The Beacon
Transcription
The Beacon
Free A Paper Designed With Readers In Mind March 22 - April 4, 2013 Former Lake Geneva resident subject of Masterpiece TV series By Dennis West On Sunday, March 31, PBS Masterpiece Classic will begin an 8-part series called “Mr. Selfridge,” about the American department store magnate who moved to England and founded the famous establishment that still bears his name. A list of the families who owned property on the shores of Geneva Lake at the turn of the 19th century reads like a Who’s Who of American industry and commerce. Names like Armour, Swift, Leiter, Fairbank, Harris, Chapin and Wrigley are recognizable by many Midwesterners, especially Chicagoans. Another name, which is perhaps more famous in Europe today than the United States, was Harry Gordon Selfridge, who built and owned Harrose Hall on the lake’s south shore from 1899 to 1922. It was during this time that he resigned as general manager of Chicago’s Marshall Field & Company and founded Selfridge’s, which quickly became England’s premier department store. Selfridge was born in Ripon, Wis., on Jan. 11, 1858. His father, a storekeeper, died shortly afterward. The widow Selfridge obtained a teaching job in Jackson, Mich., and the two moved there shortly before the Civil War began. One source says Selfridge attended school only through the fifth grade. Another says he finished high school and wanted to attend the United States Military Academy at West Point, but he was too short. He settled instead for a job as a dry goods store clerk in Jackson at $1.50 a week. He later became a bank clerk at a salary of $20 a month. In 1879, when Selfridge was 21, he secured a letter of recommendation from Jackson businessman Lawrence Field to his cousin, Marshall Field, then a partner in Field & Leiter Dry Goods in Chicago. Based on his cousin’s glowing recommendation, Marshall Field gave Selfridge a job as a clerk in the wholesale division of the company at $10 a week. Within a year the ambitious young man had been promoted to salesman, first behind the counter and then traveling to retail establishments throughout the state. During this period, Selfridge augmented his education by constantly reading newspapers and books, especially those about merchants and merchandising. In 1883, when he was offered a better job in the wholesale house, he asked to be transferred to the retail store where he thought he could put his ideas about merchandising into effect. When his supervisor refused to listen to his ideas, Harry took them directly to Marshall Field. The great man told Selfridge’s boss to let him try them, on the theory that if they worked the store would make more money; if they didn’t, it would prove the young man wrong and end the dispute. And work they did. Until 1883, the store had only five telephones. Selfridge tripled that number immediately and had a switchboard installed to route calls to every department. He inaugurated an “annual sale” on the theory that it was the best way to clear shelves for new merchandise. He ripped out high shelving and displayed piece goods on tables in the center of the aisles so customers could see and examine them more closely. The hands-on involvement resulted in huge sales increases. The basement of the store had been a repository of odds and ends that were marked down when they didn’t sell. In 1885, Selfridge greatly expanded the new department and opened it to bargain hunters. In so doing, he originated the “bargain basement” that brought thousands of less-well-to-do shoppers into Field’s who would never have thought to shop there because they couldn’t afford it. Many, as their financial circumstances improved with the growth of Chicago, moved from the basement to other floors of the ever-expanding retail emporium. The bargain basement, which went through a number of name changes, finally became known as the budget Center and grossed $25 million a year. It was Selfridge who moved the perfume counter to the front entrance where its fragrances attracted shoppers from the outside and made their first impression of the store pleasant and unforgettable. Selfridge ran big newspaper ads announcing the arrival of merchandise, new products and price reductions. it was he who, for better or worse, originated the Christmas Countdown by plac- The Selfridge summer home, Harrose, was located next to Harry’s brother-inlaw’s estate, Ceylon Point, on Geneva Lake’s south shore. Selfridge had Harrose built in 1908 and sold it in 1922. (Photo furnished) Jeremy Piven portrays retailing genius Harry Gordon Selfridge in the PBS Masterpiece series, “Mr. Selfridge,” Sundays, March 31 - May 19. (Photo by John Rogers/ITV Studios for Masterpiece) ing ads warning that there were only so many shopping days until Christmas. Selfridge insisted that the advertisements not only eye-catching and informative, but completely honest. If sale goods were slightly damaged, or seconds, the ads said so. In 1887, Field promoted the 29-yearold Selfridge to “retail general manager.” Selfridge moved his mother from Jackson, Mich., to his apartment on the Near North Side. He furnished his office more elaborately than Field’s, had a barber come to shave him each morning and changed clothes three times a day so that he always appeared fresh and dapper in frock coat, vest with a gold watch chain, wing collar and patent leather shoes. It was as he rushed from department to department in search of retail perfection, his watch chain swinging from side to side, that his employees began to call him “Mile-A-Minute Harry.” Selfridge strictly followed his employer’s maxims, “Give the lady what she wants” and “The customer is always right.” Soon he added departments for wallpaper, an art gallery, furniture, shoes and children’s clothing. Selfridge badgered Field for several years to open a restaurant in the store on the premise that, if customers could get something to eat when they got hungry, they wouldn’t have to leave and maybe not return. Finally, in 1890, Field allowed him to open a tea room near the fur section on the third floor. It began with just 15 tables, eight waitresses and four women in the kitchen. On the first day, only 56 patrons were served. In a year, it had been enlarged and was serving 1,500 a day. It eventually became one of several restaurants and dining rooms on the seventh floor, some decorated with palms, some with heavy oak tables and carved chairs, some with open grills where steaks and chops were broiled in sight of the customers, and some serving sandwiches in tiny baskets with bows on their handles. Thousands of shoppers dined at Field’s each day. In 1889, Selfridge asked to be made a partner. Field reflected on the fact that, in his six years as manager the inventive young man had increased the store’s sales from $4 million to $6.7 million a year and profits from $370,000 to $570,000. Field acquiesced and advanced his manager the $200,000 he needed for the partnership, on the provision that he repay the sum out of his earnings. Secure in his new position, in November, 1890, Selfridge married society debutante Rosalie Buckingham. Selfridge saw the Columbian Exposition of 1893 as the perfect opportunity to introduce Marshall Field to hundreds of thousands of fair-goers from all over the world. The displays he created and the merchandising techniques he used to draw the crowds worked so well that Field showed his pleasure by giving him a larger share of the store’s profits. Harrose Hall It was this bounty that Selfridge used to build his estate on Geneva Lake. Selfridge was familiar with Lake Geneva. Field’s former partner, Levi Leiter, had built his estate, Linden Lodge, on the north shore in 1880. N.K. Fairbank, chairman of the Chicago club, had built Butternuts in 1875, and Rosalie Selfridge’s sister, Anna, had married Frank Chandler, who moved the fabulous, hand-built Columbian Exhibition structure from the island of Ceylon to the south shore of Geneva Lake, where he had it rebuilt and called it Ceylon Court. Selfridge spent some time looking for the perfect spot for his home, finally choosing a 47-acre tract next to his brother-in-law’s, which afforded a view of the entire lake. He combined the names Harry and Rosalie to call his estate Harrose Hall. According to an article in the June 30, 1899 edition of the Lake Geneva News, the French Gothic style house was being rushed to completion for summer occupancy. (Continued on page 2) 2 — The Beacon Selfridge also at www.readthebeacon.com Continued from page 1 “When completed, the Selfridge summer home, which has been under construction for a year, will be one of the most magnificent country places in the costly circle that surrounds Lake Geneva,” the reporter wrote. “The first story and terrace wall are of native stone, mainly Vermont granite, showing various shades of grays, pinks and yellows. The second story is framed open timbers of selected cypress with plastered walls between.” The roof was of green tile and the window frames, watercourse and downspouts were coppered, which meant they would turn green with age to complement the roof. In contrast to the French Gothic exterior, the interior reflected a distinctly Moorish influence typical of late 19th century homes. A grand staircase hall extended from the main floor to the roofline 35 feet above. A large stained glass dome at the top of the hall provided soft, natural light. To each side of the hall were a din- The actual Harry Gordon Selfridge disembarking from the Chicago and North Western’s “Millionaire’s Special,” which made a run from Chicago to Lake Geneva every day for the convenience of business people who owned property in the Wisconsin resort city. (Chicago Daily News Historic Archive) ing room and a 40-by-60-foot “grand parlor.” Ceiling lights in the dining room were hidden from view in a “trough” to provide gentle, diffused light – perhaps the first example of an indirect lighting arrangement used in an American home. A tea arbor at the opposite end of the house was wire-screened and connected to the butler’s pantry for outdoor meal service. The second floor contained nine “master’s rooms,” four servant’s rooms and four bathrooms. All of the master’s rooms were finished in mahogany, oak and birch. The third floor contained a vaulted 60-by-35-foot ballroom, which was sometimes used as a makeshift dormitory to accommodate the overflow of guests. There was also a complete photographic studio, perhaps used to record portraits of visitors. Not long after Harrose Hall was finished, Selfridge invited Field employees, including stock boys, errand girls, clerks and executives, to his Lake Geneva estate for a gala picnic and reception. In June 1901, Selfridge had a large greenhouse erected on the property. In August, Rosalie gave birth to a daughter. In 1903 Selfridge enlarged his greenhouse to accommodate what a reporter called “one of the world’s largest and finest collections of orchids and roses.” Famous window displays Back in Chicago, Selfridge reinstated a merchandising strategy used by the store’s founder, Potter Palmer, but neglected by Field and Leiter after they bought him out. Selfridge realized the value of the store’s many display windows and turned them into the merchandising and publicity attributes they remain to this day. In 1900, Selfridge began supervising a major expansion of what was already one of the world’s premiere shopping destinations. Field acquired the entire block on which the store was built. A 12story building to the north of the store and covering the entire block to Randolph Street was completed by September, 1902. The store was astounding. It seemed Field and Selfridge had thought of everything, not only for customers, but employees, who enjoyed their own restaurant, recreation rooms, gymnasium, locker rooms with separate showers and a library. All new employees went through an extensive three-day training course. March 22, 2013 Ceylon Court was built of teakwood on the island of the same name as an exhibit for the 1893 Columbian Exposition in Chicago. Selfridge’s brother-in-law, Frank Chandler, bought it and had it disassembled, moved by rail to Lake Geneva and reassembled on the south shore. Selfridge later built his summer home, Harrose Hall, next door. (Postcard image) The result was terrific. “In 1901, before the addition was built,” wrote Kogan and Wendt in their book, “Give The Lady What She Wants,” the retail gross had been $14 million and the net profit $989,000. By 1903, retail sales were $17 million and net profits $1.4 million. Despite Selfridge’s accomplishments, Field seemed to pay more attention to other executives, notably John Shedd, who eventually assumed responsibility for the company after Field’s death. Mile-a-minute Harry became increasingly dissatisfied. In May 1904, he told Field he planned to buy Schlesinger & Mayer Department Store, but would stay until the end of the year if he so wished. Field told him he could leave the next day if it suited him. Selfridge sold his interest in Marshall Field for $1 million, borrowed $4 million from friends and relatives, and paid $5 million for his new enterprise, which he named Selfridge & Company. Unfortunately, he found the experience unsatisfying. He missed Marshall Field and its grandeur, but more than that he missed his co-workers and the enthusiasm, pride and skill lacking in his new employees. He was uncomfortable fighting with Field’s for customers. “I ‘Mr. Selfridge’ on PBS Masterpiece At the unfashionable end of London’s Oxford Street in 1909, an American retail tycoon arrived to jettison fusty British tradition and open the biggest and finest department store the world has ever seen: Selfridges. Three-time Emmy® winner Jeremy Piven stars as Harry Gordon Selfridge, the flamboyant entrepreneur and showman seeking to provide London’s shoppers with the ultimate merchandise and the ultimate thrill. “Mr. Selfridge” begins the story of Mile-A-Minute Harry as he embarks on his London enterprise. Emmy® Award-winning writer Andrew Davies (Pride and Prejudice, Bleak House) conjures the opulence and excitement of Selfridges and the story of its founder, a man of exuberant, outsized, and potentially dangerous, appetite. Behind Selfridges’ lavish shop windows, gleaming counters, and majestic doors, appetite intersects with ambition and desire not just for Harry, but for his staff, his family, and the various women drawn to the store and the man. “Mr. Selfridge airs Sundays through May 19, at 8 p.m. on PBS’ MASTERPIECE Classic. feel I’m competing with my own people,” he said. Within 90 days, Selfridge had sold his store to Carson and Pirie (Scott would come later). At age 46, Harry Gordon Selfridge retired. He spent much of his summers growing orchids, playing golf and enjoying his neighbors at Lake Geneva. He embarked on travels through Europe. Mile-a-Minute Harry was trying to slow down. Of course it didn’t work. It wasn’t long before he found a new challenge. After an extended trip to Europe in 1905, Selfridge explained to a reporter from the Lake Geneva News that the strongest impression he had gained from months of contact with Europeans was “the uniform courtesy out of which seems to grow the factor of honesty in administration. Honesty is just as much a factor in the life of these people as the daily appearance at their desks,” he said. “They do not seem to realize that such a thing as ‘graft’ or ‘pull’ is a permissible proposition. they are not, perhaps, naturally quick, but they are honest. It may have been these attributes, along with his natural restlessness, that led him to take his merchandising talents across the ocean to start, at age 50, a remarkable new career, which we will explore in the next issue. PRICE REDUCED 1800 GENEVA CLUB RD., GENEVA MLS #1241945 - Architectural masterpiece in Geneva National. 6000 sq. ft. detached condo home overlooks Palmer Golf Course. Each 4 bdrm. has its own bath. Wet bar, wine cellar, exercise room, butlers pantry. Easy condo living. $1,299,000 W8912 LK. LORRAINE ROAD, 3043 SOUTH ST., EAST TROY RICHMOND MLS #1286003 - Extremely spa- MLS #1229697 - Privacy and room to roam on this 12 acre estate with multi-level European style home. Indoor pool, rooftop patio and tennis court. 5 bdrms., 4 baths, 3 frplcs., gourmet kitchen, heated tile floors. $429,900 cious home with water frontage on lot! Gigantic deck off main floor of home, 4 season porch with fantastic location. Natural frplc., remodeled kitchen, huge pantry, finished lower level and lots more. Priced $35,000 under tax assessment. Close to I43. $239,900 1928 HERITAGE RD., ROCHESTER MLS #1265633 - Updated 4 bdrm. home on huge lot features newer carpet and well pump, Pergo flooring in kitchen. Big 4 year old wood burner in back yard. Back up furnace, newer water heater. $222,900 184 ANDREA CT., DARIEN MLS #1278139 - Beautiful home on 1/2+ acre lot. 3 bdrms., 1.5 baths on main level, another 2 bdrms. and bath on finished lower level. Marble tile in kitchen, dining room and hall. New carpet in living room. 12x20 vinyl shed, 3-tiered deck, 7 person hot tub, garage and parking for 6 cars. $199,900 SOLD 1006 N. HEARTHSTONE ST., ELKHORN MLS #1280975 - Extremely spacious home at a realistic price! Affordable, updated home. The full bsmt. will provide extra living space for the buyer w/rec room ideas in mind. All new blinds, fresh interior paint and shutters, trim and front pillars also freshly painted. Home Warranty included. $185,900 NEW LISTING 55 STARK ST., UNITS 10/12 WILLIAMS BAY MLS #1241924 & 1281466 Spacious 2 bdrm., 2 bath unit for $176,000 and 2 bdrm., 1 bath for $159,900 in Williams Bay just a short walk to the beach and Geneva Lake. Lrg. bdrms. with walk-in closets. Gas frplc., balcony and remote ceiling fans. Motivated sellers! 548 N. GENEVA NATIONAL GENEVA MLS #1296846 - 2 bdrm., 2 bath Fairways condo with amazing views of Trevino Golf Course at Geneva National Resort. Comfortable open concept living and kitchen plan. Gas frpc. Amenities include golf, tennis, playgrounds, walking trails, lakefront dining and 24 hour security. Furniture is included. $149,900 N2974 NORTH RD., DARIEN MLS #1259539 - 4 bdrm., 2 bath home on 4+ acres! Dairy barn, hog barn, machine shop w/office space, kitchen, bathroom and complete home foam insulation recently completed. 1 car attached garage w/2 bdrms. and living room quarters above. Loft area is ready for buyer to finish. Home needs TLC, but has great potential. $168,900 1031 LAKELAND LANE, GENEVA MLS #1248916 - Beautiful open concept condo with attached garage at the end of Lakeland Lane. Fantastic views all the way around the property. Tranquill lake views from the living room and dining area. Privacy and priced to sell in a buyer’s market! $159,000 “Choosing the right Realtor DOES make a difference” 251 ELMWOOD AVENUE, LAKE GENEVA MLS #1295099 - Fantastic investment opportunity in Lake Geneva. Sellers have maintained and updated the building as needed. Too many updates to list! This 4 unit building is priced $50,000 below tax assessment. All units are rented. Plenty of parking for tenants. $295,000 226 N. MAIN ST., WALWORTH MLS #1216626 - Beautiful 2 bdrm., 2 bath unit in the heart of Walworth. Gas frplc., mstr. bath connected to both upstairs bdrms., 2nd floor laundry room, spacious closets, open concept kitchen, full bsmt. w/potential for 3rd bdrm. and 3rd bath, clean 1 car attached garage and low assoc. fees. $127,000 Hotline: 262-814-1400 + 5 digit PIN Richard Geaslen 262-949-1660 www.rgeaslen.shorewest.com shorewest.com The Beacon Once again it’s time for miscellaneous items from the notebook, the desk drawer and what’s left of my mind. I’ve mentioned that, though Volkswagen makes great cars, someone in Wolfsburg is a few tappets short of an engine when it comes to naming them. I didn’t know how they arrived at their model names, but now that I do I haven’t changed my opinion. It turns out that many of them are named for winds. Yup, winds. The Golf sounds as though it is named for the “sport,” but it’s based on the German word for the Gulf Stream and the winds associated with it. There has also been the Scirocco (Mediterranean winds from the Sahara desert), Passat (German for trade wind), and Jetta (for “Jet Stream”). The Polo, which hasn’t made it to our shores yet, is named for the Marco Polo ocean current and the wind it generates. The Touareg SUV is named for the Tuareg (alternative spelling), who are Berbers, a tribal people who have lived in North Africa since prehistoric times. They are often called “the blue men” because of the color of their clothes and because the indigo dye they use ends up getting rubbed off on their skin. Does anyone remember a car based on the German version of a Jeep, which was called the Kubelwagen in Germany? When they imported it to the U.S., they called it “The Thing,” which is about as bad as you can get. I think they should have called it the Rommel, or Rommelwagen, after Field Marshal Irwin Rommel, also known as the Desert Fox, who was in charge of Germany’s Afrika Korps during World War II. Rommel, who was not a Nazi, was respected by allied commanders as an oldfashioned military general. He was given also at www.readthebeacon.com the choice of execution or committing suicide after his part in the 1944 plot to assassinate Adolph Hitler. But I digress. Speaking of names, AT&T Business Solutions has changed its name to YP, which stands for Yellow Pages. It doesn’t sound like it. My initial reaction, upon seeing it, was “Why not?” • • • • While reading the book, “The Man Who Loved China,” by name Simon Winchester, I began to wonder why the Chinese, Japanese Koreans and Vietnamese use chopsticks instead of western-style eating utensils. Surprise! The Chinese used forks long before they used chopsticks. Forks made of bone have been found in a burial site of the Bronze Age Qijia culture (2400-1900 BC) as well as later Chinese dynasty tombs. Chopsticks originated in ancient China as early as the Shang Dynasty (1166-1122 BC), replacing the fork. The first chopsticks were probably used for cooking, stirring the fire, serving or seizing bits of food, and not as eating utensils. That use began during the Han Dynasty (206 BC-220 AD) because they were considered to be safer to use with delicate lacquerware than other sharp eating utensils. China, Japan, Korea and Vietnam have had chopsticks as part of their traditional eating utensils for thousands of years, but it wasn’t until the Ming Dynasty (13681644) that they came into normal use for both serving and eating. Anything too difficult to eat with chopsticks – such as soup – is traditionally eaten with a spoon. An article in The Daily Mail says “More than 60 billion sets of chopsticks March 22, 2013 — 3 are produced every year in China, so you’d have thought they would be making enough. But a chopstick shortage is growing in the Far East. Chinese people are being urged to stop using so many chopsticks due to the burden they are placing on the world’s forests. Residents of the largest country on the planet are believed to use an astonishing 80 billion pairs of disposable wooden chopsticks every year. Bo Guangxin, chair of a state-owned timber company, told the annual parliament that it was time for China to turn away from wooden chopsticks and begin using metal or plastic knives and forks. He pointed out that since a mature tree yields around 4,000 pairs of chopsticks, the nation used up the equivalent of 20 million trees in the past year. Now a leading official has called for diners to start reusing their cutlery - and has even suggested that the Chinese should turn to knives and forks instead of chopsticks. The chopstick shortage in the Far East is prompting a U.S. company in Georgia to start exporting millions to China. Georgia Chopsticks is producing an incredible two million sets of the utensils every day, according to a report in the Daily Telegraph. The problem exists in part because of a shortage of wood in China - and poplar and sweet gum trees in Georgia are ideal for chopsticks. The chopsticks manufactured by Georgia Chopsticks can be made at extremely low cost from poplar and sweet gum trees, which are ideal for chopsticks. The U.S.-made chopsticks are already on sale in Chinese supermarkets. The firm is operating 24/7 to keep up with huge demand and wants to export 10 million pairs a day by the end of the year. But unlike the majority of chopsticks you might see at Chinese restaurants, these will be marked: “Made in USA.” • • • • The average cost of wedding in the United States is now $28,400, except in Alaska, where it is “only” $15,000. It is my humble opinion that this is further proof, if it is needed, that modern culture is not more advanced than our ancestors’ and that radio waves are rotting our brains. • • • • I am a fan of the London Daily Mail, which now has an excellent Androidfriendly application, or can be read online at www.dailymail.co.uk/ While reading an article the other day, I ran into the following sentence: “He suffered severe facial injuries which required stitches and a broken arm.” It should, of course, have been written, “He suffered a broken arm and severe facial injuries, which required stitches.” It goes to prove that it’s not just us little guys and that even “big city” newspapers make mistakes. • • • • The dome of St. Peter’s Basilica in the Vatican was struck by lightning twice in the hours following Pope Benedict XVI’s resignation announcement. • • • • A Christian mothers’ group has complained that Geico, the car insurance firm, is promoting bestiality. Geico’s latest ad features “Maxwell,” a talking pig, ignoring the flirtatious advances of a young woman as they sit in a parked car. The group, One Million Moms, said it is “disgusting to see how the company takes lightly the idea of bestiality.” Don’t these (Continued on page 23) • Hot Dogs • Polish Sausage • Potato Sausage • Andoulle • Kielbasa • Ring Bologna • Brats • Brat Patties • Ground Beef Patties CHOOSE FROM A VARIETY OF OUR DELICIOUS FROZEN... 20 VARIETIES OF Lukes BBQ Sauce: Ready-To-Bake Pies, Large Cinnamon Rolls & Dinner Rolls, Strudel Sticks and Breads ALSO: Amish Jams, Jellies, Pie Fillings, Pickles, Mushroom, Corn Salsa and More. LUKE’S ZESTY JAMBALAYA PLAN B SEASONINGS WISCONSIN CHEESE “PA PA WOODY’S” CURDS & STRING CHEESE When You Serve Pa Pa Woody’s They’ll Stand Up and Cheer! 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On matters of birth control, abortion, homosexuality, celibate priests and the role of women in the church, however, he is no revolutionary. When Argentina’s Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio stepped out on the Vatican balcony as the new pope on Wednesday evening, all he was required to do was wave and give a blessing. Instead, he began with a witty reference to the fact his fellow cardinals had picked someone from the far side of the planet to become bishop of Rome. Then, before giving his own blessing to the city and the world — “urbi et orbi” — he asked the multitude in St. Peter’s Square to bless him. His humor, humility and kindly smile immediately endeared him to the faithful and marked a contrast will his chillier German predecessor, Benedict XVI. In Latin America, the conclave’s choice was met with wild enthusiasm because he is one of their own. Picking the first non-European pope in more than 1,200 years was a timely decision given that the majority of Catholics are no longer European. Almost half live in Latin America, and Africa is where the church is experiencing dramatic growth. There is great hope among those who admire the social teachings of the church that Pope Francis will put the struggles and needs of the poor in the developing world at the top of his public agenda. In Argentina, he is known as a man of the people who shunned the limousines and palaces enjoyed by past cardinals and instead rode public transit and lived in a The modest apartment where he cooked his own meals. He has been a critic of the corrupt politics and greedy economic policies of the powerful and rich. If he puts the authority of the Roman Catholic Church on the side of exploited workers and the destitute in the barrios, Francis could have a significant humanizing influence on the world economic order. Much has already been made of the fact he chose Francis as his pontifical name, another first in the long line of popes. The assumption is he wanted to take on the name of St. Francis of Assisi, the favorite saint of the poor and marginalized. This, too, would be a good sign, a very clear assertion of where his priorities will lie. It is entirely possible that, as the first Jesuit to be elected pope, he also had in mind another Francis — St. Francis Xavier, who, with St. Ignatius Loyola, founded the Jesuit order in the 16th century. Xavier began the bold missionary tradition of the Jesuits, traveling to India, Southeast Asia and Japan, before he died at the age of 46 while waiting for permission to enter China. The evangelizing work of Xavier could be a model for Pope Francis. During Benedict’s years as pope, selling the message of the church became a priority to counteract the rise of secularism in the West and the sharp drop in the number of parishioners, priests and nuns in Europe and the United States. Francis will almost certainly carry on this work and, because of his humility and social concern, will probably be a better salesman than his predecessor. Still, Francis will not be selling a new product. On theological issues, the new pope’s pronouncements during his years leading the church in Buenos Aires were entirely traditional. (Continued on page 5) Beacon WEST PUBLISHING & ADVERTISING INC. P.O. Box 69 • Williams Bay, WI 53191-0069 (262) 245-1877 • Fax 245-1855 e-mail: beaconnews@charter.net Web Site: www.readthebeacon.com Circulation Ed Breitenfield Karen Breitenfield George Paulsen Dennis West Editor and Publisher Kathi West V.P. and Treasurer Advertising Manager Mark West Composition Manager Wendy Shafer Correspondents Marjie Reed Geneva West Parker Cross March 22, 2013 Where our money goes By Lee H. Hamilton Over the past few weeks, as the deadline for the congressionally mandated budget cuts known as the “sequester” came and went, we got a taste of how difficult cutting federal spending actually turns out to be. The news is disconcerting: thousands fewer food safety inspections, some 70,000 fewer kids in early education programs, people Lee Hamilton with mental illness losing access to treatment, civilian employees of the military furloughed, ships and aircraft going without maintenance... It’s a long and dispiriting list. Yet as painful as the sequester might be, most policy-makers know that it is not the main event when it comes to our fiscal challenges. Discretionary spending, the kind getting cut in the sequester, amounts to less than a third of federal spending. That’s not what many people believe, of course. Whenever I give talks about the federal budget I’m taken aback by where my listeners think most of our money gets spent. At two meetings recently, members of the audience stood up to complain that if we just cut what we give away to other countries in foreign aid, we could resolve our budget issues. This isn’t even close to the truth: altogether, we spend well less than 1 percent of the federal budget on foreign aid. If you think of federal spending as a pie, by far the biggest slices go to Social Security and unemployment support, Medicare, Medicaid, and other health programs, which altogether make up well over half. Military spending accounts for about another quarter, while the next biggest slice, about 7 percent, is for interest on the federal debt – a figure that will explode in upcoming years. Everything else we think of as the federal government – spending on highways and the aviation system, money for student loans and other education programs, housing, food stamps, medical research and, yes, foreign aid – comes in at less than one-fifth of the total. The biggest driver of growth in federal spending, as Nate Silver of The New York Times pointed out in a thoughtful analysis in January, is entitlements: Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security and other social insurance programs. This is especially true of health-care, which accounted for about half of the increase in federal spending relative to the economy over the past 40 years. We cannot get control of federal spending without reining in health-care spending – and though its rate of increase has slackened over the past few years, no one knows whether it’s a permanent or temporary change. So if Congress and the White House are serious about tackling federal spending, then the piece they left out of the sequester – entitlement reform – must be on the table. But it’s been hard to tell from their actions that they’re really serious. Members of Congress have been taking to the airwaves for weeks to decry the sequester’s meat-cleaver approach to budget-cutting, yet most of them voted for it. That’s because it’s simpler to impose across-the-board cuts than to make discriminating judgments about individual programs. Members find it easy to demand cuts in federal spending in the abstract, but painfully difficult to cut specific programs. Americans as a whole do, too: a recent Pew Center poll found they approve cutting government spending in general, but when asked about specific programs, they want to boost funding or keep it the same. Americans are demanding that government cut spending without cutting actual programs. This is why it takes extraordinary leadership to address our fiscal issues. Americans may bear some responsibility, but our leaders have not leveled with us about what it takes to get a sensible budget and put the economy on a path to recovery. I am hard-pressed to think of an example of government failure to match our political leaders’ inability to lead us to a solution. Their prolonged fighting is causing businesses to hesitate, workers to remain in limbo, and an economy that needs a boost to continue to stutter. They are denying us the ability to invest in our future, promote economic growth, and deal with the many other challenges our nation faces. Let’s stop the blame game and get to work. Lee Hamilton is Director of the Center on Congress at Indiana University. He was a member of the U.S. House of Representatives for 34 years. All telephone numbers published in The Beacon are in area code 262 unless otherwise indicated. The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com The Outagamie County effect By Dave Bretl It isn’t unusual for a visitor to a Walworth County Board meeting to remark that the meeting moved along more quickly than they expected. I always invite everyone who makes this observation to come back later and watch one of our committee meetings. Eleven standing committees, whose role it is to advise the county board, meet most months. Each of their meetings usually lasts longer, sometimes hours longer, than our monthly board meeting. Virtually all of the items that end up on the board aDavid Bretl genda have been discussed in detail at these committee meetings. An important reason why board meetings are relatively short is because a majority of the entire board can usually be found at any given committee meeting. In addition to attending meetings of the committees to which they are assigned, a number of supervisors sit in the audience at other committee meetings, as well. A few, including our board chair, attend nearly every committee meeting. The hours spent by these supervisors in the various committee meetings improve their understanding of the issues and provide them with the opportunity to modify proposals to their liking before the topic moves to the full board. Of all the county board’s standing committees, the executive committee can best be described as its “Jack of all trades.” Policy areas within the purview of this committee developed over time, often because a particular duty didn’t fall within the job description of another committee. As a result, topics before the executive committee range from public safety to economic development. One of the executive committee’s many jobs is to make recommendations to the full board as to whether the county should take a position on pending state legislation. Requests to take a stand on statewide issues are occasionally made by our own supervisors or staff. Many issues, however, are first brought to our attention by another county, in the form of a resolution forwarded to our clerk. Outagamie County, located a few hours to our north, is, by far, our most prolific correspondent. Their board cranks out so many advisory resolutions, complete with a computerized cover sheet detailing each roll call vote, that I feel I know their 36 supervisors, personally. I’m not sure what their postage bill looks like at the end of the year, but each resolution indicates that it is to be sent to every Wisconsin legislator and county. Two Outagamie resolutions were up for discussion at our March executive committee meeting, and I noticed three more in the queue for April. Some issues identified by that board include the following: Concealed-carry loophole. When legislation was passed in 2011 that allowed citizens to carry concealed weapons, provided they had first obtained a license from the Department of Justice, an unintended consequence was created. Authors of the law wanted to be clear that license holders would not be able to take their guns into schools. Unfortunately, the prohibition was so broadly written that it applies to off-duty police officers. A police liaison officer for example, who works armed in a high school all day, could technically face arrest if he picked up his children at an elementary school after his shift had ended. While I’m not sure any officer has been arrested under this law, it puts officers in a difficult position. The Outagamie Board is suggesting that the legislation be fixed. Our committee will take up the issue next month. Corrections alternatives. Pointing out the rapid growth in the cost of corrections, the Outagamie County Board urged other counties to join them in asking the Governor to re-examine policies that have led to historically high incarceration rates in Wisconsin. The state spent $1.3 billion in 2011 locking up prisoners. This represents more than a six-fold growth in spending since 1990. Not only does all of this spending increase state taxes, but it has a trickle-down effect on county budgets, as well. Parole violators, as well as those defendants waiting for trials and sentencing, drive up local costs. The resolution, which passed our executive committee in March, urges State lawmakers to look at alternatives to incarceration for low-risk prisoners. Increased funding for treatment courts, for example, which have a proven track record in breaking the cycle of recidivism, could actually improve public safety at a lower cost to taxpayers. Collecting from prisoners. Another way to save tax dollars is to collect the cost of incarceration from the prisoners themselves. Under current law, a county has one year to begin a civil action in circuit court to seek reimbursement of the costs it incurred in housing a prisoner. Outagamie County is seeking support for a change to the law that would extend the statute of limitations for these collections to two years. Walworth County will take up the issue in April. While they have added more than a few hours to our meetings, I’m glad we’re on Outagamie County’s mailing list. It’s tempting to take a cynical view and conclude that no one in Madison cares about what Walworth County thinks. I don’t know what effect our advisory resolutions have on the legislative process, but one thing is true: our views won’t be known if we don’t at least try. The opinions expressed in these columns are those of the author and not necessarily those of the Walworth County Board of Supervisors. March 22, 2013 — 5 Retirement taxes should be retired By State Sen. Neal Kedzie For many, working decades towards a stress-free retirement is both a personal and financial goal. However, an uncertain economy coupled with the rising cost of living makes it difficult to save for retirement, and may require some to keep working beyond their planned retirement age. When retirement finally comes, many are dismayed to learn their retirement income is taxed. Retirees often have a very limited income as it is, thus watching Neal Kedzie more of those hard-earned dollars disappear is very frustrating. Many Wisconsin cities have been named best places to live but not best places to retire. An on-line MarketWatch Wall Street Journal report says Wisconsin’s low unemployment rate, top-notch university system, friendly communities, lower cost of living, and low home prices are positives as a place to retire. However, it also mentions the negatives, including inclement weather and high state and local taxes. Wisconsin has many favorable qualities, but it must re-establish its position as a place where more retirees can call home. Several years ago, Wisconsin took a good first step by ending the state taxation on Social Security benefits. I was proud to co-author the legislation to do so and finally see it enacted into law. But that effort was only one piece of the taxation puzzle, and it is my hope others will soon become a reality. For years, high taxes have been pushing many retirees out of Wisconsin, taking their resources with them. According to the national Tax Foundation, retirees who leave the state represent a net loss of more than $2 billion adjusted gross income between 2000 and 2010. In addition, retirees heading for more tax-friendly states result in lost business for Wisconsin companies, less in-state capital for business investment and job creation, and a loss of taxpayers who had been supporting state and local governments. In order to address this problem, I have re- introduced two bills to keep retirees here. The first is Senate Bill 81, which increases the personal exemption older taxpayers may claim. Currently, a personal exemption of $250 may be claimed by taxpayers 65 and older. Under my bill, the current exemption remains, however for those between the age of 70 and 75, a $300 personal exemption could be claimed, while anyone 75 and older could claim a $350 personal exemption. In short, as you get older, you get more relief from your taxes. The second bill, Senate Bill 82, expands and increases the tax exemption of income a person receives from a pension or retirement plan. Under current law, the first $5,000 of an individual’s retirement income is exempt from taxation, but only if the person is 65 years or older and their adjusted gross income is $15,000 or less, $30,000 or less, if married. Under my bill, the current exemption would remain in place through tax year 2014, however starting in tax year 2015, the exemption would no longer discriminate based on age or household income. Furthermore, in tax year 2016, the exemption would increase from $5,000 of retirement income to $10,000; in tax year 2017, the exemption amount would increase to $15,000, and when fully implemented in 2018, the first $20,000 of an person's retirement income would be exempt from taxation. According to the Legislative Fiscal Bureau, the vast majority of individuals who derive income from a pension or retirement fund are around the $20,000 annual level. Thus, Senate Bill 82 would greatly benefit a much wider population than what the current exemption offers. Since my first days in office, I have heard the concerns of older taxpayers who struggle to stay in their home, and in this state, due to ever-increasing taxes. By allowing them to keep more of their money, we could ensure their day to day expenses can be met, reward a lifetime of hard work, and make Wisconsin the place they can truly call home. David Horsey gotten that, only minutes before, Francis was one of them. Two-time Pulitzer Prize winner David Horsey is a political commentator for the Los Angeles Times. Go to latimes. com/news/politics/topoftheticket/ to see more of his work. ©2013, David Horsey Distributed by Tribune Media Services. Continued from page 4 The fresh image he projected in his first moments on that Vatican balcony was appealing. Still as he raised his hand to the rain-soaked crowd, he was backed by a phalanx of old, conservative, white men in red cardinals’ robes. It should not be for- Sen Kedzie can be reached in Madison at P.O. Box 7882, Madison, WI 53707-7882 or by calling toll free 1 800 578-1457. He may be reached in the district at (262) 742-2025 or online at www.senatorkedzie.com. 6 — The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013 Business, Tax & Investment Martin Group receives award Konica Minolta Business Solutions U.S.A., Inc. has announced that Martin Group of Lake Geneva has been honored with a 2013 Pro-Tech Service Award, which recognizes those Konica Minolta dealerships that demonstrate the highest commitment to customer support and satisfaction. “Providing excellent service has become increasingly important in our industry, and we are committed to assuring the highest performance standards across our organization,” says James Ingrassia, Vice President, Solutions Support Division, Konica Minolta Business Solutions U.S.A. “The ProTech Service Award represents Konica Minolta’s gold standard for service competence and proficiency. There is no higher honor for an authorized Konica Minolta dealer partner, and Martin Group should be very proud of its achievement.” An eight time Pro-Tech Service Award winner, Martin Group, headed by President John Stensland, is dedicated to delivering professional, reliable service and maximum performance for Konica Minolta’s award-winning lines of digital imaging products. To attain the Pro-Tech standard, each element of Martin Group’s operation was evaluated and measured, including its management skills, inventory control systems, technical expertise, dispatch systems, and customer satisfaction ratings. “The Pro-Tech Service Award is a mark of distinction that we are proud to showcase, as it symbolizes our commitment to offering the best business practices in our marketplace,” said Stensland. “This award certifies to our customer base that we have the skills, people, and systems to keep their Konica Minolta equipment operating at the highest level of productivity. Fewer than five percent of all Konica Minolta branches or direct operations earn this award.” By Andrew Tangel Los Angeles Times ICI data show. Demand for fixed-income investments remains strong, and is only likely to grow in coming decades as the world’s population ages and the working-age population decreases, Rieder said. Much of the demand will come from insurance companies and pension funds, he noted. The problem, though, is that the Federal Reserve and other central banks around the world have pushed interest rates to historic lows in unprecedented attempts to prop up the global economy by flooding it with easy money. “We are in a historic time,” Rieder said in an interview. “Fixed-income used to be a stable, low-risk asset class.” Now, with bond prices rising and yields at historic lows, he said, “The risk has picked up significantly.” As interest rates drift higher, investors needing income from their portfolios will need search outside of traditional fixed-income investments, such as Treasury bonds and top-notch corporate bonds, he said. Investors will have to seek out other types of fixed-income investments, such as bank loans, which are similar to highyield corporate bonds, and asset-backed securities, Rieder said. Continued demand for yield from fixed-income will give rise to bonds with floating interest rates, he said. Investors will have to diversify aggressively to mitigate the risk of rising interest rates. “In a traditional fixed-income space,” Rieder said, “there are not enough attractive investments to fund retirement.” ©2013 Los Angeles Times Distributed by MCT Information Services. Investors still plowing into bonds despite exhilirating stock rally NEW YORK – Even as stocks reach all-time highs, investors continue to pour into bonds. Some on Wall Street have speculated investors would embark upon a “great rotation,” pulling their money out of bonds and putting them into stocks as interest rates rise and the economy improves. Rick Rieder, chief investment officer of fixed-income at investment giant BlackRock Inc., believes investors will instead draw from their “tremendous amount” of sidelined cash to invest in stocks. “It won’t come out of fixed-income,” Rieder said. Investors have been growing more optimistic as economy shows more stability and the threat of financial shock fades, Rieder said. “People feel more comfortable every day to take a bit of risk,” Rieder said. A stock-market rally this year pushed the Dow Jones industrial average to new record highs last week, with the broader Standard & Poor’s 500 index flirts with a new all-time high. Investors have been returning to stocks following five years of pulling out of the stock market. But they are also continuing to pour into bonds, according to data from the Investment Company Institute. Investors put $32.8 billion into bond mutual funds in January, compared to $37.9 billion into stock funds that month, ICI data show. In the week ending March 6, investors put $6.4 billion into bond funds, more than double the $2.9 billion they put into stock funds the same week, Beacon publisher Dennis West is jealous of this amazingly long hearse owned by Adams Family Memories. Margaret and James Adams specialize in photographs and videos in old-time costumes and settings. Located in historic downtown Delavan, they are open Saturdays from 12-7 p.m. or by appointment. Check their website at www.adamsfamilymemories.com. (Beacon photo) February housing market numbers impressive, Realtors report By Pary Murray The Wisconsin Realtors Association (WRA) is reporting strong home sales for February, during what is traditionally the slowest time of year for real estate transactions. The WRA’s latest monthly report says sales of existing homes in Wisconsin rose nearly 12 percent compared with last February. David Clark, a Marquette University economist and a consultant with the Realtors Association, says houses are selling faster than they did during the height of the recession. “So those inventory numbers are coming down and the median prices have started moving up,” says Clark. “They are still quite low by historical standards, but they’re certainly starting to move up, and another bit of good news for buyers is that mortgage rates are at pretty low levels.” Clark says those low rates are reserved for well qualified or first time buyers. Wisconsin Public Radio News Business briefs Shorewest, Realtors has named Oneida Wheeler of the Delavan office and Renne Koepselto in the Mukwonago office to the 2012 President’s Club. The award is presented to associates with at least $7,200,000 in closed volume or 47 closed units. Associates who were named to the 2012 Executive Club, for associates with at least $4,800,000 in closed volume or 37 closed units, were Dorothy Gerber, Kathy Baumbach, Diane Krause and Jane Dulisse in the Lake Geneva office and Margaret Nichols in the Mukwonago office. LAKE GENEVA | JANESVILLE | KENOSHA | MADISON | MONROE | ROCKFORD (800) 222-6265 www.martingroup.com Debra J. Duick, CPA • Cathy J. Billings, E.A. !INDIVIDUAL & BUSINESS TAX PREPARATION !FREE ELECTRONIC FILING 262-723-6363 39 N. Washington • Elkhorn, WI 53121 • www.duickandco.com • duickandco@duickandco.com Ryan Simons Lakefront Specialist Taking License 1409 SOUTH SHORE DR. DELAVAN Spacious 4BR, 2BA lake home with 120 feet of panoramic lake frontage. 3 car detached garage and large waterfront deck. 799,000 $ In Badgerland, we like to call a spade a spade, except when it’s a license plate. CALL RYAN TO FIND THE BEST LAKE VALUES! 608-852-3156 www.DelavanLakeProperty.com also at www.readthebeacon.com The Beacon Wisconsin’s checkbook is online By Mike Simonson In a step toward open government, Wisconsin has opened its checkbook to anyone who wants to look. It’s called “Open Book Wisconsin.” “Open Book” is two years in the making, promised by Governor Walker as a way to make state government transparent. Department of Administration Secretary Mike Huebsch says there was a lot of information from all state agencies to enter. “We’re basically putting the state’s checkbook on the Internet,” said Huebsch. “The power of this particular program will be to provide information to any taxpayer who wants to sit in front of his or her computer, unlike anything even a governor has had ever before.” “Open Book” gives Internet access to anything the state spends, although it will be a work in progress. Huebsch says they’ve been giving it a test run, just in case it comes back to bite them. “I'm not afraid,” he says. “I’m certain it will. There are items that appear, such as where we are spending money with Joe’s Liquor Store. What we didn’t know until we looked into it is that Joe’s Liquor Store is actually the local BP station and it’s doing business as Joe’s Liquor Store. So while we may be purchasing gas at the BP station, we’re actually writing the check to Joe's Liquor Store.” Huebsch says this will be a first-of-itskind website in the country. State employee salaries and fringe benefits will be added in the coming months. A few names will be kept off to protect certain people, however, such as undercover law enforcement agents or victims of domestic abuse. Wisconsin Public Radio News CERTIFIED MUSIC TEACHER has openings for Voice and Guitar Lessons in the Lake Geneva area. Also available for Lessons in Music Theory and Sight Reading. FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 262-949-2758 FINANCIAL ADVISORS INC. Irene Vilona-LaBonne CFP • Scott J. Vilona CPA (262) 728-2202 • INDIVIDUAL/BUSINESS TAX PREPARATION • MONTHLY BUSINESS ACCOUNTING • Retirement Planning • 401(k) & Pension Rollovers • IRA Distribution • Wealth Transfer Securities and Advisory Services offered through LPL Financial, a member of FINRA/SIPC. Financial Advisors, Inc. and LPL Financial are not affiliated. 517 E. Walworth Avenue, Delavan WWW.FINADVISORSINC.COM • SVILONA@FINADVISORSINC.COM • IVLABONNE@FINADVISORSINC.COM CELEBRATING 30 YEARS IN BUSINESS Amy Straubel, CPA Pat Wilson, EA • Tax Preparation & Planning • Accounting • QuickBooks Support & Training • Payroll Service ACCEPTING NEW CLIENTS 5540 Hwy. 50 • Unit 106 • Mid-Lakes Village • Delavan Lake 728-6954 • Fax: 728-6964 THINGS ARE LOOKING BETTER Let Us Help You Move Forward To Better Time$ OVER 30+ YEARS OF SERVICE TO THE COMMUNITY MICHAEL ELLSWORTH & ASSOCIATES, LLC 25 S. Wisconsin Street • Elkhorn, Wisconsin 53121 262-723-6997 PHONE • 262-723-7046 FAX mike@michaelellsworthandassocllc.com TRY US OUT! March 22 2013 — 7 Receiving awards at the Delavan Chamber of Commerce banquet on Jan. 31 were (from left) Dawn Meinschock, CSI Media and Leslie Roanhouse, Willowfield Nursing & Rehabilitation for the Apprentice Program; Pete Krieger, Pete’s Porting Service, for Cars Time Forgot; and John Scherer, Alder Group, President’s Award. (Photo furnished) Mercy Health System named top Safe Sitter® teaching site Wisconsin Mercy Health System was recently recognized a top teaching site in 2012 by Safe Sitter®, Inc. Mercy earns this recognition for its dedication to teaching adolescents the necessary responsibilities of nurturing and protecting children. Mercy Health System first implemented its Safe Sitter program in 1995. Last year alone, Mercy graduated 108 area teenagers in its program. Furthermore, Mercy has taught 734 since 2008. Mercy Health System’s Safe Sitter programs are taught in Lake Geneva, Janesville and Clinton. “We are proud to call Mercy Health System a registered Safe Sitter teaching site,” said Safe Sitter executive director Sally Herrholz. “Their ranking as a top 25 site means they have earned the distinction of training the most young teens, 11 and older, among our 850-plus teaching sites.” Safe Sitter is a medically accurate babysitting training program. It’s a twoday curriculum that teaches 11-13 year olds the responsibilities of caring for young children. Safety issues, child development, rescue breathing and first aid are discussed. To register for an upcoming Safe Sitter class, call (888) 39-MERCY toll free. For more information about the Safe Sitter program, visit safesitter.org. Patience often gets the credit that belongs to fatigue. AAA Bankruptcy LLC SERVING RACINE , KENOSHA , ROCK AND WALWORTH COUNTIES DO YOU HAVE QUESTIONS ABOUT BANKRUPTCY? • What Bankruptcy Can Do/Can’t Do • Benefits and Consequences of Bankruptcy • Changes To The Bankruptcy Code in 2005 CALL TO SCHEDULE AN APPOINTMENT IN THE PRIVACY OF YOUR HOME 1-262-245-5550 93 W. Geneva Street, Williams Bay, WI JOHN W. PETERSON - ATTORNEY/OWNER 8 — The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com Retirement ‘tweeners’ may be down, but not out Friends and founders of the Good Earth Church of the Divine (standing, from left) Pastor Simone Nathan, Pastor Nansi Hawkins, Jeanne Phelan, Len Butkus, Terry Skiba (seated) Roger Nathan, Mary Bub, Julie Ryan, Betty Sanders and Janice Peterson admire the quilt Phelan created for the church. The church has found a permanent home in the barn at Michael Fields Agricultural Research Institute in East Troy. (Photo furnished) Good Earth Church will celebrate Easter in a barn A new faith community will host Easter Services at 10 a.m. on Sunday, March 31 – but not in a church. Michael Fields Agricultural Institute (MFAI) is now the home of the Good Earth Church of the Divine. The progressive Christian community will meet at W2493 County Road ES, in East Troy. “It might seem strange to hold Easter Services in a barn, “says Pastor Simone Nathan, “but this is a barn like no other. The mission of the Good Earth Church of the Divine and the mission of Michael Fields Agricultural Institute are parallel. One body of work is from science and the other from theology. We are blessed to find ourselves in a nationally respected research center.” Friends and founders of the Good Earth Church now received a hand-quilted spring farm scene, created by Jeanne March 22, 2013 Phelan, to be used in services. The creaturely world and the land itself are respected in the prayers and works of the church. Humanity has inherited a good creation, and part of its spiritual task is to repair environmental damage and work for the thriving of all life. “The Main Barn at Michael Fields offers warm, graceful space that is beautiful and uplifting,” said Nathan. “There is plenty of parking, a ramp, an elevator, kitchen and bathrooms. The church is the only open and affirming, barrier-free and Just Peace community of the UCC in Walworth County, with our special mission of environmental compassion.” More information may be obtained by calling (262) 348-0764 or visiting the church website at www.goodearth churchofthedivine.org. By Jill Schlesinger The Great Recession wreaked havoc on financial lives across the country, but some age groups suffered especially deep losses. For many who were over 65 when the bad times began, portfolios were already positioned defensively in cash and bonds, which helped shield them from steep losses. Those under 40 may have seen retirement accounts erode, but at least they could count time as a friend in recovering lost ground. But it’s those people in between – currently aged 45 to 60 years old – who really took a shellacking and, as a result, have been forced to make big changes to their retirement plans. I like to think of this group as the “retirement tweeners,” who, like their much younger counterparts, are trying to navigate an awkward, often precarious phase of their lives. Retirement tweeners were the focus of a recent Conference Board report, “Trapped on the Worker Treadmill?” which found that 62 percent of those surveyed are planning to work longer. That’s a significant increase from just two years earlier, when the group found that 42 percent of respondents expected to put off retirement. The results surprised the report’s coauthor Gad Levanon, who had assumed that improving stock and housing markets would at least keep the numbers close to where they were in 2012. “It’s disconcerting that the two years in which the U.S. economy seemed to finally, if fitfully, turn the corner also left so many more workers compelled to change their retirement plans late in their careers.” The report found that a toxic mix of job loss or salary reduction, investment account declines and home equity erosion led to the increase. These factors have caused Americans of all age categories to rethink when they might retire. According to the Employee Benefit Research Institute, Americans’ confidence in their ability to retire comfortably remains at historically low levels. If everyone lost ground during the recession and has emerged from it wounded either financially or emotionally, why is this particular age group so affected? Looking at the numbers, the unemployment rate for those aged 45-60 remains about two percentage points below the current national rate of 7.9 percent, but if someone in this age group loses his or her job, the chances of securing another one within a year is much lower than younger job applicants. Meanwhile, as job searches linger on, many in the group have been forced to deplete savings and raid retirement accounts. As always, the timing on a fire-sale is rarely good, so many panic-stricken near-retirees simply sold out of their stock positions, regardless of whether the market was high or low. Even if personal situations improved, many were reluctant to jump back in to the markets. As a result, 62 percent of 45- to 60year-olds reported at least a 20 percent decline in the value of their financial assets since the start of the crisis, despite the stock market rising 120 percent from the March 2009 lows. “The cumulative effect of drawing down assets in hard times - including the loss of future gains during the recovery - helps explain the current plight of older workers,” said Ben Cheng, the other author of the Conference Board report. “Even as economic conditions improve, many are still relying on assets to get by. And even those who’ve made it through the worst find themselves needing to work past retirement age to rebuild savings.” Another factor in the trend toward delaying retirement was found in the expectations for savings and investments. The report notes that low interest rates on savings accounts, certificates of deposit and government bonds has forced many pre-retirees to recalculate their future potential retirement income stream. Where many once thought 5 percent interest was “safe,” the current interest rate environment has pushed that number down to 2 percent. Instead of assuming more risk with higher yielding bonds, stocks or alternative investments, many would much prefer to work longer. And while their path back to secure retirement is a long and winding one, retirement tweeners can still reach their goals through research, careful planning and, most importantly, patience. ©2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc. Taking License Restaurateurs have a message for cheeseheads. It could be wurst. TAX EXPERTISE TO GET YOU EVERYTHING YOU DESERVE. GUARANTEED. You should never settle for anything less than the best tax preparation. At H&R Block, we hire and train the most qualified tax professionals so you can feel confident you’re claiming every credit you can and taking advantage of every deduction you have coming. If there ever is an error on your return, we’ll make it right. That includes paying any penalties and interest and supporting you in the unlikely event of an IRS audit. We stand behind our work. We stand behind you. Ask about our Maximum Refund Guarantee. Is this less classy, but just as potentially filling? We be talkin’ good Cajun cookin’ in the great state of Louisiana. If you discover an H&R Block error on your return that entitles you to a smaller tax liability, we’ll refund the tax prep fee for that return. Refund claims must be made during the calendar year in which the return was prepared. OBTP# B13696 ©2012 HRB Tax Group, Inc. Burlington (262) 763-7665 Elkhorn (262) 723-3259 Genoa City (262) 279-0509 Waterford (262) 534-2200 Salem (262) 843-3557 Delavan (262) 740-2545 Union Grove (262) 878-1441 Twin Lakes (262) 877-2505 Lake Geneva (262) 248-8778 The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22 2013 — 9 Health & Fitness LG police to host blood drive There are many reasons to give blood. Blood donations save and improve lives of patients in need. Volunteering to give blood also provides an opportunity to participate in a rewarding personal experience. The City of Lake Geneva Police Department has joined forces with BloodCenter of Wisconsin to host a blood drive on Thursday, March 28 from 2 to 7 p.m. at the Lake Geneva City Hall, 626 Geneva St., Lake Geneva. Donors can schedule an appointment by visiting www.bcw.edu/LGPD, by calling 1-877-232-4376 or (414) 937-6199. Appointments are preferred to ensure a quick and convenient donation, but walk-ins are also welcome. Last October teenagers Cassandra and Courtney were involved in a car accident that could have taken their lives. Courtney had compound fracture in her arm, while Cassandra suffered multiple injuries, requiring many surgeries and several units of blood. Thankfully, today she is back in high school, enjoying dances and football games. Donna is grateful for the blood her daughter received, and is now a donor herself. Anyone 17 or older who is in general good health and meets eligibility requirements is encouraged to donate blood. Parental consent is required for 16-year-olds to donate. The entire process takes about an hour. Donors should bring a photo ID that includes birth date. Health Through Chiropractic The Walworth County Literacy Council’s fourth annual Adult Spelling Bee was held March 7 at the Monte Carlo Room. Pictured above is the winning team of Dustin Busson-Sokolik and Lisa Karner, sponsored by Grand Geneva. (Photo furnished) Let MARK WEST show you how advertising in The Beacon can help you reach your traffic & sales goals. Call Mark today 262-245-1877 Skilled Nursing Care and Rehabilitation Services Williams Bay Care Center, LLC By Dr. Bernice Elliott Community Chiropractic Center How Does Spinal Decompression improve spinal disc injury? When there is damage or injury to a spinal disc many times there is loss of “imbibition”. A simple explanation of imbibition is the process of how a disc receives nutrients. In a healthy spinal Dr. Bernice Elliott disc, imbibition occurs naturally with daily body motions and activity that cause a pumping action and allow the nutrients and fluid into the disc. When a disc has poor imbibition it will become nutrient deprived and dehydrated. This in turn can increase the chances of injury. Contributing factors to loss of imbibition include subluxations in your spine, repetitive motions, core muscle imbalance or weakness and excessive stress or trauma to your spine. One of the benefits of spinal decom- pression is to help restore imbibition. The computer controlled traction device is programmed to deliver a gentle stretching and relaxing of the spine, which restores the pumping action to the disc. This in turn resupplies the disc with nutrients and blood contact that can help the disc heal from the inside out. Other benefits of spinal decompression is the decrease of pressure in the disc, which can enhance the drawing in of a bulge and help take the pressure off a ”pinched” spinal nerve. Patients with chronic low back pain, sciatica, neck pain, arm pain, disc bulges and herniated disc have had great success with Decompression Therapy. The combination of decompression therapy, spinal correction, and rehabilitation of the muscle system can restore function and get you back to your active lifestyle. Call Dr. Bernice Elliott at Community Chiropractic Center for free consultation or demonstration. Dr. Elliott can be found at Community Chiropractic Center in Walworth. Call (262) 275-1700 today to make your appointment. This column is sponsored by Community Chiropractic Center. Dedicated to serving the needs of our Community Call For A Tour of The NEW REHABILITATION CENTER • Caring and compassionate staff • On-site physical, occupational and speech therapies* WALWORTH 262-275-6154 DELAVAN 262-728-4203 Kenosha Street & Hwy. 67 South Shore Drive & Hwy. 50 ELKHORN 262-743-2223 WILLIAMS BAY 262-245-9915 190 E. Geneva Street • Hospice/Respite care available* 121 N. Walworth Avenue www.walworthbank.com • Open Breakfast • Full-body whirlpool in a spa-like setting • Laundry and housekeeping services • Cable television • On-site religious services, beauty salon/barber shop, podiatry, optometry, dental and audiology Wil l iam s Bay C are C ent er Of f ers S h ort and Long Term Rehab Service *MEDICARE & MEDICAID CERTIFIED STOP IN FOR A TOUR 146 Clover Street, Williams Bay 262-245-6400 • Assisted Living • Memory Care Active Senior Living at The Terraces & Highlands www.genevacrossing.com 201 Townline Road, Lake Geneva 262-248-4558 Call Today! 10 — The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013 Mercy Health Line April is Foot Health Awareness Month Most of us don’t give much thought to our feet, until they start giving us trouble. Almost 75 percent of Americans will have foot problems in their lifetime. Unlike other parts of our bodies, feet really take a pounding, literally. They’re stuffed into ill-fitting footwear for hours on end, are subject to viruses like warts and fungi like athlete’s foot, are easily injured when we walk barefoot, and often bear the first signs of more serious health problems like arthritis, diabetes, anemia, kidney problems, gout, and nerve and circulatory disorders. The average person walks several miles a day, adding up to almost 115,000 miles or more over a lifetime. The pressure exerted by walking is more than a person’s body weight; running can triple or quadruple that pressure. As the miles add up, so does the wear and tear. That’s why many foot problems tend to occur as we age. Ill-fitting shoes are the major cause of foot problems. Many of us wear shoes that are too small, too narrow in the toe box, pointed, poorly-made, worn out or have an excessively high heel. Foot problems caused or aggravated by ill-fitting shoes include blisters, bunions, corns and calluses, hammertoes, ingrown nails, heel pain and neuromas. You don’t have to be an athlete to be concerned about finding and wearing comfortable and well-fitting footwear. Taking the time and investing the money to purchase quality shoes, boots and sandals is time and money well spent. Here are some tips on choosing proper footwear: • Determine your needs. Will you wear your shoes to run 20 miles a week, to the office or factory, to a formal event, to the beach, to play racquet sports? Of course you wouldn’t wear steel-toed work boots to the beach, but you may think that your walking shoes are good enough for running, your office shoes will work fine for a day at the shopping mall, or your cheap tennies will do for a full day of cycling, which is not always the case. • Where to shop. Reputable stores specializing in certain types of footwear are the best places to purchase shoes that will best meet your needs. For example, uniform stores carry footwear for employees who are on their feet all day. Remember that “one style fits all” doesn’t apply to shoes. Knowledgeable employees can help you determine your foot type (flat, normal or high-arched) and then suggest the size, style and type of shoe you need. • When to shop. Shop for shoes late in the day when your feet are at their largest. • How to shop. Always take along the socks or hosiery you’ll be wearing with the shoes, and if you wear orthotics, take those as well. Most of us have one foot bigger than the other so choose the size for the bigger foot. Try on both shoes and walk more than just once around the store. Wiggle your toes and make sure your big toe is one thumb width from the front of the shoe. Feel for areas that are being pinched or rubbed. If your feet feel cramped or the shoe feels tight, don’t count on them to stretch; well-fitted shoes don’t require a “breaking in” period. Avoid shoes with heels in excess of two inches. Feet flatten as we age so you may need to increase your shoe size as you get older. Weight gain and pregnancy change foot size too. Your athletic shoe size may differ from your dress shoe size. If you’re unsure about your size, ask a clerk to measure your feet while you stand. If, despite purchasing new shoes that fit well, you are still experiencing problems, see a board certified podiatrist; a physician who specializes in the treatment of foot and ankle problems. As mentioned earlier, your feet mirror your general health so you could have something more serious going on. Foot pain is NOT normal so don’t ignore it. Untreated foot problems can lead to larger complications, including a change in your gait, which can lead to knee, hip and spine problems. And if you’re the fix-it-yourself type, know that improper self treatment can turn a minor problem into a major one. People with diabetes have special concerns regarding their feet. About 60 to 70 percent of people with diabetes have mild to severe forms of diabetic nerve damage that can impair feelings of pain in the foot. Foot disease is the most common complication of diabetes leading to hospitalization. If you have diabetes, it is extremely important that you work closely with your doctors and diabetes educators. Between appointments, examine your feet daily for signs of redness, warmth, blisters, ulcers, scratches, cuts and nail problems. Check between toes, the entire bottom of the foot and around the ankle. Call your doctor immediately if you experience any injury to your feet. Even minor injuries are an emergency for people with diabetes. Our feet are biological masterpieces that serve us well when we serve them well. They deserve to be pampered with regular exercise (walking is the best form of exercise for the feet), daily hygiene, properly fitted shoes and medical attention when needed. Touring the Open Arms Free Clinic in Elkhorn are (from left): Destination Imagination team member Maddy Aradillas; Clinic Director Sara Nichols; DI team members Anegla Pieroni; Jimmy Lei; Kendra Pease; Hailey Dupee; and not shown, Destination Imagination Team coach Dawn Dupee. (Photo furnished) Destination Imagination students visit Open Arms Free Clinic, Inc. Students from Badger High School’s Destination Imagination, a team-based creative problem solving program, visited Open Arms Free Clinic, Inc. on March 4, to learn more about how the clinic serves the community. The students plan to make a video about the clinic for their upcoming Destination Imagination competition. Open Arms Free Clinic, Inc. is a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit volunteer medical clinic located in Elkhorn across from the high school. The clinic offers non-emer- gent health care to people who live or work in Walworth County, are at or below 200 percent of the federal poverty level, and have no health insurance. Eligibility Screening takes place on Wednesdays from 2-7 p.m. Clinic hours are Thursdays from 2-7 p.m. To learn more about OpenArmsFree Clinic, Inc., visit their website at www.openarmsfreeclinic.org or their Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/Open ArmsFreeClinic. Mercy HealthLine is a paid column. For information on this or dozens of health-related questions, visit the Mercy Walworth Hospital and Medical Center at the intersection of Highways 50 and 67, call (262) 2450535 or visit us at www.MercyHealthSystem.org. Since Birth, I Have Been Happier Than My Best Friend, Joey. The Only Difference Is My Mom & Dad Take Me To FONTANA FAMILY CHIROPRACTIC! 450 MILL STREET • SUITE 102 • FONTANA, WI 53125 (262) 275-5005 www.fontanafamilychiropractic.com also at www.readthebeacon.com The Beacon March 22, 2013 — 11 New car is hypnotizing, and can sniff out donuts By Celia Rivenbark I bought a new car this week. My beloved convertible had developed an unfixable leak and I was sick of vacuuming out inches of water and waiting for carpet that smelled like basketball feet to dry out. I didn’t want to put an ad on Craig’s List only to have somebody buy it and come back to my house the next week wanting a full refund plus all the bacon in my refrigerator. W h i c h would totally Celia Rivenbark have been deserved, by the way. So I decided that the only fair thing to do would be to trade it in to a dealer. Dealers are used to dealing with unhappy customers, the kind who would return a car like mine and whine about how the car needs “brakes that work,” “windows that go up and down” and “other mechanical necessities.” I didn’t need the hassle so I did the only honorable thing and traded the car in with full disclosure about its flaws (honestly). Duh Hubby offered to go with me but I told him that wouldn’t be necessary. The days of a woman needing a man to go with her to the car dealership to make sure she didn’t get hoo-doo’ed were a thing of the past. Things are different now, I told Duh. For heaven’s sake, Danica Patrick’s on the pole at Daytona, I told him. No, not that pole, I added when he looked confused. Fast forward a few hours and I’m not sure what happened. I walked into the dealership a confident, educated consumer and came out skipping and giggly over the fact that the front seats in my new car are heated AND cooled. I went into the dealership armed with facts and bottom lines and no small amount of research and came out squealing, “You had me at cooler inside the glove compartment!” Who ever heard of such wonderfulness? I signed lots of pieces of paper (“sign here ... and here ... oh, and here ... and just one more ...”) and read none of them. It’s nothing short of a miracle that one of them wasn’t headlined “Agreement to Advertise New Car Sale by Standing Outside Dealership Wearing Nothing But Chaps and Coconut Bra.” The salesman could tell he was dealing with a literate, informed consumer so he showed me how you can download an app that will let the car know when the hot doughnut sign comes on at the nearest Krispy Kreme store. America, she’s a great country. I was a horrible negotiator and they could smell it on me. Or maybe that was just the basketball feet. Either way, I failed to get a good deal but I did get a great car. A car that can find hot doughnuts. Paperwork done, I drove off the lot and cast a quick glance back at my nine-yearold convertible all alone under a sodium vapor light and looking like the world’s most depressing car ad. I’ll miss “Sally.” Until the next time it rains. Celia Rivenbark is the author of the New York Times best-seller, “You Don’t Sweat Much for a Fat Girl.” Kym Moore, Branch Manger of Educators Credit Union in Elkhorn receives a plaque from Paul Yakowenko, Walworth County Firefighters Association President and firefighter with Bloomfield Fire and Rescue. (Photo furnished) Firefighters Association recognizes ECU for use of WCFA Smokehouse The Walworth County Firefighters Association recently recognized local businesses for their proactive approach to promoting fire and life safety through the use of the association’s Fire Safety Smokehouse and Sprinkler Demonstration Trailer. A certificate plaque was presented to Kym Moore for having the W.C.F.A. Smokehouse at each of the last six annual block parties sponsored by Educators Credit Union each year. “This shows that they care about the Fire Safety of children as well as adults in their community” says Paul Yakowenko President of the association for the past 18 years. “They are doing their part to keep the community safe from the dangers of smoke and fire by having us demonstrate what happens when fire strikes and what to do and not to do. We accomplish this through the use of our Smokehouse at events like theirs and it is a very value able tool. They are a very community orientated organization and we are grateful to them for that.” This year the Block Party is scheduled for May 18 from 12-3 p.m. at the Elkhorn Business Centre Parking Lot. Mercy Walworth Hospital to offer Zumba and yoga classes SATURDAY, APRIL 13 • GAINING AWARENESS SUNDAY, APRIL 14 • CREATING INTENT & FOCUSED ACTION 8:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Cost (lunch included): Saturday & Sunday $199 (Early Registration before March 15, $175) Saturday or Sunday Only $125 (Early Registration before March 15, $99) To register or get more information, go to: Mercy Walworth Hospital and Medical Center now offers Zumba and Yoga fitness classes in its community education rooms. Zumba classes will take place on Tuesdays from 6-7 p.m. Zumba incorporates the hottest Latin dances and rhythms from around the world. In this class, participants will rev up their cardiovascular fitness and let their hips fly, proving it’s possible to sweat and have fun at the same time. Hatha Yoga classes will take place on Thursdays from 6-7 p.m. Hatha Yoga emphasizes relaxation and stress reduction, while toning and creating a lasting mind and strong body connection. It uses traditional breathing patterns to quiet the mind and soothe the soul. Attendees should take a Yoga mat. The cost for 10 classes is $60, 5 classes is $30 and 3 classes is $18. Registration and punch card purchase are required prior to beginning classes. Anyone who wants to register should call (608) 756-6100 or (888) 39MERCY. www.essential-yoga.net/about.html or call 262-949-YOGA (9642) Featuring Natural & Organic Products from • Earth Friendly • Seventh Generation • Nordic Naturals • Carlson • Enzymatic Therapy • New Chapter and much more! PLAZA PHARMACY 603 E. Geneva Street, Elkhorn, WI (262) 723-8444 • Fax (262) 723-8760 also at www.readthebeacon.com 12 — The Beacon March 22, 2013 “In my practice, I spend quality time with my patient, which allows us to form a solid bond and trusting relationship. I believe in fully educating each expectant mom during her prenatal care. This allows her to calmly enter her birthing experience with confidence in her body and trust in her care provider.” Jill Edwards, CNM, MS Certified nurse midwife Mercy Walworth Hospital and Medical Center welcomes certified nurse midwife, Jill Edwards, RN, to its obstetrics/ gynecology staff. Jill joins Carol Gilles, MD, board certified obstetrics and gynecology. Jill is a member of the American College of Nurse Midwives. Her areas of special interest include: • General gynecological care and procedures • Holistic women’s health care • Family planning services • Education and preventive care • Patient advocacy • Childbirth • Postpartum care Jill welcomes new patients. For more information, or to make and appointment, call (262) 245-0535 or toll-free (877) 893-5503. With all our heart. With all our mind. Mercy Walworth Hospital and Medical Center | Hwys. 50 and 67, Lake Geneva MercyHealthSystem.org also at www.readthebeacon.com The Beacon Facts about raspberry ketone Congratulating Inspiration Ministries resident Troy Gehrig (with certificate) on a presentation to the Walworth-Fontana Rotary Club are (from left) David Lindelow, Vice President of Walworth-Fontana Rotary; Bob Klockars, Past President of Walworth-Fontana Rotary; Dr. Jeremy Bria, President of Walworth-Fontana Rotary; John Henderson, Past President of the Elkhorn Rotary Club; and Robin Knoll, Past President of the Walworth– Fontana Rotary Club. Gehrig and Knoll presented a program about Inspiration Ministries, which is located at the corner of Highway 67 and County Trunk F in the Town of Walworth. Inspiration Ministries is a Christian- based residential community that serves adults with physical and cognitive disabilities. IM seeks to enable people with disabilities to live independently while promoting interdependent relationships. Inspiration Ministries’ Resale Shop, special events and volunteer opportunities draw thousands of people to the Walworth campus each year. (Photo by Bob Rauland) Want to wish someone a happy anniversary, birthday, or other occasion? A private-party ad this size is just $15, including color artwork or photo. Call 245-1877 to place your ad and pay by credit card. We accept Visa, MasterCard, Discover and American Express. ADDITIONS Contact CHUCK HUETTIG 275-2200 Chuck@HomeDesignMfg.com By Barbara Quinn Wouldn’t it just be wonderful if a pill could instantly dissolve off all our extra pounds? Some claim to have found it in a supplement called raspberry ketone. Others warn us to look at the facts. Here’s what we know about raspberry ketone, thanks to some smart investigation by dietitian intern Marian Crockett: Claim: “Raspberry ketone is the primary aroma compound of red raspberries.” Fact: True. Raspberry ketone (also referred to as RK) is a chemical compound that gives raspberries their fruity fragrance. Food and cosmetic manufacturers add it to their products for this purpose. Claim: “Research has shown that raspberry ketone can help with weight-loss efforts, especially when paired with regular exercise and a well-balanced diet of healthy and whole foods.” Fact: Regular exercise and a well-balanced diet do indeed help with weight loss efforts. Raspberry ketone has not been scientifically studied in humans, so it’s anyone’s guess whether it aids weight loss. Claim: “Raspberry ketone causes the fat within your cells to get broken up more effectively, helping your body burn fat faster.” Fact: Perhaps if you are a rat. One study tested RK on six obese male rats and compared it to six other rats. The rats fed RK were more likely to lose weight. Another study exposed RK to fat cells in a test tube and found that RK stimulated the breakdown of these cells. Claim: “The recommended dose of raspberry ketone for weight loss is 100 milligrams per day.” Fact: Who knows? No human studies have yet been done. (I think I already said this.) And if we extrapolate the dosage given in the six-obese-male-rat study, it would translate to several thousand milligrams in humans. By Shamane Mills According to a new report, excessive drinking costs Wisconsin $6.8 billion every year. Your resource for healthy weight management and weight-related health problems Program basics: • Nutrition assessment and follow-up visits with a registered dietitian certified in adult weight management • Lifestyle education: dining, cooking, holidays, travel Exercise assessment and prescription, two follow-up assessments from an exercise physiologist and two free personal training sessions To learn more, register for an upcoming information meeting: (608) 741-3825. MercyHealthSystem.org Claim: “Raspberry ketone product is made from ingredients that are 100 percent natural, ensuring that there are no negative side effects.” Fact: Rattlesnakes are 100 percent natural and can still bite you. Some concern has been expressed that RK is chemically similar to a stimulant called “synephrine” which can increase heart rate and blood pressure ... not a good idea for anyone with a heart condition. Claim: RK “slices up fat molecules so it burns easier ...” Fact: RK’s chemical structure is also similar to capsaicin _ the heat-generating substance in hot peppers. In a test tube, RK appears to stimulate a protein that breaks down fat. Claim: “Raspberry ketone is a miracle fat burner in a bottle.” Fact: Raspberry ketone is a “miracle money maker” in a bottle. Unless you are an obese male rat, it is way too early to draw any conclusions about the effectiveness or safety of RK as a weight loss aid. A recent review article in the International Journal of Sports Nutrition concluded: “There is no strong research evidence indicating that a specific supplement will produce significant weight loss, especially in the long term. Weight-loss supplements containing metabolic stimulants (such as caffeine, ephedra, or synephrine) are most likely to produce adverse side effects and should be avoided.” (Barbara Quinn is a registered dietitian and certified diabetes educator at the Community Hospital of the Monterey Peninsula. Email her at bquinn@chomp .org.) ©2013 The Monterey County Herald Distributed by MCT Information Services Alcohol abuse costs state billions Mercy Healthy Image Weight Management Program • March 22 2013 — 13 Free information meetings Mercy Walworth Hospital and Medical Center lower level conference room Second Thursday of each month 4:30-5:30 pm Mercy Healthy Image is led by Jean A. Ibric, MD a board certified family medicine doctor who specializes in safe, medically supervised weight loss. The $6.8 billion figure takes into account lost productivity, health costs and crime. The report was prepared by the University of Wisconsin (UW) Population Health Institute. The release of the report took place in five Wisconsin cities at the same time. At each event were people attesting to the devastating effects of alcohol abuse — people like cops, judges, and emergency room physicians. Doctor Jeff Pothof, an assistant professor of medicine at UW-Madison's School of Medicine and Public Health, says excessive drinking is not just a problem for alcoholics. He points out that most of UW Hospital's trauma patients with alcoholrelated accidents have never been ticketed for operating a vehicle while intoxicated. “They’re thinking, ‘This can’t happen to me. I’m not an alcoholic. This is a problem for the select few.’ And the truth is, is that’s just not true,” says Dr. Pothof. A group called Health First Wisconsin says alcohol consumption in Wisconsin is 30 percent higher than the national average. Some communities, like Two Rivers, have made headway in lowering drinking rates. Health First Director Maureen Busalacchi, says they started by scrapping policies that encouraged drinking. “The Two Rivers City Council used to give barrels of beer to the graduating senior class,” said Busalacchi. “So change can happen, and now they have seen over time in Manitowoc County a decrease in youth consumption of alcohol.” To help reduce drinking in the general population, a state council on alcohol and drug abuse has a number of recommendations. They include raising the tax on beer and alcohol, setting up sobriety checkpoints, and limiting the number of local alcohol permits. Wisconsin Public Radio News 14 — The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com Walworth County agency works ! to reduce falls in older adults The Walworth County Aging & Disability Resource Center (ADRC) and partners are working to reduce the number of falls in Wisconsin. Falls are the leading cause of injury and death for older Americans. Falls threaten a senior’s safety and independence and generate enormous economic and personal costs. However, falling is not an inevitable result of aging. Through evidenced based interventions, practical lifestyle adjustments, and community partnerships, the number of falls among seniors can be substantially reduced. Stepping On is a workshop offered by the ADRC of Walworth County. The workshop helps older adults prevent falls. The workshop is for two hours, once a week for seven weeks, April 10 through May 22, from 9 to 11 a.m. at the Lake Geneva City Hall, 626 Geneva St, Lake Geneva. Stepping On will help participants identify why they fall and different ways to prevent falls, including strength and balance exercises, home safety check suggestions and a medication review. The workshop is for people who have fallen and for people who fear falling. Participants will leave with more strength, achieve better balance, and experience a feeling of confidence and independence as a result of performing various activities and sharing with the group, personal experiences about falls. The program was developed by Dr. Lindy Clemson of Sydney, Australia, to help older adults learn ways to prevent falls. It was brought to the United States by Dr. Jane Mahoney, Executive Director of the Wisconsin Institute for Healthy Aging, with funding from the Centers for Disease Control and other partners. The research has found that 5K to run on 5/18 The Walworth County Employee Wellness Council will sponsor a Get Fit 5K run/walk on Saturday, May 18, at the Kettle Moraine Nordic Trail (white loop). This fun, family orientated 5K, is designed bo be a way to support the Wellness Council’s mission on improving employee wellness, and is open to the public. The event will take place rain or shine. Registration will begin at 8 a.m., with the race starting at 9. Kettle Moraine trails are located just off of Hwy H in Lagrange Township. A Wisconsin State Park sticker will be required for each vehicle on race day. A daily pass can be purchased that day for $7. Entry fees will be $15 for walkers, $20 for runners, and $5 for children ages 6-12, (prices will increase by $5 after May 8th). Everyone who pre-registers will receive a free tee shirt. Log on to www.co.walworth.wi.us for a registration form or call Dale Wilson at 741-4949 for more information. LGSO to perform La Traviata 4/16 Romance, drama, and tragedy take to the concert hall stage Saturday, April 6, when the Lake Geneva Symphony Orchestra will perform La Traviata. The orchestra’s concert production of Giuseppe Verdi’s opera will feature soloists from the Lyric Opera of Chicago as the colorful characters Violetta, Alfredo, and Germont. The concert will begin at 7:30 p.m. at Calvary Community Church in Williams Bay. Adult tickets to La Traviata are $10; students through high school are free. Tickets may be purchased at www. LakeGenevaOrchestra.org or by calling (262) 359-9072. people who complete the workshop have a 31 percent reduced rate of falls. Contact Kris Ruf, Prevention Specialist, at 741-3309 to register for the workshop. Pre-registration is required. March 22, 2013 ! S ERVICE N EWS ! Army Pvt. James Laitila has graduated from Basic Combat Training at Fort Leonard Wood, Waynesville, Mo. During the nine weeks of training, Laitila received instruction in drill and ceremony, weapons, rifle marksmanship qualification, bayonet combat, chemical ! warfare, field training and tactical exercises, marches, military courtesy, military justice, physical fitness, first aid, and Army history, traditions, and core values. A 2012 graduate of Big Foot High School, Laitila is the son of Stacy and Alan Laitila of Walworth. The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com Spring Home and Garden March 22, 2013 — 15 Tankless water heater saves money By Angie Hicks For years, traditional gas-powered tank water heaters have been one of the biggest energy hogs in the home. With tank heaters, you have to pay to heat water you aren’t even using. Not so with a tankless water heater. “It’s truly an on-demand hot water heater,” said Kyle Whelpley, operations manager for J.F. Denney Plumbing and Heating Inc. in Leavenworth, Kan. “It does nothing until you turn on your hot water. So, when you’re at work, it simply hangs on the wall and doesn’t cost you one penny, compared to a 40- or 50-gallon tank you pay to heat while you’re away from the house. Here in the Midwest, a 50-gallon natural gas water heater’s yearly cost is about $360. A (comparably-sized gas tankless) is about $190.” Tankless water heaters are a fraction of the size of tank systems – roughly the size of a circuit breaker box – and mount to a wall instead of taking up valuable space in the basement or garage. “Some people really like the fact they have their space back, once they get a tankless installed,” said Rob Evans of Mr. Rooter of Columbus, Ga. The most popular benefit of a tankless water heater, though, is an almost endless supply of hot water it provides by heating the water via an internal heat exchanger. “A tankless water heater is designed so that, if you wanted to, you could take a shower from 8 a.m. until midnight at 115 degrees and it won’t move one degree,” Whelpley said. “It’s truly endless hot water.” Though gas tankless water heaters cost about twice as much as their conventional predecessors – ranging from $2,500 to $5,000 on average – they are easily repairable compared to a tank unit that usually needs to be replaced when it fails. Tankless heaters last 20 years on average and are more energy efficient, making them more environmentally friendly than the traditional models. Qualifying tankless water heaters are eligible for a $300 federal tax credit. Some utility providers also offer rebates for qualifying purchases. “A tank water heater lasts about nine years on average,” Evans said. “A tankless generally lasts twice that long. So, even though the initial upfront costs can be quite a bit, over the long haul it’s cheaper because you don’t have to replace the water heater nine years down the road.” Electric tankless heaters are available as well, but use a lot of power and typically require the electrical service to be upgraded. Electric heaters are best for limited use, such as a small apartment or a point-of-use application like a dedicated sink where you need plenty of hot water. Tankless water heaters require minimal maintenance, other than periodic flushing to descale them of mineral buildup. A plumber can do that service, typically for around $100 to $150. A handy homeowner can clean the system with vinegar if he or she follows the manufacturer’s recommended guidelines for descaling. It’s also recommended homeowners have a water softener to reduce scale buildup. “You can tell a difference on ones that have water softeners and ones that don’t have water softeners,” Whelpley said. “When you heat the water that quickly, you bring the calcium out even quicker.” Tankless water heaters do require venting and should be placed close to gas lines to operate at their highest efficiency. A licensed plumber who has a good history of working with tankless heaters can help ensure it’s installed correctly and is properly sized to accommodate your family’s needs. “The biggest thing is to make sure you get somebody that knows tankless and deals with tankless day in and day out,” Whelpley said. “The biggest thing I see is people go to (a big box hardware store) and see a tankless and say, ‘I’ll take that,’ but they don’t know that you have to size it for the house. How many shower heads do you have? How many Jacuzzi tubs do you have? If you go buy one off the shelf that’s a 5-gallon a minute when you really need a 9-gallon a minute and you have one person taking a shower in the master bathroom and another person goes to take a shower in the guest bathroom, you won’t have (enough water pressure).” Angie Hicks is the founder of Angie’s List, the nation’s most trusted resource for local consumer reviews on everything from home repair to healthcare. © 2013, http://www.angieslist.com/ Distributed by MCT Information Services Milwaukee County Zoo’s Jaguar cubs are now on exhibit. They were recently named B’alam and Zean in a contest open to the public. (Photo furnished) Milwaukee Zoo’s jaguar cubs are more than just cute babies By Chuck Quirmbach Some newly-named jaguar cubs have brought genetic diversity to the Milwaukee County Zoo. The two cubs were born last November, the first of their species to be born there in 38 years. The zoo just announced the new names of the cubs, based on the results of a contest: B’alam and Zean. But scientists at the zoo say these cubs are more than just a cute tourism draw. Large mammals curator Tim Wild says the cubs’ father is a wild-born jaguar, roughly 14 years old, captured in Belize after killing some livestock. The zoo no longer takes in many wild animals, due to various concerns, including the difficulty in getting import permits. Wild says the cubs help bring genetic diversity to North American zoos. “All the jaguars in zoos in North America are managed as a group,” says Wild. “So anytime you bring new genes into that population, it adds new bloodlines and it kind of spreads things out a little better. It brings inbreeding down.” Wild says the diversity can help deal with change. “With changing environments and changing habitats with more diversity, you have animals out there that are going to be adaptable,” he explains. “Disease is one of those things. Some animals might better be able to handle a disease that runs through a population.” Wild says the cub’s father is very healthy, making it unlikely he brought in any problems or passed them on to his offspring. Wild also says he hopes the breeding success in Milwaukee shows the importance of the wild jaguar population in Belize, which may discourage ranchers and farmers there from wanting to shoot the animals. Wisconsin Public Radio News WATER HEATER TUNE UP CHECK & INSPECT: • Burner • Pilot • Venting • Safety Valve 69 $ FLUSH ENTIRE UNIT (The flush will remove the calcium and rust sediment thus extending the life of your water heater and giving your home a quicker and cleaner hot water response). FREE PLUMBING INSPECTION Lake Geneva, WI 262-248-2103 www.masterserviceslg.com 100 OFF $ “We’re the Good Guys Your Friends Told You About”™ NEW WATER HEATER INSTALLATION Not good with any other offer. With this coupon. Expires April 15, 2013 Free In-Home Sample Showing and Design Service CARPET • VINYL • HARDWOOD • CERAMIC • NATURAL STONE • GLASS • LAMINATE • SANDING & REFINISHING HARDWOOD SERVING THE LAKES AREA FOR OVER 20 YEARS Superior customer service and knowledgeable staff with over 75 years combined experience We’ve Got You Covered! 438 S.WRIGHT STREET • DELAVAN, WI • 262-728-6200 www.fourseasonsflooringinc.com Monday - Friday 9:00-5:00; Saturday 9:00-3:00 also at www.readthebeacon.com 16 — The Beacon March 22, 2013 Five easy steps to a low maintenance, eco-friendly landscape By Melinda Myers It’s possible to create a beautiful landscape and be kind to the environment even with a busy schedule and while staying within budget. “All it takes is a bit of planning and a few low maintenance strategies,” says gardening expert and author Melinda Myers. Myers recommends these five strategies to create a low maintenance ecofriendly landscape this season. Be Waterwise Save money on the water bill, time spent watering and this precious resource, water. Start by growing drought tolerant plants suited to your growing environment. Once established they will only need watering during extended dry spells. Mulch with shredded leaves, evergreen needles, woodchips, or other organic matter to conserve moisture, reduce weeds, and improve the soil as they decompose. Fertilize with a low nitrogen fertilizer, like Milorganite, that promotes slow steady growth instead of excessive greenery that requires more water. Plus, it won’t burn even during drought. Put rainwater to work all season long by using rain barrels to capture rainwater off your roof or directly from the sky. Recycle Yard Waste Minimize the amount of yard waste produced, reuse what can be in other areas of the landscape and recycle the rest as compost. These are just a few strategies that will save time bagging, hauling, and disposing of yard debris. And better yet, implementing this strategy will save money and time spent buying and transporting soil amendments, since it will be created right in the backyard. Mulching with shredded leaves, evergreen needles, woodchips, or other organic matter will conserve moisture, reduce weeds, and improve the soil as they decompose. (Photo furnished) Start by leaving grass clippings on the lawn. The short clippings break down quickly, adding organic matter, nutrients and moisture to the soil. Grow trees suited to the growing conditions and available space. That means less pruning and fewer trimmings that will need to be managed. Make Compost at Home Recycle yard waste into compost. Put plant waste into a heap and let it rot. Yes, it really is that simple. The more effort put into the process, the quicker the results. Do not add insect-infested or diseased plant material or perennial weeds like quack grass, annual weeds gone to seed, or invasive plants. Most compost FUN WITH FAMILY AND FRIENDS Shawn Chisamore Owner, PGA LESSONS AVAILABLE RANGE OPENING SOON! • Range Balls • More Accurate Targets • Demo Clubs • Club Repair 689 STATE ROAD 67 WALWORTH, WI 262-275-0162 BigFootGolfRange.com 3 YEAR ANNIVERSARY! 25% OFF for the month of march OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 222 E. Walworth Avenue, Delavan • 262-728-3405 Brand New Spring Merchandise Arriving Daily! piles are not hot enough to kill these pests. And do not add meat, dairy, or bones that can attract rodents. Manage Pests A healthy plant is the best defense against insects and disease. Select the most pest-resistant plants suited to the growing conditions and provide proper care. Check plants regularly throughout the growing season. It is easier to control a few insects than the hundreds that can develop in a week or two. And when problems arise, look for the most ecofriendly control. Start by removing small infestations by hand. Consider traps, barriers, and natural products if further control is needed. And as always be sure to read and follow label directions carefully. Energy Wise Landscape Design Use landscape plantings to keep homes warmer in the winter and cooler in the summer. Homes will have a more comfortable temperature throughout the seasons and energy costs will be reduced. Plant trees on the east and west side of a house to shade windows in the summer and let the sun shine in and warm it up through the south-facing windows in winter. Shade air conditioners, so they run more efficiently and be sure to collect and use any water they produce for container gardens. Incorporate these changes into gardening routines and habits over time. Soon these and many more strategies that help save time and money while being kind to the environment will seem to occur automatically. Nationally known gardening expert, TV/radio host, author & columnist Melinda Myers has more than 30 years of horticulture experience and has written more than 20 gardening books, including “Can’t Miss Small Space Gardening.” She hosts the nationally syndicated Melinda’s Garden Moment segments which air on more than 115 TV and radio stations throughout the U.S. She is a columnist and contributing editor for Birds & Blooms magazine and writes the twice monthly “Gardeners’ Questions” newspaper column. Myers also has a column in Gardening How-to magazine. She has a master’s degree in horticulture, is a certified arborist and was a horticulture instructor with tenure. Her web site is www.melindamyers.com/ also at www.readthebeacon.com The Beacon March 22, 2013 —17 Grow up, not out, with square-foot gardening By Kathy Van Mullekom No matter how you garden – on the cheap or with wallet wide open – it’s wise to garden the smart way. In the edible garden, smart means finding ways to maximize your harvest and minimize your workload and planting space. These three new gardening books outline ways to do just that. Each provides helpful how-to details – not just pretty photos. GROW UP, NOT OUT Raised beds and containers get lots of attention, but vertical gardening is one of the easiest and most practical ways to grow edibles. Vertical gardening means people living in condos, apartments and other places with limited yard space can reap the benefits of fresh food, according to Chris McLaughlin, author of “Vertical Vegetable Gardening.” Besides the traditional trellises and arbors, the book shows how to grow on common household items you can recycle or reuse for free: broken baby gates that can be folded side up and spread to create an A-frame, crib springs turned on their ends, ladders with boards put across the rungs to holds pots, shoe bags filled with soil, tin tub gardens you can hang and 5-gallon buckets that are suspended from trees or poles. Chris also shows how to turn wire, twine and other materials into arbors, teepees, fences and A-frames to support vining, twining, twisting plants. Even a kiddie pool filled with soil becomes a small garden. There are lists of materials and directions on how to make each, and profiles identify 30 veggies, fruits and herbs best suited for vertical gardening. MAKE EVERY FOOT COUNT Square-foot gardening took root 30 years ago when Mel Bartholomew penned his first book on how to garden less to get more – for example, 48 crops from two 4-by-6-foot boxes. Two million copies later, he operates the Square Foot Gardening Foundation (www.squarefootgardening.org) and recently released two new books on the topic – the “Square Foot Gardening Answer Book” and the “All New Square Foot Gardening, Second Edition.” The answer book draws on hundreds of questions he’s heard over the years, including how to garden in a shady yard, how to calculate the potential yield from a square-foot garden, how to deter pests and how to rotate crops for maximum results. He also addresses common problems all gardeners can relate to: The gnats in my square-foot garden are a real bother; how can I deal with them? Make a spray by mixing 1 part vodka with 3 parts water. No, don’t drink it; spray the area infested by the gnats. You can check whether you’ve gotten rid of the gnats by cutting a potato in half and leaving it in the area. If, after a week, the potato is still clean, your gnat problem is gone. POT UP A GARDEN In “Grow Your Own in Pots,” Kay Maguire features 30 step-by-step projects using vegetables, fruits and herbs. She shows how to sprout seed potatoes in egg cartons and then grow them in recycled, porous bags or large tubs; spinach in a window box; rhubarb in old garbage cans; and beans and sweet corn as companion plants in a tub. Her chapter on Garden Soil 101 is particularly helpful because healthy soil makes a healthy plant. You’ll like her “compost sandwich,” which uses layers of newspaper, cardboard, yard debris and topsoil to create the best of best beds for growing anything. “Growing your own makes you happy, healthy, and it’s fun, too,” writes Kay. ©2013 Daily Press (Newport News, Va.) Distributed by MCT Information Services. Re-Elect John P. " " " " " MARRA FOR VILLAGE PRESIDENT Attendees look over auction items at last year’s Elkhorn Area Women's Club Card & Game Night. This year’s event will be held Wednesday, April 24 at the Monte Carlo Room to raise monies for Elkhorn Area High School scholarships. The evenings festivities will start at 6:30 p.m. with a raffle/basket review. The cost of $12 per person includes desserts and finger food. Tickets for the Chance Bucket Raffle, as well as a chance to win a $100 cash payout, will be available, as well as a Silent Auction of items to bid on. Admission tickets are available from club members. Contact Dee Smudde at 723-3178 to book a table for this fun event. (Photo furnished) Extend the life of your tools (StatePoint) Birds are chirping, flowers are blooming and do-it-yourselfers are kicking their home improvement projects into high gear. At the heart of any handy job in or around the house is a high-quality set of tools. “Even great tools won’t work as well or last forever if they aren’t treated with care,” warns Chris Barker, Technical Manager at Royal Purple, a manufacturer of premium synthetic lubricants. So what can DIY-ers do to extend the life of their valuable tools? Store Properly Good organization is not just about saving time when you’re looking for the proper tool, or even just about saving space in your garage or shed. Good organization can go a long way toward keeping tools in proper working order for longer. So never leave tools scattered about where they are susceptible to getting dinged or could be the cause of an accident. Install shelving units and invest in a quality toolbox that meets your size and portability needs. Proper storage away from the elements can also protect metal tools from rust and wooden handles from rot. Be sure to clean and dry all tools before storing them and maintain a cool and dry climate in your workshop or garage. Maintain Regularly Use a versatile product to lubricate (855) 365-8494 VOTE APRIL 2 nd " A Village President dedicated to the service of Williams Bay and its residents " Holding true to what Williams Bay and its resident’s value: Past, Present and Future " A dedicated public servant of the people, for the people " Committed to insuring, maintaining and improving the quality of life in Williams Bay " Committed to the Bay, dedicated to progress while safeguarding our history " A good example of up front leadership " The right person for the right reasons VOTE JOHN P. MARRA FOR TRUTH, HONESTY AND INTEGRITY Authorized and paid for by John P. Marra power tools, rollers and lawn equipment, loosen stuck parts, preserve equipment in storage, and facilitate hand drilling, tapping and metal cutting. A long-lasting lubricant means less maintenance for you. For example, Royal Purple Maxfilm, a high-film strength, multipurpose synthetic lubricant, uses their proprietary additive called Synerlec to adhere to metal parts and provide continuous protection. It is rated highly by the Handyman Club of America for performance, quality durability and effectiveness. Maintaining your tools and lawn equipment with regular lubrication will protect them against wear, rust and corrosion and can actually improve the condition of metal surfaces. More information can be found at www.ProtectParts. com. Use Correctly Most tools are designed to perform specific functions. Using the wrong tool for a job can pose a safety hazard to you and those around you. By using your equipment incorrectly, you can make the tool less effective for its intended use. Be aware, even with good maintenance habits, tools will need to be replaced over time. High-quality tools can be expensive. But with the proper care, you can keep them in good working order all season long and well into the future Offer Valid Only with: ServiceM aster R estoration ofLake G eneva ³ Serving all of Walworth and Waukesha Counties ³ 50 $ 5 x x x x .00 Off Any purchase of$175.00 orm ore« Expiration D ate: 9/30/13 ÀÀÀ N otvalid w ith any otheroffer. Carpet and Area Rug Cleaning Upholstery Cleaning Whole House Deep Cleaning Furnace Vent and Duct Cleaning also at www.readthebeacon.com 18 — The Beacon March 22, 2013 Easter basket skullduggery An exhibitor tweaks a few connections while setting up for the 2013 Model Train Show at the American Legion Hall in Delavan on March 8. (Beacon photo) DAR presents American History Awards at Lakeland School The Samuel Phoenix Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, presented American History Awards at Lakeland School of Walworth County, Elkhorn on March 1. The topic for the essay contest was “Forgotten Patriots Who Supported the American Struggle.” The essays covered subjects such as: Francis Marion, Swamp Fox; Sybil Ludington, Female Paul Revere; William Dawes, Rider who Spread the Same Message as Paul Revere; Crispus Attucks, First Casualty of the American Revolution; Deborah Sampson, Soldier; Esther Reed and Sarah Bache, Daughters of Liberty Group. Teachers involved in the project were Joanne Suchy and Irene Straz. Music instructor Sue Harig led the students in patriotic songs. The essay judge was Ione Tindle, Walworth with alternate judges, Joan Johnson, Allen Lehman, Walworth and County Historian Doris Reinke, Elkhorn. Nancy Lehman, DAR American History Chairman and Past State DAR Historian, presented the awards. Kathleen Murray, Past DAR Treasurer, presented a check to the History Department. Jennifer Coon, Junior DAR Member and JAC Chairman, assisted in the certificate presentations. The Jr. High: Medalists of the American History Essay Contest were: Angie Bishop, Nick Taylor and Jessie Stoll with runners-up being Destiny Brobst, Will Griffin, Aaron Rasmussen, Jordan Allen and Cody Recob. The high school level medalists were Austin Frischmann and Greg Webel with runners-up being Christopher Thompson and Sean Jacobs. The Lakeland School Junior American Citizens Group, received first place awards from Samuel Phoenix Chapter and Wisconsin State DAR Society for their November Voter Education and Voting Day Project. The entry has advanced to the North-Central District Contest. “All the students at Lakeland School are to be congratulated on their enthusiasm for and knowledge of American history,” said Lehman. Premium Quality Nursery Stock for Distinctive Landscapes Rita Yadon 4348 Dam Road • Delavan, Wisconsin 53115 Phone: (262) 728-6050 Fax: (262) 728-2107 arborvistanursery@att.net Monday-Friday Noon-5; Saturday 9-2; Closed Sundays By Marjie Reed Easter and Christmas are two days of great Spiritual significance on the Christian calendar – we’ll touch on that a bit later – but they are also days of sweet treats, family fun and great food. My brothers, six and eight years older than I, had reached the age where looking for Easter baskets was no big thing. My father told my mother the boys were too old for Easter baskets. Mom pushed for “just one more year, honey.” Against his Marjie Reed better judgment, dad agreed. Mom realized dad was right when she couldn’t even wake the boys to look for their baskets. Eventually, they stumbled out of bed, since they had to get ready for church anyway, and to make mom happy, started looking for their baskets. Unbeknownst to my one brother (and my parents), the other had secretly dyed some eggs. After his brother fell asleep Saturday night, the perpetrator found and infiltrated the other’s basket with his eggs. “Oh, what a thoughtful thing to do,” you say. One young teenage boy being thoughtful to another? To quote Sherlock Holmes, “Skullduggery was afoot.” Both the boys eventually found their baskets and, of course, the comparison started. One definitely had more colored eggs than the other; he was elated. They sat on their beds and began cracking the hardboiled eggs and wolfing them down. All of a sudden, there was a groan as the brother with the most eggs cracked another one and found out it hadn’t been boiled at all. Raw egg ran all over his bed and the guilty party took off running towards my room. Then things really ran amuck. I was in the midst of a raw-egg war. Colored raw eggs flew past me as my annoyed, egg covered brother aimed for retaliation. My room was in the direct line of fire. A couple of the eggs hit the hot radiator in my room and began to fry as the mess ran down the free standing heater. My brothers were in a boatload of trouble. Mom and dad burst into my room and, smelling fried eggs and seeing colored shells everywhere, I remember my dad’s famous loud words to my mom, “I told you they were too old for Easter baskets!” I enjoyed the rest of that Easter day twirling in my new dress, enjoying the shine on my new patent leathers, and biting the ears off my chocolate bunnies. My brothers, on the other hand, were scrubbing radiators and washing sheets. Oh, yeah, that was the last year they got Easter baskets. Now along that same line let me tell you what we do with colored eggs. Believe it or not, we don’t boil them at all; however, we don’t throw them, either. We dye dozens and dozens of raw eggs and it works out great. We started this when the kids were each between three and four. We told them they were not hard boiled and to be gentle. It worked out fine. Try it with your kids or grandkids. Don’t just say your kids will break them all; give them some direction as to how to handle the eggs gently and let them go. You’ll be pleasantly surprised and it’s a treat to see all the colors every morning when you open the box to scramble or fry eggs. Expect a couple to break and don’t freak out if they do. They are eggs and we’ve all broken our share, so relax and let the kids have fun. One more hint my daughter taught me about dying eggs with less mess is to use an old flannel-backed tablecloth and cover the table, flannel side up. Then when spills occur, the flannel soaks it up. If the cloth has raw egg on it, just fold it up and toss it out when you’re finished; if it’s just wet from dye, let it dry and use it again next year. Dear God, The world celebrates rebirth at Easter. It occurs in spring when the natural world is waking up from a long, cold, lethargic winter. Many of us need to wake up from our spiritual lethargy, as well, and Easter Sunday is the perfect time to do so. As the kids find their Easter baskets, enjoy some colored eggs and nibble the ears off their chocolate bunnies, remind us parents to keep an eye on the clock so we can get our family to church on time. Easter is a joyous day – help us to be sure our kids know the real reason for the season, the resurrection of Christ from the tomb.HE LIVES! Amen Marjie Reed lives in Harvard, Ill., with her husband, Bob. They have been married nearly 45 years and have three children and eight grandchildren. Contact Marjie at mreedbeacon@sbcglobal.net. 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The exhibit is open through Memorial Day on Saturdays from 11 a.m. - 3 p.m., Wednesdays from 9 a.m. noon and by appointment for groups of scouts who wish to view it. The exhibit includes a silent film from 1918, a hall filled with local and historical items to view, a scavenger hunt and activities that girls can take home to do. The Historical Society is located on the historic square in the heart of East Troy, on Church Street just off of HWY 120 and ES. Check the website etahs.org. LAKE GENEVA INTERLAKEN ON LAKE • 2 BDRM. FURNISHED CONDO IN/OUTDOOR POOLS • SEASONAL SPORTS Weekly/Monthly/Long-Term Housing 1-847-825-2575 Searching for a religious home where people honor each other’s different beliefs and worship together as one faith? We are an open-minded religious community that encourages you on your spiritual path. Join us on Sunday and discover Unitarian Universalism. UU Church of the Lakes • A Welcoming Congregation 319 N. Broad St., Elkhorn • 262-723-7440 uulakes@elknet.net • www.uulakes.org PROFESSIONAL CLEANING AT AN AFFORDABLE PRICE • Business • Residential • After Construction • Carpet Cleaning • Window & Gutter Cleaning • Power Washing REFERENCES AVAILABLE Home Cleaning Service WILL DONATE 10.00 $ to S.M.I.L.E.S. Gift es icat Certif ilable Ava Cell: (262) 745-8881 • (262) 248-0858 homecleaning@sbcglobal.net • Stephanie Nicewarner, Owner Vist Our Website: www.home-cleaning-service.webs.com For Special Offers! for Every New-Repeat Customer that we get in 2013! EXCITING NEW SHIPMENT OF ECLECTIC FURNITURE to enhance the beauty of your home Shoestring Creations The Word Detective By Evan Morris Dear Word Detective: When did the term “gypsy” become associated with dancers in American musical theater? Thanks for a good question. I was vaguely familiar with the usage before I started to look into it, but I’ve actually learned a number of interesting things while poking around for details. “Gypsy” is a fascinating word in its own right. In its original (and properly capitalized) sense, it refers to a nomadic people who originated in northwestern India and first appeared in Europe in the early 16th century. When Gypsies eventually made it to England, they were called “gipcyan” (later modified to “gypsy”), which was a shortening of “Egyptian,” the popular impression being that they hailed from North Africa. The “gypsies” called themselves “Roma” or “Romani,” from “rom,” the word for “man” in their language, Romany. Today there are an estimated four million Roma in Europe and large populations in both North and South America. Historically, the Roma have frequently been the target of discrimination, exploitation, deportation and even extermination in their host countries, where they were popularly imagined to make their livelihood by theft and deceit. Popular prejudice against the Roma is often assumed to have given us the verb “to gyp,” meaning “to cheat or deceive” (as well as the noun, meaning “a thief”), """""""" !Vote April 2, 2013 Re-Elect Long-time resident # BILL DUNCAN Williams Bay Trustee ! ! ! ! Dedicated Ethical Experienced Reliable Approachable: wduncan.trustee@gmail.com David Marsh March 22, 2013 —19 Authorized and paid for by William Duncan """""""" but there is reason to doubt that explanation. “Gyp” in this sense didn’t appear until the late 19th century, and it appeared in the US, where the Roma were not all that common. “Gyp” in the “cheat” sense may actually come from “gippo,” an much older term for a kitchen worker (from the French “juppeau,” a kind of short tunic). The reputation of the Roma for nomadic wandering underlies several uses of “gypsy” in colloquial English. “Gypsy cabs” in large cities are taxicabs that, while either unlicensed or licensed only to operate “on call,” roam the streets illegally picking up fares. A “gypsy truck” is one operating in an area where it has no home depot. Other businesses and occupations operating in an unlicensed and/or sporadic fashion, such as small logging operations, are also tagged with the adjective “gypsy.” I have been, as yet, unable to pin down a debut date for “gypsy” in the sense of “a dancer or chorus member in the company of a musical play,” but, based on what I have found, I’d be willing to bet that the term dates back to at least the 1940s, and quite possibly much earlier. Oddly enough, I have yet to find a dictionary that even lists “gypsy” in this sense, which is odd, since it’s hardly obscure. In any case, the term “gypsy” in the theatrical sense comes from the fact that dancers or chorus singers work in one show during its run (on Broadway, for instance), and then move on to another, frequently performing in many dozens of shows in the course of their careers. Some “gypsies” eventually, after years of hard work, graduate to starring roles and fame; the actress, singer and dancer Chita Rivera is perhaps the most notable example of starting out as a “gypsy” and ending up a major star. You’d think that the peripatetic nature of such a career would dictate a somewhat individualistic lifestyle, but apparently not. Gypsies stick together. A fascinating CBS Sunday Morning report from 2012 (www.cbsnews.com/video/ watch/?id=7411210n) showcased the pre-show opening night Broadway ritual of the “Gypsy Robe,” in which the “gypsy” with the most show credits is honored with a robe festooned with the logos of all the shows in which previous winners have performed. ©Evan Morris 10% OFF LUNCH Any purchase over $20.00 or more with this ad. Good only at Yo Shi through 3/31/13 WI lavan, t. • Dae S a ) v rt e . Genfront of Wal-M 4 1823 E (in 40.222 • 262.7 3 2 2 0.2 • Sushi • Tempura 262.74 • Hibachi Tables Hours: Mon.-Thurs. 11:00-10:00; Fri. & Sat. 11:00-11:00; Sun. 4:00-9:30 along with STATE OF THE ART HOME LIGHTING DECOR Hwy. 67 & Willow Bend Road Walworth, WI 262-275-5775 FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE...SHOP AT HOME! www.laserlightinggallery.com • • • 15% OFF DINNER Any purchase over $25.00 or more with this ad. Good only at Yo Shi through 3/31/13 Gift Certificates Available DO YOU WISH TO PROTECT YOUR LAND FOREVER AND LEAVE A LEGACY FOR YOUR CHILDREN? • Store Hours: MONDAY-FRIDAY 7:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M. SATURDAY 9:00 A.M. - NOON OR BY APPOINTMENT CONTACT THE CONSERVANCY TODAY P.O. Box 588 • 398 Mill Street • Fontana, WI 53125 262-275-5700 • www.genevalakeconservancy.org The Conservancy is a 501(c)3 not-for-profit organization supported by contributions and community volunteers also at www.readthebeacon.com 20 — The Beacon March 22, 2013 Holy Communion Episcopal Church invites you to join us EASTER SUNDAY, MARCH 31 at 10:00 a.m. The service is followed by an Easter Egg Hunt for kids. We are Accepting All People, Sharing God s Love, Teaching God s Ways. Come and See! Everyone is Welcome Here. 320 BROAD STREET, LAKE GENEVA • (262) 248-3522 BREAKFAST LUNCH Baked Blueberry French Toast Fajita Skillets with Sweet Potatoes Avocado Omelette with Mashed Potatoes Baked Ham Chicken, Steak or Combo 4.00 Bloody Marys $ Baked Chicken includes Soup or Salad, Bread, Rolls & Dessert PLUS REGULAR MENU Catering for any Occasion Available RESERVATIONS SUGGESTED This pooch has a nose for Easter eggs. Maybe his young master taught him how to sniff them out so he could beat the other hunters to the quarrry. • LILIES • CENTERPIECES • SILK ARRANGEMENTS Easter is Sunday, March 31 WE DELIVER DAILY TO ELKHORN, DELAVAN, LAKE GENEVA & LAKELAND MEDICAL CENTER Florist 26 S. Wisconsin St. Elkhorn, WI www.flowerswishingwell.com (262) 723-6677 COMMUNITY CHURCH OF FONTANA United Church of Christ 275 Kinzie Avenue Fontana, Wisconsin 53125 (262) 275-2808 invites you to join us Palm Sunday ~ March 24, 10 am Maundy Thursday ~ March 28, 7 pm Good Friday ~ March 29 7 pm service at Williams Bay UCC Easter ~ March 31 6:30 am Sunrise Easter Service in Reid Park 10 am Easter Resurrection Service All Are Welcome - Handicapped Accessible w w w .com m unitychurchoffontana.com 1 N. Lincoln Street Elkhorn, WI 262-723-1599 The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013 — 21 The confusion of Easter These two sisters gearing up for Easter must live somewhere down south. This year’s early Easter may mean snow bunnies are still in fashion here. It’s Like Going Back Home COME AND WORSHIP at the small church with the big heart Saturday 4:30 p.m. Nontraditional Sunday 9:00 a.m. Informal For information, call our Lay Leader Joe Reynders at 763-9455 SPRING PRAIRIE METHODIST CHURCH 1/4 mile east of Hwy. 120 on Hwy. 11 in Spring Prairie Easter may be the most confusing holiday of the year. Ask anyone when Easter is next year and the odds are 10 to 1 he or she won’t know. If you had asked them the same question about this year’s date for Easter earlier in the year, you would have elicited the same response. The dates, by the way, are: 2013, March 31; 2014, April 20; 2015, April 5. The reason for the confusion is that Easter and the holidays that are related to it are moveable feasts, in that they don’t fall on a fixed date in the Gregorian or Julian calendars (both of which follow the cycle of the sun and the seasons). Instead, the date for Easter is determined on a lunisolar calendar similar to the Hebrew calendar. Get it? The early church fathers wished to keep the observance of Easter in correlation to the Jewish Passover. Because the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus Christ happened after the Passover, they wanted Easter to always be celebrated subsequent to the Passover. And, since the Jewish holiday calendar is based on solar and lunar cycles, each feast day is movable, with dates shifting from year to year. . The First Council of Nicaea (325 AD) established the date of Easter as the first Sunday after the full moon (the Paschal Full Moon) following the March equinox. Ecclesiastically, the equinox is reckoned to be on March 21 (even though the equinox occurs, astronomically speaking, on March 20 in most years), and the “Full Moon” is not necessarily the astronomically correct date. In Western Christianity, using the Gregorian calendar, Easter always falls on a Sunday between March 22 and April 25, inclusively. The following day, Easter Monday, is a legal holiday in many countries with predominantly Christian traditions. Eastern Orthodox Christians compute the date differently, as do other organizations. Attempts to reconcile the dates between all of these factions have met with little success and there is little probability that it will happen in the future. Many Americans follow the tradition of coloring hard-boiled eggs and giving baskets of candy. The Easter Bunny is a popular legendary anthropomorphic Easter gift-giving character analogous to Santa Claus in American culture. On Easter Monday, the President of the United States holds an annual Easter egg roll on the White House lawn for young 44TH YEAR Ye Olde Hotel children. New York City holds an annual Easter parade on Easter Sunday. In some countries where Christianity is a state religion, or where the country has large Christian population, Easter is a public holiday. Some European and other countries in the world also have Easter Monday as a public holiday. In Canada, both Easter Sunday and Easter Monday are public holidays. In the province of Quebec, either Good Friday or Easter Monday (although most companies give both) are statutory holidays. Two days before Easter Sunday, on Good Friday, is a public holiday as well. In Denmark, Finland, Norway and Sweden, both Easter Sunday and Easter Monday are public holidays. It is a holiday for most workers except some shopping malls that stay open for half day. Many businesses give their employees almost a week off, which is called Easter break. In the United States, Easter Sunday is a flag day but because Easter falls on a Sunday, which is already a non working day for federal and state employees, it has not been designated as a federal or state holiday. Few banks that are normally open on regular Sundays (have you ever seen one of those?) are closed on Easter. Some retail stores, shopping malls, and restaurants are closed on Easter Sunday, although this practice is declining. Good Friday, which occurs two days before Easter Sunday, is a holiday in 12 states. Even in states where Good Friday is not a holiday, many financial institutions, stock markets, and public schools are closed. Historically, schools have given extended spring breaks of one to two weeks around the Easter holiday, but this practice has been declining in favor of fixed one-week recesses around Washington’s Birthday and in late April. So why do we have the Easter Bunny as a symbol of Easter? And why, since rabbits are mammals and don’t lay eggs, does the bunny traditionally bring eggs – colored, no less – on Easter. It turns out that the egg-toting Easter bunny evolved from a mythic German goddess named Ostara, (Oestre / Eastre) who was the Germanic Goddess of Springtime. Eggs, like rabbits and hares, are fertility symbols of antiquity. Since birds lay eggs and rabbits give birth to large litters in the early spring, these became symbols of the rising fertility of the earth at the March Equinox. IN LYONS (262) 763-2701 Hwy. 36-Halfway between Lake Geneva & Burlington from Hwy. 50 turn on South Road, 3 miles CLOSED MONDAY & TUESDAY Open Wednesday through Sunday 4:30 p.m. DAILY SPECIALS....................$10.00 FRIDAY FISH FRY...................$10.95 SURF ‘N TURF........................$34.95 WEDNESDAY THURSDAY New York or Ribeye Lasagna or 1/2 Chicken 9.95 $ 12.95 $ Filet $14.95 SATURDAY Prime Rib $ 18.95 & 22.95 $ OPEN EASTER SERVING at 11:30 A.M. Ham Dinner $12.95 Prime Rib $18.95 • Leg of Lamb $14.95 PLUS REGULAR MENU Children under 12: $5.95 A THING IS RIGHT WHEN IT TENDS TO PRESERVE THE INTREGITY, STABILITY AND BEAUTY OF THE BIOTIC COMMUNITY. IT IS WRONG WHEN IT TENDS OTHERWISE. Aldo Leopold (1887-1948) GOOD EARTH CHURCH OF THE DIVINE (UCC) Services at Michael Fields Agricultural Institute, Sundays at 10:00 a.m., W2493 Cty. Road ES, East Troy WI Are you alive at the crossroads of words about God and works for the Earth? CALL (262) 348-0764 • www.goodearthchurchofthedivine.org also at www.readthebeacon.com 22 — The Beacon Shorewest Realtors® Keefe Real Estate, Inc. Assistant Sales Director OFFICE: (262) 248-1020 DIRECT: (262) 248-5564 ext. 127 CELL: (262) 745-5439 kbaumbach@shorewest.com Kathy Baumbach Realtor Associate LAKEFRONT SPECIALIST Dorothy Higgins Gerber CELL: (608) 852-3156 OFFICE: (262) 728-8757 rsimons@keeferealestate.com OFFICE: (262) 248-1020 DIRECT: (262) 248-5564 ext. 199 AGENT MOBILE: (262) 949-7707 Realtor dgerber@shorewest.com Ryan Simons www.shorewest.com Shorewest Realtors® Dorothy Higgins Gerber Keefe Real Estate, Inc. 1155 E. Geneva Street Suite A Delavan, WI 53115 Shorewest Realtors Shorewest-Lake Geneva 623 Main Street Lake Geneva, WI 53147 www.delavanlakeproperty.com www.shorewest.com Shorewest Realtors® Shorewest Realtors® Richard Geaslen Jane Dulisse Brian Hausmann Broker Associate, GRI OFFICE: (262) 248-1020 OFFICE: (262) 248-1020 DIRECT: (262) 248-5564 ext. 204 CELL: (262) 206-5532 DIRECT: (262) 248-5564 ext. 161 CELL: (262) 949-1660 OFFICE: (262) 728-3418 DIRECT: (262) 740-7300 ext. 1218 jdulisse@shorewest.com rgeaslen@shorewest.com www.rgeaslen.shorewest.com CELL: (262) 441-1811 EMAIL: bhausmann@shorewest.com Jane Dulisse Shorewest Realtors Shorewest-Lake Geneva 623 Main Street Lake Geneva, WI 53147 Shorewest Realtors® Ryan Simons Kathy Baumbach Shorewest Realtors Shorewest-Lake Geneva 623 Main Street Lake Geneva, WI 53147 March 22, 2013 Richard Geaslen www.shorewest.com Shorewest Realtors Shorewest-Lake Geneva 623 Main Street Lake Geneva, WI 53147 Realtor Brian Hausmann Shorewest Realtors® Shorewest - Delavan 830 E. Geneva Street Delavan, WI 53115 www.shorewest.com www.shorewest.com FOR RENT or SALE NEWLY RENOVATED Loramoor Estate ON GENEVA LAKE Beloit Snappers mascot, Snappy, visits with Wileman Elementary School students to welcome them into Snappy’s Reading Club. (Photo furnished) Darien, Wileman students to ‘Read Around the Bases’ Students at Darien Elementary School and Wileman Elementary School are among approximately 7,000 peers from throughout Southern Wisconsin and Northern Illinois participating in Snappy’s Reading Club. The club, sponsored by the Beloit Snappers Minor League Baseball team and McDonald’s, is encouraging students throughout the region to read, read and read some more. Teachers and schools can sign up to be a part of the club. Students are encouraged to “Read around the bases.” For every base they reach, or every goal they accomplish, the Beloit Snappers provide prizes to those readers, said Natalie Tobey, director of community relations for the team. Individual teachers can decide the requirements for students to reach certain bases. One teacher might require students to read a certain number of books within a time period. Another might require students read a certain number of hours. It’s completely up to the teachers, Tobey said. At the end of the school year, teachers provide their students’ “stats” to the team, and the team awards the prizes — a Reading Club pencil for making it to first, a ruler for making it to second, a game ticket to a Snapper’s home game for third, and a half-price ticket plus a McDonald’s Happy Meal for making it around the bases. Tobey and Snappy, the team’s mascot, visited with students at Darien Elementary (March 8) and Wileman Elementary (March 14) to explain Snappy’s Reading Club and the importance of reading, weather that’s in the classroom, or on the baseball field.The students also listened to Tobey read the popular baseball book, “Casey at the Bat.” 16,000 sq. ft. on 2 acres, 7 bedrooms, boat slip, pool, tennis court, terraced gardens, theater, furnished SUMMER RENTAL 18,000/month or $ 40,000 for full summer season $ SALE PRICE $1.2 Million Call (262) 203-0755 The Beacon Westwords Continued from page 3 women have enough to worry about without something like this? Does anyone remember when the word Christian wasn’t synonymous with wacko? • • • • And we thought Muslim countries were bad. According to the New York Times, in India, about 100,000 women are burned to death each year by husbands or families. Another 125,000 die from injuries inflicted in domestic violence that’s never reported to police. • • • • The U.S. is not a student-friendly place. According to HuffingtonPost. com, college textbooks have risen in price by 812 percent since 1978, far outpacing even the 559 percent increase in tuition and fees over the same period. The average student at a four-year college pays $655 per year for textbooks and supplies. also at www.readthebeacon.com • • • • According to The New Yorker magazine, last year, for the first time, the percentage of U.S. women with tattoos – 23 percent – surpassed that of men, at 19 percent. • • • • Some prices from a grocery ad in 1913 were: milk, 32 cents a gallon; eggs, 30 cents a dozen; bacon 33 cents a pound; potatoes, 9 cents for 5 pounds and; sirloin steak, 24 cents a pound. Of course, the average annual wage in 1913 was $1,296, or $24.92 per week. • • • • The question of the week is “what was Noah’s last name?” According to one website, “Noah would have had a surname in accordance with Semitic practice. Noach’s father was Lamech, thus Noah would have been known as Noach ben Lamech, Noah son of Lamech. But after many years of research, we recently decided that his last name would have either been Carpenter or Arkwright. March 22, 2013 — 23 This lavish interurban trolley, originally manufactured for the Sheboygan Light Power & Railway in 1908 and meticulously restored by East Troy Electric Railroad volunteers in 2005, can be seen at the museum in East Troy. (Photo furnished) East Troy Electric Railroad announces summer events Delavan Alderman Ryan Schroeder, Ava and Debra Cross serve up corned beef and cabbage, roast chicken and more during the Delavan Lions Club St. Patrick’s Day fundraiser on Sunday, March 17 at The Village Suppere Club. (Beacon photo) NOW, WHEN EVERY DOLLAR COUNTS... ...IS NOT THE TIME TO BE WASTING MONEY ON INEFFECTIVE PROMOTION. Advertising in is LESS EXPENSIVE AND MORE COST-EFFECTIVE THAN MANY OTHER AREA PUBLICATIONS. 245-1877 Call 245-1877 for details Real Estate Advertising in The Beacon is effective because it doesn’t get lost in the clutter of hundreds of other ads. Call 245-1877 today for rates. Celebrating 106 years of riding the rails through Southeast Wisconsin’s Kettle Moraine countryside, the East Troy Electric Railroad has planned a number of special events for the upcoming season showcasing its stable of interurban rail treasures, as well as the addition of a pizza train to its dinner train schedule allowing young rail fans the opportunity to dine aboard former coaches of the Chicago South Shore & South Bend Railroad. [The foregoing won the longest-sentence-ofthe-year award. Editor.] A variety of antique trolleys and interurban coaches that once whisked passengers from major cities to surrounding towns and nearby summer retreats will be featured during the season including Chicago’s workhorse “El” cars that debuted in the 1920s, a rare trolley built for the Milwaukee Transport Company in 1920 and a lavish interurban trolley from 1908 originally manufactured for the Sheboygan Light Power & Railway. All special events are included in the daily unlimited ride fare: $12.50 for adults; $10.50 for seniors; $8.00 for children ages three – 11; children under three, free. The East Troy Electric Railroad, one of only three electric interurban railways in the U.S. that have maintained electric operations for more than 100 years, is home to over 20 rail treasures including open cars, locomotives, streetcars and interurban coaches. The railroad continues to be operated and managed by a legion of volunteers committed to the operation and preservation of historic trolleys and interurban railcars. The 2013 summer events calendar includes: North Shore Day June 22 Celebrate the famed North Shore Line that once whisked passengers from Milwaukee to Chicago and all points inbetween. Photos and memorabilia of the North Shore Line, which ceased operation 50 years ago, will be on display including a retrospective from noted railroad photographer John Gruber from the Center for Railroad Photography & Art in Madison. Historians from Classic Trains magazine will also be on-hand to discuss the interurban era and classic railroading in general. A variety of historic railcars will be on display and ferrying passengers from the railroad’s depot and museum to the turn of the century-styled terminal at the renowned Elegant Farmer. North Shore Day will serve as the launch of a fundraising campaign to restore Chicago North Shore and Milwaukee Railroad coach 761, which will be on display during the event. Chicago Day July 27 Celebrate Chicago’s railway history during Chicago Days as the East Troy Electric Railroad features its collection of rapid transit cars that once whisked people around Chicago and its suburbs. Riders of Chicago’s “L” line prior to 1978 will remember the iconic 4000-series cars with its interesting interiors, old-time light fixtures, walkover leatherette seats and “bowling alley seating at the ends. The historic Pullman-built cars of the famed Chicago South Shore & South Bend Railroad will also be running the rails during the weekend ferrying passengers from the railroad’s historic depot and museum to the turn of the century-styled terminal at the renowned Elegant Farmer. Milwaukee Day September 21 Home to the last remaining streetcar from the Milwaukee Electric Railway & Light Company still in operation, the East Troy Electric Railroad celebrates Milwaukee’s rich railcar history during Milwaukee Days. Joining the 1920 built streetcar, which once whisked residents from the greater Milwaukee area to the ballpark and shopping centers, is a 1907 line car equipped to respond to trolley emergencies. Also featured during the weekend is L8, a stately locomotive built in 1935 that once served as a secondary work car called on to help in track maintenance and brush cutting, as well as serving as a yard goat and backup locomotive. Dinner Trains Recreating the time when commuter trains offered lavish meals served on china atop white table cloths. The East Troy Electric Railroad offers guests a two-hour, four-course exquisite dining experience. Home to the last remaining electric interurban dining car train in North America, dinner train service for the 2013 season will take place on June 15, September 14 and 28, and October 5, 12, 19 and 26. Tickets are $72 per person and prepaid reservations are required. New this year, the railroad’s familyfriendly pizza train will ride the rails on June 13 and August 17. The two-hour casual dining experience, taking riders from the railroad’s historic depot to Phantom Lake in Mukwonago, WI and back, includes pizza, beverage and garlic bread. Ticket price varies per number in party. Prepaid reservations are required. The East Troy Electric Railroad’s dining cars are former coaches of the Chicago South Shore & South Bend Railroad. Built in 1927 and acquired by the railroad in the early 1990s, each Pullman car underwent extensive renovation by museum volunteers resulting in mahogany trimmed, beautiful Art Deco interiors complemented by an exterior color scheme featuring the railroad’s colors of red and silver. For complete details on all East Troy Electric Railroad special events and dinner trains, visit www.easttroyrr.org. 24 — The Beacon By Kathi West I was at a quilt shop this week when a woman came in and asked for help with colors for her quilt. A friend of mine said she only buys kits with the fabric included because she doesn’t like to choose the colors. Another friend said she had to match the colors in her bedroom. Some people make quilts with only two colors, maybe three. They might get adventurous and use four or five colors. My first quilt had four in it. I still like it but I like my quilts to have a lot more colors now. They are much more interesting and can go with any colors in any room. If your quilt is pleasing to you then it is the right colors for you. It doesn’t matter what others think or do. We all have a certain color sense. My favorite color has always been red. And I think all reds go together if you have enough of them. There are quilters that disagree with me. But I don’t care. Red is sort of a neutral color. All colors go with red. Don’t be afraid to play with color. If you like red with orange, use it. When I was a kid, my mom said green and blue don’t go together. Well in my world they do. One of also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013 Porter Love of Quilting. There will be classes, workshops, quilt exhibits, trunk shows, demos, and fantastic shopping. For more information visit www.sewingexpo.com or call 1-800-699-6309. April 6-7, “Here’s to Hollywood, Movies, Books, Fairy Tales” Crazy Quilters Quilt Show will be at Parkview Middle School, at 930 N. Rochester, in Mukwonago. There will be more than 300 quilts on display, a vendors mall, and a bed turning of scrap quilts. This is a judged show with cash prizes. There are two raffles, a Bernina sewing machine and a queen size bed quilt. Kathy Kippers will appraise quilts by appointment, call (262) 662-3451. If you would like to enter a quilt in the show go to www.mukwonagocrazyquolters.com or call Cindy Osinski at (414) 91603761 0r cosinski@wi.rr.com for more information and entry forms. April 7-9, Prairie Heritage Quilter Show in Sun Prairie will be held at St. Albert’s Catholic Church. This is a judged show. April 24-27, AQS Quilt Show will be held at the Paducah McCraken County This hawaiian sampler was at the Paducah show in 2011. It's a great example of my contention that all reds (hues and tints) go together. (Beacon photo) Ellen Weber’s Shed, 2789 Theater Road, Delavan. This group makes quilts for men and woman who have served in the military. Bring your sewing machine, fabric to make a QOV quilt or a quilt that you have started and any sewing tools you will need. The Scrappers Quilt Guild meets on the third Tuesday, of every month, at 6:30 p.m. in the Lions Field House on Hwy 67 (north) in Williams Bay. Bring your latest project to show and tell. Guests are always welcome. The Stone Mill Quilters meet the third Wednesday of each month at 6:30 p.m. at the Congregational Church in Whitewater, 130 S. Church Street, but enter through the door on Franklin off Main Street. If you have some quilting news to share with quilters in the greater Walworth County area, e-mail me at The Beacon, kbeacon@charter.net, or send a note to P.O. Box 69, Williams Bay, WI 53191. Make sure you send it about a month before the event. I will try to get it into the next issue. Pieces of Time was presented at the 2012 Madison Expo. There must be at least 50 different fabrics in this quilt. It’s a quilt you can look at and study for a long time. (Beacon photo) my very favorite quilts is green and blue; lots of different greens and blues. My quilts and my flower gardens are getting more alike every year. I have every color in the rainbow in both. There is no right or wrong. If one color stands out too much, use more of it. If your quilt lacks spark add a bright colored fabric like yellow or lime green. (not too much just a little). Scrap quilts are much more interesting than a red and white quilt or a blue and white quilt. They are nice, and I have a couple of each, but they’re boring. One look and you’ve seen the quilt. A scrappy quilt with hundreds of different fabrics and colors you can look at a very long time and not get tired of it. QUILTING EVENTS April 4-6 Sewing and Quilting Expo, at the Shaumberg Convention Center in Shaumberg, Ill., is sponsored by Fons and Expo and Convention Center in Paducah, Ky. There will be lectures, workshops, and special events. This is a juried and judged show, which means only the best quilts from around the word are in this show. QUILT GUILD MEETINGS Chocolate City Quilters meet the second Monday of each month at 6:30 p.m. in the Burlington High School library, 400 McCanna Parkway. The Crazy Quilt Guild Quilters meet the second Wednesday of each month at 7 p.m. in the First Congregational Church, 231 Roberts Drive in Mukwonago. The Harvard Village Quilters meet the third Wednesday of the month at 1 p.m. at Trinity Lutheran Church 504 East Diggins Street Harvard, Ill. Guests are Welcome. Quilts of Valor Quilt Group meets the second Tuesday of each month at 6 p.m. at Raindance is the name of this colorful quilt. It was displayed at the AQS Show in Paducah in 2011. Look for all the animals in this quilt, lions, tigers and bears, oh my. Also snakes, crabs, giraffes and more decorate this masterpiece. (Beacon photo) also at www.readthebeacon.com The Beacon March 22, 2013 — 25 Pet Questions and Answers By Marc Morrone Q: My female cat has a habit I would like to better understand. We have a big basket of assorted stuffed animals in the master bedroom. Every time she is left home alone, she takes one or both of the toy guinea pigs from the basket and leaves them near our front door. There are dogs, cats and other animals in the basket, but she only selects the guinea pigs. Why? A: Many cats will kill rodents and leave them for their human companions to find. Since the shape of a rodent is instinctive knowledge for a cat, perhaps the cat is picking out only the guinea pigs to leave as gifts for you. This answer suggests the cat is cognitively thinking about the situation. Some scientists would take issue with that and say the cat picked up the guinea pigs randomly and dropped them by the door randomly as it was wandering about in the house just before its human caretakers came home. Because the humans made such a fuss, the cat learned to do this in exchange for the drama and positive reinforcement. I think the answer falls somewhere in the middle. I agree that pets act a lot more instinctively than we would like to believe, but I also am sure that their life of leisure allows them the time and inclination to learn to act a lot more cognitively than mere instinct would allow. Q: I would like to know the correct way to feed my pit bulls. Is once-a-day feeding OK or is it better to feed them twice a day? I do not want them to get overweight, and everybody tells me something different. A: Growing up, I was always told by other dog keepers that an adult dog should be fed only once a day, in the evening. That caused both me and my dogs a lot of stress – me because I love to feed animals and my dogs because they liked to eat. However, I soon started to feed them twice a day, and they did just fine. They never got too heavy from this routine, and were not scrounging around for food all day. How much to feed the dog each time varies from dog to dog. Some pet keepers I know just leave a dish of dry dog food out for the dogs all day, and their dogs eat a bit here and there to keep them satisfied during their waking hours. However, there are dogs that would eat as much food as is offered – and the dish, too, if that were possible. If the feeding schedule you have chosen suits you and your dog and if your vet says your dog is the perfect weight for its build, then that is the routine you should continue to use. Q: I know my African gray parrot needs to be misted every day, but he has so much powder in his feathers that I could stand there for an hour misting him until my hand hurts and he is still dry. Is there any other way to get him wet? Some people say to take the bird into the shower with me, but who has time for that? A: When I was a kid, I worked in a garden center. When we were mixing the peat moss potting soil for seeds to be planted in, my boss would mix some dish soap in with it to wet it instantly. Otherwise, the water would just run off it and we could never get to work. Pet stores sell shampoos made just for birds, and I always add some to my birds’ misting bottles to wet them instantly. Q: My 7-year-old Dachshund-mix licks at everything - her furniture, her bed, and she even licks leaves during walks. I believe poor Goldie was kept in a crate for many hours as a puppy. Do you have any insights on her behavior? A: Dr. Ilana Reisner, a veterinary behaviorist in Philadelphia, Pak., explains that persistent licking can be coined a “displacement behavior,” sort of letting off steam, as an outlet for anxiety, much as nail biting can be for people. However, since your dog seems so intent, more might be going on.” One determination of seriousness is to assess if your dog can easily be distracted from licking and redircted to another behavior, such as com- Seamus is another recent addition to The Beacon household. He found this file box to be a perfect hiding place, especially with the “window” provided by the handle flap so he can see who’s coming (below). (Beacon photo) ing when you call her. Lots of folks might jump to the idea that Goldie has a compulsive disorder, and certainly that possibility exists. However, Reisner says to first rule out a medical explanation (which most likely explains the licking), particularly a possible gastrointestinal issue, or even chronic tonsillitis. Scoping with biopsies will rule out the stomach issue and visually looking at throat will rule out the other. Crazy as it sounds, a food allergy is also possible. Reisner suggests you keep a log to determine what Goldie licks and when to determine if there's any pattern. This information might help a veterinarian. Meanwhile, it can do no harm to enhance your dog’s enrichment. Feed Goldie from various Kong or food dispensing toys. You might even stuff food inside toys and then hide them around the house, so she can sniff them out. Also, take Goldie for daily walks on-leash, not only for exercise but also to sniff what's new in the ’hood. IS ALWAYS IN NEED OF: • Clay Cat Litter • Kitten Food • Dry & Canned Cat Food • Canned Dog Food • Kitten Milk Replacement Formula (KMR or Mother’s Helper) CLEANING SUPPLIES: • Liquid Laundry Soap • Bleach • Dish Soap • Paper Towels • Antibacterial Hand Soap “Our mission is to provide a rescue and home for abused, abandoned, retired and injured large felines, exotics and hoofed animals. Sharon, WI 53585-9728 ADMITTANCE SATURDAYS & SUNDAYS TO MEMBERS ONLY! FIND OUT HOW YOU CAN BECOME A MEMBER AND VOLUNTEER, visit our website w w w . v o t k . o r g VOLUNTEERS! 3 MILES SOUTH OF ELKHORN ON HWY. 67 • ELKHORN, WI • (262) 723-3899 We are a Federal and State licensed (501c3), not for profit educational organization. QUALITY, COMPASSIONATE PET CARE BY A CARING & FRIENDLY STAFF! Complete Veterinary Care for Cats, Dogs and Exotics LASER SURGERY • ULTRASOUND • DENTISTRY GROOMING SALON AND SPA • BOARDING • HOUSE CALLS Socialize, get a little exercise and tune-up those commands • STAR Puppy • Basic Skills • Canine Good Citizen • Therapy Dog Evaluations Call or Go Online Today! http://thebarkmarketllc.com/obedience.html JOIN US AT THE 10TH ANNUAL Chris Hartwig, DVM • Laura Jens, DVM • Bret Peterson, DVM • Betty Lee, DVM Mon., Tues. & Fri. 7:30 a.m. -5:00 p.m.; Wed. & Thurs. 7:30 a.m.-6:00 p.m.; Sat. 7:30 a.m.-Noon SATURDAY, APRIL 6 Burlington High School www.petwellnessexpo.com for details Scan this with your SmartPhone and link to our website (262) 728-8622 1107 Ann Street, Delavan • www.DelavanLakesVet.com QUALITY SUPPLIES FOR DOGS & CATS • PET DOG TRAINING 262-728-7877 “Teach Me How To Be The Dog You Want!” 5540 STATE RD. 50 DELAVAN, WI Grooming By Appointment Hours: Sun. & Mon. Closed Tues., Wed. & Thurs. 9:00 am-6:00 pm Fri. 9:00 am-5:00 pm; Sat. 8:00 am-3:00 pm also at www.readthebeacon.com 26 — The Beacon Aram Public Library, 404 E. Walworth Ave., Delavan. Hours are 9:30 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through Thursday, 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. on Friday, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Saturday, and Sundays from 1 to 5 p.m. The library will be closed on March 29 and 31. • Youth Art Show during the month of March. The artwork will be displayed in the Children’s Department for the entire month. • Storytime with Miss Kris - Wednesdays and Fridays at 10 a.m. • Tiny Tots Time, for children from birth through age 3, meets Wednesdays at 10 a.m. Preschool Storytime, for children age 3 to 6, meets Fridays at 10 a.m. Themes for this month are: April 3 and 5, Let’s Make Music; April 10 and 12, Sea Life; April 17 and 19, Bicycle Fun; April 24 and 26, Family Life. • LEGO Club, Monday, April 1 and April 15 at 4 p.m. Give our LEGO blocks a workout by building anything from a dinosaur to a spaceship. Work in teams or individually, give your creation a name, then see it displayed in the Children’s Library. • Exploration Art Studio, Tuesday, April 9 at 4 p.m. This month we’re working with feathers! All materials provided. • Nibbles of Nutrition - Mondays, April 15 through May 6 at 10 a..m. Enjoy listening to stories with a special preschooler (3-6 years old) in your life? Would you like your child to try new or different healthy foods? Join us for the four-week series Nibbles of Nutrition. There will be stories, activities, and snacks. Presented by the UW Extension. Registration is required. • Elephant and Piggie Party, Saturday, April 20 at 1 p.m. Love Elephant and Piggie as much as we do? Come celebrate with us. There will be lots of hilarious stories, food, and a super fun craft. • Peep Art for Teens and Tweens, Thursday, April 11, 6 p.m. Everybody knows what Peeps are – super sugary little chicks or rabbits in a variety of colors. But do you ever feel like maybe they’re not reaching their full potential? Do you ever think they could be something more? Join us for Peep Art and show us whatcha got. All materials provided. • Knitting Club for all ages and experience levels meets the first two Mondays and the last two Wednesdays of each month at 6 p.m. Each session is led by an experienced knitter. Bring your own project to work on, share your expertise, and learn from other knitters. • Microwave Magic, Tuesday, April 16 from 3 to 4 p.m. Learn to prepare a variety of quick main dishes, breakfasts, and snacks in this class taught by the UW Extension. You’ll leave with new ideas to add variety to your quick meals. Registration is required. • Birds, Bees, Butterflies and Blossoms, Wednesday, April 17 from 2 to 4 p.m. Join UW Extension Horticulturist Chrissy Wen and learn to design your garden to attract the beautiful and beneficial B’s: birds, bees and butterflies. The program is open to the public, free of charge, and snacks will be provided. • Aram Book Club: “Still Life by Louise Penny,” Thursday, April 18 at 6:30 p.m. Chief Inspector Armand Gamache is called to the scene of a suspicious death. The locals are certain it’s a tragic hunting accident and nothing more, but Gamache smells something foul in these remote woods, and is certain that someone more sinister than a careless bowhunter is to blame. • Facebook for Beginners, Tuesday, April 23 from 1 to 2 p.m. Learn how to sign up for Facebook, manage your account including security, “friend” people, upload pictures, create wall posts, and other basic activities. Participants must have an e-mail account and know how to use it. Registration is required. • Living Better with Less Without Feeling Deprived, Thursday, April 25 from 6:30 to 8 p.m. Gain a new perspective on March 22, 2013 City of Delavan Librarian Amber McCrae speaks to the Delavan-Darien Rotary Club on March 4, during their regular meeting at Lake Lawn Resort. She spoke about how technology has greatly expanded the number of magazines available at Aram Public Library. A software program called Zinio allows readers to access magazines electronically in a ‘flip the pages’ style on computers, tablets, I-Pads, etc. The Zinio software program is licensed by the Lakeshore Library System and is accessible with a library card from any internet location. ZInio solves the problem of hard copy shortages, explained Amber, as well as raising magazine circulations from 135 in 2011 to 1,300 in 2012. The biggest advantage of Zinio is the unlimited availability of almost 100 of the most popular magazines – to anyone with a library card. (Photo furnished) decluttering, one that goes beyond cleaning out drawers to reconsidering your relationship to your belongings. Examine your beliefs about needs vs. wants and how your attitudes relate to today’s fast-paced world. Clutter Coach Kathi Miller returns to help attendees learn simple strategies for living a more sustainable, earth-friendly life. Registration is required. • Knitting Club, Wednesday, March 27 at 6 p.m. For all ages and experience levels,. • The library now owns a batterypowered portable scanner that you may check out to use in the library. Scan your pictures or documents into the device, then use the cord provided to plug into your laptop or one of the library’s public computers and transfer or print your scans. The scanner checks out for a period of two hours from the Adult Services desk. You must have a valid SHARE library card in order to use it. • Kindle E-reader. Take our Kindle on vacation with you this year. The Kindle can now be checked out for 21 days, just like a book. It’s a great lightweight alternative to large print books; adjust the print to the size that works best for you. Plus, to update our Kindle with titles that you want to read, we’re taking requests. Leave your purchase suggestions at the Adult Services desk, and ask about checking out the Kindle. • Disc Cleaning Service. Extend the life of your favorite DVDs, CDs, and other discs. Bring your audio, video, or game discs to the library for cleaning on Saturdays between 1 and 2:30 p.m. Library staff will clean them for you for $3 per disc. Stop at the Adult Services desk for more information about this service. • Would you like to get library news by email? Contact the library at 728-3111 or email interlib@aramlibrary.org to sign up. ! ! ! Barrett Memorial Library, 65 W. Geneva St., Williams Bay. Open Mon. and Wed. 9 a.m. - 7 p.m.; Tues., Thurs., Fri. 9 a.m. - 6 p.m.; Sat. 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. Check the library’s new Web site at www.williamsbay. lib.wi.us/ • Story Times Tuesdays at 10 a.m and Thursdays at 1:30 p.m. Same books and crafts both days. • Scrabble Club 10 a.m. - noon Wednesdays. • Knitting Circle, Wednesdays 1-3 p.m. All skill levels welcome. Take a project to work on. • The Saturday Morning Book Club meets the second Saturday of the month at 10 a.m. The April 13 book discussion will be on “A Short History of Nearly Everything” by Bill Bryson. The May 11 book discussion will be on “Killing Kennedy” by Bill O’Reilly. • Story times, Tuesdays 10 a.m. and Thursdays 1:30 p.m. Same books and crafts both days • “What Are Teens Reading?” book group meets the third Wednesday of the month at 7 p.m. This group is for parents to read and review teen books. Stop at the library to pick from a great selection of YA books. • Ongoing sale of a great selection of used books. Browse Barret for Books. All programs are free and open to the public unless otherwise indicated. Call 245-2709 or e-mail wmsbay@williamsbay.lib. wi.us. ! ! ! Brigham Memorial Library, 131 Plain St., Sharon. • Story Time, Wednesdays, 9:30 – 10:30 a.m. A theme will unite a story and craft. Snacks will be available. • Young adult book club, every second Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. – 7:30 p.m. ! ! ! Darien Public Library, 47 Park St., Darien. Hours: Mon-Thurs 10 a.m. - 7 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. 882-5155. • Wireless Internet now available. Bring your laptop and ask at the desk how to access the wireless connection. • Ongoing book sale. • The schedule for our popular free adult computer classes is now available. Stop in or call 882-5155 for information. ! ! ! East Troy Lions Public Library, 3094 Graydon Ave., East Troy. • Book club, 6:30 p.m., first Tuesday of each month. • Story time, 11 – 11:45 a.m., for children and their caregivers. Registration required. • Story Time, Fridays, 11:30 a.m., for ages 18 months – 4 years. For more information, call 426-6262. ! ! ! Fontana Public Library, 166 Second Ave., Fontana. • Happy-to-Be-Here Book Club, first Thursday of each month, 1 p.m. • Evening Book Club, third Thursday of each month, 6:30 p.m. All programs are free and open to the public unless otherwise indicated. Call 2755107 for more information. ! ! ! Genoa City Public Library, 126 Freeman St., Genoa City. • The Genoa City Library Friends will host a demonstration of unique English and European floral designs by Joanne Wright, owner of Lilypots in Lake Geneva, on April 22, at 7 p.m. at the Genoa City Village Hall, 715 Walworth St., Genoa City, and is free and open to the public. Refreshments will be served. • Story time and craft time, Fridays, 10 a.m. For kids ages 3-5 and siblings. • Ongoing book sale. Donations of new or slightly used books, including children’s books, may be dropped off at the library. All programs are free and open to the public unless otherwise indicated. Call 2796188 for more information. ! ! ! Lake Geneva Public Library, 918 W. Main St., Lake Geneva. Phone 249-5299 or visit the Library’s website at www.lakegene va.lib.wi.us. • The reading series “Poems by the Lake” will continue in the Smith Meeting Room on Wednesday, April 10 at 6:30 p.m. The program will be led by Alisha Benson, who received her MFA in Creative Writing: Poetry from Bowling Green State University. Those who attend the program are invited to read their favorite poems aloud on any subject or simply listen. The theme is hometown poetry and participants are encouraged to share poems about Lake Geneva and other homes or towns, real or imaginary. Benson will share examples of classic and contemporary home-town poetry. She will also introduce a writing technique inspired by Thornton Wilder’s “Our Town,” which is the selection for the local 2013 Big Read, and “The Triggering Town” by Richard Hugo. Free copies of Poetry Magazine’s April 2013 issue, donated by the Poetry Foundation, will be available on a first-come basis. The library’s collection of books by United States Poet Laureates will be available to check out on the night of the reading. Everyone is welcome to attend this program at no charge. • Preschool story time Tuesdays and Fridays from 10:30 – 11 a.m. Children ages 2-5 years are especially encouraged to attend this half hour reading program. However, families and children of all ages are also invited. Each week, library staff read aloud stories that are often based on a seasonal theme. The event may include singing, dancing, and other participatory activities. • Generations-on-line computer tutoring is now available for senior citizens. Tutors will be available Tuesdays from 10 – 11 a.m. and Wednesdays from 2 – 3 p.m. in the library’s reference room. The goal of the program is to provide seniors with beginning computer skills and to interest them in exploring elementary uses of the World Wide Web and e-mail. Interested senior citizens may sign up at the reference desk or call the Library at 2495299 to make a reservation. Volunteer tutors are made possible by the Retired and Senior Volunteer Program (RSVP). The laptop computer used for the tutoring sessions was made possible by a grant received by Lakeshores from the Racine Community Foundation and administered by Generations on Line. (Continued on page 28) EXCEPTIONAL INVESTMENT, PRIMARY & VACATION PROPERTIES 12 unit, single story apartments, FULLY RENTED! Each 2 BR/1 BA apartment offers kitchen appliances and washer and dryer hookups. New roofs on all 3 buildings. Great income! Call for details. #7045 $600,000 CO PR MM OP ER ER CIA TY L C Enjoy the serene CO OM ND FO views of Delbrook OM RTA IN BLE Golf Course at IU M Eagle Pointe. 3 BR, 2.5 baths, open floor plan. Hardwood floors and gas fireplace in living/dining area. Relax in the screened, cedar porch. Priced to sell! #2133 $149,000 FRED SCHUBERT REALTOR®, Broker 262-949-7199 fred@rauland.net The Beacon Plan ahead. Look through the calendar to make advance reservations for events that require them. Phone numbers are in area code (262) unless otherwise indicated. • • • • FRIDAY, MARCH 22 Fish fry, 4:30-7 p.m., St. Benedict’s Parish Hall, 137 Dewey Avenue, Fontana. Baked and fried Icelandic cod, potato pancakes, french fries, hushpuppies, green beans, applesauce, coleslaw, coffee, tea, milk and homemade desserts at a cost of $10 for adults, $5 for children, or $30 for a family. SATURDAY, MARCH 23 Elkhorn Easter Egg Hunt. Registration and games at 9 a.m.; Easter Egg Hunt begins at 9:30 a.m. at the Elkhorn Area High School Athletic Lobby. Age groups are 0-3, 4-6 and 7-10. Bring your camera for photos with the Easter Bunny. Please consider bringing a non-perishable food item for the Elkhorn Food Pantry or a donation for the Lakeland Animal Shelter. February Sky, a husband and wife duet, will perform at UU Church of the Lakes in from 7-9 p.m. See the article on page 28 for more information. SATURDAY, MARCH 23 Easter Egg Hunt, 9 a.m., East Troy High School, East Troy. Easter Egg Hunt, 10 a.m., Brookwood Middle School, 1020 Hunters Ridge Dr., Genoa City. Call 877-2220 with questions. Easter Egg Hunt, 10 a.m., Star Center School, W1380 Lake Geneva Hwy., Lake Geneva. SATURDAY, MARCH 30 Easter Egg Hunt, 10 a.m., West Park, Hwy. 14 and North Road, Darien. Easter Egg Hunt, 10 a.m., Phoenix Park, Wisconsin and 2nd streets, Delavan. Easter Egg Hunt, 10 a.m., Duck Pond Recreation Area, Wild Duck Road, Fontana. Call 275-2117 or log on to www.bigfoot recreation.org Easter Egg Hunt, 10 a.m., Lions Park, Highway 67, north, Williams Bay. Lake Geneva Jaycees Easter Egg Hunt 10:30 a.m. - 12:30 p.m., Seminary Park, Lake Geneva. Log on to www.lakegeneva jaycees.org. TUESDAY, MARCH 26 Used Computers & Books Sale, 8:30 a.m. - 5 p.m., room 112 in the South Building of the Gateway Technical College Elkhorn Campus for a variety of deskjet and laser printers, desktop systems with LCD monitors, Macs, laptops and miscellaneous peripherals. Cash only. All equipment is sold as is, no software included. Geneva Lake Museum Tuesdays at Two workshop; Dolls, Dolls, Dolls; bring one and talk about who they are and where they fit into our lives today and in the past. Free to museum members, $5 for non-members. Geneva Lake Museum, 255 Mill St. (intersection of Mill and Main), Lake Geneva. Call 248-6060 or email staff@genevalakemuse um.org to make a reservation. Lakeland Audubon Society presents “Wisconsin's Wood-Warblers: The Butterflies of the Bird World” 7 p.m. in the Lion’s Field House, Highway 67, north, Williams Bay. Wayne Rhode has had the good fortune to spend the last six years photographing many of the three dozen warbler species which nest in or migrate through the Badger State, and these images will form the backbone of his presentation on warblers. He will also feature tips for locating warblers, identifying them, and photographing them. He has also promised to bring several books about warblers, so be sure to take a good look at the literature that's available. Don’t forget to bring your own tips and questions; ample time will be provided for interaction - as we all gear up for the warbler migration in May! There will be complementary coffee and tea, plus snacks both before and after the program. The public is invited, free of charge. WEDNESDAY, MARCH 27 Used Computers & Books Sale, 8:30 a.m. - 5 p.m., room 112 in the South Building of the Gateway Technical College Elkhorn Campus for a variety of deskjet and laser printers, desktop systems with LCD monitors, Macs, laptops and miscellaneous peripherals. Cash only. All equipment is sold as is, no software included. SATURDAY, MARCH 30 Easter Egg Hunt, Phoenix Park, Washington and S. 2nd streets in the city of Delavan. The hunt will begin at 10 a.m. The Easter Bunny will be present to greet the area also at www.readthebeacon.com children and will also make appearances in the stores in Delavan. The Delavan - Delavan Lake Area Chamber of Commerce sponsors the Easter Egg Hunt. Candy, eggs and special treats will be supplied by Delavan Lakes Veterinary Clinic, Andes Candies, Comfort Suites, Wal-Mart, and McDonalds. SUNDAY, MARCH 31 Easter Egg Hunt, 11:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m., The Abbey Resort, 269 Fontana Blvd., Fontana. Call 275-9000, or log on to www.theabbeyresort.com for more info. Easter Egg Hunt, 10-11 a.m., Lake Lawn Resort, 2400 E. Geneva St., Delavan, Call 728-7950 or log on to www. lakelawnresort.com for more information. Easter Egg Hunt, 1 p.m., Grand Geneva Resort, 7036 Grand Geneva Way, Lake Geneva. Call 248-8811, or log on to www.grandgeneva.com MONDAY, APRIL 1 Networking Event. Join Young Auditorium for a tourism and chamber networking after hours event with refreshments at 6 p.m., a Wisconsin Department of Tourism update from David Spiegelberg at 6:30 p.m., then stay for the premiere screening of the Whitewater episode of Milwaukee Public TV’s “Around the Corner” with John McGivern. RSVP to Ben Strand at 472-6224 or email strandb@uww.edu. TUESDAY, APRIL 2 Geneva Lake Museum Tuesdays at Two workshop; learn about Lorine Niedecker. Free to museum members, $5 for non-members. Geneva Lake Museum, 255 Mill St. (intersection of Mill and Main), Lake Geneva. Call 248-6060 or email staff@genevalake museum.org to make a reservation. Walworth County Genealogical Society, 6:30 p.m. at the Community Centre, 826 Geneva St, Delavan, will feature Patricia Boyd of Photographs, Restorations & Composites in “Bring Those Photos Back To Life.” Bring a faded, old or damaged picture, black or white or color and experience hands on manipulation to bring your photograph back to life. The program is free to the public. Refreshments will be provided. For information, call Deb Ketchum at 215-0118. FRIDAY, APRIL 5 Blood Drive sponsored by the Williams Bay High School Student Council from 7 a.m. until 12:30 p.m. The Blood Center of Wisconsin will be collecting blood donations from anyone who is 16 years old (with parent consent) or older and in good health. Walkins will be accepted but appointments are encouraged. To schedule an appointment, please call the school at 245-6224. The process will take approximately one hour. Donors should bring a photo ID that includes birth date. Senior Travel Club of Walworth Co., 10-11 a.m. in the Community Room at Matheson Memorial Library in Elkhorn. Continue signup for the May 17 trip to The Bartlett Mandir, Bartlett , Ill., and begin signing up for the June 12 trip, “Brewsin’ to Cruising” a Milwaukee River Cruise. Program for this meeting will be Dr. Solverson from the Eye Physicians & Surgeons Clinic, Elkhorn. Visitors and new members are always welcome. Membership is $15/year. Call Rachel at 743-1555 with questions. Limber Timbers Square Dance Club, 7:30-10 p.m. in the cafeteria of Elkhorn Middle School, 627 E. Court St. (Hwy. 11), Elkhorn. $5 adults, $2 children. For information call Karen or Jose at 275-6373 or Barb at (608) 883-2017. Caller, Bob Asp, cuer, Jerry Buckmaster. SUNDAY, APRIL 7 Women’s Extravaganza, 12-4 p.m. Enjoy a fun filled afternoon at Staller Winery, located at W8896 Cty Rd. A in Delavan, with 20 exhibitors, raffles, door prizes, food and wine available as well as items for sale and demonstrations. Admission is $2 or non-perishable food items for the food pantry. TUESDAY, APRIL 9 Geneva Lake Museum Tuesdays at Two workshop; Carpenters Tools. Free to museum members, $5 for non-members. Geneva Lake Museum, 255 Mill St. (intersection of Mill and Main), Lake Geneva. Call 248-6060 or email staff@genevalakemuseum.org to make a reservation. THURSDAY, APRIL 11 Friends of Geneva Theater fundraiser featuring Chicago Tribune columnist and WBEZ Radio personality Rick Kogan, in his program, “Off The Record,” 7 p.m., Badger High School auditorium. A Q&A and meet and greet book signing will follow the talk. The evening will begin with music from Williams Bays’ own Rock Central. Tickets are $20 for adults and $10 for students. To order, go to www.friendsof genevatheater.org. FRIDAY, APRIL 12 Walworth County Fur and Feather Swap, 7-10 a.m., Walworth County Fairgrounds, Hwy. 11 East, Elkhorn. The swap features a variety of small animals and pets, including chickens, turkeys, waterfowl, rabbits, caged birds, goats and gerbils, related crafts and equipment. Buyers are encouraged to come early for the best selection. Admission is $1, children under 12 free. A lunch stand will be available on the grounds. The place for adults and children to enjoy the familiar while discovering new and unusual types birds and small animals. ~ ~ ~ Ongoing events ~ ~ ~ American Legion Auxiliary meeting, 6:45 p.m. on the second Monday of each month at the Legion Hall on Second Street in Delavan. The group raises money for scholarships and to send gifts at Christmas time to the servicemen and women that are hospitalized due to injuries while in combat. Smelt and fish fry, 5:30-7:30 p.m., fourth Friday of the month at the Delavan American Legion, 111 S. Second St. in Delavan. $8.50 for smelt, tilapia, salads and dessert. Full bar available. Attention horse lovers – Walworth County Boots and Saddle Club is looking for new members. Meetings take place at 7 p.m., second Saturday of each month for potluck and to plan events. Sugar Creek Town Hall, N6641 Co. Road H, Elkhorn. Call Fred Campisano, 716-6355 for more information. Geneva Lake Museum, Saturdays 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. in January and February, 255 Mill St, Lake Geneva. Call 248-6060. East Troy Area Historical Society exhibit on Girl Scouts and camps in the Walworth County area. The exhibit is open through Memorial Day on Saturdays from 11 a.m. - 3 p.m., Wednesdays from 9 a.m. - noon and by appointment for groups of scouts who wish to view it. The exhibit includes a silent film from 1918, a hall filled with local and historical items to view, a scavenger hunt and activities that girls can take home to do. The exhibit is located on Church Street just off HWY 120 and ES on the historic square in the heart of East Troy. Check the website etahs.org. Women of all ages who enjoy singing are invited to visit Spirit of the Lakes Sweet Adelines International chorus. Discover just how fun it is to sing with Sweet Adelines International. Tuesday Nights 7 p.m. at March 22, 2013 — 27 Horticultural Hall in Lake Geneva. OFA-LG, meets at 6:30 p.m. the fourth Monday of each month at Caribou Coffee in Lake Geneva. Come join us for discussion and updates on the happenings in Washington, D.C. Walworth County AARP #5310 meets the fourth Tuesday of the month from 9:3011:30 a.m. at Peoples Bank, 837 Wisconsin St, Elkhorn. The speaker for March is Mike McMcabe ,director at Wisconsin democracy campaign .The public is always welcome. Contact Jim at 642-5694. Southern Lakes Masonic Lodge #12, 1007 S. 2nd St., Delavan. Stated meetings are second and fourth Mondays at 7 p.m. Geneva Masonic Lodge #44, 335 Lake Shore Dr., Lake Geneva. Regularly stated meetings, second and fourth Tuesdays, 7:30 p.m. 725-3062. Ice Age Trail Alliance, monthly meeting, third Tuesday of each month 7 p.m. at U.S. Bank, Elkhorn (Downstairs in the community meeting room, enter at the back door). Home-brew Club, 7 - 9 p.m., Lake Geneva Brewing Emporium, 640 W. Main Street, Lake Geneva, meets the third Wednesday of every month. Call 729-4005 for more information. Butchers Model Car Club 4H models project meetings take place on the third Saturday of the month from 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. at the Delavan Community Center, 826 Geneva St., led by 4H scale models key advisor Keith Reimers. Bring models for display and projects to work on. Sale and swap items are also welcome. The club also hosts the 4H scale models project and young people in the project are encouraged to attend. Call Keith at 728-1483 for more information. Walworth County Toastmasters Club meets the 1st and 3rd Wednesday of every month from 6:30 to 8 p.m., at VIP Services, 811 E. Geneva, Elkhorn. Check www.wal worthcountytoastmasters.com. Bingo, second and fourth Thursday of the month at the Delavan American Legion hall, 111 S. 2nd St. Doors open at 5:30 p.m., a 15-game session begins at 6:30. Progressive session follows. $1 face, progressive pot grows until it is won. $100 consolation prize. Bingo, first Monday of the month at the Town of Delavan Community Park, Highway 50 and South Shore Drive. Doors open at 6 p.m. and a 15-game session begins at 7 p.m. Plenty of parking and food/beverages available. Bingo, St. Andrew Parish in Delavan. The games will be played on the first Friday of every month, with doors opening at 6 p.m. and play starting at 7 p.m. For more info see www.standrews-delavan.org. (Continued on page 30) Puzzle Answers JUMBLE ANSWERS BASIS TESTY QUAINT STOLID What the wine collector invested in — “LIQUID” ASSETS KIDS’ JUMBLE FAN BELL CORN WORM What do you call a cow eating grass? — A LAWN “MOOER” ©2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc. BOGGLE ANSWERS RAINY WINDY SNOWY SUNNY STORMY CLOUDY ©2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc. 28 — The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013 February Sky to sing in March The longtime favorite, February Sky, a singing duo consisting of Phil Cooper and Susan Urban, will perform again at the UU Church of the Lakes in Elkhorn on Saturday, March 23 from 7-9 p.m. According to Lilli Kuzma, host of WDCB Public Radio’s “Folk Festival,” “February Sky, a duo consisting of Phil Cooper and Susan Urban, combines the musical talent and chemistry of Phil’s traditional influences and beautiful gui- tar work with Susan’s stellar songwriting, delivering songs that tell stories of lives and feelings, resonate with messages of social justice, and entertain with quirky humor that adroitly exposes human nature.” UU Church of the Lakes is located at 319 N. Broad St. in Elkhorn. The cost is $10 at the door and includes refreshments and drinks. For more information, call 723-7440 or visit www.uulakes.org. Library Notes seniors, good conversation, and of course, coffee. • LEGO Building Club for all ages. No registration required. For those who love to build with Legos, want to stretch their creativity and meet other kids who love to build. We’ll provide the Legos. You provide the creativity. When you’re finished building, we’ll put your creations on display. Well also have DUPLO blocks available for kids ages 5 and younger. Tuesday, April 16, 5:30 – 7 p.m.; Saturday, May 11, 10:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m. • Alphabet Themed Story Time: Letter Q, Thursday, April 4, 11:30 a.m. • Books & Boogie, ages 2-5 10:30-11 a.m., Thursdays, March 28, April 11, 25, May 9. No registration required. Bounce on in for Books & Boogie. We’ll read stories, sing songs, and move and groove. • Baby Time, Friday, April 19. Ages birth - 2, 10:30 - 11 a.m. No registration required. Join us for songs, activities, and even a story or two perfect for babies. Baby Time is a great place for babies and caregivers to meet. • Bedtime Storytimes, Tuesday, April 30, ages 1 - 5, 6:30 – 7 p.m. No registration required. Can’t make it to morning story time programs? Check out our special evening story times for quiet, calming stories, perfect for winding down the day. Kids can a pair of comfy pajamas and bring their favorite stuffed animal. ! ! ! Walworth Memorial Library, 101 Maple Ave., Walworth. Open Mon. and Wed. 10 a.m. - 8 p.m., Tues., Thurs., Fri. and Sat. 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Now offering wireless Internet service. • Knitting and crocheting classes, Saturdays, 10:30 a.m. Call for details. • Preschool Story Hour, Fridays, 9:45 – 10:30 a.m., for preschool-age children and their caregivers. The hour will include stories, snacks, crafts and more. • Book Club for adults, third Saturday of each month, 9:30 – 10:30 a.m. • Digital downloads of electronic books (e-books) are growing in popularity and the library is participating with the Lakeshores Library System in a statewide program to buy $1 million in new content in 2012 for the Digital Download Center (http://dbooks. wplc.info) sponsored by the Wisconsin Public Library Consortium. You can also access the Digital Download Center through your library’s online catalogue. Available to all Wisconsin residents, the Digital Download Center offers e-books, audio books, videos and music that you can download to devices such as iPods and other MP3 players, Kindles, Sony eReaders, Nooks and iPads, to name just a few. For a complete list of supported devices, visit the Digital Download Center and use the link near the bottom of the left column. While all new titles will not be available immediately, the purchase of new titles has already begun and will continue throughout 2012 and beyond. All programs are free and open to the public unless otherwise indicated. Call 2756322 for more information. ! ! ! Librarians and Friends Groups: Send information about upcoming library events by mail to: The Beacon, P.O. Box 69, Williams Bay, WI 53191; by fax to 245-1855; or by e-mail to dbeacon@charter.net. Continued from page 26 For more information, call the library at 249-5299 or visit the Library Web site, www. lakegeneva.lib.wi.us. ! ! ! Matheson Memorial Library, 101 N. Wisconsin St., Elkhorn. Open Monday Thursday 9 a.m. - 8 p.m., Friday 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. and Saturday 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. 723-2678. • Free Movie Night showing of “Les Miserables” on April 12 at 6:30pm. Starring Hugh Jackman, Russell Crowe and Amanda Seyfried, this epic film follows an escaped convict seeking redemption while being hunted for decades by the police. Based on the novel by Victor Hugo and Tony Award-winning musical. Winner of three Academy Awards, including Best Supporting Actress Anne Hathaway. Admission, popcorn and soda are all provided by the Friends of the Library. Rated PG-13. Children under the age of 13 must be accompanied by an adult. • The library hosts two book clubs per month. The Page Turners meet on the first Wednesday of the month at 6:30 p.m. and the Afternoon Book Club meets on the third Wednesday of the month at 2 p.m. You can check out a copy of the book club selection 34 weeks prior to the book club meeting. All meetings are held at the library and are facilitated by staff librarians. • Story times are about 30 minutes and are filled with books, songs and more. Each week will bring something new. No registration required. Toddlers on Tuesday at 10 a.m. and 11 a.m.; Books n Babies on Thursday at 10 a.m.; Preschool age on Wednesday at 10 a.m.; and Tiny Tots 2nd and 4th Monday at 6:30 p.m. We Explore, ages 3+, Friday 10 a.m. • The Lego Building Club for all ages meets every other Thursday at 3:30 p.m. in the community center. Each meeting will feature a different building theme. Creations will be displayed in the library and online. Lego donations greatly appreciated. Messy Art Club meets on the alternate Thursday at 3:30 p.m. • Elkhorn Area Writers’ Group, Tuesdays from 6-8 p.m. in the Mary Bray Room, upper level of the library, for anyone who wishes to share their writing. Each member is allowed equal time to share work with others: poems, manuscripts, short stories, etc. Please bring at least five copies of each selected work for review. We all benefit from the power of collaboration. Questions? Email: elkhornrice @gmail.com. • The Walworth County Genealogical Society Library is open Tuesdays from 10 a.m – 3 p.m. and by appointment, which can be made by calling the WCGS librarian at 215-0118. A board member will always be there to render assistance if needed. To obtain membership information or find literature regarding Walworth County, visit walworthcgs.com. All programs are free and open to the public unless otherwise indicated. Call 7232678 or visit www.elkhorn.lib.wi.us for more. ! ! ! Twin Lakes Community Library, 110 S. Lake Ave., Twin Lakes. 877-4281. Hours: Monday - Wednesday 10 a.m. -8 p.m., Thurs. 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. Friday – Sunday 12-4 p.m. • Senior Coffee Hour, 10-11:30 a.m. on the second Wednesday of each month will feature healthy refreshments, programs for A youngster is fascinated by the intricate model train layouts during the Sixth Annual Model Train Show, March 8-10, at the American Legion Hall in Delavan. (Beacon photo) Delavan Easter egg hunt and more The annual Easter Egg Hunt, is scheduled for Saturday, March 30 at Phoenix Park. The hunt will begin at 10 a.m. The Easter Bunny will be present to greet the area children. The Easter Bunny will also make appearances in the stores in Delavan. The Delavan - Delavan Lake Area Chamber of Commerce sponsors the Easter Egg Hunt. Delavan Lakes Veterinary Clinic, Andes Candies, Comfort Suites, Wal-Mart, and McDonalds supplied the candy, eggs, and special treats. In addition to the hunt, Easter Baskets will be placed in Delavan businesses the week of March 25. The baskets will have numbers assigned to them. Children ages 3-9 years need to register at the Delavan Chamber office, 52 E Walworth Ave. or call the office at 728-5095 to receive a number corresponding to a business Easter Basket. Once the child receives a number and a list of businesses with the baskets, he/she will then go to the businesses in search of the basket. There are a limited number of baskets available. It will be a first come first serve basis for children to sign up to receive numbers. There is no cost to participate, but there is a limit of two per household. For more information, contact the Delavan Chamber of Commerce at 728-5095 Monday through Friday from 9 a .m. - 3 p.m. The Delavan – Delavan Lake Area Chamber of Commerce sponsors many activities including Cars Time Forgot, which will take place on July 14. The chamber welcomes new businesses, sponsors business seminars, and speakers, promotes holiday events and provides networking opportunities. For event listings log on to www.delavan wi.org. The annual Delavan – Delavan Lake Area Chamber of Commerce annual auction will take place on May 31. It will be held at Lake Lawn Resort and is the chamber’s biggest fundraiser. Proceeds from the auction help fund the many activities and community events offered by the chamber. If anyone would like to donate to the auction or attend, please contact Jackie Busch, Executive Director at the Chamber office. For more information contact the Delavan - Delavan Lake Area Chamber of Commerce at 728-5095. See listings for area Easter Egg Hunts in What’s Happening on page 27. Slice of One Topping Pizza & Drink $3.95 - Served All Day! Let Us Cater Your Next Event Dine In Carry Out Delivery Catering Williams Bay Dock Delivery - Boating and Ice Fishing 659 E. Geneva Street, Williams Bay, WI • Phone: 262-245-9132 • 262-245-9133 Fax: 262-245-9035 Mon. - Thurs. 10:30AM-12:00PM; Fri. & Sat. 10:30AM-1:00AM (Summer Hours) Winter 11:00PM Sun. 10:30AM-10:00PM PIZZA: Thin Crust, Chicago Stuffed Pizza Pie, Bobby Sr. Famous Pan Pizza Pie, Calzones • ITALIAN ICE & GELATO • APPETIZERS • SALADS • HOMEMADE SOUP & CHILI (seasonal) • KID S MENU $4.75 • SANDWICHES • BURGERS: 1/3 lb. Char-Broiled Burgers • CHICAGO HOT DOGS The Real Deal • CHICKEN & RIB DINNERS • PASTA DINNERS • SHRIMP & FISH DINNER $ 5.00 OFF WITH ANY PURCHASE OF $30.00 OR MORE! This offer not valid with any other conjunction. Good only at Sanfratello’s also at www.readthebeacon.com The Beacon March 22, 2013 — 29 Members of the Williams Bay Women’s Banquet committee say plans are well underway for the 2013 event. This year’s Banquet, mysteriously named “R4,” will take place at the Geneva National Ballroom on Tuesday, May 7 from 5:30 – 9 p.m. The banquet is an annual event that brings local women together for an evening of fun and comraderie. This will be the 86th annual banquet and, according to chair Linda Choyce, is shaping up to be a fun and memorable evening. Tickets are available from any member of the comittee, as well as a few area businesses. Tickets are limited to 200 seats this year, so those planning to attend should get theirs early. For more information call Linda Choyce at 9495903. For ticket information, call Sally Gerson at 245-0920, Halina Marra at 245-9373 or Betsy Arney at 245-2691. (Photo furnished) Novel packed with interesting people and places residents will recognize By Dennis West Using the pen name Clyde Deighton, local businessman Anthony Navilio has written a highly enjoyable, readable and informative book about the southern lakes area. “Murder at the French Country Inn” is, as the title indicates, a mystery set at Navilio’s hotel on Lake Como. The hostelry, once known as the Lake Como Hotel, has a fascinating history that is tied to famous Chicago gangsters who dominated the headlines during and after Prohibition. Local residents and frequent visitors will feel right at home as Navilio/Deighton uses actual names of locations and people in his novel. He even talks about the Inn’s owner – himself – in the third person, providing humorous incites into his own character. A few of the people in the novel have been given pseudonyms, but most are readily identifiable. The story revolves around the exploits of the fictional Town of Geneva Police Chief, who is known only by his nickname, Chief. Contrary to what one would expect, he didn’t get the nickname when he became a cop, or even a police chief, but from his neighborhood buddies when he was a kid in Chicago. Many years later, fed up with life as a cop in the big city, he decides to return to the Lake Geneva area where he spent his childhood summers. Here, he enjoys the laid-back lifestyle of a divorced male whose main company, outside of work, is his dog. But the peace is shattered when a murder is committed at the French Country Inn. A subsequent shooting, mugging and other plot-intensifiers leave the reader guessing, and a surprise ending will delight even the most jaded mystery fan. Perhaps the most surprising aspect of the book is the quality of the writing. Dialogue is tight and snappy and the tale moves right along from beginning to end. The French County Inn, known as the Lake Como Hotel during the 1920s and 30s when Chicago gangsters used it for a handy hideaway, has enough interesting history for at least two novels. And readers will find the facts behind the legend in an appendix that details the real life stories of such figures as Baby Face Nelson, John Dillinger, George “Bugs” Moran, and his wife, Lucille, who divorced her gangland hubby to marry Lake Como Hotel owner Hobart Hermansen. Hermansen deserves his own book. He was the gambling kingpin of Walworth County for several decades, with a monopoly on slot machines that must have had the blessing of local law enforcement authorities. A house just west of the French Country Inn still features a garage and a room used for counting money on the lower level. Accounts exist in newspaper files of police chases that ended when hoodlums seemed to disappear from Highway 50 somewhere near the road that led down to Lake Como and Hermansen’s hideout. Navilio became interested in the history in the mid-1980s when he acquired the French Country Inn. The more he learned, the more fascinated he became until, one day on a trip to Italy, the plot gelled and he began putting words to paper. When he returned home he finished the book, incorporating much of the hotel’s history into the plot. The result is a fun read, especially for those who are familiar with the people and places that crop up throughout. An interesting note is that Navilio chose the pen name Clyde Deighton for his first foray into authorhood by using his middle name and an alternative spelling of the city in which he attended college, Spring Break & Easter Week at Lake Lawn - Live entertainment EVERY NIGHT 3/22 – 3/31 - $5 pitchers of Miller Lite with purchase of food and drink specials - Basketball bracket pool - enter team choices through the sweet 16 Win a Free Party with Friends ($100 worth of apps) EASTER SUNDAY CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH THE ROCK AND THE RABBI Frontier Restaurant Sunday, March 31st | 9:30 am - 3:00 pm A musical story telling about Peter and Jesus - Carved Cocoa Coffee Crusted Roast Beef, Peppercorn Beef Demi Glace - Rosemary Garlic Rotisserie Leg of Lamb, Fresh Mint Lamb Reduction Sauce - Custom, Chef Made Omelet Bar - And Much, Much More... * Mothers receive a flower and glass of champagne RESERVATIONS HIGHLY RECOMMENDED call 262.725.9155 March 28th & 29th Buffet 5:30 - 6:30 pm | Lake Lawn Room Show 7:00 pm | Geneva Ballroom BUFFET DINNER & THEATER SHOW Adult $40 | Child (12 & under) $20 VIP seating available Call 262.728.7950 or Visit LakeLawnResort.com 2400 EAST GENEVA STREET DELAVAN, WISCONSIN | LAKELAWNRESORT.COM | 800.338.5253 Dayton, Ohio. The 360-page paperback book is priced at $16 and can be purchased at The French Country Inn, Cornerstone Shoppe and Breadloaf Book Shop in Lake Geneva, Bayside Motel and Clearwater Day Spa in Williams Bay or online at www.french countryinnshop.com/ Rick Kogan to headline funder Friends of Geneva Theater will present a fundraiser featuring Rick Kogan in his show, “Off the Record,” on Thursday, April 11 at 7 p.m. in the Badger High School auditorium. “This promises to be an exciting evening with well-known Chicago Tribune columnist and WBEZ radio personality Rick Kogan,” said FOGT marketing director Lily Miceli. “As ‘a Voice of Chicago’ Rick brings to Lake Geneva stories featuring his life in journalism and radio.” A Q&A and meet and greet book signing will follow the talk. The evening will begin with music from Williams Bays’ own Rock Central (http://rockcentral.org). “Our Mission is to save and restore the historic Geneva Theater and create a community arts center for the Lakes Area,” said Miceli. Tickets are $20 for adults and $10 for students. To order tickets go to www.friendsofgenevatheater.org. The Good Humour Section b e g i n s o n p a g e 34 . No joke. also at www.readthebeacon.com 30 — The Beacon What’s Happening Continued from page 27 Bingo, St. Francis de Sales Church, 148 W. Main Street, Lake Geneva. First and Third Wednesdays of the month. Doors open at 5:30, bingo starts 7. Refreshments available. Games include 50/50, Pull Tabs, Progressive. For info call Mary or Bill Gronkeat (847) 840-8878. Civil Air Patrol, Walco Composite Squadron, meets every Thursday from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. at the Elkhorn National Guard Armory, 401 East Fair St., Elkhorn. Visit www.gocivilairpatrol.com/ or call Maj. Robert Thomas at (262) 642-7541. Authors Echo Writers group meeting, 7 p.m., first and third Tuesday of every month, Grace Church, 257 Kendall St., Burlington. Call Frank Koneska at 534-6236. Clogging lessons, beginning and intermediate level adult classes, Tuesday evenings, Walworth County Gymnastics and Dance Center, 213 E. Commerce Court, Elkhorn. Adults of all ages are welcome. Call Shannon McCarthy at 742-3891 or email wccdirector@elknet.net. Beginning youth clogging lessons (Tiny Tots ages 3 – 5 at 4 p.m./Youth ages 6 & up at 4:30 p.m.) at Walworth County Gymnastics and Dance Center, 213 E Commerce Court, Elkhorn. For more information: www.walworthcountycloggers.com or 742-3891. Yerkes Observatory, 373 W. Geneva St., Williams Bay. The observatory offers free, 45-minute tours, Saturdays, 10 a.m., 11 a.m. and noon as well as night sky observations for a fee of $25. Visitors may also view the Quester Museum, which covers some of the observatory’s history. For more information, call 245-5555 or e-mail rdd@yerkes.uchicago.edu. Support Our Troops rally, 11 a.m., Mondays, second floor of the Government Center (formerly the Walworth County Courthouse), downtown Elkhorn on the square. The names of servicemen and service women with ties to Walworth County who are currently serving in Iraq and Afghanistan will be read. Call Bob Webster at 275-6587 for more information. • • • • Cards and games, Mondays, 1 – 4 p.m. Darien Senior Center, 47 Park St., Darien. Call 882-3774. Thursday Senior Card Club, 11:30 a.m. - 3:30 p.m., Matheson Memorial Library Community Room, Elkhorn. Bridge, 500 or bring your own group. Call Judy at 723-1934 or Liz at 723-5036 for more information. Bridge, (open to new members), every Tuesday 9:30 - 11:30 a.m., Lake Geneva City Hall, second floor conference room. Bridge - every Tuesday, 12:30-3:30 p.m., Lake Geneva City Hall, second floor conference room. ~ HEALTH AND FITNESS ~ Intentional Meditation Circle brings together the Intender’s Group and Meditation Circle, both of which have proven benefits for your life. Group meets weekly on Fridays 5:30-6:30 p.m. at Essential Yoga, 422 N Wisconsin St, Elkhorn. All levels welcome; come as your schedule allows. Free-will offering accepted. For more information contact Laurie Dionne Asbeck, 745-4051. Check Essential Yoga’s website, www.essential yoga.net, weekly for schedule changes. Alanon self help program, 6:30 p.m. Tuesdays, VIP building, 816 E. Geneva St., across from Elkhorn High School in Elkhorn. Mindfulness and Loving kindness Meditation each Thursday, 7-8 p.m., at Elkhorn Matheson Memorial Library Community Center Room, 101 N. Wisconsin St. Beginners and experienced practitioners are always welcome. No registration is nec- March 22, 2013 essary, just drop in. Meditation is practice for being more awake and attentive in our daily lives. Sponsored by Wisconsin Blue Lotus, a meditation group led by Buddhist nun Vimala (Judy Franklin). For more information, call 203-0120, or visit www.bluelotustemple.org. Spiritual Discussion Group to be held on four Tuesdays at 6:30 p.m. (March 19, 26, April 2 and 9) at the UU Church of the Lakes, 319 N Broad St., Elkhorn. What does “spirituality” mean to you? Explore the many forms it takes in our world. All voices, thoughts and religions are welcome to join these non-denominational discussions assisted by a highly experienced facilitator. Just bring an open mind and a desire to share your thoughts, experiences or personal journeys in an informal group discussion format. Please try to make all four sessions. There is no charge but call Joan at 684-5050 or email ecowings08@gmail.com to reserve a spot. Post Traumatic Stress Disorder Group, third Thursday of the month, 7 p.m., at Delavan American Legion Post 95, 111 South Second Street, Delavan. The group is led by Dr. John Jansky. This group is made up of people who have PTSD for many different reasons, they are not all veterans. Everyone is welcome. Diabetes Support Group meets at 6 p.m. on the second Monday of the month, April through October at Aurora Lakeland Medical Center, Highway NN, Elkhorn. This group is for adults with insulin or non-insulin dependent diabetes and their family/support person. The purpose is to provide support and education to the person with diabetes to help manage this chronic disease. The group is facilitated by a registered nurse. Call the diabetic educator at 741-2821 for more info. Breast Cancer Support Group meets the first Wednesday of the month at 4 p.m. at Aurora Lakeland Medical Center, Highway NN, Elkhorn. The group addresses the fears and adjustments faced by women with breast cancer. (Continued on page 31) “WE GOT YOUR BACK!” check out our OPEN FOR LUNCH LENTEN MENU Se Habla Espanol 111 PARK AVENUE, WALWORTH, WI 262-275-9400 • DINE-IN • CARRY OUT Call or Check Our Facebook Page for Our Lenten Specials MARCH 1 - MARCH 31 Sun.-Thurs. 11:00 a.m.-10:00 p.m.; Fri. & Sat. 11:00 a.m. - 11:00 p.m. DELIVERY AVAILABLE ALL DAY: FONTANA, SHARON, DARIEN AND ALL WALWORTH AREA CLOSED EASTER 450 MILL STREET SUITE 102 FONTANA, WISCONSIN (262) 275-5005 WELCOME TO THE BEACON’S FRIDAY NIGHT FISH FRY GUIDE FRY FRIDAY FISH FRIED FISH BAKED OR Homemade Potato Pancakes or s Corn Fritters and All The Trimming $ ALL-YOU-CAN EAT SH FRY FRIDAYBeerFI battered with homemade 7 $ 99 potato pancakes or your choice of potato, coleslaw & soup or salad 99 2 6 2 - 7 2 3 - 19:005 p.m. Open 11:00 a.m. - ORN , WI 1 N. LINC OLN STRE ET • ELKH The Village ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT FRIDAY FISH FRY 11.75 Your Choice of French Fries or Potato Pancakes and All The Fixins! Limited Menu Available FRIDAY SERVING 4:00-9:00 P.M. EVERY $ 3 MILES NORTH OF DOWNTOWN LAKE GENEVA 10.95 EARLY BIRD p.m . 4:00 - 6:00 eva, WI 7377 Krueger Road, Lake Gen 262-348-9900 www.hawksviewgolfclub.com at North Shore Bar & Grill ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT FISH $ 10.95 Choice of French Fries, ta de Potato Pancakes or Pas ma me Ho KARYN & $ 11.99 HAPPY HOUR Monday - Frid ay 2 FOR 1 3:00 to 5:00 p. m. JOE ROSS I Delavan 2001 North Shore Drive, 728-2092 0424 2 WES T GEN EVA STRE ET • (262 ) 245lighth ousew illiam sbay. com Come In For Our SUPPER CLUB lavan 1725 South Shore Dr., De 0 36 728-6 $ 11.95 FRIDAY FISH FRY FAMOUS FRIDAY SE AF OO D • ST EA K s New Chef • Nightly Special FR IDAY NIG HT$ Blue Roughy All You Can Eat $ 10.95 Perch or Walleye Dinner 12.95 We also feature an Oyster Bar, Salm on & More , WI W6904 Hwy. Cty. A, Elkhorn 42 -50 (262) 742 5 p.m.-9 p.m. Open Wed.-Fri. 4 p.m.-9 p.m. • Sat. HT FISH FRY FRIDAY NIG ng From Noon Y SdeHr FR FISH 0) 8.0 (un $ Servi $ BAKED or FRIED COD... 10.95 PAN or DEE$P FRIED WALLEYE 13.95 Includes choice of Potato Pancakes or French Fries, Coleslaw & Applesauce 20 S. Wisconsin St., Elkhorn, WI (262) 723-8021 also at www.readthebeacon.com The Beacon March 22, 2013 — 31 AAUW to present ‘Much Ado About the English Renaissance’ Feeding the multitude during the Delavan Lions Club St. Patrick’s Day corned beef, cabbage and roast chicken fundraiser at The Village Supper Club on Sunday, March 17 are (from left) Diane Morrison, Dick Hummel and Cindy Bickle. (Beacon) What’s Happening Continued from page 30 It encourages participants to develop a positive attitude about the future and discuss common concerns after being treated for breast cancer. Contact Leann Kuhlemeyer at 7412677 for more information. Stroke Support Group provides emotional support through opportunities to interact with others who have experienced stroke. Informational programs will also be provided on topics related to stroke/brain attack. The group welcomes individuals newly diagnosed and those with a history of stroke. Family, friends and caregivers are also encouraged to join. The group meets the third Monday of every month from 6 – 7:30 p.m. Call Pat Positano at 741-2402 for further informantion. Free blood pressure screening, courtesy of The Walworth County Public Health Department on the 1st and 3rd Wednesday of every month from 9 – 10 a.m. at the Walworth County Public Health office, located at the east entrance of the Department of Health and Human Services building, W4051 County Road NN, Elkhorn. The screenings are open to all. Contact the Health Department at 741-3140 for more information. Free blood pressure screening, last Friday of every month, 2 - 4 p.m., Williams Bay Care Center, 146 Clover St., Williams Bay. Narcotics Anonymous meetings in the southern lakes area. Call (877) 434-4346 (toll free) for times and locations. White River Cycle Club, 7 p.m., VIP Services, 811 E. Geneva St., Elkhorn, second Tuesday of each month. Contact Mike Lange for more information at 723-5666. Lake Geneva Alzheimer’s support group, 6:30 p.m., third Wednesday of the month. Arbor Village of Geneva Crossing, 201 Townline Road, Lake Geneva. Call Andy Kerwin at 248-4558. Alzheimer's/Dementia support group, third Wednesday of the month at 4 p.m., Delavan Community Bank Community Center located at 826 E. Geneva Street in Delavan. Call Bob Holland at 472-0958 or Arlene Torrenga at 728-6393 with questions. Alzheimer’s Support Group, first Thursday of the month, 1:30 p.m., Hearthstone/Fairhaven, 426 W. North Street, Whitewater. Facilitators: Janet Hardt, Darlene Zeise 473-8052. Respite care is available with no advance notice. Parkinson’s Disease support group, 1 p.m., second Monday of every month, Lower level conference room, Fairhaven Retirement Community, 435 W. Starin Road, Whitewater. Contact Julie Hollenbeck, 4314772, or by email at jhollenbeck2 @wi.rr.com. Huntington’s Disease Support Group for anyone affected by Huntington’s Disease, meets the third Saturday of the month on the lower level, conference rooms A and B, of Froedtert Hospital, 9200 W. Wisconsin Ave, Milwaukee. Call (414) 257-9499 or go to www.hdsawi.org for more information. Harbor of Hope grief support group, first Thursday of each month, 3 - 4:30 p.m., Aurora VNA of Wisconsin, 500 Interchange North, Lake Geneva. 249-5860. NAMI, The National Alliance on Mental Illness, Support Group, first and third Wednesday from 6-7 p.m. at the Health and Human Services building on Co. NN, Elkhorn. Call 495-2439 for more info. A support group called “Entouch,” (Encouraging others Touched by suicide), meets at 6:30 p.m. on the fourth Tuesday of the month at Riverwood Church, 6919 McHenry St., Burlington. The group is for those who have lost a loved one to suicide. Attendees do not need to attend the church or, indeed, have any religious affiliation. Everyone is welcome. Call 758-0886 for more information. Families Anonymous (FA), a 12-Step, self-help support program for parents, grandparents, relatives, and friends who are concerned about, and affected by, the substance abuse or behavioral problems of a loved one, meets every Thursday evening at 7 p.m. at the First Congregational United Church of Christ, 76 S. Wisconsin St., Elkhorn. Enter through the double glass doors on W. Geneva St. Parking is available on the street or the parking lot west of the church. Additional information may be obtained by calling (262)215-6893, Maureen at 723-8227 or through the Families Anonymous website: www.FamiliesAnonymous.org. Take Off Pounds Sensibly (TOPS), Tuesdays 8-9 a.m. Community Center, 820 E Geneva St., Delavan. Encourages nutrition and exercise with a positive attitude. Guests are welcome, no weekly meeting fee. Contact Marilyn Wilkin at 249-0304. T.O.P.S. (Taking Off Pounds Sensibly) Tuesdays 9:15 - 9:35 a.m., Community Center, U.S. Bank, 101 E. Walworth St., Elkhorn (call 723-3791 with questions) and Tuesdays 5:30 - 6 p.m., United Methodist Church, corner of 2nd and Washington Streets, Delavan. Clinton, Wisconsin • 800-895-3270 The Geneva Lake Branch of the American Association of University Women invites the public to attend “Much Ado About the English Renaissance,” the second program in the AAUW Speaker’s Series. Tickets are now available for the event to be held at Horticultural Hall, 330 Broad Street, Lake Geneva, on Thursday, April 18 at 7 p.m. The program provides a return to the Renaissance with Lady Anne Bacon, attendant to Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth, portrayed by Lake Geneva historical performer Chris Brookes, who has arrived from the court of Queen Elizabeth to describe life in sixteenthcentury England from clothes, customs, and entertainments to mayhap e’en some secrets and scandals. From the royal schoolroom to the formal presence chamber, Lady Bacon has seen it all. She educated her son Francis Bacon, traveled with the Queen on Progress, and lived during the times of Shakespeare, Raleigh, Drake, and Walsingham. Dressed in period clothing and using her traveling basket full of necessaries, Chris Brookes captures the essence of a Renaissance courtier's life. Chris Brookes, a Lake Geneva native, performs one-woman, research based shows for schools, clubs, organizations, libraries, and senior centers. She owns more costumes than clothes in order to bring history and literature to life for her recreations of literary and historical figures from a variety of time periods: the Dark Ages, the Renaissance, Victorian times, and the 1860’s to the 1960’s. She has performed as Lady Bacon at the Bristol Renaissance Faire and has played a variety of characters with several community theater companies. In her other life, she taught literature and social studies at Lake Geneva Middle School. In 2008, she produced an educational DVD, “Introduction to the Elizabethan Age,” and in 2012, after years of study, she co-authored and published an alternative history of the legend of King Arthur, “Arthur of the Gododdin,” with Michael Ferenz. Both the DVD and book will be available for sale and signing following the program or through www.litlady.com. Brookes serves on the Lake Geneva Public Library Board of Trustees and is secretary of the Friends of the LGPL. She teaches for Road Scholar and Cardinal Stritch University, and is a member of the Wisconsin Humanities Council and DPI Speakers Bureaus, Northlands Storytelling Network, AAUW, DAR, Walworth County Genealogical Society, and The Friends of the Geneva Theater. Call 348-9510 to reserve tickets or order online from brownpapertick ets.com. Adults $15, students $5. Money raised at the event will benefit the scholarship fund and other activities of the Branch. The Delavan – Delavan Lake Area Chamber of Commerce will host an Easter Basket Hunt. Easter Baskets will be placed in Delavan businesses the week of March 25. The baskets will have numbers assigned to them. Children ages 3-9 years need to register at the Delavan Chamber office, 52 E Walworth Ave. or call the office 7285095 to receive a number corresponding to a business Easter Basket. Once the child receives a number and a list of businesses with the baskets, he/she will go to the businesses in search of the basket. There are a limited number of baskets available. It will be a first come first serve basis for children to sign up to receive numbers. There is no cost to participate, but there is a limit of two per household. For more information, call the Delavan Chamber of Commerce at 7285095 Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. - 3 p.m. ~ ART, LITERATURE THEATER, MUSIC ~ Live entertainment, Saturday and Sunday 2-5 p.m., Village Supper Club, 1725 South Shore Drive, Delavan. 728-6360. Live Music Fridays 9 p.m. to midnight, Champs Sports Bar & Grill, 747 W Main St., Lake Geneva. No cover charge. Call 248-6008, or log on to www.foodspot.com/champs. Karaoke, 9 p.m. - 12 a.m., Snug Harbor Lakefront Campground Pub and Restaurant, Highway A and P (not the food store) Richmond, Wis. Call (608) 883-6999 or log on to www.snugharborwi.com for details. Live Entertainment, 9 p.m. - midnight Fridays and Saturdays, Hemingway’s, N3270 County Hwy H, Lake Geneva. Call 348-1200, www.hemingwaysportofcall.com. Live Entertainment, Fridays and Saturdays, 7:30 - 11 p.m., Bella Vista Suites, 335 Wrigley Drive, Lake Geneva. 248-2100, www.bellavistasuites.com Fireside Dinner Theater in Fort Atkinson presents “Footloose,” through April 14. When Chicago teenager Ren McCormack moves to the small town of Bomont he is shocked to find a gloomy place where dancing has been outlawed by the city fathers. He sets out to change the law and the minds of the town council and bring laughter and fun back to the town. His journey is the basis for a vibrant and entertaining musical. First a popular film and then a fabulous Broadway show, “Footloose” is filled with high energy singing, heart-pounding rhythms, and some of Broadway’s most spectacular dancing. It is a show that features such hit songs as “Let’s Hear it For the Boy,” “I Need a Hero” and the well known title song. Call 800-477-9505 or log on to www.firesidetheatre.com for complete information . Chris Brookes as Lady Bacon Delavan Chamber of Commerce to sponsor Easter basket hunt “An optimist is a person who starts a new diet on Thanksgiving Day.” Jim Peck Irv Kupcinet also at www.readthebeacon.com 32 — The Beacon March 22, 2013 Tr a n s p o r t a t i o n Lincoln’s 2013 MKZ propounds luxury, relativity* By Susan Carpenter It takes more than good genes to survive almost 100 years in the U.S. auto business. It requires grit, stamina, courage and, in the case of Lincoln, a tremendous amount of chutzpah to “introduce” a company that’s been around longer than the light switch. Like 111-year-old geriatric Cadillac and the even more elderly 114year-old Buick, Lincoln is part of an automotive old folks club that refuses to go gently into the night. With its 2013 MKZ, Ford’s luxury division kicks off a four-model reinvention strategy designed to appeal to buyers who are younger than the brand’s 65-year-old median age but still AARP-eligible. Unusual as it seems to reboot a legacy brand with a redo instead of an entirely new model, the MKZ makes a certain amount of sense. In the seven years it’s been on the market, the midsize sedan has become Lincoln’s best-seller. It is also part of the fast-growing, entry-level luxury segment. What luxury means, of course, is relative. In the case of the MKZ, it means a car that forgoes dramatic exterior design for creature comforts and safety features in a vehicle priced ever-so-slightly out of reach of mere plebes. The version I tested cost $49,585. The first vehicle to emerge from Lincoln’s dedicated design studio in Detroit, the 2013 MKZ sports a slightly more aerodynamic and edgy style than the outgoing model with a large panoramic roof, LED brake lights that extend across the entire rear end and a split-wing grille vaguely reminiscent of a Beemer. Still, its most significant innovations are technological. The base model MKZ is powered by a 2.0-liter inline-four cylinder engine. I was The 2013 Lincoln MKZ shares its platform and most systems with the Ford Fusion. (Courtesy of Sam VarnHagen/Lincoln/MCT) driving the 3.7-liter V-6, which was responsive off the line and felt completely comfortable cruising the carpool lane at speed. It did, however, yield an abysmal 21.7 mpg. A hybrid model more than doubles the car’s fuel economy to an EPA-estimated 45 mpg and is priced the same as the gas model, which starts at $36,800. In an effort to streamline its controls and simplify its interior, Lincoln has moved the MKZ’s gear selector next to the eight-inch touch screen which accesses the car’s three drive modes, as well as the entertainment, navigation, climate and phone systems. The car’s push-button start tops a vertical stack of buttons for park, reverse, neutral, drive and sport, the result of which is more space at the driver’s right elbow for various cubbies. A standard feature on all three trims of the MKZ is Lincoln Drive Control, which automatically adjusts the suspension, steering, engine, transmission, traction and stability control settings based on driver inputs. Lincoln says the suspension settings alone are updated 50 times a second, including on the all-wheel drive version I inadvertently tested on the dirt and sand access roads leading into an off-highway vehicle recreation area on a recent weekend. Even at speeds exceeding 60 mph, the MKZ held its ground without skidding into the scrub. One of Lincoln’s goals is to distinguish the brand through personalization. To that end, Lincoln is comping buyers with three years of live operator assistance accessible through Sync Live. With the press of a button, drivers are connected to a real human being who can send custom navigation to the car and provide them with addresses, similar to GM’s OnStar. That same information is also accessible through the car’s built-in nav, but it can’t be operated while driving. BENOY MOTORS IN WOODSTOCK FAMILY OWNED AND OPERATED FOR º1,,7.9(5+*/,962,,6=,93(5+? º 1,,7>9(5.3,9<53040;,++9? 5,>+6+., 5,> SALE PRICE: 21,192 $ DODGE DART ** SXT :[R + 30+6/* ,UNPUL (PY*VUKP[PVUPUN :WLLK(\[V;YHUZ 7V^LY>PUKV^3VJRZ 2L`SLZZ,U[Y` ¹(S\TPU\T>OLLS NOW ONLY: $ MSRP-$19,890 9LIH[L )VU\Z*HZO )LUV`+PZ 17,958 ** AVENGER SE 4DR (PY*VUKP[PVUPUN 30,UNPUL ¹;PYL>OLLS.YV\W :PYYP\Z?49HKPV ;PS[;LSLZJVWL:[LLYPUN 7V^LY>PUKV^ 3VJRZ ,THPS!PUMV'ILUV`TV[VYZJVTVY^^^ILUV`TV[VYJVT :,HZ[^VVK+Y*VYULYVM9[ (815) :[R ; 9LHY(*/LH[ 7V^LY>PUKV^Z 3VJRZ UKYK9V^ :LH[PUN 5,>+6+., :[R + 338-5100 SALE PRICE: $ * * º*/9@:3,9;6<905.+9 * º 1,,77(;906;:769;+9 * º-69+4<:;(5.765@+9 * º1,,7*644(5+,9? $10,900 * * º/65+((**69+:,+9 * º ;6@6;(*69633(:+9 º*/,=@;(/6,3;A? º1,,730),9;@3;++9? * * º*/,=@047(3(3;+9 º(*<9(93+9 * º-69+-6*<::,:+9 * º +6+.,+<9(5.6? * * º/@<5+(0:(5;(-,? * º4(A+(47==(5 * º +6+.,+(26;(*3<)*()? º*/9@:3,94+9 * º+6+.,.9(5+*(9(=(5,: * º */,=@?>0;/736> * º*/,=@)3(A,9+9? * º;6@6;(*(49@3,+9 * * º 1,,7.9(5+*/,962,,? * º+6+.,.9(5+*(9(=(5:769; * º */,=@=,5;<9,=(5 * º-69+,:*69;+9 º 1,,7*/,962,,+9? * * º */9@:3,9*65*69+,+9 º+6+.,9(4? MONTHS 4:97 3=,UNPUL 9LIH[L ;YHKL(ZZPZ9LI :\UZJYLLU.SHZZ ¹(S\TPU\T>OLLSZ )LUV`+PZ * º+6+.,*/(33,5.,99;*3(::0* $31,900 * ^ GRAND CARAVAN SE BENOY MOTORS IN WOODSTOCK QUALITY PRE-OWNED VEHICLES TO FIT YOUR BUDGET OVER 60 YEARS! 0APR x 84 As a whole, the MKZ is so safety-conscious it’s borderline hypochondriac. In addition to a lane departure warning system integrated into the side mirrors, there’s long-range radar that senses what’s in front of the car and auto-adjusts the speed to avoid a fender bender, as well as a camera integrated into the rearview mirror that reads the road’s lane markers and alerts drivers to hazards with blindingly bright lights and dramatic beeps. Considering all the money spent “introducing the Lincoln Motor Company” with its “new” MKZ, the car doesn’t feel like a dramatically different direction for the company. The five-door five-seater is comfortable. It’s spacious with a good amount of head- and legroom, front and back. It’s nicely finished with understated black leather seats and colormatched soft plastic touch points on the interior door panels and dash. It’s easy to drive. But ultimately the MKZ lacks distinction other than the fact that Lincoln, 96 years into its existence, has become something of a novelty. 2013 LINCOLN MKZ • Powertrain: Sequential multiport electronic fuel injection, 3.7-liter, V-6, DOHC, 4 valves per cylinder, intake variable camshaft timing, 6-speed automatic transmission, all-wheel drive • EPA fuel economy estimate: 18 city, 26 highway • Road test fuel economy: 21.7 mpg combined • Base price: $35,925 • Price as tested, including destination charge: $49,585 ©2013 The Orange County Register (Santa Ana, Calif.) *Probably the worst headline we’ve ever seen – whatever it means. Editor. 4:97 9LIH[L )LUV`+PZ 16,942 ** /V\YZ! Mon: 7:30am-8pm ;\LZ!!HTWT >LK!!HTWT ;O\YZ!!HTWT -YP!!HTWT :H[!!HTWT **Prices exclude tax, title, lic. & doc fee. Includes all manufacturer rebates & incentives. Photos are for illustration purposes only and may not represent actual vehicles. Jeep & Chrysler are registered trademarks of Chrysler LLC. No prior sales. Expires 3 days after publication. See dealer for more details. ^On select models, See dealer for complete details. HOURS: 4VU!!HTWT;\LZ!!HTWT>LK!!HTWT ;O\YZ!!HTWT-YP!!HTWT:H[!!HTWT BENOYMOTOR.COM 6Y,THPS!PUMV'ILUV`TV[VYZJVT :,HZ[^VVK+Y*VYULYVM9[ (815) 338-5100 *Prices exclude tax, title, lic. & doc fee. No prior sales. Expires 3 days after publication. See dealer for more details. also at www.readthebeacon.com The Beacon March 22, 2013 — 33 Motor vehicles may be the one exception to mail-order sales success By Larry Printz In an era when most any item can be bought online, you have to wonder why you can’t buy a car from Ford.com and have it shipped to your door. Well, that’s due to automotive franchise laws. Still, it’s not a new idea. In fact, it’s almost as old as the automobile, but it never succeeded. A century ago, one of the most important books in any home was the Sears, Roebuck and Co. mail-order catalogue. If an item appeared in this weighty tome, it was proof that it had become mainstream. In 1908, the same year that Ford Motor Co. introduced the Model T, Sears introduced the Runabout, item number 21R333. This gas-powered, two-cylinder high-wheeler produced 10 horsepower and carried two people down the road without the benefit of doors, windows, windshield, heater or seat belts. It cost $395 – or approximately $9,200 today. It was designed by Alvaro Krotz who, after designing it, developed a car that ran on both gasoline and electricity. Sears wasn’t interested, so Krotz left and attempted to build it on his own. He had no success. In the meantime, Sears’ buggy proved popular with customers, but not with company accountants. Production of the car ceased in 1912 after it was revealed that it was being sold at a loss. Despite that, 40 years later, the idea resurfaced. Blame Theodore Houser, the vicepresident of merchandising for Sears who, in 1949, sat on the board of Kaiser-Frazer, an upstart automaker launched after World War II by steel magnate Henry J. Kaiser. That year, Kaiser-Frazer sales had withered under the assault of all-new models from General Motors, Ford and Chrysler. Financial prospects dimmed. Houser offered to sell a Kaiser-Frazer car under Sears’ Allstate brand, but he wasn’t sure Kaiser's current models were a good If you ordered a Sears Allstate automobile, you got a Henry J with a different name on it. Selling cars by mail order didn’t go over and Sears abandoned the project. fit. In an effort to remain solvent, KaiserFrazer borrowed $44 million from the Reconstruction Finance Corporation with the stipulation that the automaker build an affordable small car. That car, introduced in 1951, was the Henry J, modestly named after the company’s founder. In an era when bigger was better, this plain two-door fastback’s 181-inch length – an inch longer than a 2013 Toyota Corolla – must have seemed spectacularly small. And its 68-horsepower four-cylinder engine couldn't compete against the likes of Olds-mobile’s 135-hp Rocket V-8, although an 80-hp six-cylinder engine was optional. Still, the Henry J found 81,942 takers. Arrangements were made to slap Allstate badges and some unique trim on the Henry J and have Sears sell it for 1952. Prices for the Allstate started at $1,395 – or $12,355 today. Considering that a trunk lid and glove box weren’t standard on base models, Allstates were pricey. An additional $65 bought a full-size Chevrolet, while an extra $29 netted a fullsize Ford. Is it any wonder that only 1,566 Allstates were sold? When a mere 797 found buyers in 1953, Sears pulled the plug. Some might blame the Allstate’s failure on the car’s compact size, its styling or its price tag. However, the Henry J sold in much greater numbers and held its own for four model years. The difference is the Henry J was sold through dealers, not a catalogue. Let’s face it: Few things in life are as exciting as going to a car dealer and selecting a new car or truck from a row of shiny new sheet metal. And, given the cost involved, it's not something that can be taken care of with a click of the mouse. ©2013 The Virginian-Pilot (Norfolk, Va.) 815-943-7390 1520 N. Division Street, Harvard • HASSLE FREE REPAIR PROCESS • LIFETIME WARRANTY ON REPAIRS Ask for Adams...Two Convenient Locations LAKE IN THE HILLS 8559 Pyott Road 815-356-0192 HARVARD 1520 N. Division Street 815-943-7390 www.adamscollision.com - Where Quality & Customer Satisfaction Count! S E R V I C E D I R E C T O RY REPAIR A.A. Anderson, Inc. SERVICE YOU CAN COUNT ON! WATER CONDITIONING WATER TREATMENT Family Owned & Operated We do service work on everything from Combines to Chainsaws... • FARM • LAWN • COMMERCIAL Certified Mechanics and Modern Facility 815-943-5454 • aaanderson.com $ 10.00 OFF WITH THIS AD INSURANCE All your protection under one roof. WATER SOFTENERS • IRON FILTERS • DRINKING WATER SYSTEMS SATISFIED CUSTOMERS SINCE 1978 Free Water Analysis Free Softener Check-Up 262-728-2731 For expert advice, call Terry Addie & his professional sales staff. dealer participation may vary culligandelavan.com 888-771-8099 DENTIST MASSAGE THERAPY PAUL V. KREUL, D.D.S. 262.249.1230 General Denistry Mike Spragia Agency, Inc. 601 East Geneva St., Elkhorn, WI 53212-0281 (262) 723-3113 Bus. ©2009 American Family Mutual Insurance Company and Its Subsidiaries, American Family Company Home Office - Madison, WI 53783 • amfam.com NA-07497 Rev. 2/09 ANIMAL SANCTUARY & RETREAT VALLEY OF THE KINGS SANCTUARY & RETREAT VOTK is open to members only. An Individual Membership is Only $60 for 6 months and Family is $ 75 for 6 months. Once you are a member, you can come any Saturday, Sunday or both after 1:30 p.m. to visit the animals. Inquire about our 2013 calendars. CONTACT US: VALLEY OF THE KINGS SANCTUARY & RETREAT W7593 Townhall Road, Sharon, WI 53585-9728 PHONE (262) 736-9386 email: info@votk.org • website: www.votk.org PEST CONTROL RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL Mike Guiler WEST SIDE PROFESSIONAL BUILDING 715 West Walworth Street Elkhorn, Wisconsin 53121 (262) 723-2264 Lake Geneva Massage Therapy Barb and Mark Mitchell Nationally Certified in Theraputic Massage & Bodywork Members AMTA • Certified Since 1978 905 Marshall Street, Lake Geneva, WI 53147 CARPENTRY CARPENTRY & ELECTRICAL ASPHALT SERVICES Quality Reliable Construction for Over 20 Years • DECKS • PORCHES • DOORS • WINDOWS • BOOKCASES • KITCHENS & BATHS Small Jobs Are Very Welcome IAN ABRAM CALL 1-847-507-2697 Email: brituk7@aol.com DO YOU HAVE A SERVICE BUSINESS? Your ad in this directory will be seen by 50,000 potential customers an issue. CALL 245-1877 For Advertising Rates in Serving Walworth County LOCALLY OWNED & OPERATED TO PLACE AN AD CALL 262-245-1877 also at www.readthebeacon.com 34 — The Beacon Opening April 1 st March 22, 2013 Since 1883, Mercy has grown to touch the lives of millions of individuals throughout southern Wisconsin and northern Illinois. We have healed bodies, mended families and saved lives. Today, Mercy is proud to offer its services to the residents of Elkhorn and surrounding communities. We work hard every day because we truly care about you and your community’s health and well being. We have a passion for what we do, why we do it and who we help. You have our promise that we will do whatever it takes to see you well. Mercy Elkhorn Medical Center staff looks forward to serving you and your family. To make an appointment, please call (262) 741-1400. Mercy Elkhorn Medical Center 839 N. Wisconsin St., Elkhorn (262) 741-1400 Mark Angevine, MD Internal medicine Daniel Allison, MD Family medicine Jill Edwards, CNM, MS Nurse midwife Building our future together Over the next few months, you will see many great things happening and many great doctors arriving at your new Mercy Elkhorn Medical Center. Mercy medical staff starting April 1: Bradley Fideler, MD Orthopaedic surgery Carol Gilles, MD Obstetrics/ gynecology James Knavel, MD Orthopaedic surgery Craig Lyon, MD Orthopaedic surgery The Beacon Laughing Matter “Hey, buddy,” said Bill as he caught up with Gus on the way back to camp. Are all the rest of the guys out of the woods yet?” “Yup,” said Gus. “All six of them?” “Yup, all six.” “Then,” said Bill, his chest swelling with pride, “I’ve shot a deer.” ☺ ☺ ☺ “What’s you name?” the cop asked a truck driver he had just pulled over. “ ’Tis on the side of me truck,” said the driver. “It’s obliterated,” said the cop. “Yer wrong,” said the driver. “ ’Tis O’Brien.” ☺ ☺ ☺ “Yes, she’s married to a lawyer, and a good honest fellow, too,” answered a man to a query about a good-looking woman. “My goodness!” said the other. “Bigamy.” ☺ ☺ ☺ ☺ ☺ ☺ ☺ ☺ ☺ ☺ ☺ ☺ “What would I get,” asked the man who had just insured his property against fire, “if this building burned down tonight?” “I would guess,” said the insurance agent, “about 10 years.” “This program will do half you work,” said the computer salesman. “Good,” said the customer. “I’ll take two.” “Are you looking for work?” asked the employment agent. “Not necessarily,” replied the man, “but I’d like a job.” “Why are you carrying only one plank when all the others are carrying two,” a foreman asked a laborer. “I’m not sure,” the worker replied, “but I think it’s because they’re too lazy to make two trips. ☺ ☺ ☺ “You can’t get better no matter where you go,” said a tobacconist, holding up a box of cigars. “You’re right,” said the customer. “I smoked one last week and I’m not better yet.” ☺ ☺ ☺ Two friends met on the street after not seeing each other for some time. One of them was using crutches. “What’s the matter with you?” asked the first man. “Traffic accident,” answered his friend. “When did that happen?” “Oh, about six weeks ago.” “And you still have to use crutches?” “Well, my doctor says I could get along without them, but my lawyer says I can’t.” ☺ ☺ ☺ A judge was leaving the bench when he slipped, bumped down several steps and landed on the floor. “An alarmed bailiff ran to help him up and said, “I hope your honor isn’t hurt.” “No,” replied the judge, rubbing himself tenderly, “my honor is safe enough, but my seat will probably suffer for a while.” ☺ ☺ ☺ ☺ ☺ ☺ ☺ ☺ ☺ ☺ ☺ ☺ ☺ ☺ ☺ ☺ ☺ ☺ A party of tourists in Arizona came upon an Indian riding a pony, while a heavily burdened woman walked beside him. “Why doesn’t the woman ride?” asked one of the tourists. “She got no pony,” replied the brave. “Where’s old four-fingered Pete?” Alkali Ike asked the bartender. “I ain’t seen him around here since I got back.” “Pete?” said the bartender. “He went up to Hyena Flats, got likkered up, went up to a hotel window, yelled ‘Fire!’ and everybody did.” The skipper of a tramp steamer, in writing up the log recording an eventful day, rounded off his task with the entry, “First mate intoxicated.” To the mate, who vigorously protested when he read it, the captain said, “Well, it’s true ain’t it?” On the following day, it was the mates duty to write up the log and he completed his account with “Skipper sober.” When the captain saw it, he exploded. Whereupon the mate said, “Well, it’s true, ain’t it?” “Excuse me, sir,” said the panhandler, “will you give me a dollar for a sandwich?” The passer-by looked at him and said, “Let’s see the sandwich.” A young man approached the father of his girlfriend and said, “Er, I’m seeking your daughter’s hand in marriage, sir. Do you have any objection?” “None at all” said the father. “Take the one that’s always in my pocket.” “I have the most perfect wife that ever lived,” said one traveling salesman to another. “Isn’t it monotonous to go through life with such a paragon?” asked his friend. “Well, I may have put it a bit strongly,” admitted the first man. “Absence makes the heart grow fonder. If she has any little fault at all it’s a tendency to profanity when she is intoxicated.” (Continued on page 39) also at www.readthebeacon.com Pickles by Brian Crane March 22, 2013 — 35 36 — The Beacon Mr. Boffo by Joe Martin Now online at www.readthebeacon.com Willy ’n Ethel by Joe Martin March 22, 2013 The Beacon Mr. Boffo by Joe Martin also at www.readthebeacon.com Bound and Gagged by Dana Summer March 22, 2013 — 37 Now online at www.readthebeacon.com 38 — The Beacon March 22, 2013 FuN and GameS Crossword Clues Theme: Famous Inventors* ACROSS 1. Squirrel away 6. Young newt 9. They put the bitter in beer 13. Jousting pole 14. Tap choice 15. Bone-chilling 16. Cast member 17. Greater than the whole? 18. Dismal 19. *Cotton gin inventor 21. Do this for a waltz, e.g. 23. *___ Isaac Newton 24. Shirts on their backs, e.g. 25. Farmer’s ___ 28. Turkish honorific 30. Lots 35. Brother of Jacob 37. Uh-oh 39. Poet’s “below” 40. Slash mark 41. Fine-tune 43. A fit of shivering 44. Sarong 46. Therefore 47. Connecting point 48. Acquiesce 50. *____ Tupper, inventor Tupperware 52. Actor’s domain 53. “Null and ____” 55. Payment for an eye 57. *Corn Flakes inventor 61. *Motorcycle inventor 65. Eskimo boat 66. a.k.a sodium hydroxide 68. Pleasant Island 69. Electron tube 70. Goon 71. Barry Bonds formerly was one 72. Large pots 73. Choose instead 74. Wintry mix of Puzzle answers on page 2 7. ! Bridge % Play or Defend? Goren on Bridge by Tannah Hirsch East-West vulnerable. North deals. NORTH ! K, 2 " 10, 4, 2 # 8 $ K, 10, 9, 6, 5, 3, 2 WEST ! Q, 9, 7, 5, 4 " Q, 9 # A, K, 7, 5, 3 $ Q EAST ! 10, 3 " 8 # Q, J, 10, 9, 6, 4, 2 $ A, J, 4 SOUTH ! A, J, 8, 6 " A, K, J, 7, 6, 5, 3 # Void $ 8, 7 The bidding: NORTH EAST 3$ Pass. 4" 5# Pass Pass DOWN 1. Deli side 2. Dash gauge 3. Opposed to 4. *Alexander Graham Bell and John Boyd Dunlop 5. Possible consequence of heavy lifting 6. No problem 7. Common winter bug 8. Time in Italian 9. German title 10. Cream-filled treat 11. “La Vie en rose” singer 12. Owned by the lord 15. *He saw the light 20. Cereal killer 22. Often preceded by a time period 24. Gradually diminished 25. *Namesake of electric car maker 26. Singular form of “asci” 27. Indian cuisine staple, pl. 29. *Sewing machine inventor 31. *____ Kamen, inventor of the Segway 32. Chief port of Nigeria 33. Short composition for solo instrument 34. _____ music 36. Instinctive motive 38. It’s a long story 42. Land of “Gangnam Style” 45. Conjure up 49. Clothe 51. Pinocchio’s fabrications 54. Inuit shelter 56. Modern letter 57. Spiral-horned African antelope 58. Arabic for commander 59. He gets bigger share? 60. Boys 61. Adroit 62. Molokai party 63. Sea eagles 64. *____ Handler, Barbie doll inventor 67. Small dog’s bark SOUTH 3" 5" WEST Dbl. Pass Opening lead: Q of $ Study the auction and diagram above then decide: Would you rather play or defend five hearts after the lead of the queen of clubs? In a competitive auction where West # Sudoku $ made a takeout double for spades and diamonds over South's response, South wisely elected not to defend five diamonds. Although that contract goes down a trick, there was no guarantee of that, and five hearts would surely not be expensive. Suppose you elect to defend and find the best lead of the queen of clubs: Declarer covers with the king, East wins with the ace and cashes the jack. As West, what do you discard? If you discard either a low spade or a low diamond, partner will lead the other plain suit. Declarer wins the spade, or ruffs the diamond, draws trumps and claims the rest of the tricks. The same applies if you discard the seven of diamonds - partner will shift to that suit and that is the end for the defense. Suppose, however, you pitch the ace of diamonds! Partner will work out that you had other ways of asking for a shift, and that you want clubs continued. Partner follows your suggestion and your queen of hearts is promoted to the setting trick. Despite that, however, you should choose to declare. All you need do to ensure the contract is refuse to cover the queen of clubs at trick one. No matter how the defenders continue, they cannot get more than two club tricks since one ruff sets up the suit for all the discards you need and there are ample entries to dummy. Complete the grid so that each row, column and 3x3 box (in bold borders) contains every digit, from 1 to 9. SPRING HOURS: We Are Now Open Everyday 7 Days A Week 11:00 A.M. - 8:00 P.M. or LATER Still serving you the best crispy, thin crust pizza and char-broiled burgers in the area! 99 N.Walworth Downtown Williams Bay 262-245-1330 DINE IN OR CARRY- OUT • Ice Cold Beer • Italian Beef • Gyros • Brats • Pizza • Burgers • Shakes • Malts COUPON BUY 1 HOT DOG, FRIES & DRINK AT REGULAR PRICE GET A HOT DOG ABSOLUTELY FREE! With this coupon. One coupon per order. Not valid with any other offers. Good only at Skip’s through April 30, 2013 The Beacon also at www.readthebeacon.com March 22, 2013 — 39 Laughing Matter Continued from page 35 Three slightly deaf Englishmen were driving to London in an old, noisy car, and hearing was difficult. As they neared the city, one asked, “Is this Wembly?” “No,” replied the second. “This is Thursday.” “So am I,” said the third. “Let’s stop and have one.” ☺ ☺ ☺ ☺ ☺ ☺ ☺ ☺ ☺ ☺ ☺ ☺ A man had fallen 40 feet onto concrete outside a seaside hotel. As he lay bruised, battered and semi-conscious, the hotel-keeper rushed out and, raising his head, held a glass of sherry to his lips.” “Good God!” exclaimed the man. “How far do I have to fall to get a glass of whiskey?” Puzzle Answers on Page 23. A young matron in whom the shopping instinct was strong asked a butcher the price of hamburger. “Two-fifty a pound,” he replied. “But the price at the corner store is only $2 a pound,” she said. “Why don’t you buy it down there?” “They’re all sold out,” “Well,” said the butcher, “when I don’t have any I sell it for $2 a pound.” A father bought a lie detector robot that slapped people when they lied. He decided to test it at dinner one night. The father asked his son what he did that afternoon. “I did some schoolwork,” said the lad. The robot slapped the son. The son said, “Ok, I was at a friend’s house watching movies.” “What movies did you watch?” asked his father. “Toy Story.” The robot slapped the son again. “Ok, Ok, we were watching ‘dirty stuff,’” said the son. “What?,” said his dad. “At your age I didn’t even know what ‘dirty stuff’ was.” The robot slapped the father. Mom laughed and said, “Well, he certainly is your son.” The robot slapped the mother. Robot for sale. Now online at www.readthebeacon.com 40 — The Beacon March 22, 2013 Phoenix Middle School students (back row) visit with Turtle Creek kindergarteners to read with them as part of a life-skills project. On Thursday and Friday, Feb. 21-22, students from the special education classrooms of Phoenix Middle School in Delavan visited the 4-year-old and 5-year-old kindergarten classrooms of Turtle Creek Elementary School. The middle school students were there to read to the younger students as part of an effort to assist the special education students in learning vital life skills. One goal of the Special Education Program at Phoenix Middle School this year is for its students to build relationships with peers of other age groups, develop social skills outside the school setting, and learn the positive effects of community service. By providing opportunities to develop these skills in their curriculum, the middle school students build self-confidence, 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 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 shelter, or conducting a community clean-up. The choice future fieldtrips will be driven by student input. As part of the goal of building confidence and self-advocacy, the students are encouraged to give their ideas for ways to enrich their curriculum. (Photo by Mike Heine) Spa, Beauty & Personal Care RESTAURANT & BAR 220 Elkhorn Rd. (Hwy.67), Williams Bay 262-245-6666 Deb Huebscher Director of Tenant Services 116 Cherry Street • Williams Bay, WI Phone: 262.245.7320 Fax: 262.245.7399 Email: dhuebscher@ricemanagement.com www.sherwoodlodgeseniorliving.com FRIDAY FISH FRY $ HAPP 11.99 Y HOUR Monday - Frid ay 2 FOR 1 3:00 to 5:00 p. m. 2 WEST GENEVA STREET • (262) 245-0424 lighthousewilliamsbay.com Now Open Everyday • 7 Days A Week 11:00 A.M. - 8:00 P.M. or LATER 104 Walworth Avenue Williams Bay, WI 53191 Tel. (262) 245-5171 99 N. Walworth, Downtown Williams Bay (262) 245-1330 Ice Cold Beer • Italian Beef • Gyros • Brats • Pizza • Burgers • Shakes • Malts W I L L I A M S B AY BUSINESS ASSOCIATION Calendar of Events: • PIER 290 Open Mic Night Every Thursday from 8-10 p.m. Live Music Every Friday & Saturday at PIER 290 beginning at 9 p.m. 3/22 Big Al Wetzel Band • 3/23 Jeff & Barb Trudell • 3/29 David Sarkis • 3/30 Mr. Myers • Williams Bay Rec Department: Spring Egg Hunt 3/30 at Lions Park, 10:00-Noon. YOGA IS BACK! Tues. & Thurs., 10:30-11:15, Lions Field House. PING PONG SOCIAL HOUR, Fridays 10-Noon, Lions Field House. ZUMBA Tues. & Thurs. 9:15-10:15, Lions Field House. INDOOR MORNING WALKING CLUB (Ages 18+). Every Mon.-Fri. that school is in session, 6-7 am, WBHS. For more information call (262) 245-2720. info@wbreccenter.org. www.wbreccenter.org Slice of One Topping Pizza & Drink $3.95 - Served All Day! • Wisconsin Secretary of Tourism, Stephanie Klett to Speak at PIER 290 Restaurant in Williams Bay at a luncheon on April 4, 2013 at 12:00 pm. Cost for the luncheon is $15. PIER 290 Restaurant is located at Gage Marina at 1 Liechty Drive, Williams Bay. Reservations are required. For more information or to make a reservation, please contact Jim D’Alessandro at (262) 245-5036 or info@lakegenevaharborview.com. 659 E. Geneva Street, Williams Bay, WI Phone: 262-245-9132 • 262-245-9133 • Fax: 262-245-9035 • WBBA Meet ‘N Greet April 16 Mon.-Thurs. 10:30AM-12:00PM; Fri. & Sat. 10:30AM-1:00AM (Summer Hours) Winter: 11:00PM Sun. 10:30AM-10:00PM Dine In Carry Out Delivery Catering Williams Bay Dock Delivery - Boating and Ice Fishing Skilled Nursing Care and Rehabilitation Services MERCY WALWORTH HOSPITAL and MEDICAL CENTER Williams Bay The Stateline’s Premier Plumbers Care Center, L L C Dedicated to serving the needs of our Community William s Bay C are C ent er Of f ers S h ort and L ong Term Reh ab S erv ic e Hwys. 50 & 67, Lake Geneva, WI 53147 262-245-0535 New and Existing Residential and Commercial Septic and Sewers • Service LICENCED, BONDED and INSURED CALL TODAY 262-245-1621 *MEDICARE & MEDICAID CERTIFIED STOP IN FOR A TOUR 146 Clover Street, Williams Bay 262-245-6400