<br />

“No,” replied the<br />

judge, rubbing himself<br />

tenderly, “my honor is<br />

safe enough, but my seat<br />

will probably suffer for a<br />

while.”<br />

☺ ☺ ☺<br />

Aparty <strong>of</strong> tourists in<br />

Arizona came upon an<br />

Indian riding a pony,<br />

while a heavily burdened<br />

woman walked beside<br />

him.<br />

“Why doesn’t the<br />

woman ride?” asked one<br />

<strong>of</strong> the tourists.<br />

“She got no pony,”<br />

replied the brave.<br />

☺ ☺ ☺<br />

“Where’s old four-fingered<br />

Pete?” Alkali Ike<br />

asked the bartender. “I<br />

ain’t seen him around here<br />

since I got back.”<br />

“Pete?” said the bartender.<br />

“He went up to<br />

Hyena Flats, got likkered<br />

up, went up to a hotel<br />

window, yelled ‘Fire!’ and<br />

everybody did.”<br />

☺ ☺ ☺<br />

The skipper <strong>of</strong> a tramp<br />

steamer, in writing up the<br />

log recording an eventful<br />

day, rounded <strong>of</strong>f his task<br />

with the entry, “First mate<br />

intoxicated.”<br />

To the mate, who vigorously<br />

protested when he<br />

read it, the captain said,<br />

“Well, it’s true ain’t it?”<br />

On the following day,<br />

it was the mates duty to<br />

write up the log and he<br />

completed his account<br />

with “Skipper sober.”<br />

When the captain saw<br />

it, he exploded.<br />

Whereupon the mate said,<br />

“Well, it’s true, ain’t it?”<br />

☺ ☺ ☺<br />

“Excuse me, sir,” said<br />

the panhandler, “will you<br />

give me a dollar for a<br />

sandwich?”<br />

The passer-by looked<br />

at him and said, “Let’s see<br />

the sandwich.”<br />

☺ ☺ ☺<br />

A young man<br />

approached the father <strong>of</strong><br />

his girlfriend and said,<br />

“Er, I’m seeking your<br />

daughter’s hand in marriage,<br />

sir. Do you have<br />

any objection?”<br />

“None at all” said the<br />

father. “Take the one<br />

that’s always in my pocket.”<br />

☺ ☺ ☺<br />

“I have the most perfect<br />

wife that ever lived,”<br />

said one traveling salesman<br />

to another.<br />

“Isn’t it monotonous<br />

to go through life with<br />

such a paragon?” asked<br />

his friend.<br />

“Well, I may have put<br />

it a bit strongly,” admitted<br />

the first man. “Absence<br />

makes the heart grow<br />

fonder. If she has any little<br />

fault at all it’s a tendency<br />

to pr<strong>of</strong>anity when she is<br />

intoxicated.”<br />

(Continued on page 39)


36 — The Beacon Now online at www<br />

Now online at www.readthebeacon.com<br />

.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013<br />

Mr. B<strong>of</strong>fo by Joe Martin Willy ’n Ethel by Joe Martin


The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013 — 37<br />

Mr. B<strong>of</strong>fo by Joe Martin<br />

Bound and Gagged by Dana Summer


38 — The Beacon Now online at www.readthebeacon.com<br />

www.readthebeacon.com<br />

March 22, 2013<br />

FuN and GameS<br />

ACROSS<br />

1. Squirrel away<br />

6. Young newt<br />

9. They put the bitter in beer<br />

13. Jousting pole<br />

14. Tap choice<br />

15. Bone-chilling<br />

16. Cast member<br />

17. Greater than the whole?<br />

18. Dismal<br />

19. *Cotton gin inventor<br />

21. Do this for a waltz, e.g.<br />

23. *___ Isaac Newton<br />

24. Shirts on their backs, e.g.<br />

25. Farmer’s ___<br />

28. Turkish honorific<br />

30. Lots<br />

35. Brother <strong>of</strong> Jacob<br />

37. Uh-oh<br />

39. Poet’s “below”<br />

40. Slash mark<br />

41. Fine-tune<br />

43. A fit <strong>of</strong> shivering<br />

44. Sarong<br />

46. Therefore<br />

47. Connecting point<br />

48. Acquiesce<br />

50. *____ Tupper, inventor <strong>of</strong><br />

Tupperware<br />

52. Actor’s domain<br />

53. “Null and ____”<br />

55. Payment for an eye<br />

57. *Corn Flakes inventor<br />

61. *Motorcycle inventor<br />

65. Eskimo boat<br />

66. a.k.a sodium hydroxide<br />

68. Pleasant Island<br />

69. Electron tube<br />

70. Goon<br />

71. Barry Bonds formerly was one<br />

72. Large pots<br />

73. Choose instead<br />

74. Wintry mix<br />

Puzzle answers<br />

on page 27.<br />

East-West vulnerable. North deals.<br />

NORTH<br />

♠ K, 2<br />

❤ 10, 4, 2<br />

♦ 8<br />

♣ K, 10, 9, 6, 5, 3, 2<br />

WEST EAST<br />

♠ Q, 9, 7, 5, 4 ♠ 10, 3<br />

❤ Q, 9 ❤ 8<br />

♦ A, K, 7, 5, 3 ♦ Q, J, 10, 9, 6, 4, 2<br />

♣ Q ♣ A, J, 4<br />

SOUTH<br />

♠ A, J, 8, 6<br />

❤ A, K, J, 7, 6, 5, 3<br />

♦ Void<br />

♣ 8, 7<br />

The bidding:<br />

NORTH EAST SOUTH WEST<br />

3♣ Pass. 3❤ Dbl.<br />

4❤ 5♦ 5❤ Pass<br />

Pass Pass<br />

Opening lead: Q <strong>of</strong> ♣<br />

Study the auction and diagram above<br />

then decide: Would you rather play or<br />

defend five hearts after the lead <strong>of</strong> the<br />

queen <strong>of</strong> clubs?<br />

In a competitive auction where West<br />

Crossword Clues<br />

Theme: Famous Inventors*<br />

DOWN<br />

1. Deli side<br />

2. Dash gauge<br />

3. Opposed to<br />

4. *Alexander Graham Bell and John<br />

Boyd Dunlop<br />

5. Possible consequence <strong>of</strong> heavy lifting<br />

6. No problem<br />

7. Common winter bug<br />

8. Time in Italian<br />

9. German title<br />

10. Cream-filled treat<br />

11. “La Vie en rose” singer<br />

12. Owned by the lord<br />

15. *He saw the light<br />

20. Cereal killer<br />

22. Often preceded by a time period<br />

24. Gradually diminished<br />

25. *Namesake <strong>of</strong> electric car maker<br />

26. Singular form <strong>of</strong> “asci”<br />

27. Indian cuisine staple, pl.<br />

29. *Sewing machine inventor<br />

31. *____ Kamen, inventor <strong>of</strong> the<br />

Segway<br />

32. Chief port <strong>of</strong> Nigeria<br />

33. Short composition for solo instrument<br />

34. _____ music<br />

36. Instinctive motive<br />

38. It’s a long story<br />

42. Land <strong>of</strong> “Gangnam Style”<br />

45. Conjure up<br />

49. Clothe<br />

51. Pinocchio’s fabrications<br />

54. Inuit shelter<br />

56. Modern letter<br />

57. Spiral-horned African antelope<br />

58. Arabic for commander<br />

59. He gets bigger share?<br />

60. Boys<br />

61. Adroit<br />

62. Molokai party<br />

63. Sea eagles<br />

64. *____ Handler, Barbie doll inventor<br />

67. Small dog’s bark<br />

Bridge<br />

♠ Play or Defend?<br />

Goren on Bridge by Tannah Hirsch<br />

♥ ♦<br />

♣<br />

made a takeout double for spades and diamonds<br />

over South's response, South wisely<br />

elected not to defend five diamonds.<br />

Although that contract goes down a trick,<br />

there was no guarantee <strong>of</strong> that, and five<br />

hearts would surely not be expensive.<br />

Suppose you elect to defend and find<br />

the best lead <strong>of</strong> the queen <strong>of</strong> clubs:<br />

Declarer covers with the king, East wins<br />

with the ace and cashes the jack. As West,<br />

what do you discard? If you discard either<br />

a low spade or a low diamond, partner will<br />

lead the other plain suit. Declarer wins the<br />

spade, or ruffs the diamond, draws trumps<br />

and claims the rest <strong>of</strong> the tricks. The same<br />

applies if you discard the seven <strong>of</strong> diamonds<br />

- partner will shift to that suit and<br />

that is the end for the defense.<br />

Suppose, however, you pitch the ace <strong>of</strong><br />

diamonds! Partner will work out that you<br />

had other ways <strong>of</strong> asking for a shift, and<br />

that you want clubs continued. Partner follows<br />

your suggestion and your queen <strong>of</strong><br />

hearts is promoted to the setting trick.<br />

Despite that, however, you should<br />

choose to declare. All you need do to<br />

ensure the contract is refuse to cover the<br />

queen <strong>of</strong> clubs at trick one. No matter how<br />

the defenders continue, they cannot get<br />

more than two club tricks since one ruff<br />

sets up the suit for all the discards you<br />

need and there are ample entries to<br />

dummy.<br />

S u d o k u<br />

Complete the grid so that each row, column and 3x3 box (in bold<br />

borders) contains every digit, from 1 to 9.<br />

DINE IN OR<br />

CARRY-OUT<br />

• Ice Cold Beer<br />

• Italian Beef<br />

• Gyros • Brats<br />

• Pizza • Burgers<br />

• Shakes • Malts<br />

SPRING HOURS:<br />

We Are Now Open Everyday<br />

7 Days A Week<br />

11:00 A.M. - 8:00 P.M. or LATER<br />

Still serving you the best<br />

crispy, thin crust pizza<br />

and char-broiled burgers in the area!<br />

99 N.Walworth<br />

Downtown Williams Bay<br />

262-245-1330<br />

C O U P O N<br />

BUY 1 HOT DOG, FRIES & DRINK<br />

AT REGULAR PRICE<br />

GET A HOT DOG ABSOLUTELY FREE!<br />

With this coupon. One coupon per order. Not valid with any<br />

other <strong>of</strong>fers. Good only at Skip’s through April 30, 2013


The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013 — 39<br />

Puzzle Answers on<br />

Page 23.<br />

Laughing Matter<br />

Continued from page 35<br />

Three slightly deaf Englishmen were<br />

driving to London in an old, noisy car,<br />

and hearing was difficult. As they neared<br />

the city, one asked, “Is this Wembly?”<br />

“No,” replied the second. “This is<br />

Thursday.”<br />

“So am I,” said the third. “Let’s stop<br />

and have one.”<br />

☺ ☺ ☺<br />

A man had fallen 40 feet onto concrete<br />

outside a seaside hotel. As he lay<br />

bruised, battered and semi-conscious,<br />

the hotel-keeper rushed out and, raising<br />

his head, held a glass <strong>of</strong> sherry to his<br />

lips.”<br />

“Good God!” exclaimed the man.<br />

“How far do I have to fall to get a glass<br />

<strong>of</strong> whiskey?”<br />

☺ ☺ ☺<br />

A young matron in whom the shopping<br />

instinct was strong asked a butcher<br />

the price <strong>of</strong> hamburger.<br />

“Two-fifty a pound,” he replied.<br />

“But the price at the corner store is<br />

only $2 a pound,” she said.<br />

“Why don’t you buy it down there?”<br />

“They’re all sold out,”<br />

“Well,” said the butcher, “when I<br />

don’t have any I sell it for $2 a pound.”<br />

☺ ☺ ☺<br />

A father bought a lie detector robot<br />

that slapped people when they lied. He<br />

decided to test it at dinner one night. The<br />

father asked his son what he did that<br />

afternoon.<br />

“I did some schoolwork,” said the<br />

lad.<br />

The robot slapped the son.<br />

The son said, “Ok, I was at a friend’s<br />

house watching movies.”<br />

“What movies did you watch?”<br />

asked his father.<br />

“Toy Story.”<br />

The robot slapped the son again.<br />

“Ok, Ok, we were watching ‘dirty<br />

stuff,’” said the son.<br />

“What?,” said his dad. “At your age I<br />

didn’t even know what ‘dirty stuff’<br />

was.”<br />

The robot slapped the father.<br />

Mom laughed and said, “Well, he<br />

certainly is your son.”<br />

The robot slapped the mother.<br />

Robot for sale.<br />

☺ ☺ ☺


40 — The Beacon Now online at www.readthebeacon.com<br />

www.readthebeacon.com<br />

March 22, 2013<br />

Phoenix Middle School students (back row) visit with Turtle Creek kindergarteners to read with them as part <strong>of</strong> a life-skills project. On Thursday and Friday, Feb. 21-22,<br />

students from the special education classrooms <strong>of</strong> Phoenix Middle School in Delavan visited the 4-year-old and 5-year-old kindergarten classrooms <strong>of</strong> Turtle Creek Elementary<br />

School. The middle school students were there to read to the younger students as part <strong>of</strong> an effort to assist the special education students in learning vital life skills. One goal<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Special Education Program at Phoenix Middle School this year is for its students to build relationships with peers <strong>of</strong> other age groups, develop social skills outside the<br />

school setting, and learn the positive effects <strong>of</strong> community service. By providing opportunities to develop these skills in their curriculum, the middle school students build self-confidence,<br />

learn to practice self-advocacy, and create a positive community image for the program. In addition to the recent field trip to Turtle Creek, these opportunities will be<br />

accomplished through other various fieldtrips into the local community. Future fieldtrips may see the Phoenix students visiting a nursing home, caring for animals at an animal<br />

shelter, or conducting a community clean-up. The choice future fieldtrips will be driven by student input. As part <strong>of</strong> the goal <strong>of</strong> building confidence and self-advocacy, the students<br />

are encouraged to give their ideas for ways to enrich their curriculum. (Photo by Mike Heine)<br />

RESTAURANT & BAR<br />

220 Elkhorn Rd. (Hwy.67), Williams Bay<br />

262-245-6666<br />

Deb Huebscher<br />

Director <strong>of</strong> Tenant Services<br />

116 Cherry Street • Williams Bay, WI<br />

Phone: 262.245.7320<br />

Fax: 262.245.7399<br />

Email: dhuebscher@ricemanagement.com<br />

www.sherwoodlodgeseniorliving.com<br />

FRIDAY FISH FRY<br />

$ 11.99 HAPPY HOUR<br />

Monday - Friday<br />

2 FOR 1<br />

3:00 to 5:00 p.m.<br />

2 WEST GENEVA STREET • (262) 245-0424<br />

lighthousewilliamsbay.com<br />

Spa, Beauty & Personal Care<br />

104 Walworth Avenue<br />

Williams Bay, WI 53191<br />

Tel. (262) 245-5171<br />

WILLIAMS BAY<br />

BUSINESS ASSOCIATION<br />

Calendar <strong>of</strong> Events:<br />

• PIER 290 Open Mic Night Every Thursday from 8-10 p.m.<br />

Live Music Every Friday & Saturday at PIER 290 beginning at 9 p.m.<br />

3/22 Big Al Wetzel Band • 3/23 Jeff & Barb Trudell • 3/29 David Sarkis • 3/30 Mr. Myers<br />

• Williams Bay Rec Department: Spring Egg Hunt 3/30 at Lions Park, 10:00-Noon.<br />

YOGA IS BACK! Tues. & Thurs., 10:30-11:15, Lions Field House. PING PONG SOCIAL HOUR,<br />

Fridays 10-Noon, Lions Field House. ZUMBA Tues. & Thurs. 9:15-10:15, Lions Field House.<br />

INDOOR MORNING WALKING CLUB (Ages 18+). Every Mon.-Fri. that school is in session,<br />

6-7 am, WBHS. For more information call (262) 245-2720. info@wbreccenter.org.<br />

www.wbreccenter.org<br />

• Wisconsin Secretary <strong>of</strong> Tourism, Stephanie Klett to Speak at PIER 290 Restaurant in Williams<br />

Bay at a luncheon on April 4, 2013 at 12:00 pm. Cost for the luncheon is $15. PIER 290<br />

Restaurant is located at Gage Marina at 1 Liechty Drive, Williams Bay. Reservations are<br />

required. For more information or to make a reservation, please contact Jim D’Alessandro at<br />

(262) 245-5036 or info@lakegenevaharborview.com.<br />

• WBBA Meet ‘N Greet April 16<br />

MERCY WALWORTH HOSPITAL<br />

and MEDICAL CENTER<br />

Hwys. 50 & 67, <strong>Lake</strong> <strong>Geneva</strong>, WI 53147<br />

262-245-0535<br />

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New and Existing Residential and Commercial<br />

Septic and Sewers • Service<br />

LICENCED, BONDED and INSURED<br />

CALL TODAY 262-245-1621<br />

Now Open Everyday • 7 Days A Week<br />

11:00 A.M. - 8:00 P.M. or LATER<br />

99 N.Walworth, Downtown Williams Bay<br />

(262) 245-1330<br />

Ice Cold Beer • Italian Beef • Gyros • Brats • Pizza • Burgers • Shakes • Malts<br />

Slice <strong>of</strong> One Topping Pizza & Drink $ 3.95 - Served All Day!<br />

Dine In Carry Out Delivery Catering<br />

Williams Bay Dock Delivery - Boating and Ice Fishing<br />

659 E. <strong>Geneva</strong> Street, Williams Bay, WI<br />

Phone: 262-245-9132 • 262-245-9133 • Fax: 262-245-9035<br />

Mon.-Thurs. 10:30AM-12:00PM; Fri. & Sat. 10:30AM-1:00AM (Summer Hours)<br />

Winter: 11:00PM Sun. 10:30AM-10:00PM<br />

Williams Bay<br />

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Care Center, LLC<br />

Dedicated to serving the needs <strong>of</strong> our Community<br />

Williams Bay Care Center Offers Short<br />

and Long Term Rehab Service<br />

*MEDICARE & MEDICAID CERTIFIED<br />

STOP IN FOR A TOUR<br />

146 Clover Street, Williams Bay<br />

262-245-6400

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