- Waupaca Special Sections

Transcription

- Waupaca Special Sections
To place a classified ad,
call 715-369-3331
FREE!
Scan here to viSit
Starjournalnow.com
™
SuNDAy, SEpTEmbER 7, 2014
VOLumE 37, NumbER 23
THE VOICE OF RHINELANDER & THE NORTHWOODS SINCE 1977
A walk through Rhinelander’s architectural history
By Eileen Persike
Editor
Star Journal photo by Mary Ann Doyle
Bob Smith and his daughter Cheryl Evans, will be participating in
the Walk to End Alzheimer’s event that will take place in Rhinelander on Sept. 20. Bob and Cheryl cared for their wife and mother,
Jeri, who suffered from Alzheimer’s disease for 18 years before she
passed away last October.
Finding a cure for
Alzheimer’s one
step at a time
By Mary Ann Doyle
Associate Editor
For the fourth year in a row Bob Smith will be participating in the Walk to End Alzheimer’s event and
for this WW II veteran, there is no greater cause. His
wife, Jeri will be on his mind.
Bob knows all about what Alzheimer’s can do to
a loved one. For 18 years he faithfully nurtured his
spouse through the slow and persistent progression of
this horrible disease. Jeri died almost a year ago and
her passing was a hard blow.
“I miss the companionship,” said Bob. “I miss being
able to take care of her.”
Bob and Jeri met on a blind date in 1948 and it
wasn’t long before they were married in May of 1949.
They couple moved to Tomahawk in 1972 where Bob
see alzheimer’s, page 4
10
the local designation the
Rhinelander commission
is focusing on.
So far, the only building designated as a Local
Historic Building is the
beach house at Hodag
Park according to Rog.
“It was built by the Works
Progress Administration
Protect yourself from
identity theft by secure
destruction of your old,
unneeded confidential
documents.
Wednesday is Men’s day
all Men’s Cuts
$
Photo by Eileen Persike
This colorful home near the courthouse was built in the late 1800’s. Participants in the Historic Home
Open House will be able to tour inside this Queen Anne style dwelling.
FREE Community Shred Event
00
05081853
2181 Lincoln Plaza, Rhinelander • 715-362-7722
Mon-Fri 9-8; Sat 8-4; Sun 10-3
• Baker’s Three
Lakes Foods
• Menards
When:
• Office Max
Saturday, September 13, 2014
9:00AM - Noon
For More Info:
www.ripco.org or call 715-365-4800
05078889
home tours in Rhinelander, this event’s participants
will be able to walk inside
the homes to witness the
interior architectural details. “There will be volunteers stationed throughout the homes,” Rog said,
INSERTS
Where:
Ripco Parking Lot
121 Sutliff Ave • Rhinelander
No Appointment needed
in 1938, and there aren’t
too many of those structures around these days.”
Rog also said the Historic
Preservation Commission
is not funded by the city,
so charging a fee for the
tours is a way to make
those signs a reality.
Unlike previous historic
• Shopko
see history, page 7
NOT ALL INSERTS
AVAILABLE IN ALL AREAS
• Slumberland
• SmartSource
• Trig’s
• Walgreens
05081939
Members of a little
known city commission
with a big name are taking
on an even bigger task.
Officially called the City
of Rhinelander Historic
Preservation
Commission, the group is planning its first ever Historic
Homes Open House. That
may be a feat in itself,
but the purpose of the
event is to raise money to
provide historic properties and grounds with a
plaque commemorating
a local historic building
or landmark. It was the
process of rewriting the
city ordinance to define
a locally historic designation, working with the
Wisconsin Historical Society, and wading through
paperwork and red tape
that has proven to be a big
undertaking.
Commission
chair
Dawn Rog said there was
a lot of back and forth with
the Wisconsin Historical
Society to restructure the
ordinance to meet their
criteria. “We have to regularly submit our meeting
minutes,” she said, “to
oversee our actions and
discussions.” The state
and national registries require more paperwork and
much more detail than
Page 2 • Star Journal • Sunday, September 7, 2014
VIEWPOINT
Color Dash organizers say thanks
To the Editor:
The 2014 Color Dash was a huge success! 314 dashers
from across the Northwoods and beyond ran, walked,
strolled and rolled along the 5K course at Rhinelander
High School. Our 50 volunteers and 18 sponsors helped
put a lot of smiles on faces – and we raised $5,225!
A major thank you to sponsors who helped bring the
dash to town: Sark Investments; Aspirus Rhinelander
Clinic; WJFW; Trig’s; Andrew Davis, CPA; Sandy
Ebben, First Weber Group; Wisconsin Public Service;
Peoples State Bank; Roth Family Chiropractic; Shopko;
Superior Diesel; Heck Capital Advisors; Rhinelander
VETERINARIAN OWNED SINCE 1983
feeding
for the
Tourism Marketing Committee; First National Bank
of Park Falls; Press Express, Advanced Disposal; A-1
Septic; and West Side Mini Storage.
A colorful thank you to our Dasher Splashers who
demonstrated awesome color delivery techniques:
WJFW, Phillips Splashers, Calvary Baptist Church,
Central Schooligans, and St. Germainiacs,
An awesome thank you to the Dashers! Completing
a 5K is no easy task, but you sure made it look fun—
and we hope to see you dashing again next year.
Thank you City of Rhinelander – your downloadable Event Planner showed what steps needed to be
taken (street closure, etc.) and the city crews were very
helpful; and to the School District of Rhinelander–
your staff from communications to grounds to activities was wonderful to work with. A special shout out
to Mel’s who sent Al over on a fat tire bike to lead the
dashers along the route; and to Coach Tom Schermetzler, who walked that 5K with me when snow was still
on it – the dashers loved
the field, woods trail
and street. And, thanks
Acacia Lane Apartment
folks who worked with
us on the street closure.
RETAIL OUTLET
pet supply store
cure!
– jjustt off Hwy
H y 8 at
2423 Air Park Road, Rhinelander
HOURS: Mon-Fri 8 am to 6 pm
Sat 9 am to 5 pm • Closed Sun
Purchase any pet food or treat and help
fund a cure for cancer in pets with FEEDING
FOR THE CURE! Full details online at
www.drsfostersmith.com and at our retail store.
Mary Kinnunen
Development &
Marketing Coordinator
Big Brothers Big Sisters
of Northwestern
Wisconsin
MILESTONES
Ronald W. McFadden, 63, of Rhinelander, died
Aug. 27, 2014. He was born May 21, 1951, in
Iowa City, Iowa, to Warren and Dorothy (Blacksmith) McFadden. He is survived by his wife,
Melanie (Morey) McFadden of Rhinelander; his
children, Becky (Kevin) Danielczak of Crandon,
Kayla and Ronald McFadden of Rhinelander,
Roger McFadden of Harbor, Ore., and Ricky McFadden of Elcho; a sister Tia (Ken) Bartlett of
Des Moines, Iowa; brothers Warren McFadden of
Antigo and Randol McFadden of Sheldahl, Iowa;
seven grandchildren; and a great-granddaughter.
He was preceded in death by his parents, a sister
and a brother. A memorial service was held Sept.
3. (Carlson Funeral Home)
Cecilia Mary Pazdernik, 86, died Monday, Sept.
1, 2014, at Cumberland Heights Assisted Living
facility. She was born July 11, 1928, in Wausau
to Jacob and Gertrude (nee Denfeld) Heybl. She
is survived by her husband, Kenneth Pazdernik;
10 children, Michael (Mary Lynn) Pazdernik of
Rhinelander, Peggy (Lynn) Haker of Madison,
Patrick (Mary Beth) Pazdernik of Archdale, NC,
Kenneth (Pamela) Pazdernik of Ellsworth, Jayne
Scott of Verona, Perry (Kelley) Pazdernik of Stesee obits, page 3
715-369-9312
your favorite pet foods
Barb & Greg Yoder
Opening
Doors to
Dreams ...
TheYoderGroup.com
Greg 715-360-9080
[email protected]
Barb 715-367-5653
[email protected]
What’s Your Home Worth? Call Us.
Property Pros, LLC
Many grain-free
food choices available!
Find out why thousands of people call Bramm’s First
Frequent Buyer Program
BUY 6 BAGS
of ANY BRAND Dog/Cat Food
Follow
us on
Facebook!
Thank you for the prompt and
professional service!
Friendly & Competent.
-Janis
GET 1 FREE!
 1000s of products all at LOW prices –  SAVE on your pet’s prescription needs
supplies for ALL your pets: dogs, cats,
fish, birds, reptiles, small pets, horses,
PLUS wild birds and ponds
with our veterinarian-owned pharmacy
 Senior citizens SAVE 10%
every Tuesday (regular-priced items only)
everything for your pet’s good health
715-369-DRIP(3747)
Bramms.com • 4340 Island View Rd. • Rhinelander
-Peggy
05081921
Crescent Lake Escape Yes, we know this Northwoods haven is
technically a condo but here’s the scoop. The home and property do
not look like a condo, they do not feel like a condo. Rather the feel is
more a celebration of the pairing of 626 acre Crescent Lake and an
authentic custom designed 4 bedroom home that accommodates
and showcases all the best of The Northwoods lifestyle. Like a
fine wine concentrates flavor and body, the essential elements like
the easy stroll to the sandy shore, the stunning sunsets bathing
the west deck and great room or a new day’s promise that is the
sunrise on the east deck, you’ll sense the perfect pairing for your
every waking day. You’ll sip comfortably knowing this impeccably
nurtured low maintenance home is poised to deliver Northwoods
relaxation and peace of mind. $550,000
Sunday, September 7, 2014 • Star Journal • Page 3
continued from page 2
vens Point, Gregory Pazdernik of Savage, Gary
(Maria) Pazdernik of Ellsworth, Nettie (Steven)
Heimerl of Madison and Jerry (Debbie) Pazdernik of Antioch, Ill.; sisters Elizabeth Howe
of Wausau, Sister Laurice Heybl; sister-in-law,
Patricia Heybl of Santa Maria, Calif.; 22 grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren. She
was preceded in death by a son, David; a sister,
Audrey Reetz; a brother, Jacob “Jack” Heybl; a
daughter-in-law, Jeanne (Wells) Pazdernik; and
brothers-in-law Charles Reetz, Eugene Howe
and William Howe. A Mass of Christian Burial
was held at Nativity of Our Lord Catholic Church
Sept. 5 Father Tom Thakadipuram and Chaplain
John Uhlarik presiding. Burial was in Northland
Memorial Park Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, the
family asks that memorials be made in care of
Grace Lodge, 1000 Day Street, Rhinelander, WI
54501. (Carlson Funeral Home)
Robert “Bob” Thostenson, 76,
of Rhinelander died Sunday, Aug.
31, 2014, at St. Clare’s Hospital in
Weston. He was born Feb. 12, 1938,
in Beloit to Norman and Alice (Slinde) Thostenson. He is survived by his son, Aaron (Misty)
Thostenson of Augusta; four sisters, Marion
(Eugene) Keller of Melbourne Beach, Fla., Ellen Mickelson of Beloit, Norma (Richard) Riese
of Beloit and Nancy (Richard) Norman of Janesville; four grandchildren; and six great-grandchildren. He was preceded in death by his parents; his wife, Pat; two sisters, Carol Terpstra and
Donna Creedy; and a brother, Dennis Thostenson. Mr. Thostenson served in the Army. A funeral service was held Sept. 5 at Luther Valley
Church in Beloit with Rev. Mae Jean Zelle officiating. Interment and military honors followed
the service at Luther Valley Church Cemetery.
(Carlson Funeral Home)
Star Journal photo by Mary Ann Doyle
Dangerous storms moved through the Northwoods area Thursday morning causing damage to many trees. A giant limb of a tree on Pelham
St. in Rhinelander cracked off due to high winds taking down a power pole and landing on top of a car that was parked on the street. WPS
reported that 30,000 people were without power after the storm and quarter-size hail was reported throughout the area. Many lawns, roads
and basements were also flooded. There were reports of more than 3 inches of rain falling during this storm.
NOTICE: Obituary policy
Ready Mixed Concrete • Excavating • Asphalt Paving • Trucking
ASPHALT PAVING
Driveways • Commercial
Residential • Industrial
Municipal • Tennis Courts
Free s
ate
Estim
909 Boyce Dr., Rhinelander, WI
715-365-8700 • MussonBrothers.com
Lock-In
&
D. Bruce Carlson
Make Milestone Moments Throughout the Seasons
John Mayo
SAVE
lock-in your propane price for 12 months
world-class Safety
automatic Delivery Flexible Payment options
Customer referrals 24/7 live Emergency service
Michael Carlson
TOWARD YOUR NEXT
PROPANE DELIVERY
715-369-1414 • www.carlsonfh.com
05081108
Certain restrictions may apply. LIMITED TIME OFFER.
rEfEr a frIEnD anD Earn $100 TowarDs your nExT DElIvEry.
112 S. Park St. • Rhinelander • (715) 365-7700
9:00 AM - 3:00 PM
Monday thru Sunday & Holidays
Come for a few hours, a day, or the week.
SENIOR LIVING
CALL TODAY 715-365-7700
our local DEDIcaTED TEam wanTs To
“Thank our loyal cusTomErs”
Engaging Activities | Crafts | Entertainment
Worship Services | And much more!
M ilestone
NEW CUSTOMER COUPON
50
$
WINTER
to our hometown
for five generations.
September Savings!
SPRING
PROFESSIONAL
CARE
Adult Day Program
SUMMER
Committed
to providing
Death notices that appear in this space
weekly are written and/or edited for
content and consistency by assistant
editors of the Star Journal. Obituaries
written in the paper’s standard format
are printed at no charge. Unedited
obituaries written by the family may
be printed for a fee. These can include
a border and/or a photo.
For more information, call
715-369-3331.
3727837-01
AUTUMN
Star Journal
Thursday morning storm damage
4220754-01
Obits
4686 North Shore Drive, Rhinelander, WI 54501
05042199
Buying or selling - the Classifieds can
work for you. Call 715.369.3331
Please call Amy today to find out more.
715-493-0818
www. MilestoneSeniorLiving.com
Page 4 • Star Journal • Sunday, September 7, 2014
Wisconsin Singers coming to the Northwoods
Submitted photo
Lakeland Performing Arts Association begins its concert series Thursday Sept. 25 with the Wisconsin Singers. The group, made up of students at the University of Wisconsin-Madison was founded in 1967 and
has evolved into a professional entertainment company, focusing on Broadway caliber productions. The 90 minute revue show features singers, dancers and instrumentalists from the UW. Contact the Lakeland
Performing Arts for more information.
Alzheimer’s
continued from page 1
became president of Tomahawk Savings and Loan. Jeri
stayed at home to raise their children Cheryl and Greg.
She also enjoyed golfing, playing cards and gardening.
Then in 1996 Bob noticed subtle changes coming over
his wife. The couple saw a neurologist and it was determined Jeri was suffering from mini strokes, but there was
more.
“We really weren’t thinking she had early on-set dementia,” said Bob. “But she was tested and that’s what
the diagnosis was. It really put us in a spin. Back then
they just gave you a diagnosis and then you were sort of
on your own. No one told us there was any help available
so we just did the best we could but I felt very alone.”
It wasn’t long after that grim diagnosis Bob had to install alarms on all the doors in the couple’s home.
“She couldn’t sleep very well and she would get up and
wander around,” Bob said. “I was afraid she would get
STOXEN PHARMACY
Your prescription for
knowledgeable health care advice.
The
HealtHy Humor
Fishing Hole, LLC
Bait & Tackle
After having a knee dislocated and
an elbow fractured in two barroom
brawls, Bradley should have learned
to stay away from those joints.
Stoxen Professional Pharmacy
3460 North Faust Lake Road • Rhinelander
Ministry Medical Group
2251 N. Shore Dr., Rhinelander 715-361-4770
Medela & Jobst Dealer
715-362-1510
We sell Hunting and Fishing Licenses
05080983
Hours:
rhinelander
7:30-5 M-F, sat. 9-Noon
out and get lost.”
For 12 years Bob, along with his daughter, Cheryl,
cared for Jeri in their home, always willing to do whatever it took to make her comfortable. Bob would take her
shopping and she loved strawberry sundaes so they made
frequent trips to McDonald’s for her favorite treat.
For Cheryl, who is a professional caregiver, the diagnosis was just as devastating.
“For many years Mom thought I was her sister,” said
Cheryl. “But we learned to never argue or try to correct
her. Life just went smoother that way.”
But the stress of being a 24/7 caregiver took its toll on
Bob. He had a heart attack in 2004.
“I think the stress of this disease was a big part of me
having a heart attack,” said Bob. “But my goal was to get
better so I could get home to take care of Jeri.”
Then in 2007 Jeri fell and broke her hip, requiring an
operation. It threw the family into even more turmoil. Jeri
recovered enough from this fall to go from a wheelchair
to a cane.
“She was quick with that cane,” said Bob with a chuckle. “If she didn’t like what you were doing or saying she
was apt to take a swipe at you with it.”
By 2009 it became clear that the family, especial-
05077030
Still Buying Aluminum Cans
ly Bob, could no longer cope with the continuous and
stressful care required to keep Jeri at home so they placed
her in a nursing home but that didn’t stop Bob from visiting her every day.
“Mom always seemed to know Dad and he was a person she felt safe with,” said Cheryl. “She would always
light up when he came into her room.”
At this point Bob decided to reach out and he found a
support group for people going through the Alzheimer’s
journey.
“It was so good to find a group like this and be able to
talk about what we were all going through,” he said. “It
also gave me a way to help others. That made me feel
good.”
Jeri died in Oct. of 2013 from complications of her disease. Her passing was not only sorrowful for her family,
but for Jeri herself.
“When a person has dementia it’s very hard to talk to
them about dying,” Cheryl said, “she fought it every step
of the way.”
Today Bob lives with Cheryl and he continues to adjust
to life without his wife of 64 years. But he finds creative
outlets to spend his time. He loves to bake and he’s become a special friend to Cheryl’s little dog, Zoey.
“I can’t eat most of what I bake but I really like giving it away,” he said, “and Zoey is great company when
Cheryl is at work.”
While Bob and Cheryl continue to miss Jeri, the pair
feel very proud to be taking part in the Walk to End Alzheimer’s which will take place Sept. 20.
“Whatever we can do to raise money to find a cure for
this disease we will do,” said Bob. “It’s so important to
find a way to end this.”
The Walk to End Alzheimer’s will take place on Saturday, Sept. 20 at the Rouman Cinema in Rhinelander.
Registration starts at 9 a.m. with a ceremony at 10 a.m.
and the 1.5 or 3 mile walk starts after that. To find out
how to participate call Julie St. Pierre at 715-362-7779.
Sunday, September 7, 2014 • Star Journal • Page 5
New photography exhibits coming to ArtStart
Rhinelander ArtStart will open its fall
season with two photography exhibitions.
Room & Board: The Bedroom and Weeknight Dinners features works by photographer Lois Bielefeld. In a New Light: A
Photographic Journey of Transformation
shows the work of teenagers in therapeutic
nature photography program at Northwest
Passage, a northwest Wisconsin residential
treatment center.
The exhibition opens for viewing Friday, Sept. 12. A reception for Bielefeld and
Northwest Passage In a New Light Program
Director Ben Thwaits is scheduled for Saturday, Sept. 20, 4-6 p.m. at ArtStart. Melinda Childs, ArtStart’s new Development
Director, will also be introduced at the reception.
Bielefeld said her Room & Board series
was motivated by curiosity about people’s
lives and what their most private spaces
look like. “I explore the rituals that define
us, exploring what habits and personal
spaces can reveal about our private selves,”
she said. The Bedroom series includes portraits inspired by the artist’s sharing a small
Brooklyn apartment with her daughter for
one year.
Weeknight Dinners focuses on the rituals involved in the typical home meal when
“food and space often become secondary to
the busy workday.” The series was begun in
2013 and is currently in progress.
The photographs in the In a New Light
exhibition, which has been shown across the
United States are the work of participants in
the Northwest Passage therapeutic nature
photography program which emphasizes
expressive arts training and nature immersion. The program strives to empower youth
in residential treatment programs to perceive
themselves “through the lens of strength
and awe-inspiring accomplishments.” Photographs in this exhibition are compiled
from images taken on artists’ tours of Isle
Royale, Rocky Mountain and Yellowstone
National Parks, and their “home park,” the
St. Croix National Scenic Riverway.
Northwest Passage operates residential
treatment facilities providing mental health
and behavioral counseling for youth ages 6
to 17 in Frederic and Webster, WI.
Bielefeld’s work has been exhibited nationally including exhibitions at the Honfleur Gallery in Washington D.C. and
Walkers Point Center for the Arts and The
Institute of Visual Arts in Milwaukee.
Rhinelander ArtStart is located at 68 S.
Stevens St. in Rhinelander. Fall hours are
Thursday from 11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Friday 1:00 to 7:00 p.m., and Saturday 11:00 to
5:00. Admission is by donation.
2016 Wisconsin state park
sticker design contest open
Entries for the 2016 Wisconsin state
park sticker design contest are being accepted now through April 17, 2015. The
contest is open to all high school age
students attending public, private, or parochial schools in Wisconsin. The winning design was just selected for the 2015
Wisconsin State Parks admission sticker
and features a butterfly atop of a purple
Green & Golden
Car Show
Best of
Show prize!
GREEN BAY
Circulation:
Cathy Oelrich, Circulation Supervisor
[email protected]
This event will take place in the Adams Street
To enter or get additional information, contact
Parking Lot (formerly the Boston Store Lot) in the
Sean Schultz at [email protected] or
heart of the Packers Heritage Trail. All Packer cars,
920-360-5720 by September 8th. Please include your
trucks and vans “tricked out” in green and gold are
name, phone number, and email address.
eligible to participate. The Packer Heritage Trail is a
celebration of great moments in the Packers’ history
that all started in downtown Green Bay.
05027153
verification
C o u n C i L
“The Green & Golden Rod”
Saturday, September 13th • 12:00 - 5:00 pm
Editorial:
Eileen Persike, Editor
[email protected]
Mary Ann Doyle, Associate Editor
[email protected]
C i r C u L At i o n
ll take hom
e a pair of
for the Gr
tickets
een Bay Pa
ckers hom
opener ag
e
ainst the Ne
w York Je
the next da
ts
y, Septem
ber 15th!
CALLING ALL PACKER CARS!
CONTACT US: 715-369-3331
24 West Rives St., Rhinelander,WI 54501
General Manager:
Publisher, Multi Media Channels, LLC,
Pete Daniels - [email protected]
Patrick J. Wood - [email protected]
Certified circulation
audited by
Winner wi
CALLING ALL CARS!
™
Classified Advertising:
[email protected]
2nd ANNUAL
coneflower, designed by Josie Tollaksen,
a junior at Poynette High School. It will
be printed on state park and forest annual
vehicle admission stickers and displayed
on more than 150,000 vehicles. For information on the rules of this contest and
how to enter go to the Wisconsin DNR
website and type “park sticker contest” in
the search box.
™
Advertising:
Randy Gilson, Michelle Miller, Ellen Azzarello
[email protected]
Submitted photo
Badlands Sunrise by Diamonte, age 16, is a featured photograph from the exhibit In a New Light: A Photographic Journey of Transformation. This offering and a companion exhibition, Room & Board: The Bedroom
and Weeknight Dinners by Lois Bielefeld, will open in the Rhinelander ArtStart Gallery Friday, September 12.
Page 6 • Star Journal • Sunday, September 7, 2014
FOOD
Walking through
the plums
By Mary Ann Doyle
Associate Editor
One of the ways I like to exercise is walking. I’m not
a speed pacer by any means, more like a poke-along, but
for me it’s about enjoying all the sights and sounds of
being outdoors.
When I start a walk from home I always take Homey
and Bubs who look forward to this outing every day.
Once the leashes come out they go into spirals of ecstasy,
dancing and hopping around like they are about to embark on the biggest adventure of their lives. This is the
time they water the trees along the way and they love
getting out of their familiar yard and seeing something
new. Just watching them trotting happily along beside me
puts a smile on my face.
And I really miss my little companions when I decide
to take a break from my work duties and stroll throughout the neighborhoods of Rhinelander. I have to admit,
this is a very different kind of experience than a country
jaunt and not because my pups are missing.
Sometimes I wander up Brown St. accompanied by the
aromas of whatever is cooking in the area restaurants.
Seems like there’s always the smell of burgers in the air
and many times delectable fragrances I can’t quite put
my finger on wafting over the block. I love looking into
the windows and checking out all the interesting shops
If You Have Packerland Pride...
TM
MAGAZINE
TM
sHow It off
wItH a
Packerland
Pride Polo!
Star Journal photo by Mary Ann Doyle
Plums are just becoming ripe and they make sweet additions to cakes,
jellies and jams.
™
MAGAZINE
look great in this quality embroidered Micropique
®
portsport-wick
Polo at your next game day party!
3 CONVENIENT WAYS TO SUBSCRIBE!
TM
MAGAZINE
Ladies Style
1. PHONE: 1-888-706-4045
2. ONLINE: www.packerlandpride.com/subscribe
3. MAIL: Complete form and mail with check or money order to:
Packerland Pride, 24 W. Rives Street, Rhinelander, WI 54501
1 year subscription to
Magazine
Packerland Pride™
Polo shirt Includes shipping & handling.
Both the polo and
subscription
$
49
Includes shipping & handling.
Please allow approximately 3-4 weeks for delivery of polo.
Packerland
Pride
™
19 95
$
39 95
Packerland Pride™ $
Please send me a 1-year subscription and
Packerland Pride Polo Shirt for $49.95
Shirt Size: Mens Ladies
XS
95
save $995!
Please send me a 1-year subscription for $19.95
Please send me a Packerland Pride Polo Shirt for $39.95
S
M
L
XL
2XL
3XL
4XL
Name: _________________________________________________________ Phone: __________________________
Address: _________________________________________ Email: _________________________________________
City: ____________________________________________ State: _________________ Zip: ____________________
CREDIT CARD INFORMATION
CARD
NO.
Offer Code: PKLD PPTS
EXP.
DATE
3 DIGIT
SECURITY CODE
Authorized Signature: _______________________________________________________________
*Upon renewal, regular subscription rates will apply. Packerland Pride is published 9 times per year. First issue will mail within 6 weeks. Offer expires 10/15/14.
05081459
that downtown Rhinelander has to offer.
However, more times than not, I head into the historic
district where I often marvel at the beautiful and stalwart
architecture of the old and grand homes around the courthouse area. This is where my pace really slows as I take
in the many beautiful flower gardens or unique lawn ornaments that surround these places. I love the homes with
old fashioned porches, where you can just imagine sitting
on a cool night watching the evening fade away.
But there is one street that always beckons this time
of year. It is the street where a plum tree grows that for
many seasons has fascinated me.
In the spring it has the most delicate and fragrant blossoms but it is this time of year that this little tree is covered with beautiful orchid-colored fruits. And the way
this tree grows.
It isn’t planted in a yard but rather in the area between
the sidewalk and the street. A little trellis holds it up out
of the way of pedestrians but still when you walk underneath it, you get a feeling of being surrounded in a
canopy of small dark-pink globes.
Their sweet smell hits my nose long before I come
upon the little tree and it takes every restraint I have
not to start swiftly plucking these fruits and stuffing my
pockets. However, I have snuck a couple just to eat as I
go and they are so sweet and juicy, so perfect, that I want
to walk around this block several times just so I can keep
grabbing them.
These fruits also remind me of a recipe that I got from
my grandmother shortly after I graduated from college.
She used to make this treat about this time of year and of
course share it with her grandchildren. When I went off
to school, I often dreamt of this cake when plum season
was upon us and now I make it at least once a year. That’s
the recipe I’m sharing this week.
With the beautiful fall weather that is slowly changing
our landscapes, it’s a good time to take a stroll no matter where you live. And if you find a plum tree or two to
walk beneath do it. Or better yet, grab a handful. They are
some of the sweetest bounty of the season.
see food, page 7
Sunday, September 7, 2014 • Star Journal • Page 7
Citizen science training workshop at Treehaven
Developers of the citizen science-based
program, Driven to Discover, will present a work shop Oct. 10-12. The workshop will be held at Treehaven, a natural
resources education, conference and research center located between Tomahawk
and Rhinelander.
Driven to Discover uses citizen science
experiences as a springboard into science
research projects for youth ages 10-16.
This new program is designed for settings
such as nature centers, youth programs,
museums and after school programs.
Citizen science is a way for everyone to
learn how to collect information about the
natural world and then share that information and contribute to scientific databases.
Citizen scientists might record species of
birds they see in specific locations, or they
might record monarch butterfly eggs on
milkweed plants. There are many citizen
science projects to choose from.
Driven to Discover was designed and
field tested by educators at the University
of Minnesota Extension and the University of Minnesota’s Monarch Lab. In the
workshop participants will learn how to
implement the program, techniques for
mentoring youth to do original ecology
Photo by Eileen Persike
The beach house at Hodag Park has the distinction of being the only local historic building in Rhinelander.
A city commission is hosting an Historic Home Open House later this month with the goal of raising
money to recognize this and other structures.
“to pass along information about the
architecture, significant events that may
have taken place and maybe some history
about previous homeowners.”
One of the homes that will be open to
visitors is the colorful and easily recognized Queen Anne style home on Rives
Street. According to records, the home
was built in 1893 for Levi J. Billings,
the first Oneida County district attorney. The wrap-around porch was added
in 1910. Another home down the street
has the tile roof and symmetrical façade
of what is referred to as the Italian Renaissance variant of the Mediterranean
Revival, built in the early 1920’s. Many
of the homes included in the open house
are 100 years old or more, and are within
walking distance of the courthouse.
Raising awareness of national, state
and local historic designations is another
goal of commission members. People
shudder when they hear those words, according to Rog, but contrary to popular
belief homeowners are allowed to make
changes to their living spaces, and there
can be financial advantages of working
for that designation. “There are state
tax credits available for improvements
made to homes built before 1930,” she
stated, “such as getting a new roof or a
new furnace.” Plus, an architect can assist with building plans to add on to an
existing historical home so that the new
addition matches the original. There are
experienced commission members to assist with paperwork and point interested
homeowners in the right direction.
There are already plans in the works to
make the historic home open house an annual event, and will likely look for different period homes for the next one. “There
are some great mid-century homes in
other parts of the city,” according to Rog,
“and they have very interesting histories
and architecture in their own right.”
The Historic Homes Open House is
Saturday, Sept. 20. Homes will be open
11 a.m. until 3 p.m. Tickets are $20 in
advance and can be purchased at Trig’s in
Rhinelander. Tickets should be brought
to 108 E. Davenport St. (Sand Creek
Consultants) that morning, and a listing
of homes will be provided.
Finding Senior Housing can be complex,
but it doesn’t have to be.
“You can trust
A Place for Mom
to help you.”
– Joan Lunden
(800) 217-3942
A Place for Mom is the nation’s largest senior living referral
information service. We do not own, operate, endorse or recommend
any senior living community. We are paid by partner communities,
so our services are completely free to families.
Don’t be late with your
Classified Deadline
Wednesdays at 4:00 pm
Food
research and how to recruit, train and
support volunteer adults to lead youth research clubs.
A National Science Foundation grant
pays for workshop training materials and
instruction. There is a modest cost for
food and lodging at Treehaven. Lodging
and food is $155 for the weekend. Commuters may attend for $60, which includes
all meals excluding breakfast.
The workshop will begin at 1 p.m. on
Friday and end at 2 p.m. on Sunday.
Treehaven is located at W2540 Pickerel
Creek Road, Tomahawk, WI 54487. For
more information, call 715-453-4106.
continued from page 6
Plum Cake with Cinnamon Streusel
8-10 very ripe small red plums
3/4 cup butter
1 1/2 cups light brown sugar
3 eggs
1 1/2 cups yogurt
1 tsp. vanilla
1/2 tsp. nutmeg
3 cups flour
1/4 tsp. salt
1 1/2 tsp. baking soda
1 1/2 tsp. baking powder
Cinnamon Streusel
1/2 cup butter, melted
1 tsp. cinnamon
1/2 cup brown sugar
3/4 cup flour
Heat oven to 350 degrees and grease
a 9x13 baking pan. Halve and pit the
plums. Cut into quarters.
Cream the butter and sugar. Beat in
the eggs until lightened and fluffy. Beat
in the yogurt and vanilla. Sift in the nutmeg, flour, salt, baking soda and powder.
Beat until smooth. Pour half the batter
into the pan and smooth it out. Place
the plum quarters cut side down on the
batter. Pour the other half of the batter
over the plums, and layer the rest of the
plums on top. Mix the butter, brown sugar, flour and cinnamon until crumbly and
sprinkle over plums. Bake for about 60
minutes or until a knife comes out clean.
Let cool for fifteen minutes.
Full Service Auto Maintenance
•
•
•
•
•
Alignments
Tires
AC Repair
Front End Repair
And much more!
Arts & Learning Center
School Age Child Care
Licensed • Professional • Relaxed • Individual
Full Service Oil Change
Multi point inspection includes belts, hoses, all fluids, lights.
Regular
$22.99
Now
Only
Expires 10/31/14
15
$
R&K Repair
.99
+ tax
(for most vehicles)
4475 HigHway 17 N
RHiNelaNdeR
362-2929
2 Locations: 135 E Larch St
(First Congregational UCC for Ages 5-7)
315 S. Oneida Ave
(Former Curran School for Ages 8-12)
$50/week or $11/day after school
$23/day on No School Days
State assistance accepted
Contact Louise 715-420-0300
[email protected]
05081885
continued from page 1
05081908
History
Submitted photo
The Citizen Scientist program at Treehaven teaches
particpants how to look for and record what they
see in nature.
Page 8 • Star Journal • Sunday, September 7, 2014
GOVERNMENT
ABBREVIATION KEY:
PH - Preliminary Hearing
PTC - Pre-Trial Conference
AIA - Adjourned Initial
Appearance
Wednesday, Aug. 27
Michael T. Schettino, Woodruff, charged with intentionally
pointing a firearm at a person,
possession of a firearm on the
grounds of a school, carrying
a concealed weapon and disorderly conduct. Counts one
and two dismissed. Judgment
deferred. Review hearing Aug.
15, 2016.
Joshua D. Juergens, Rhinelander, charged with theft of
movable property more than
$5,000-$10,000. Sentenced to
17 days in jail, one year probation and fined $443.
Jenna M. Haff, Rhinelander,
charged with neglecting a child,
possession of drug paraphernalia, two counts and possession
of THC, two counts. Judgment
deferred. Bond continued. Sentenced to 15 days jail and three
years probation.
Tyler J. Schewe, Harshaw,
charged with battery, two
counts, resisting or obstructing an officer and disorderly
conduct. Count one dismissed.
Sentenced to jail for 135 days.
Louis J. Stone, Rhinelander,
charged with reckless driving
causing great bodily harm, possession of THC, second offense
and possession of drug paraphernalia. Bond continued. Arraignment Sept. 8.
Rodney R. Zinsmeier, Hazelhurst, charged with operating
while intoxicated, fifth offense,
fleeing an officer, operating
while revoked and felony bail
jumping. Cash bond $10,000.
Arraignment Sept. 8.
Duane J. Poupart, Lac du
Flambeau, charged with failure
to support a child, seven counts.
Non-appearance by defendant.
Warrant authorized.
Jason J. Moore, Harshaw,
charged with felony bail jumping, two counts, bail jumping
and disorderly conduct-domestic abuse. Sentenced to jail
for 20 days, probation for two
years and fined $915.
Steven J. Coleman, Rhinelander, charged with possession of amphetamine/LSD/psilocin. Sentenced to jail for six
months.
Brian B. Smith, Arbor Vitae,
charged with forgery and misappropriating ID information to
obtain money.
Jonathon C. Ring, Rhinelander, charged with manufacturing
THC with intent to deliver. Bail
continued. PTC Oct. 7.
Cheyenne R. Meshigaud, Lac
du Flambeau, charged with retail theft less than $500. Sentenced to probation for one year
and fined $443.
Jolene L. Evans, Green Bay,
charged with issuing worthless
checks, two counts. Sentenced
to 18 months probation, fined
$686 and to pay $1,181 in restitution.
Neil E. Wozniczka, Rhinelander, charged with bail jumping, disorderly conduct, two
counts and battery. Count two
dismissed. Sentenced to 18
months probation and fined
$1,686.
Beau R. Ames, Rhinelander,
charged with theft of movable
property more than $2,500$5,000. Bond continued. Arraignment Sept. 22.
Michael A. Washington Jr.,
Rhinelander, charged with possession of THC and possession
Contact information for Wisconsin elected officials
Gov. Scott Walker
115 East Capitol,
Madison, WI 53702
(608) 266-1212
walker.wi.gov
U.S. Senator Ron Johnson
386 Russell Senate Office
Building, Washington, DC
20510
(202) 224-5323
ronjohnson.senate.gov
U.S. Senator Tammy Baldwin
1 Russell Courtyard,
Washington, DC 20510
(202) 224-5653
baldwin.senate.gov
Congressman Sean Duffy, 7th
Congressional District
1208 Longworth HOB,
Washington, DC 20515
(202) 225-3365 or
(855) 585-4251
duffy.house.gov
Wisconsin State Senator Tom
Tiffany, 12th Senate District
State Capitol, Room 409 South
PO Box 7882,
Madison, WI 53708
(608) 266-2509
legis.wisconsin.gov
Representative Rob Swearingen, 34th Assembly District
State Capitol, Room 320 East
PO Box 8953,
Madison, WI 53708
(608) 266-7141 or
(888) 534-0034
legis.wisconsin.gov
Representative Mary Czja,
35th Assembly District
State Capitol, Room 208 North
PO Box 8952,
Madison, WI 53708
(608) 266-7694 or
(888) 534-0034
legis.wisconsin.gov
Senator Schultz and Representative Wright
to hold public forum in Rhinelander
The future of public education, and rural public
schools in particular, will be the subject of a public
forum hosted by two state legislators, one Republican
and one Democrat, in conjunction with the League of
Women Voters of the Northwoods, on Thursday, Sept.
11, from 7-9 p.m. in the James William Middle School
Auditorium in Rhinelander. Senator Dale Schultz (RRichland Center) and Representative Mandy Wright
(D-Wausau), in a bipartisan initiative, will share a presentation about public school funding and take questions at the forum. They are encouraging interested
community members to attend, especially educators,
students, and parents. “Recent state policy and budget
actions are creating significant challenges for public
schools, especially in rural areas,” said Schultz. “The
forum will shed light on the impacts state policies portend for our schools.”
of drug paraphernalia. Sentenced to two years probation
and fined $686.
Thursday, Aug. 28
Joshua W. McGill, Green Bay,
charged with possession of
THC, manufacturing cocaine
with intent to deliver and possession of a controlled substance. Signature bond $2,500.
AIA Sept. 22.
Jordan T. Larson, Rhinelander, charged with resisting
or obstructing an officer. Bail
continued. Sentencing hearing
Sept. 26.
Friday, Aug. 29
Steven A. Nielsen, Mercer,
charged with manufacturing
THC with intent to deliver and
possession of THC. Bail continued. PH Oct. 2.
Matthew J. Plewa, Minocqua,
charged with possession of
narcotic drugs. Bail continued.
PTC Nov. 4.
Russell W. Urquhart, Rhinelander, charged with disorderly
conduct. Non-appearance by
defendant. Warrant authorized.
Pauline F. Linklater, Lac du
Flambeau, charged with operating while intoxicated, third
offense and operating while revoked. Signature bond $3,500.
AIA Sept. 22.
Edward C. Pomroy, Rhinelander, charged with child
abuse intentionally causing
harm. Signature bond $3,500.
AIA Sept. 22.
Tuesday, Sept. 2
Edward R. Luedke, Chippewa
Falls, charged with operating
while intoxicated, tenth offense. Bail continued. PH Sept.
17.
Joseph G. Zyhowski, Eagle
River, charged with violating
a harassment/restraining order,
bail jumping, possession of
THC and possession of drug
paraphernalia. Bail continued.
PTC Nov. 4.
William O. Oakley, Tomahawk, charged with disorderly
conduct-domestic abuse, battery-domestic abuse, substantial battery intending bodily
harm-domestic abuse and possession of THC. Bail continued. PTC Nov. 4.
Caren M. Bink, Rhinelander,
charged with theft in a business setting more than $2,500$5,000. Bail continued. PTC
Nov. 4.
Mohammed R. Dajani, Chicago, Ill., charged with operating
while intoxicated, with a passenger under age 16. Cash bond
$500. PTC to be determined.
Addam T. Ohara, Gleason,
charged with resisting or obstructing an officer and possession of drug paraphernalia. Bail
continued. PTC Nov. 4.
Daniel J. Wimmer, Rhinelander, charged with operating while intoxicated, second
offense and operating with a
PAC, second offense. Bail continued. PTC Nov. 4.
Wendy L. Hogan, Rhinelander, charged with possession of
non-narcotics with intent to deliver, maintaining a drug trafficking place and possession
of THC. Bail continued. PTC
Nov. 4.
Steven R. Gibbs Jr., Minocqua, charged with issuing
worthless checks less than
$2,500, 12 counts. Bail continued. PTC Nov. 4.
Alison M. Keso, Wausau,
charged with manufacturing
non-narcotics with intent to deliver, second offense. Bail continued. PTC Sept. 11.
Jeremy J. Kuehl, Hazelhurst,
charged with felony bail jumping and operating while intoxicated, fourth offense. Bail continued. PTC Nov. 4.
Angel M. Roberts, Rhinelander, charged with batterydomestic abuse and disorderly
conduct-domestic abuse. Bail
continued. PTC Dec. 2.
Lashawn E. Lewis, Harshaw,
charged with disorderly conductdomestic abuse. Fined $263.50.
Review hearing Oct. 27.
Donovan J. Wayman, Lac du
Flambeau, charged with possession of THC and possession
of drug paraphernalia. Non-ap-
“Wisconsin enjoys a history as a national and global
leader in public education, and the desire to see that
continue is not a partisan issue,” said Wright. “Public
schools are the bedrock of small communities, and it
is beyond time to have a discussion about a funding
model that treats all Wisconsin children equitably, regardless of their zip code.”
Public schools provide an education for 83 percent
of Wisconsin children, and 43 percent of public school
students are eligible for the free and reduced lunch
program according to recent data from the Wisconsin
Department of Public Instruction.
Both legislators said they consider public schools
to be our most dependable and proven educational resource and are working to foster a growing consensus,
and bipartisan legislative initiatives, to keep Wisconsin
public schools strong.
pearance by defendant. Warrant
authorized.
Devon W. Martin, Rhinelander,
charged with possession of an
illegally obtained prescription.
Bail continued. PTC Nov. 11.
Lorrenda A. Fritz, Manawa,
charged with issuing worthless
checks, two counts. Bail continued. Status conference Oct.
27.
Teresa A. Kennedy, Rhinelander, charged with bail jumping, two counts, possession of
a controlled substance, three
counts, possession of methamphetamine, retail theft less than
$500, possession of an illegally
obtained prescription, operating while intoxicated, fourth
offense, criminal trespass to a
dwelling, disorderly conduct
and felony bail jumping. Bail
continued. PTC Nov. 14.
Tammy L. Groner, Rhinelander, charged with fourth degree
sexual assault. Case dismissed.
Todd D. Dumpprope, Rhinelander, charged with disorderly
conduct-domestic abuse and
battery-domestic abuse. Count
two dismissed. Judgment deferred. Bail continued. Review
hearing May 18, 2015.
Sean M. Fanning, Woodruff,
charged with operating while
intoxicated, fifth offense. Cash
bond $3,000. AIA Sept. 5.
Darron J. Thunder, Crandon,
charged with operating while
revoked and bail jumping. Signature bond $1,500. AIA Sept.
22.
Joshua J. Mohr, Rhinelander,
charged with operating without
a valid license, second offense.
Signature bond $1,000. AIA
Sept. 22.
Troy A. Thornton, Mount Vernon, Wash., charged with disorderly conduct and criminal
trespass to a dwelling. Signature bond $2,500. AIA Sept. 5.
Dustin A. Clark, Tomahawk,
charged with operating while
intoxicated, fourth offense
and bail jumping. Cash bond
$3,500. PH Sept. 11.
Brian S. Reynolds, Land
O’Lakes, charged with disorderly conduct. Signature bond
$1,000. AIA Sept. 22.
Ryan L. Schuppler, Rhinelander, charged with battery,
two counts. Sentenced to six
months in jail and fined $686.
Review hearing March 23,
2015.
John W. Houghton, Rhinelander, charged with burglary
to a dwelling, theft of movable property less than $2,500,
criminal damage to property
and felon possessing a firearm.
Bail continued. PTC Oct. 6.
Gregory S. Porter, Rhinelander, charged with sex offender
failure to update information
and disorderly conduct. Bail
continued. Status conference
Nov. 3.
Marriage Licenses
Monday Aug. 25
Matthew R. George and Paige
L. Slayton of San Francisco,
Calif.;
Edward G. Kurilla and Paige
J. Jensen of Crescent;
John F. Scheiner and Ann M.
Radke of Lake Tomahawk;
Terry G. Burkeland and Ellen
J. Skubal of Pelican;
Charles W. Bradow and Tina
M. Larson of Rhinelander;
Philip J. Negri and Amanda
L. Weldon of Chicago, Ill.;
David M. Fier and Carley M.
Keso of Rhinelander;
Brandon W. Brigham and Erika R. Kleinschidt of Rhinelander.
DIVORCES
Monday, Aug. 25
Jason D. Dellenbach and Paula M. Dellenbach of Rhinelander;
Jason A. Farah of Rhinelander
and Jamie L. Farah of Woodruff;
Charles F. Strong and Jennifer J. Strong of Rhinelander;
Brandon A. Sandoval of Lac
du Flambeau and Chenine M.
Sandoval of Minocqua;
Randall J. Sankey and Terri
L. Sankey of Three Lakes.
Sunday, September 7, 2014 • Star Journal • Page 9
“Hi” Five!
5
$
Classified Ads!
BUY
HODAG
™
®
e
d
i
u
g
RS’
3 Lines, $5, Additional Lines $1.00
Each Additional Market $2.00
™
(Private Party Only, Excludes Real Estate and Rummage Sales)
715-369-3331
05076315
24 W. Rives Str
Street • Rhinelander
One word per box. Payment must accompany ad. All ads run in both the Hodag Buyers’ Guide
and Star Journal and are pre-paid, nonrefundable (cash, check, credit card).
Name______________________________ Address___________________________________
Phone______________________________ City, State & Zip____________________________
AD COPY
Add-A-Market:
Clintonville
Marshfield
1
Merrill/Wausau
New London
2
Deadlines
Hodag Buyers’ Guide - Tuesday at 9:00 a.m.
Star Journal - Wednesday at 4:00 p.m.
3
Stevens Point/Wisconsin Rapids
Waupaca
4
Add-ons
• Border
$3.00
• Bold Lettering $3.00
5
6
• Blind Box $6.00
• Photo/Logo $6.00
Drop off or mail to: Hodag Buyers’ Guide, 24 W. Rives St. Rhinelander, WI 54501
Page 10 • Star Journal • Sunday, September 7, 2014
EDUCATION
Northwoods Community
Elementary School
receives state recognition
Northwoods Community Elementary School (NCES)
is one of the schools receiving the Wisconsin Title I
School of Recognition Award for Beating the Odds.
This category is for schools in the top 25% of highpoverty schools in the state with above-average student
achievement in reading and mathematics when compared
to schools from similarly sized districts, schools, grade
configurations, and poverty levels.
“I love the start of the school year because it’s a chance
to set the pace for a successful year ahead,” said State Superintendent Tony Evers as he announced 173 Wisconsin
Title I School of Recognition awards. “These schools are
off to a strong start to the 2014-15 school year.”
Schools meeting the recognition award criteria will receive a plaque at an Oct. 13 ceremony at the State Capitol and $500 for use by the school. During the awards
ceremony, three schools will receive banners for earning
the Wisconsin Title I School of Recognition award for 10
consecutive years, and 10 schools will receive flags for
earning the award for five consecutive years. This year’s
173 Wisconsin Title I School of Recognition Award recipients include 133 elementary schools, 29 middle or
junior high schools, and 11 high schools.
Submitted photo
Pelican staff pictured left to right, Katie Andrastek (kindergarten teacher), Becky Kecker (special education paraprofessional), Katie Morois
(guidance counselor), Tanya Cook (first grade teacher), Jodi Belter (multi-age teacher), Kim Frederickson (second and third grade teacher).
Pelican school staff receive recognition
Recently, a team of staff from Pelican Elementary
School traveled to the 2014 PBIS (Positive Behavior Interventions and Supports) Leadership Conference. The
PBIS program focuses on behavior as part of a larger
state wide educational collaboration.
Staff attended seminars and listened to speakers,
and left with ideas to implement when they returned to
school. Kindergarten teacher Katie Andrastek said, “I
was able to bring back and share with the rest of the Pelican staff in a presentation on one of our inservice days.”
Earlier in the year, Pelican was chosen as a PBIS School
of Merit, based on the PBIS initiatives and several other
criteria. On the first day of the conference there was an
award ceremony where all Schools of Merit and Schools
of Distinction were recognized and presented a banner.
We’ve Moved. ATTENTION
NON - PROFIT ORGANIZATIONS
We’ve changed affiliations to Cambridge Investment Research, Inc.
Dave
Mannikko
05080815
Mike
Boyd
What does that mean for you?
• A continued level of
personal service
• A greater number of
investment choices
• More flexibility in the way
we work together
Jennifer
Cordy
Whether you’re a current client or interested in becoming
one, please contact us at 715-369-5577 or 800-709-3898.
Boyd Financial Services, LLC
1202 Lincoln Street
Rhinelander,Wisconsin 54501
Phone: 715-369-5577 or 800-709-3898
[email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected]
Securities offered through Registered Representatives of Cambridge Investment Research, Inc., a broker-dealer, Member
FINRA/SIPC. Advisory services offered through Cambridge Investment Research Advisors, Inc., a Registered Investment
Advisor. Boyd Financial Services, LLC and Cambridge are not affiliated. V.CIR.0814
The Area’s BEST Script
Program is here!
Only at Hodag
in front of Menards.
12% BACK TO YOUR
NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATION
Please contact our headquarters to
enroll in this program. 715-420-0084
Hodag
hodagstores.com
No Fee ATM • Hot Food
Fresh Sandwiches & Subs
Large Drink Selection
05081136
Sunday, September 7, 2014 • Star Journal • Page 11
Driving reminders for the Hockey and figure skating registration time
The Rhinelander Ice Association (RIA) will hold team.
start of the school year
hockey and figure skating registration for the 2014-15
The Rhinelander Figure Skating Club will offer Basic
ATV safety course offered
The Oneida County Sheriff’s Office in conjunction
with the Oneida County ATV Association are sponsoring a Wisconsin DNR certified ATV safety course. The
course will be held at the Oneida County Law Enforcement Center located at 2000 East Winnebago Street in
Rhinelander. Dates and times for the course are Saturday Sept. 13 and Sunday Sept. 14, 9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.
each day. Fee for the course is $10 per student.
Anyone born on or after Jan. 1, 1988 and at least 12
years old must have ATV certification to operate on
public areas. Students must be 12 years old to enroll
in the course. There is no maximum age, and parents
and adults are encouraged to enroll and participate in
this course.
Students are now required to obtain a DNR customer
ID number for any recreational safety class they attend. Please contact the DNR at 1-888-936-7463
between 7:00 AM and 10:00 PM daily to obtain this
number before the course begins.
Advanced registration is required. Please contact
Deputy Brad Fogerty at the Oneida County Sheriff’s
Office, telephone number 715-361-5132 for information or to register for the course.
Students with special needs ar asked to notify the
department when registering and request special accommodations that may be required for participation.
season Tuesday Sept. 16 and Wednesday Sept.17 from
5-7 p.m. at Rhinelander Ice Arena. The ice arena is located at the corner of Timber Drive and HWY 17 (2021
E. Timber Drive). The RIA will offer a learn to skate
program and in-house hockey program for beginners.
RIA Hockey will have teams at the In-House Mite,
Squirt, Peewee and Bantam Level as well as a girl’s
Skills 1-8 and Freestyle. Registration forms are available
for download at www.rhinelanderice.com. For more information call Brett Aylesworth at 715-369-9649 or
email [email protected]. Financial assistance is
available and is on the same basis as the reduced school
lunch program and substantial fee discounts for first year
participants.
Genuine
RhinelandeR
Ken Juon
“I grew up on a farm in central Iowa.
There wasn’t a good-sized lake
within a hundred miles of our home.
As a boy, I dreamed of living in the
Northwoods where I could go fishing
every day of the week. I moved to
Rhinelander 25 years ago with my wife
and 6- month-old daughter to pursue
that dream. Today I go fishing as
often as I choose, but I don’t go every
day. That’s because there are just so
many other recreational, cultural and
volunteering opportunities to occupy
my time. I love it here – the place, the
people and even the weather. Living
here is a dream come true.”
Real life,
Real people,
Real results.
TM
05058756
The start of the school year can be an exciting time
for students, a relief for parents and a wake-up call
for drivers. The Wisconsin State Patrol reminds drivers
to expect the unexpected because children and teens
on their way to and from school don’t always pay attention to nearby traffic. Drivers should slow down
and pay attention when approaching students who are
walking or riding bikes, as well as around school buses
that are loading or unloading passengers.
Wisconsin law requires drivers to stop a minimum
of 20 feet from a stopped school bus with its red warning lights flashing. Drivers must stop whether the bus
is on their side of road, on the opposite side of the
road, or at an intersection they are approaching. However, drivers are not required to stop for a school bus if
they are traveling in the opposite direction on the other
side of a divided roadway separated by a median or
other physical barrier.
When they are passed illegally, school bus drivers
are authorized to report the violator to a law enforcement agency and a citation may be issued. The owner
of the vehicle, who might not be the offending driver,
will then be responsible for paying the citation.
State law requires drivers to yield to pedestrians who
have started crossing an intersection or crosswalk on
a walk signal or on a green light if there’s no walk
signal; who are crossing the road within a marked or
unmarked crosswalk at an intersection where there are
no traffic lights or control signals and when a vehicle
is crossing a sidewalk or entering an alley or driveway.
Additionally, drivers may not legally overtake and
pass any vehicle that has stopped for pedestrians at an
intersection or crosswalk.
When drivers are passing bicycles traveling in the
same direction, they must leave a safe distance of no
less than 3 feet of clearance and must maintain that
clearance until they have safely passed the bicycle.
Here today. Gone tomorrow.
That is how quick the classifieds can work for you.
click: www.rhinelanderifo.com call: 715.369.3331
Page 12 • Star Journal • Sunday, September 7, 2014
Dining • Entertainment • Festivals • Celebrations
time Steppin’ Out
in the Northwoods
EVENTS
Friday Fish Fry
Served all Day!
8
$ 99
3 Pieces of
Haddock
broiled, deep
fried or beer
battered served
with coleslaw and
french fries
With salad bar $10.99
N. Stevens St.
Restaurant 70Rhinelander
in the Days Inn and Suites
$5.49 Breakfast Specials Daily 715-362-7100
05074185
2014-2015
Concert Series
Sunday, September 7
Walk for Grandparents: Noon the walk
begins and lunch at 2 p.m.
at Hodag Park in Rhinelander. Let’s Go Fishing
is sponsoring this event
for grandparents and their
families. Call Stephanie
Schroeder at 715-219-5436
for more information.
Monday, September 8
Storytime for Kids: at
10:15 a.m. at the Rhinelander District Library.
This 20-minute program
is aimed at children ages
6 months to 2 years old.
There is also a program for
kids 3 to 6 years old. Call
715-365-1070 for more
information.
Music Garden for
Kids: at 9:30 to 10 a.m.,
Head Start, 1872 N. Stevens St. in Rhinelander for
infants to 18 months. Call
Tondra at 715-361-2897
for more information.
Music Garden for
Kids: at 10:30 to 11:30
a.m. at Head Start, 1872 N.
Stevens St. in Rhinelander.
For children ages to 18
months to 5 years.
AAUW Meeting: at
11:30 a.m. at Nicolet
Area Technical College in
the Northwoods Center,
Room 113. Guest speaker
Roxanne Lutgen, vice
president of finance, operations and student services
at Nicolet College, will
share her personal story of
a first generation college
student who overcame
many obstacles. For more
information or to make
reservations call Kathleen
Marshall at 715-277-2664
or Bill Billimack at 715388-0300.
Personal Essential Pantry: at 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. at
the First United Methodist
Church, 724 Arbutus St., in
Rhinelander. PEP supplies
personal items for people
who are currently using the
food pantry, WIC, BadgerCare or the Food Share
program.
Tuesday, September 9
Play and Learn for
Kids: 9:30 to 11 a.m.,
Head Start, 1872 N. Stevens St. in Rhinelander.
All ages are invited to
participate. Call Tondra
at 715-361-2897 for more
information.
Music Garden for
Kids: 10:30 to 11:30 a.m.
at Head Start, 1872 N.
Stevens St. in Rhinelander.
For children ages to 18
months to 5 years,
Wednesday, September 10
Free Movie: 1 and 6
p.m. at St. Augustine’s
Guild Hall, 39 S. Pelham
St. in Rhinelander. The
Purity Myth-The Virginity
Movement’s War Against
Women will be playing.
No charge.
Bingo: 4:30 p.m. doors
open. Early bird sales at
5:30 p.m. and Bingo starts
at 7 p.m. at the VFW Hall,
120 Park St. in Rhinelander. Call Ralph at 715-3691451 for more information.
Retired Educators
Meeting: Noon at the Claridge Inn, 70 N. Stevens
St. in Rhinelander. Dr. Bill
Celebrating 33 Years Serving the Greater Lakeland Community
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Wisconsin Singers
An Evening with
Rebecca & Kuba
Thursday, September 25, 2014
The Wisconsin Singers was founded in 1967. Over the last 42 years,
the Singers has evolved into a professional entertainment company,
focused on Broadway caliber productions with hands-on educational
opportunities. As a financially independent non-profit organization
that receives no funding from the UW, the Singers is a program of the
Offices of the Dean of Students run almost entirely by the students.
Students handle many elements of production, from booking to
operations and music performance, working alongside professionals who arrange, choreograph and rehearse a 90
minute revue style show featuring the most talented singers, dancers and instrumentalists from the UW.
Amit Peled - Cellist
Wednesday, December 3, 2014
From the United States to Europe to the Middle East and Asia, Israeli cellist
Amit Peled, a musician of profound artistry and charismatic stage presence, is
acclaimed as one of the most exciting instrumentalists on the concert stage today.
He is a strong advocate of breaking boundaries between performers and the
public, trying to promote and share classical music with wider audiences. Mr. Peled
has performed as a soloist with many orchestras and in the world’s major concert
halls such as: Carnegie Hall and Alice Tully Hall, New York; Salle Gaveau, Paris;
Wigmore Hall, London; Konzerthaus, Berlin; and Tel Aviv’s Mann Auditorium. Mr.
Peled presents a “down-to-earth” concert you really don’t want to miss.
Todd Oliver and Friends
Tuesday, January 20, 2015
Have you ever met a talking dog, a real talking dog? Get ready because when
comedian and ventriloquist Todd Oliver takes the stage you’ll meet his two funny
companions - Irving and Lucy. These little dogs are making crowds across the
country howl for more. When they get behind the microphone they turn everyday K-9
experiences into knockout comedy. Audience participation and personalizing the show
for special events is a part of Todd’s proven successful formula, which has made his
show a strong consistent draw in top entertainment venues across America. His warm
friendly personality creates a “magical family chemistry” with a cast of characters
who along with Irving and Lucy, you’ll also meet Pops, a crazy confused old timer;
Miss Lilly, his lifelong love; and Joey, the loveable bad boy.
Thursday, March 26, 2015
With successful solo endeavors under both their belts, Rebecca and Kuba
decided to do the unthinkable: a variety show with country, jazz, show tunes
and classical music. It could never work. But it did. Still performing their solo
acts, their combo show has gone on to become a huge hit with audiences
everywhere from performing arts venues in the U.S. to jazz clubs in Poland,
let alone on many of the top cruise lines in the world. Their repertoire of diverse styles of music combined with their
chemistry together onstage have been delighting audiences for years with no sign of letting up. Seldom performing
the exact show twice while constantly adding new material has made them an act that is fun to follow as well as
easy to count on to be an engaging show.
The Step Crew
Friday, May 15, 2015
An unbelievable new show which brings together three styles of exhilarating dance
forms - Ottawa Valley stepdance, Irish stepdance, and Tap. With virtuosic dancers and
musicians from the likes of The Chieftains, Cherish The Ladies, and Bowfire, this cast
of outstanding talent takes you on a dance journey as champions in their respective
art forms show audiences the amazing similarities and differences between these
three captivating styles. As if dancing weren’t enough, The StepCrew boasts three
world-class fiddlers backed by an amazing five-piece ensemble comprised of some
of the most talented and respected musicians in the Celtic music scene today. Enjoy our site and check out our tour
dates- there’s nothing quite like seeing it live.
(Detach Here)
Lakeland Performing Arts Association 2014/2015 Concert Series - Order Form
Please mail with checks payable to: Lakeland Performing Arts Association, P.O. Box 1279, Minocqua, WI 54548 • www.lakelandperformingarts.org • wwwllakelandperformingarts.com
Name
SEASON TICKETS
Includes 5 LPAA concerts
Address
Adult $50 Student (18 & under) $12 Family (Includes children 18 & under) $105
City. State. Zip
SNOWBIRD SPECIAL Adult $40 Includes 3 LPAA Concerts
Phone
PATRONS
List all ticket holders below:
Benefactors (concert co-sponsor) $500 +
Adults
(Includes 4 adult season tickets)
Students
Patron $300-$499 (Includes 2 adult season tickets)
All gifts in excess of ticket prices are tax deductible. Ticket refunds not available. For more information call
Donor $200-$299 (Includes 2 adult season tickets)
Contributor $125-$199 (includes 2 adult season tickets)
Phil or Nancy Strand at (715) 356-5645 or (715) 367- 1271 or e-mail: [email protected]
05078842
Sunday, September 7, 2014 • Star Journal • Page 13
Shirer will speak on “If
You Remember Nothing
Else, Do these Things
Now.” In addition, Susan
Hampton will share her
experiences with an innovative project she started at
Rhinelander High School.
Call Natalie Obey at 715369-5582 for reservations
or more information.
a.m. at the North Lakeland Discovery Center.
This is a fundraiser for
Wild Instincts, a wildlife
rehabilitation facility in
Rhinelander. There will
be basket raffles and a talk
by Naturalist, John Bates.
Cost is $20. Call Carol at
715-686-2507 for more
information.
Storytime for Kids:
10:15 a.m. at the Rhinelander District Library.
This 20-minute program
is aimed at children ages
6 months to 2 years old.
There is also a program for
kids 3 to 6 years old. Call
715-365-1070 for more
information.
Wild Rice Festival:
starts at 10 a.m. in downtown Lac du Flambeau.
Native American crafters, wild rice harvesting
demonstrations, live music,
games for the kids, wild
rice and fry bread cooking
contest, pie eating contest,
5K walk/run and a pow
wow. Call 715-588-3346
for more information.
Friday, September 12
Monday, September 15
Thursday, September 11
Fix Is In Spay/Neuter
Clinic: Noon at Crescent
Town Hall. Appointments
are required by calling
715-550-7729.
Play and Learn for
Kids: 9:30 to 11 a.m.,
Head Start, 1872 N.
Stevens St. in Rhinelander.
All ages are invited to
participate. Call Tondra
at 715-361-2897 for more
information.
Saturday, September 13
Hodag Farmers Market: from 8 a.m. to noon at
Pioneer Park.
Walk in the Wild: 9
Storytime for Kids:
10:15 a.m. at the Rhinelander District Library.
This 20-minute program
is aimed at children ages
6 months to 2 years old.
There is also a program for
kids 3 to 6 years old. Call
715-365-1070 for more
information.
Music Garden for
Kids: 9:30 to 10 a.m.,
Head Start, 1872 N. Stevens St. in Rhinelander for
infants to 18 months. Call
Tondra at 715-361-2897
for more information.
Music Garden for
Kids: 10:30 to 11:30 a.m.
at Head Start, 1872 N.
Stevens St. in Rhinelander.
For children ages to 18
months to 5 years,
Tuesday, September 16
Play and Learn for
Kids: 9:30 to 11 a.m.,
Head Start, 1872 N.
Stevens St. in Rhinelander.
All ages are invited to
participate. Call Tondra
at 715-361-2897 for more
information.
Blood Drive: 10 a.m.
to 1 p.m. at the BMO
Harris Bank, 7 Brown St.,
in Rhinelander. Walk-ins
welcome or to schedule an
appointment call Angela at
715-362-1684.
Wednesday, September 17
Free Breakfast: 8 to
10 a.m. at the VFW Hall,
120 E. Park St. in Rhinelander. Call 715-367-4790
or 715-282-5465 for more
information.
Bingo: 4:30 p.m. doors
open. Early bird sales at
5:30 p.m. and Bingo starts
at 7 p.m. at the VFW Hall,
120 Park St. in Rhinelander. Call Ralph at 715-3691451 for more information.
Thursday, September 18
Storytime for Kids:
10 a.m. at the Rhinelander District Library.
This 20-minute program
is aimed at children ages
see events, page 19
A rib fest
competition
Eleven rib cooks will compete for three
prizes/awards selected by celebrity judges and
festival attendees will also vote for their favorite rib
with a People’s Choice award being presented.
pArticipAting rib teAms:
SatuRday, SepteMbeR 13, 2014
NooN till Sold out • outSide at the MaRC
Hwy. 107, MErrill
Geiss Meat Service, The wellness Center rib rubbers,
The Grill Team, Dickey’s BBQ, rich’s Amazin Blazin
BBQ, richard’s Supper Club, Porchy’s Bar-B-Q, Merrill
Sheet Metal works, Dustin McNeil, Urban Street
Bistro, Kim’s BS “Smokin”
free Admission
Steak and chicken sandwiches, corn on the cob, and ribbon fries will also be available – additional cost.
ribs
Beer,, soda and water will be available sponsored by the Merrill Hockey Association.
LIVE music from 1:00 to 5:00 pm by Bobby Evans & the Alimony Band.
Festival T-shirts with the great dancing pig logo will be available
for only $15.00 each while supplies last!
0
$A1b.0
one
ide
+As
sponsors:
Merrill Area Chamber of Commerce, Church Mutual
insurance, Foto News, Merrill Sheet Metal works
Page 14 • Star Journal • Sunday, September 7, 2014
HEALTH
Rhinelander Dental Center
Welcomes New Dentist
Northwoods native, Dr. Brad Camp
is the newest dentist to join Rhinelander Dental Center, operated by
Family Health Center of Marshfield
Inc. in conjunction with Marshfield
Clinic. Camp is a graduate of Northland Pines High School in Eagle
River. He received his undergraduate
degree from Lawrence University in
Appleton and graduated from the University of Iowa, School of Dentistry in
Dr. Brad Camp
Iowa City.
“I wanted to come back to Northern Wisconsin because
it’s always been the place I’ve called home. My wife and I
love the outdoor activities the Northwoods has to offer and
try to get outside as much as possible. We especially enjoy living so close to our families and being able to spend
more time with them.” said Dr. Camp.
Marshfield Clinic Rhinelander Dental Center is located at 2268 North Shore Drive in Rhinelander.
Flu vaccine clinic to be held
The Oneida County Health Department is offering a
mass flu vaccine clinic at Rhinelander High School in
the cafeteria Tuesday, Sept. 9 from 4 – 6 p.m.
Flu vaccine is free for children 18 and under. Parent/
guardian(s) must be present with their child at the time
of vaccination. Flu Vaccine is available for adults 19
years and up at a cost of $25 or $37 depending on the
vaccine, as there are many choices in flu vaccine available this year.
The Oneida County Health Department accepts cash
or check and will bill Medicaid, BadgerCare, Medicare,
and some Medicare Replacements. Please have card
available.
Anyone who wants to reduce his or her chances of
getting the flu should get vaccinated. It is recommended
that all people 6 months and older get a flu shot. Certain people are at higher risk of complications from the
flu. Those people include Children age 6 months to 18
years, pregnant women, people 50 years and older, anyone with chronic medical conditions, and people who
live in nursing homes.
The best way to protect yourself from getting the
flu is to practice good hand washing, get your flu shot
each year, stay home when you are sick, and maintain a
healthy lifestyle.
For more information about 2014-15 Influenza see the
Center for Disease Control website.
YMCA of the Northwoods 1st annual Nutty Run is October 4
Preregistrations are being accepted for the Oct. 4
Nutty Run 5K trail run/walk. The race, hosted by the
YMCA of the Northwoods, begins at 10 a.m. at the trail
head of CAVOC (Cedric A. Vig Outdoor Classroom).
The course will be a single lap 5km through the CAVOC
trails. The top three male and female runners in each age
bracket will receive awards. Runners of all abilities are
encouraged to pre-register by Sept. 16 to receive an official Nutty Run dri-wick shirt. Registration is $30 before
Sept. 16 and $35 after that date. A group rate is available.
Contact the YMCA of the Northwoods at 715.362.9622
or visit the website www.ymcaofthenorthwoods.org for
more information.
I’m Kyle McLaughlin from Rhinelander. As a self-proclaimed water enthusiast, I spend my summer
wakeboarding on the lakes in the Northwoods, but it hasn’t always been smooth sailing. In 2010, I suffered my first
of many shoulder dislocations, which almost always resulted in a trip to the hospital. Not wanting to live in fear of it
happening again, I made an appointment to see Dr. Kent Jason Lowry, an orthopedic and sports medicine surgeon at
Ministry’s Northland Orthopedics, who repaired my left shoulder in December 2013. After months spent recovering,
I’m excited to be back behind the boat.
444 East Timber Drive, Rhinelander 715.369.2300 ministryhealth.org
05082106
Sunday, September 7, 2014 • Star Journal • Page 15
7005
Personals
7025
HYPNOSIS for smoking,
weight, addiction,
anxiety etc. $90
Dr. L. F. Anderson,
Stevens Point. 715-342-4180
www.hypnosis-therapy.net
Entertainment
7035
Meet singles right now! No paid
operators, just real people like
you. Browse greetings, exchange
messages and connect live. Try it
free. Call now: 800-387-3590
(wcan)
Schools & Instruction
7100
DENTAL ASSISTANT Be one in
just 10 SATURDAYS! WeekendDentalAssistant.com. Fan us on
FACEBOOK! Next class begins
9/6/14. Call 920-730-1112 Appleton (Reg. WI EAB) (wcan)
General Employment
7110
AVON - Earn Extra $$$ Sell from
home, work, online. For
Information Call: 1-800-796-2622
or email [email protected]
(ISR) Se Habla Espanol
LAUNDRY/HOUSEKEEPERSFriendly Village in Rhinelander is
hiring for laundry/housekeeping
staff. Pay is $8.00. Please apply in
person at Friendly Village, Boyce
Dr., ask for Josh.
General Employment
7110
COMMUNITY SUPPORT ASSISTANT. We are looking for
caring and creative individuals to
provide evening and weekend
support to a woman with disabilities who will be moving into her
own apartment. Job duties include assisting with household
activities like cooking, cleaning,
laundry, and shopping. Other
activities include supporting the
woman to be involved in community activities based on her interests. Part-time position (29
hours or less per week). Must be
at least 18 years old with a valid
driver's license and a good driving
record. Send letter of interest and
resume to: Administrative Assistant, Headwaters, Inc., PO Box
618, Rhinelander WI 54501. Position will remain open until filled.
E.O.E.
Do you currently work in the
HVAC industry and are looking to
advance your career? Make up to
$25/hr with a growing company in
Antigo. Willing to train self-motivated person with the right attitude.
3 years’ experience preferred paid
vacation, paid holidays, company
cell phone and vehicle provided.
Clean driving record is a must.
Send resume and cover letter to
2238 Neva Road Antigo WI
54409.
FRONT DESK Associate, parttime, for busy hotel. Hours are
mostly 3rd shift with some 2nd
shift. Must be able to multi-task,
work in a fast paced environment,
and remain professional and productive at all times. Experience
preferred but will train. Apply in
person, 1490 Lincoln St.,
Rhinelander, WI.
OTR & REGIONAL DRIVERS
NEEDED .44 Base Pay + Mileage
& Safety Bonus. PC Miler Practical Miles, Home Weekly, No Forced
Dispatch, No Hazmat. 401K. Kohel Interstate Transport Corp
1425 E. Ramsdell St., Marion, WI
54950. For more Info Call: Steve
at 800-290-4440 Ext 9
General Employment
7110
OTR TRUCK DRIVERS FT/PT
Competitive wages & full benefits.
Milage, Drop pay, Paid weekly.
Home weekends, NO east or west
coast, 23 central states. Van &
Hopper Division. Agriculture experience a plus. Drivers needed
for harvest season. Fox Valley
company since 1958. Call Frank
920-788-6242. Van Groll Trucking Inc, Kaukauna
RHINELANDER BASED Transportation and Warehousing Co.
has an immediate opening for full
time M-F Mechanic. Company has
semi - tractor & trailers, material
handling equipment as well as
regular vehicles which require preventative maintenance and minor
repairs. CDL License, Flexibility,
Great attitude and a willingness to
work is greatly appreciated.
Be a name not a number. Trucking company looking for Professional Drivers to deliver our customer's products throughout the
Midwest. GREAT HOME TIME
mostly out five home two weekly
with some exceptions. Class A
with min. 2 years exp. required.
Please send resume to: MECHANIC or DRIVER, 4593 Cty. P,
Ste C, Rhinelander WI 54501.
Professional & Technical
7135
CLASS A CDL DRIVERS: NEW
PAY PACKAGE NOW IN EFFECT with a Sign on bonus of
$2000. Local company in Jefferson WI with NO east coast, great
home time, easy freight, first year
pay up to 60K with annual raises &
benefits. Need CLEAN record & 2
yrs experience. Call Angie @
800-383-8386 x5714
Frac Sand Owner Operators
Needed Immediately in Texas! Requires tractor, blower, pneumatic
trailer. Sting Services Pays
80%...Unlimited Work , 817-9805648 and 817-412-8650
Hey! Look at us to get your CDL
training. Call SCDTI for more info
@ 715-942-2700 ext 101
Still Available on 1st and 2nd Shift!
Full and Part-Time Positions
Professional & Technical
7135
Countryside Auto Transport, Inc.
of Menasha, WI is looking for
drivers for specialty auto transport.
We have 25 years of business experience. We offer: Full-time Position, Consistent weekly miles, Paid
by HUB MILES, Higher rate of pay
for East miles +.10 No NYC, Paid
per vehicle, Late model equipment, EZ load 7 car-trailers, 5-10
days out. Paid vacation, 401K,
Health/Dental/Vision Insurance,
Accident Insurance, Critical Illness Insurance & Direct Deposit. If
you have a Class A CDL w/3
years experience & a good driving
record, we will train you to haul
cars! 800-739-0701 M-F 8-5
DRIVERS - OTR
Midwest Regional runs, Home
weekends. Insurance, Vacation,
401K. Midwest Express, Inc.
800-236-2621
Professional & Technical
Find it in the
classifieds
buy- sell - trade
• Order Pickers while performing the duties employees are regularly required to stand, bend, walk and include
repeated lifting & pushing/pulling of up to 50 lbs. They should also have good mathematical skills and will also
have the ability to work safely and efficiently in a fast paced, high volume environment.
7200
Pine Lake Thrift Shop 1/2-Price
Sale Mon., Wed. & Sat., Sept. 8,
10 & 13, 8-4. Everything but
clothes. Main level and gym. (by
Country Fest)
GREAT HOME TIME,
GREAT EQUIPMENT IT’S ALL RIGHT HERE!
Roadready, We Try Harder
For details contact Julie S at
1-800-346-7691 ext. 122
IMMEDIATE OPENINGS
Full-Time Route Sales Driver
AND Full-Time Relief Route Driver
Base plus commission, 401K, health, dental, as well
as other benefits. Sales experience preferred. CDL a
plus. No phone calls. Mail resumé & cover letter to:
Attn: Jennifer
PO Box 542
Merrill, WI, 54452
Or apply online at www.jwperry.com
Account Executive
™
• Call Center Agents possess friendly and courteous communication skills, a desire to provide quality
customer service in a call center environment, accurate typing ability, computer experience, and the flexibility
to work rotational weekends.
Magazine
Multi Media Channels LLC, a Wisconsin based, family owned
company, is looking for an energetic, experienced, high performing
advertising account executive for Packerland Pride Magazine and
Packerlandpride.com.
• Coral Farm, (part-time) Duties include: cleaning and upkeep of the coral facility; propagation of coral;
picking, packing and shipping of orders; feeding of fish and corals. Must also be able to lift 40 to 50 lbs on a
regular basis and be able to get hands wet.
The successful candidate will be self motivated, a faithful fan of the
green and gold and well versed in digital technologies.
• Fulfillment Supevisor (1st shift) responsibilities include maintaining order quality and production
standards, employee development, and safety compliance/policies. Applicants must have three or more years
experience as a supervisor or a minimum 2 year degree in a related field. Applicant must have strong leadership,
communication, and problem solving skills with a commitment to excellent customer service.
Two years of advertising sales is preferred.
If you love America’s team and want to join our great team, you are
encouraged to apply.
We offer competitive wages and shift differentials. Training will be provided for all positions.
Full-time benefits include Health, Dental, Vision, and Life Insurance,
401K, Paid Breaks and a generous Employee Discount just to name a few.
Pick up an application or send your resume to:
Send Resumes to [email protected].
05079489
Attn: Human Resources • PO Box 100 • Rhinelander, WI 54501-0100
[email protected]
Rummage Sales This Week
Packerland
Pride
Due to record growth, Drs. Foster & Smith is seeking qualified candidates for positions currently available in their Call
Center and Order Fulfillment departments.
7140
DRIVE WITH ROADREADY...
05065425
Start Immediately! Great money
from home with our FREE mailer
program. LIVE operators available now! 866-780-0580 ext.110
or visit www.pacificbrochures.com
Child Care Services
NEEDED: Nanny/babysitter to
watch 2 1/2 year old child in my
home, 3 days/week during business hours. 715-966-6879.
and find out why our drivers are happier!!
• Family Oriented
SIGN-ON • No East/West Coast
BONUS!! • F/T 14/7 & 7/7 options
DRIVERS! Run Midwest/Southeast! Closest thing to regional
with OTR pay!
Call 800-227-0020 or apply at
www.windyhilltrans.com
OTR DRIVERS WANTED
Above Average Mileage Pay Including Generous Bonus Packages. Health/Dental/Vision/HSA/
Matching 401K/Vacation Pay &
Holiday Pay.
*Avg 2500-3500 Miles/Wk
*100% No Touch
*6 Mo CDL/A Exp Preferred
1-888-545-9351 EXT 13
Jackson WI
www.doublejtransport.com
(wcan)
7135
TEAM & SOLOS Midwest & West
Coast runs. Late model equip.
Scheduled home time, Excellent
miles, Paid practical miles, Direct
deposit, Paid vacation. 800-6453748 (wcan)
05081447
Announcements
WCAN (Wisconsin Community
Ad Network) and/or the member publications review ads to
the best of their ability. Unfortunately, many unscrupulous people
are ready to take your money!
PLEASE BE CAREFUL ANSWERING ANY AD THAT
SOUNDS TOO GOOD TO BE
TRUE! For more information, or to
file a complaint regarding an ad,
please contact The Department
of Trade, Agriculture & Consumer Protection 1-800-4227128 (wcan)
EOE
Page 16 • Star Journal • Sunday, September 7, 2014
Rummage Sales This Week
7200
Wausau-9290 County Road A,
Sept 3rd-5th, 8am-6pm. Mega
Sale!!! Toys, Furniture,
Housewares, Clothes and
Lots of Misc. From Wausau39N to Cty Rd WW west to
County Rd K North to County
Road A 3 miles on Right.
Weston, 6211 Isiah St, Fri. & Sat.,
Sept 5 & 6, 8-4pm. Wooden kitchen table chairs, patio furniture,
small kitchen appliances, much
more.
Rummage Sales This Week
7200
RH- 733 Messer St. Fri./Sat.,
Sept. 5 & 6, 9-4. Multi-family saleclothing, child-adult; men, books,
household, collectibles, more.
SUN. ONLY 9-12 Bag Sale,
$4/bag.
Rothschild, 7275 Whitespire Rd
#2. Sept 4, 5 & 6
Office Hours:
Hodag Buyers’ Guide/star journal
Monday-Friday, 8 a.m.-5 p.m.
HARVEST LABOR
05081422
Seeking Cranberry Marsh Workers for
late September through November
Apply at James Lake Farms
1075 S. Big Lake Loop, Three Lakes
or call (715)421-6510
A producer of certified organic fruit
Rummage Sales This Week
7200
Wausau-5201 Lombardy Dr,
Sept. 6, Sat. 8:30-4pm. Must
see family moving Sale! Great
quality of Dinning
Table/Chair, chest freezer,
sofa & Lazy Boy Chair, dressers, snow blower, furniture,
metal cabinet, kid items,
bikes, housewares, household items, & much more.
Miscellaneous Sales
7212
For Sale: Records: 45, 33, and 8
Track tapes, also Porta-Potty for
campers, fishing, and hunting
shacks call 715341-1543
Antiques & Collectibles
7214
Computers & Electronics
7216
My Computer Works - Computer
Problems? Viruses, Spyware,
Email, Printer Issues, Bad Internet Connections - FIX IT NOW!
Professional, US Based Technicians. $25 off Service. Call for Immediate Help. 800-611-2173
(wcan)
Musical Instruments
Application Deadline: October 15, 2014. Position will remain open until filled.
WXPR, an independent community-supported public radio station in Rhinelander, WI, is
seeking to hire a general manager.
7242
NEW MATTRESS SETS from
$89 All Sizes In Stock! 9 Styles!
PlymouthFurnitureWI.com 2133
Eastern Ave Plymouth WI Open 7
Days A Week (wcan)
Redwood Boards. Former silo
boards, 23.5' long, tongue &
grooved. 715-693-3678
05081587
Now hiring part-time security officers
for Tomahawk area. Must be able to
work a flexible schedule. Must have
a high school diploma or GED and be
able to pass drug test. We offer matching
401K, paid holidays, paid vacation,
and free uniforms.
Please fax resume to: 414-527-1754
or call 414-527-1482
05079524
Pharmacist Needed
HIGHWAY MAINTENANCE WORKER
Drs. Foster and Smith, the nation’s largest direct marketer of pet products, is in search of a
highly motivated pharmacist, full time 1st shift, to join our mail order veterinary pharmacy.
Don’t let a lack of exposure to veterinary medications or a mail order pharmacy setting
deter you from applying! You’ll find great support from your fellow pharmacists, pharmacy
technicians, and staff veterinarians. Our unique setting allows you to utilize and expand your
professional knowledge, while learning to love your job again!
The Town of Newbold seeks an individual for a Highway
Maintenance Worker position. Starting probationary
hourly wage is $18.09 for a six-month period and
$21.17 upon successful completion of the probationary
period. The position is eligible for health, dental and
life insurance and must participate in the Wisconsin
Retirement System. The position performs work of a
varied nature, including road maintenance and repair,
welding and mechanical work, equipment maintenance
and repair. This position reports to the Newbold Town
Board and Newbold Public Works Director.
Responsibilities include, but are not limited to: verifying and authorizing prescriptions from
licensed veterinarians, performing quality control on filled prescriptions prior to shipment,
and telephone consultation with both veterinarians and customers. Ability to work rotational
weekends is also required. We are however, closed all major holidays.
In addition to our highly competitive salary, we offer an excellent benefit package which
includes paid vacation time upon hire, paid holidays and sick days; health and dental
insurance; 401K and profit sharing, and employee discounts.
Qualified individuals need a high school degree or
equivalent and must be able to maintain a valid CDL
with class B, C & D and air brake endorsements.
®
Attn: HR Department • Po Box 100
Rhinelander WI 54501
[email protected]
05079998
Please submit your resume with work history, including WI pharmacy license number, to:
Heating & Cooling Equip.
7246
OUTDOOR WOOD STOVE, excellent condition! Copper plumbing, heat exchangers available.
715-362-7408. NEW WOOD
SPLITTER, 27 ton, perfect set!
Sporting Goods
Guns
4 Pc Queen Bedroom Set with
Mirror and Frame.
Asking price $175.
715-446-1313
7236
7244
7260
Cross Bow with Scope.
715-693-2620
GUARDSMARK SECURITY
Compensation: $48,000 or commensurate with experience and qualifications.
WXPR does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex, disability, or age.
Lumber
Security
Minimum requirements:
• Bachelor’s degree or higher, or ten years or more experience in broadcasting field (or a
combination of relevant education and experience).
• Three years of broadcast experience or three years in related media field.
• On-air and programming experience.
• Experience and expertise in direct staff management.
• Experience in fundraising for non-profits.
• Strong fiscal management skills for non-profits.
• Working knowledge of multi-media technology.
A full job description can be found at wxpr.org/employment. Submit cover letter and resume to
[email protected].
INSTALLING And Refinishing
HARDWOOD FLOORING
Beautiful & Durable
Free Estimates
715-848-2700 or 715-253-2525
HISTORIC PHOTOS
NORTHERN WISCONSIN
Hardcover, glossy book includes
over 300 photos from Northern
Wisconsin's glorious past. Fishing,
hunting, commerce, events,
families and much more.
Presented by the Star Journal
Rhinelander, WI
Special price Only $39.95
plus tax & shipping.
715-369-3331
Credit Card Orders Accepted
Furniture & Home Decor
Firewood
FIREWOOD: $84 face cord, Oak.
Or $58 face cord, Pine. All cut,
split, dried, delivered free within 30
mi.; otherwise add fee. 715-3582305
7220
Alto Saxophone, Jupiter, exc
cond., complete in case, new
books, and Rico/Royal new reeds.
715-693-3720
General Manager
WXPR Public Radio
7238
Kenmore 6.4cf compact refrigerator. Works great and clean. $50.
Call 715-298-2682.
Alto Saxophone, Jupiter, exc
cond., complete in case, new
books, and Rico/Royal new reeds.
715-693-3730
UNIQUE WISCONSIN
COOKBOOK
Over 800 recipes from
Wisconsin's great Northwoods.
Published by the
Star Journal Newspaper.
Hardcover, spiral bound.
Special price $21.95
plus tax & shipping.
715-369-3331
Carpeting & Flooring
FLEA MARKET SUNDAY
SHAWANO (Fairgrounds) 7am4pm 715-526-9769 Zurko
A complete job description and application may be
obtained from the Northern Advantage Job Service
Office at 51A N. Brown Street, Rhinelander, WI 54501,
(715) 365-1500. Completed applications must be
submitted to the Job Service no later than 4:30 p.m. on
Friday, September 19, 2014. EOE
05081458
7264
46th ANNUAL
Wausau Fall Gun Show.
Sept. 12th & 13th, 2014
Marathon Park East Gate Hall,
Garfield Avenue, Wausau WI
Open to Public:
Fri. Sept. 12th 3pm-8pm
Sat. Sept. 13th 9am-5pm
Admission $5. Youth under 12
free. (with paid adult)
Sponsored by No. Central WI
Gun Coll. Assoc. Inc.
For information only call Fred
715-443-2825
GUN SHOW Sept 5, 6 & 7. Arnott
Lions Community Park, Hwy. J &
4th Street, Arnott, WI. Fri 3pm8pm, Sat 9am-5pm, Sun 9am3pm. Adm $6. 14 & under free.
Free gun raffles! 608-752-6677
bobandrocco.com
NRA PERMIT Instructor Gregory
Olson at Hodag Sports Club in
Rhinelander Fri., Sept. 12, WI and
UT permits 5 pm, fee $60. Finger
prints & photo, $30. Sat., Sept. 13,
NRA Beginner shooting course, 9
am, fee $100. FLA Permit Course,
2 pm, fee $75. 320-245-0474.
We Will Buy Your Gun and or
Entire Gun Collection.
Wausau Gun & Loan.
5612 Bus 51 South. Schofield
(715)359-5540
Misc. Merchandise
7266
ENJOY 100% guaranteed, delivered to the door Omaha Steaks!
SAVE 74% PLUS 4 FREE Burgers - The Family Value Combo Only $39.99. ORDER today 800931-1898. Use code 49377PXR or
www.OmahaSteaks.com/father7
2 (wcan)
Acorn Stairlifts. The AFFORDABLE solution to your stairs!
**Limited time - $250 Off Your
Stairlift Purchase!** Buy Direct &
SAVE. Please call 800-598-6714
for FREE DVD and brochure.
(wcan)
BEAUTIFUL LOG bed, queen, incl. pillow top mattress/box spring,
$200; antique white wicker couch,
$150; queen matt./box spring set,
$100; two twin mattress sets, $20
ea. All in exc. cond. 715-356-3717
CASH PAID- UP TO $25/BOX for
unexpired, sealed DIABETIC
TEST STRIPS! 1 DAY PAYMENT
& PREPAID shipping. BEST
PRICES! Call 1-888-776-7771.
www.Cash4DiabeticSupplies.com
Custom Built Storage Sheds.
Many styles & sizes.
Order now for Fall Delivery.
Call for more info.
Baker Barns 715-873-3338
Sunday, September 7, 2014 • Star Journal • Page 17
7266
2 SETS VALANCES (Southwest
design), 104x14, 100x14, 2 sets
blue verticals, 102x84, 96x66, plus
hardware, $75; Bart Star treadmill,
$25; AM/FM boombox radio, $10;
Free 19" TV and VCR. 715-3691583.
FOLDING DOOR Panels, 2- 48"
doors, $20 ea., 1- 64" door, $25;
Toshiba DVD player, $20; Toshiba
DVD player/recorder, $30. Call
715-369-9142.
For Sale wooden box racks 8 foot
truck, stock tanks, bug zapper,
sharpening stone foot pedal, older
hand grass trimmer, no gas. 715536-6295
For Sale, Janome Embroidery
Machine hoops patterns on disks
adapter for disks reading, $400.
Call 715-675-2180 after 6pm.
For Sale, old stand corn planter.
All wood Oak gun cabinet with
glass door, like new. 715-5511751
For Sale: Allis Chalmers Riding
Mower, P245/78R17 tires $100,
Chain Hoist $75, and a 15 gallon
tank w/ hose and nozzle $30
715-203-2050
POOL TABLE- Give Away, great
condition, you dis-assemble and
haul. 715-282-5060
Metal Utility Trailer, 4'x6'x17",
manual dump, tires like new,
spare tire new, jack and ball included, ex. cond. 5505 Winding
Creek, Schofield. $600 firm.
Harley Davidson Items: Women's
medium rain gear, men's T-shirts,
long sleeve shirts & tank tops, XL
HOG State Rally shirts, 19972006, playing cards, mugs, x-mas
items, etc. 715-544-4449
DELUXE stainless steel 4-burner
gas grill, like new. 715-282-7180.
NORTHERN OVERHEAD
Rhinelander's only
locally owned & operated
GARAGE DOOR SERVICE
for over 10 years. Installations
& repairs. Fully insured.
Sr. Citizen discount. Call now
for preventative maintenance.
Thank you for your
continued support.
(715)369-5576
THREE SMALL mirrored medicine cabinets, Birch w/deep honey
finish, used only a few weeks; two
bowling balls w/bags & shoes; two
dog life jackets. 715-282-5867.
Merch. Wanted to Buy
7268
FREE SCRAP Metal Pick-Up- 1
item or truckload. Cash for junk
vehicles. Call anytime 7 days/wk.
Rhinelander, Minocqua, Eagle
River & more. (715)367-0358 or
715-367-0196.
Looking to buy old barns and log
structures. Call: 715-613-0842.
OLD GUITARS WANTED! Paying
TOP CASH for 1920's thru 1980's
models - Gibson, Martin, Fender,
Gretsch, Rickenbacker &
many more. Plus Gibson Mandolins/Banjos. 1-800-401-0440
WANTED TO BUY! ANTLERS,
HEAD MOUNTS and any other
taxidermy work! 920-731-9616
Cats
7270
FREE KITTENS to good homes.
Contact Nathan 715-282-5596.
Dogs
7272
ACK Black Lab pups! 2 females left. Have first shots, vet
checked, wormed, and ready to
go $450 each 715-213-6536
GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS
AKC OFA. Excel. Temp. Import
Stock. Guaranteed. 715-537-5413
www.jerland.com #268001-DS
(wcan)
GOLDEN DOODLE and Irish
Doodle Pups, med. size, cream to
dark red, non-shed, good hunters,
vaccinated, wormed, dews removed, incl. written health guarantee, $575 to $700. 715-587-2058.
Horses
7274
HORSE AUCTION! Friday Sept
12th @ 6:30pm. Willow Springs,
Nichols, WI 920-525-2662.
Farm Equipment
7286
2007 2588 Case IH axelflow combine 4x4, 2400 engine hrs, like
new. $135,000. Call 920-851-0608
Ford TW35, 195 HP 4WD front &
rear WTS. 20x38 hub duals. All
tires new. Only 3900 hrs. Super
good condition. $28,500. Case
Payloader "W36", new engine,
90% tires. Runs excellent. Big machine, little money. $12,950. Combine Gleaner L3 hydro diesel.
2700 hrs with 6 row 30" corn head
and 15' grain & bean head. Excellent condition. Asking $14,500. JD
Plow 3710, 10 bottom variable
with 14" to 22" on hand hitch trailer plow. Excellent condition.
$25,000. Call 920-878-0005
TYM COMPACT TRACTORS
*0% Interest Financing
*5 Yr Power Train Wrnty
*Mitsubishi Diesel Engine
*Rugged 4 Wheel Drive
*Avail Loader/Backhoes
*Trades Always Welcome
BADGER MARINE
715-886-3308
www.BadgerMarine.com
Family Is Our Business!
When you choose Cleary, you become part of the Cleary Family!
Money to Lend
7300
Minocqua/Woodruff, WI
715-358-2510
Building pictured is not priced in ad. Crew
travel required over 50 miles. Local building
code modifi cations extra. Price subject to
change without notice. 40 PSF Snow Load
05075090
BUILDING SPECIALS!
30’x54’x13’ • $15,023
42’x81’x15’ • $27,704
60’x120’x17’ • $56,515
FEATURING:
800-373-5550 I ClearyBuilding.com
- M.F.L. Harvesting
- Selective Harvesting
- Wildlife Management
- Forest Health Improvement
- Certified Foresters/
Licensed Realtor
Grezenski Forest Products
3158 County Rd. X North
Stevens Point, WI 54481
REDUCE Your Past Tax Bill by as
much as 75%. Stop Levies, Leins,
and Wage Garnishments. Call The
Tax DR. Now to see if you qualify.
800-819-0736 (wcan)
Heath Care Services
Email:
[email protected]
Adoption
7312
PREGNANT? CONSIDERING
ADOPTION? Talk with caring adoption expert. Choose from families Nationwide. LIVING EXPENSES PAID. Call 24/7 Abbyʼs
One True Gift Adoptions
866-413-6296 Void In
Illinois/New Mexico/Indiana
Satellites & Antennas
7324
DIRECTV starting at $24.95/ mo.
Free 3-Months of HBO, Starz,
SHOWTIME & CINEMAX. FREE
Receiver Upgrade! 2014 NFL
Sunday Ticket Included with Select Packages. Some exclusions
apply - Call for details. 800-9181046 (wcan)
DISH TV Retailer. Starting at
$19.99/month (for 12 mos.) & High
Speed Internet starting at
$14.95/month (where available).
SAVE! Ask About SAME DAY Installation! CALL Now! 800-3743940 (wcan)
REDUCE YOUR CABLE BILL!
Get a whole-home Satellite system installed at NO COST and
programming starting at
$19.99/mo. FREE HD/ DVR Upgrade to new callers, SO CALL
NOW! 800-492-0375 (wcan)
Web:
grezenskiforestproducts.com
Misc. Services Offered
Misc. Services Offered
7334
7334
AIRLINES JOBS Start Here – Get
trained as FAA certified Aviation
Technician. Financial aid for qualified students. Job placement assistance. Call Aviation Institute of
Maintenance 888-686-1704
Bundle & Save on your TV, Internet, Phone!!! Call Bundle Deals
NOW Compare all Companies,
Packages and Prices!
Call 1-888-986-3957 TODAY!
Want to purchase minerals and
other oil/gas interests. Send details to: PO Box 13557,
Denver, CO 80201.
Call-a-Pro Plumbing! Your Local
Plumbing Professionals! Have
plumbing problems? We have the
solution! Call us 24/7.
800-605-4582 (wcan)
DIRECTV, Internet, & Phone From
$69.99/mo + Free 3 Months:
HBO® Starz® SHOWTIME®
CINEMAX®+ FREE GENIE 4
Room Upgrade + NFL SUNDAY
TICKET! Limited offer. Call Now
888-248-5961
DO YOU NEED TO ADVERTISE?
Make ONE call to affordably advertise in 79 Wisconsin Shoppers
& Buyers’ Guides! Reach nearly
1.6 MILLION households! As low
as $2.27 per paper! Call us today!
Publishers Development Service, Inc. (PDS, Inc.)
1 - 8 0 0 - 2 3 6 - 0 7 3 7
www.pdsadnet.com (wcan)
Home Building Supply
7358
GET LIGHTNING FAST High
Speed Internet: AT&T U-Verse®
plans starting at $14.95/mo.
Bundle & Save
Internet+Phone+TV. Call to
check availability in your area!
Limited Offer. 1-800-919-0548
SPECIAL pricing on Interior
Liner Panel $1.48 L.F! Savings
on exterior Metal roofing panels.
Trim Mfg in house. Screws & accessories in stock. SQUARE
DEAL METAL SALES Athens WI
715-257-1004
HOTELS FOR HEROES – to find
out more about how you can help
our service members, veterans
and their families in their time of
need, visit the Fisher House website at www.fisherhouse.org
Heating & Cooling
HOTELS FOR HEROS - to find
out more about how you can help
our service members, veterans
and their families in their time of
need, visit the Fisher House website at www.fisherhouse.org
(wcan)
715-344-0878
1-866-344-0878
Fax: 715-344-1470
7310
Medical Guardian - Top-rated
medical alarm & 24/7 medical alert
monitoring. For a limited time, get
free equipment, no activation fees,
no commitment, a 2nd waterproof
alert button for free & more! Only
$29.95 per month. 800-281-6138
(wcan)
7328
For your forestry needs,
helping create a better
tomorrow - TODAY!
Do you owe over $10,000 to the
IRS or State in back taxes? Get
tax relief now! Call BlueTax, the
nation’s full service tax solution
firm. 800-671-9189 (wcan)
Make a Connection. Real
People, Flirty Chat. Meet singles
right now! Call LiveLinks.
Try it FREE. Call NOW:
Call 1-877-737-9447 18+
Safe Step Walk-In Tub Alert for
Seniors. Bathroom falls can be
fatal. Approved by Arthritis Foundation. Therapeutic Jets. Less Than
4 Inch Step-In. Wide Door. AntiSlip Floors. American Made. Installation Included. Call 800-9403411 for $750 Off. (wcan)
SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY
BENEFITS. Unable to work?
Denied benefits? We Can Help!
WIN or Pay Nothing! Contact Bill
Gordon & Associates at 800-9600307 to start your application
today! (wcan)
Basement Services
7340
All Things Basementy! Basement
Systems Inc. Call us for all of your
basement needs! Waterproofing,
Finishing, Structural Repairs, Humidity and Mold Control. FREE
ESTIMATES! Call 800-991-1602
(wcan)
Home Building Supply
7358
I&H BEAMS $3/ft & up PipePlate-Channel-Angle-Tube-ReBarGrating-Expanded-OrnamentalStainless Steel & Aluminum.
NEW-USED-SURPLUS. 12 acres
usable items Pal Steel Co 262495-4453 Palmyra WI (wcan)
7362
DIRTY DUCTS?
Don't forget your ducts
Call Refined Duct Cleaning
Free Estimates, Reasonable
Rates. 715-218-5164
Apartments for Rent
7400
For Rent, Park Lane Apartments. 2 bdrm upper apt. near
Marshfield clinic, quiet building,
non smoking, garage, storage &
laundry area, sec. dep & lease,
$465. No pets. 715-539-9547
Merrill, nice, newly remodeled,
2 BR, incl heat, $475.
715-551-2354
For Rent: 2 bedroom home near
Kate Goodrich school. Spacious
with large dry basement. Appliances included. Clean and energy
efficient. Includes garage. Phone
715-536-6264
RETIREMENT APARTMENTS,
ALL INCLUSIVE. Meals,
transportation, activities daily.
Short Leases. Monthly specials!
Call (866) 338-2607
RH- North Side 3 bdrm. upperlarge living room, master bdrm.
w/walk-in closet, stove/frig,
tub/shower, no laundry hookup.
$600/mo. incl. heat & elec. 715360-1929
RH- 1 bdrm. upper, heat & water
included. $395/mo. plus security
deposit. Call 715-499-3181.
COURT ORDERED AUCTION
14218 County Rd. AA Suring, WI 54174
650’ of Oconto River frontage; 37 acres of
hunting land! Cabin with 2BR/1BA, porch, &
fireplace. Search ID: 100741; List Price: $150,000
Carrier Needed
City walk for the Star Journal & Hodag Buyers’ Guide
Call Today
715-369-3331
Route 29
• Brown St.
• Stevens St.
• Pelham St.
• Harvey St.
Route 38
CALL US FOR A FREE CONSULTATION!
Tree Services
ARE YOU in BIG trouble with the
IRS? Stop wage & bank levies, liens & audits, unfiled tax returns,
payroll issues, & resolve tax debt
FAST. Seen on CNN. A BBB. Call
800-601-2165. (wcan)
• Pelican St.
• W. Davenport St.
• Crescent St.
• Hemlock St.
Land - Clinic Rd. Suring, WI 54174
Route 40
• W. Davenport St.
• Pelican St.
• Crescent St.
• Hemlock St.
Route 44
Only 2 days a week!
0.97 acres of vacant land, heavily wooded
with easy access to County Highway AA.
Search ID: 100743; List Price: $3,000
Land - W. Main St. Lena, WI 54139
0.24 acres; tree lined corner lot ready for your
new home! Only 30 minutes from Green Bay.
Search ID: 100742; List Price: $5,000
Live Auction: Tuesday, 10/7, 1:30pm
Located at the Oconto County Courtroom
• E. Randall Ave.
• Dorr Ave.
• S. Pelham St.
• S. Keenan St.
866-431-2836 | www.micoley.com
05079675
Misc. Merchandise
2 14" Fayette wheels, 5'x8' trailer,
64" trailer axle w/tires and wheels,
42" lawn dethatcher, Ariens ST622
wheeled string trimmer, Antique
Rollfast tandem bike works, 1/3
HP sump pump, 12' Jon boat w/ or
w/o 6 HP outboard and trolling
motor, corner cabinet, 42" mower
deck w/ new spindles and 2 sets
of blades, Kohler 18 HP vertical
shaft engine very good. 608-3396655
MICOLEY.COM
Bidding shall begin at the fair market value as stated by the Trustee. After bidding has completed for each Property,
Trustee shall determine, in its sole & complete discretion, whether the highest bid for the said Property is acceptable.
No bidder may make a bid subject to financing. Each winning bid must post a 10% deposit of the bid price w/the
Trustee at the time of the auction & pay the remaining 90% of the bid price w/in 30 days of the auction. If either of
these conditions is not met, the bidder is deemed to have forfeited his/her bid. Upon full payment of the bid price,
Trustee shall deed the subject Proeprty to the highest bidder. Buyer Fees (#100743 - $750; #100742 - $250; #100741 2%), to be added to high bid to determine final sale price. Nonrefundable EM of 5% of high bid/sales price due from
high Bidder at time of auction/offer. Property sold‘as is, where is’. Registered WI Auctioneer Wade Micoley #2647-052;
Broker Wade Micoley #43427-90 & Firm WM Enterprises, Inc. #83181-91
Page 18 • Star Journal • Sunday, September 7, 2014
Homes for Rent
7409
Wausau, 2 bedroom house lower,
$540 a month plus utilities, avail.
now. No pets. 715-573-9103
Storage Space for Rent
7433
RV Storage for winter, Sep, Oct April 15, 2015. campers, motor
homes, boats, pontoons, trailers,
old tractors, cycles with trailers,
door height 8'-14'. 715-432-4149
Homes For Sale
7454
Homes For Sale
7454
TOMAHAWK AREA- Handyman
Special- house sold As-Is- 4
Bdrm., 2 Bath. Asking $39,000.
Call 920-420-2729 or 920-2166531 or leave msg.
Wausau West 3 bedroom, 1 1/2
bath ranch home, great location,
brick exterior, many updates,
move in cond., must see to appreciate, $110,000. 715-842-9786
Farms For Sale
7457
AUCTION - SEPT. 20, NOON,
STH 21, Omro, on 243 ACRES
FARM W/CROP LAND &
MAKETABLE TIMBER, being
sold in parcels. Visit www.nolansales.com or call for details. NOLAN SALES LLC, Marion, WI,
800-472-0290. Reg Auctioneers
#165 & #142. (wcan)
Manufactured Homes
PRICE REDUCED- Immaculate
1700 sq. ft. home w/wood floors, 3
BD, 2 BA, sun room, den, 2-car
garage, central air & beautiful
fenced yard in quiet neighborhood.
321 Hillandale Ave. $129,900.
www.firstweber.com/gnmls:
141598. Sandy Ebben, First
Weber, 715-367-0114.
John Krueger Realty Homes.
1015 Thayer St. 3 BD, 2 BA, 2
garages & 2 parcels, $108,900;
Nice Lot on Sycamore St., .40 ac.,
$25,000; 117 E. Harvey St. 1 BD,
1 BA, $36,800; 243 Highview
Pkwy. 3 BD, 1 BA, $74,900; 818
Mason St. 2 BD, 1 BA, 2 car garage, $57,900; 802 River St. 3 BD,
1 BA home, $49,500; 1699 Spring
Meadow Ln, Eagle River- log
home, 3 BD, 3 BA, on 5.25 ac.,
$235,000; Timber Ridge Golf
Course home in Minocqua- 3 BD,
3 BA home built in 2003,
$249,900; 423 Dahl St. 3 BD, 2
BA, 2 car garage, $109,900; 1414
Glenwood- 2 BD, 2 BA home on 3
lots, $60,900; Bar/Restaurant
w/living quarters and cottage on
Bass Lake in Sugar Camp.
JohnKruegerRealty.com 715362-3307
7460
2013 CLOSEOUT MODELS
Don’t Wait!!! One of a Kind
Starting at $46,000 Base Price.
866-433-1442
PerretHomesInc.com
NEW 1 Bedroom $25,984
New 2 Bedroom $29,984
New 3 Bedroom $31,984
Price Includes Delivery
Quality Homes, Tomahawk
715-453-6613. Website:
qualitymh.com
WANTED TO Buy: Used mobile
homes in good condition.
Quality Homes
715-453-6613
Lots/Acreage For Sale
7466
20 Acres/West Texas
$15,900 $0 Down ONLY $119/mo.
No Qualifying-Owner Financing
Money Back Guarantee
Beautiful Mountain View
1-877-284-2072
www.TexasLandBuys.com
THREE ACRE building site- new
well & septic, privacy parcel, 10
mi. east of Rhinelander, $27,000.
Call 715-360-3133.
Business
DIRECTORY
Brian K. Nerdahl
Bus. 715-358-3050
ged
7472
RH- 3 bedroom, 2 bath on 3.5
acres, 350' frontage on Wisconsin
River, attached garage. Call for
more info, 715-369-2317.
ISLAND PARADISE! Secluded
wooded private 14-acre island on
the Wisconsin River, near Plover.
Only $49,000. Trades or land contract considered. (715) 424-4504:
broker/owner.
Summer BLOWOUT Prices!
Lakefront lots. Beautiful Langlade
Co. Sand frontage. 1136 ac. Post
Lake, 715-216-0838 postlakerealestate.com
Business/Commercial
7475
13,000 sq ft Grocery Store.
Central WI. Full service, Meat
cutting, Deli. Family owned,
ample parking. $350,000. WILICHOWSKI REALTY, 715-4433171, WWW.1-BID-2.COM
Hunting Land for Sale
7486
62 Acres
Prime hunting land located just off
State Hwy 49 & Tri-Cty Rd,
Waushara Cty. This property has
been in present ownership for 40+
years & has given it's owner numerous bucks and does. There
are 14 tree stands on this property, some are suited to bow &
others to rifle. 2 creeks run
through this property as well as
several building sites for your log
cabin or home, Has a number of
acres that are forested. This is a
prime piece of land with years of
success in it's future. $2,750.00
per acre. Call Larry at 262-7511386 OR Jim at 262-617-9268
7500
Motorcycles
CARS & TRUCKS
A leader in
automotive
recycling.
715-362-5639 or 1-800-236-5639
www.rhinelanderautosalvage.com
7502
2002 Yamaha Virago 250. $1600
Only 5300 miles. Color black.
Like new with windshield and
saddlebags. Weston, WI
715-298-7933
3883677-01
05008707
Waterfront For Sale
ATV’S, SCOOTERS & GOKARTS. YOUTH ATV’S &
SCOOTERS (80 MPG) @ $49/
MO. SPORT & 4X4 ATV’S @
$69/MO. AMERICAN MARINE &
MOTORSPORTS, SHAWANO =
SAVE= 866-955-2628 www.americanmarina.com (wcan)
8703 Blumenstein Road
P.O. Box 701
Minocqua, WI 54548
Junk or Dama
7466
BEAUTIFUL LAKE Weyauwega
property consisting of 25 Park Like
acres. Property has 1400 feet of
lake frontage with numerous evergreens, walnut and other species
of foliage. Over 300 feet of frontage on County Road AA. Property
consists of eight commercial storage lockers which are fully rented
as well as a 30 X 60 foot storage
building which is also rented. The
home is approximately 2500 SF
with an exposed walk out lower
level. The home has had smoke
damage and most of the damage
has been removed to the studs.
Home could be torn down or rebuilt from the inside. All brick exterior as well as stone roof makes
this latter scenario possible.
$289,900.
Call today, Larry Stanul
Re/Max Realty Center
262-751-1386
ATV’s
Financial Advisor
ing
y
u
B
Lots/Acreage For Sale
Wooded land for sale, 49.1 acres,
prime hunting land, Adams Lane,
Town of Berlin, deer, bear & fowl,
call after 11am. 715-848-4116
Honda VTX 1300C 2006 Metallic
Orange, 15K Miles. Excellent condition, new tires, many extras.
$5500. Leave message at 715302-4147.
Motorcycles
7502
Campers & Motorhomes
7526
WANTED JAPANESE MOTORCYCLES 1967-1982 ONLY
KAWASAKI Z1-900, KZ900,
KZ1000, Z1R, KZ1000MKII, W1650, H1-500, H2-750, S1-250, S2350, S3-400 Suzuki, GS400,
GT380, Honda CB750 (19691976) CASH.
1-800-772-1142, 1-310-721-0726
[email protected]
Great Deal! 2012 Jayco FB 22',
like new, pulled by SUV, walk
around queen bed, sofa sleeper,
dinette, full bath, elect awning, stereo with outside speakers, outside
shower, 3 burner stove, oven micro, fridge/freezer, ducted air/heat,
lots of storage in/out, cabinet upgrade, must see. $12,750 OBO.
715-359-8086
WANTED: 60’s and 70’s Motorcycles. DEAD OR ALIVE!
920-371-0494 (wcan)
HOLIDAY 1973 30' Rambler
Trav'ler, sleeps 4, propane oven &
heater, elec. water heater, roof
A/C unit, tub/shower, lots of storage. $2,000 OBO. To view, 715362-5169; details, 218-666-6980
Sports Trailers
7506
TRAILERS @ LIQUIDATION PRICING. FOR BOAT, ATV, SLED
OR PONTOONS. 2 OR 4
PLACE/OPEN OR ENCLOSED.
AMERICAN
MARINE,
SHAWANO. 866-955-2628
www.americanmarina.com
(wcan)
Boats - Fishing
7508
ALUMACRAFT FISHERMAN
145LTD, 25 hp Merc, Minnkota
trolling motor, Lowrance electronics, Shoreland'r trailer, $3,600.
Call 715-614-6616.
ON WATER BOAT SHOW,
SEPTEMBER 6TH, 10AM TO
4PM. RUN MISTY HARBOR,
CREST, MALIBU, NAUTIC STAR
AND CROWNLINE. TEST RIDES
AT THE LIGHTHOUSE PUB,
GUMAER RD. ON SHAWANO
LAKE. GO TO AMERICANMARINA.COM FOR DETAILS (wcan)
Boats - Pontoon
7510
$2,000,000 LIQUIDATION @
BOAT WORLD. FIN. AVAIL. ON
OVER 700 NEW & USED PONTOONS, FISHING BOATS, DECK
BOATS, SKIBOATS, BASS &
WALLEYE BOATS, CUDDYS,
CRUISERS UP TO 35 FEET &
OUTBOARDS @ THE GUARANTEED BEST PRICE!! CROWNLINE AXIS MALIBU TRITON
ALUMACRAFT MIRROCRAFT
MISTY HARBOR & CREST PONTOONS. AMERICAN MARINE &
MOTORSPORTS SUPER CENTER, SHAWANO. WHERE
DREAMS COME TRUE. 866-9552
6
2
8
WWW.AMERICANMARINA.COM
(wcan)
WANTED: 15 ft. pontoon boat
in good running condition.
Other accessories negotiable.
Call 715-258-5904.
Boats - Sport & Jet Ski
Collector & Antique Cars
2005 Pontiac Sunfire SE
2 Door, 4 Cyl, 5 Speed Manual,
Power Windows & Locks,
Power Sunroof, AC, CD, Great
Fuel Mileage.
3 Month/3,000 Mile Warranty.
And Priced Right @ $4,195
Financing Available
G&G Auto Sales, Merrill
1-888-494-1870
gandgauto.com
TOYOTA 2010 Corolla LE, black,
new tires, front brakes & rotors, all
work done by Toyota, 130K miles,
$8,995. Call 715-360-0653
Station Wagons
7540
7536
FOR SALE 1968 FORD MUSTANG 2 DOOR. FAIR CONDITION. $4000.00 FIRM.
715-451-8146.
Passenger Cars
7538
7534
37th ANNUAL AUTO PARTS
SWAP MEET & CAR SHOW!
SEPT. 26-28
JEFFERSON CTY
FAIRGROUNDS,
JEFFERSON, WI
Swap Meet & Car Corral ALL
THREE DAYS!
SHOW CARS Sat./Sun. Only!
Adm $8. No Pets.
Fri. 10-6, Sat./Sun. 6-3.
608-244-8416
madisonclassics.com (wcan)
Sports Cars
Passenger Cars
7538
2000 Pontiac Bonneville SLE, 4
dr, 3.8 A4, A/C, CC, PW, P seats,
power heated side mirrors, no
rust, very nice car, $4,000 or best
reasonable offer. 715-218-3605
04 Mercedes Benz C320 Wagon
3.2L-V6, AWD, Auto, Stereo,
Leather, Keyless Entry, Trac. Control, Dual Climate, Steering Audio
Controls, PW, PL, PM & More.
$6,300
E & H Auto
866-546-8057
Hwy 51; Exit 205-Merrill
www.ehauto.com
Budget Sales & Service
Vans - Full Size & Mini
2001 SATURN SL SL1
1.9L-4 Cyl., Auto, AM/FM,
Rear Def., Tilt, & More.
$4,000
E & H Auto
866-546-8057
Hwy 51; Exit 205-Merrill
www.ehauto.com
Budget Sales & Service
2003 Cadillac Deville. Black w/
Gold trim. 32 Valve Engine.
$3,900 OBO. Excellent Condition!
(715) 572-0996
7542
2006 Chevy Uplander Ext LS
3.5L-V6, Auto, AC, CD, PL, PW,
PM, Voice Activated Phone,
TV/DVD, Rear Sound Controls,
Anti Lock Brks & More
$5,800
E & H Auto
866-546-8057
Hwy 51; Exit 205-Merrill
www.ehauto.com
Budget Sales & Service
7512
14ft aluminum deep V boat, trailer, 8 horsepower Mercury trolling
motor, new battery, 3 swivel seats.
$675. Call 715-572-0996
Boating Equipment
7520
BOATERS - All Yamaha 4 Stroke
Outboards on sale. Save on all
models. Sport Shop & Repair.
715-758-2244 Bonduel
Wanted to Buy
7524
WE BUY-BOATS/RVS/PONTOONS/SLED/ATVs & MOTORCYCLES! "CASH PAID" NOW.
AMERICAN MARINE & MOTORSPORTS SUPER CENTER,
SHAWANO 866-955-2628
www.americanmarina.com
(wcan)
Campers & Motorhomes
7526
1979 New Way Motor Home,
23,500 mi. asking $4,000. 715432-7644
2003 Ford Taurus SES Deluxe
3.0L-V6, AC, CD, Cruise,
Pwr. Seat, Keyless Entry,
P.W, P.L., P.M.,
Steering Audio Controls, Alloys.
$2,700
E & H Auto
866-546-8057
Hwy 51; Exit 205-Merrill
www.ehauto.com
Budget Sales & Service
2007 4 Dr. Nissian Altima, one
owner, four new tires. New
battery, non-smoker. Trailer hitch.
92720 miles, good condition. Col
air, $7,500. 715-389-2486.
For sale: 2013 White Honda Accord EXL, automatic, 13,000
miles excellent condition. Owner upgrading to SUV. Call 715340-8177 anytime.
2008 Dodge Grand Caravan SXT
3.8L-V6, Auto, Adjustable Pedals,
AC, CD, Cruise, Pwr Seat, Keyless, P.W., P.L., Pwr. Sliding Door,
Dual Climate, Steering, Audio
Controls, Traction & Stability
Control.
$10,800
E & H Auto
866-546-8057
Hwy 51; Exit 205-Merrill
www.ehauto.com
Budget Sales & Service
SUVs
7544
2012 Jeep Patriot Latitude 4x4,
automatic, heated seats, remote
start, deep cherry red. Like New!
22,000 miles $17,500 715-4242014
Sunday, September 7, 2014 • Star Journal • Page 19
SPORTS CENTRAL
Wednesday Suburban
Horseshoe League
August 27
Standings
A Division....................W/L
Woodpecker............. 244/44
Twin Pines#2............ 231/57
River Street Tap....... 190/98
Country Bar............ 184/104
River Street Pinkies.116/172
B Division....................W/L
Flyin Finn#2........... 188/100
Crescent Corners.... 174/114
Twin Pines#1.......... 133/155
Moonlighting#1..... 127/161
Moonlighting#2....... 80/208
Flyin Finn#1............. 61/227
Northwoods Mens
League
August 27
Low Gross
Dave Frasier.................... 35
Jayme VanZile................. 36
Jim Johnson..................... 37
Todd Terzinski................. 37
Pat Hunter....................... 38
Logan Willis.................... 38
Dan Strand...................... 39
Eugene Gilman................ 39
Darl Lunde...................... 39
Erik Matson..................... 40
Gary Cirilli...................... 40
Low Net
Dan Strand...................... 31
Dave Frasier.................... 31
Darl Lunde...................... 31
Gary Swenson................. 32
Roger Saari...................... 32
Jim Johnson..................... 32
Steve Dahlquist............... 33
Jayme VanZile................. 33
Rob Riopel...................... 33
Pat Hunter....................... 34
Ken Johnson.................... 34
Birdies........................ Hole
Ron Johnson...................... 1
Ken Brown........................ 2
Logan Willis...................... 2
Dave Frasier..................... 2
Kris Fiszer......................... 3
Rob Schindelholz.............. 3
Erik Matson....................... 3
Jim Johnson...................... 3
Dave Frasier...................... 4
Pat Hunter........................ 5
Dennis Schulz................... 6
Dan Strand....................... 6
Jim Johnson...................... 7
Roger Saari........................ 8
Erik Matson....................... 8
Darl Lunde........................ 8
DonSpengler.................... 8
Jayme VanZile................... 8
Eugene Gilman................. 8
Northwood Paper Mill
Golf League
August 28
A Division
Low Gross
Pat Hunter....................... 38
Josh Willis....................... 39
Eugene Gilman................ 39
Dennis Schulz................. 41
Matt Shadley................... 43
Don Spengler.................. 44
Mike Vandervest............. 44
Rahlow Gilman............... 46
Low Net
Tom McDonald............... 28
Pat Hunter....................... 35
Dennis Schulz................. 35
Jesse Hageny................... 35
Eugene Gilman................ 36
Mike Vandervest............. 36
Josh Bougie..................... 36
Josh Willis....................... 37
B Division
Low Gross
Dan Luse......................... 39
Tim Fortier...................... 42
Tom Franke..................... 45
Mike Moore.................... 47
Bruce Thompson............. 50
Bob Platek....................... 52
Mike Rawlsky................. 54
Eric Lund........................ 55
Low Net
Dan Luse......................... 31
Tim Fortier...................... 32
Eric Lund........................ 33
Bruce Thompson............. 36
Jarrod Haenel.................. 37
Bob Platek....................... 37
Lee Hueckstaedt.............. 37
Tom Franke..................... 38
RCC Mens League
August 28
Low Gross
Josh Thompson............... 34
Don Stroede.................... 35
Dale Bronson.................. 37
Tim Kulhanek................. 37
Dan Labodda................... 37
Charlie Laham................. 37
Scott Cirilli...................... 38
Jake Nelson..................... 38
Low Net
Bill D’Aprix.................... 29
Brad Widule.................... 29
Jake Nelson..................... 30
Steve Agnoli.................... 31
Ken Schmidt.................... 31
Josh Thompson............... 31
Joe Duchac...................... 32
Dennis Hooker................ 32
John Kucharski................ 32
Charlie Laham................. 32
Don Stroede.................... 32
Dan Tvedten.................... 32
Tim Winter...................... 32
Jim Bloch........................ 33
Dale Bronson.................. 33
Brad Hanson.................... 33
Dan Labodda................... 33
Pat Marquart.................... 33
Todd McEldowney.......... 33
Andy Olds....................... 33
Eagles......................... Hole
Charlie Laham................... 1
Birdies........................ Hole
Mike Carlson..................... 1
Gary Cirilli........................ 1
Todd McEldowney............ 1
Del Smith.......................... 1
Jesse Spiegelhoff............... 1
Joe Duchac........................ 2
Tim Kulhanek................... 2
Steve Ory.......................... 2
Dennis Hooker.................. 3
SUVs
SUVs
4 x 4 Trucks
7544
2002 FORD EXPLORER
XLS 4WD
4.0L-V6, Auto, AC, Stereo,
Cruise, Keyless Entry, P.W., P.M.,
P.L., Tilt, Tow Pkg. & More.
$5,000
E & H Auto
866-546-8057
Hwy 51; Exit 205-Merrill
www.ehauto.com
Budget Sales & Service
2006 Ford Explorer XLT
4x4, 4 Door, 3rd Row Seat,
Fully Loaded, Rear Heat & AC,
AC, Disc Changer,
Runs & Drives Like New.
3 Month/3,000 Mile Warranty.
Priced Right @ $6,995
Financing Available
G&G Auto Sales, Merrill
1-888-494-1870
gandgautosales.com
Trucks
2005 VOLVO XC90 T6 AWD
2.9L-6 Cyl., Auto, AC, CD
Changer, Cruise, Pwr. Mem. Seat,
Heated Seats, Leather, P.L., P.M.,
P.W., Steering Audio Controls,
Sunroof & Much More.
$7,500
E & H Auto
866-546-8057
Hwy 51; Exit 205-Merrill
www.ehauto.com
Budget Sales & Service
7544
7548
2003 Chevy S10 LS Crew Cab
4 door, 4x4, V6, loaded, CD, AC,
only 105,000 miles, locking
Tonneau cover.
3 Month/3,000 Mile Warranty.
Priced less than blue book
@ $6,995
Financing Available
G&G Auto Sales, Merrill
1-888-494-1870
gandgautosales.com
7546
1994 Dodge Dakota SLT
2WD, long box, power windows &
locks, only 65,000 mi, very clean
inside & out.
3 Month/3,000 Mile Warranty.
Only $3,995
Financing Available
G&G Auto Sales, Merrill
1-888-494-1870
gandgautosales.com
Send your scores,
achievements
and photos to
[email protected]
Gary Peterson.................... 3
Kari Hjelt.......................... 4
Jim Kuczmarski................ 4
Scott Cirilli........................ 5
Pat Deau............................ 5
Ken Johnson...................... 5
Al Steinmetz...................... 5
Ansy Berrell...................... 6
Bill D’Aprix...................... 6
Rocky Delap...................... 6
Mark Gutteter.................... 6
Pete Otis............................ 6
Tim Phelan........................ 6
Pat Marquart...................... 7
Bruce Ginzl....................... 8
Craig Kuhl......................... 8
Charlie Laham................... 8
Dale Mooney..................... 8
Dan Tvedten...................... 8
Dan Labodda.................. 1,8
Josh Thompson........ 1,6,8,9
Pinewood Mens
League
September 2
Low Gross
Bob Loether.................... 41
Don Buss......................... 43
Butch Seeger................... 41
Ken Winnicki.................. 43
Tom Felch....................... 41
Mike Nieuwenhuis.......... 43
Vic Hohensee.................. 43
Low Net
Bob Loether.................... 33
Don Buss......................... 32
Butch Seeger................... 34
Bob Flannery................... 34
Perry Schuette................. 34
Tom Sommers................. 34
Brian Teske..................... 36
Mike Nieuwenhuis.......... 36
Steve Godawa................. 36
Birdies........................ Hole
Butch Seegar.............. 10,16
Kyle Adams................ 14,17
Bob Flannery................... 16
Lyle Kuckkan.................. 17
Jason Kral........................ 18
Repairables
Trailers
7552
Load Master Trailer 10ft, 13"
wheels, 2" hitch, rear ramp gate,
very good condition. Includes
Spare. List $2,200/Sale Price
$1,800. Asking $1,050 715-5444449
Vehicles Wanted
2003 CHEVY SILVERADO
1500LT
Ext. Cab, 4x4, 5.3L-V8, Auto, AC,
CD W/Changer, Pwr. Mem. Seat,
Heated Seats, Leather, Keyless
Entry, Pwr. Passenger Seat, P.L.,
P.W., P.M., Dual Climate Controls,
Topper, Tow & More.
$10,900
E & H Auto
866-546-8057
Hwy 51; Exit 205-Merrill
www.ehauto.com
Budget Sales & Service
7550
PETERSEN'S HYDRAULIC Jack
& Repair. 19 Theiler Dr., Tomahawk, WI 54487. (800)262-5225.
We repair all hydraulic cylinders,
log splitters, power trim on boat
motors, jack hammers, geared
pumps, air wrenches, motorhome
rams. We buy used jacks. Email:
[email protected]
Website: www.phjjacks.com
7554
CARS/TRUCKS WANTED! Top
$$$$$ PAID! Running or Not, All
Years, Makes, Models. Free Towing! Weʼre Local! 7 Days/Week.
Call Toll Free: 1-888-416-2330
GET CASH TODAY for any
car/truck. I will buy your car today.
Any Condition. Call 1-800-8645796 or www.carbuyguy.com
NOW PAYING CASH. Buying junk
vehicles. Call for price quote.
Bring in or we can pick up. Oak
Leaf Auto Salvage, (715)3629445.
Events
continued from page 13
6 months to 2 years old.
There is also a program
for kids 3 to 6 years old
and one for kids ages 2 to
3 years old. Call 715-3651070 for more information.
Friday, September 19
Play and Learn for
Kids: 9:30 to 11 a.m.,
Head Start, 1872 N. Stevens St. in Rhinelander.
All ages are invited to
participate. Call Tondra
at 715-361-2897 for more
information.
Saturday, September 20
Hodag Farmers Market: from 8 a.m. to noon at
Pioneer Park.
Escaping the Selfie
Syndrome Presentation:
from 10 a.m. at Woodruff
community building, Hwy.
47. Abundant Life Church
will host Botswana Missionary Kristin Buckley
who will speak on how
keep a godly perspective frees people from the
Selfie Syndrome. Call
715-477-2547 for more
information.
Main St. in Eagle River.
The theme for this open
house is “Dolls and More
Dolls.” A doll appraiser
will be attending and for
a $3 fee dolls will be appraised. Punch and cookies
will be served.
Jog for the Dogs: 9
a.m. at the Minocqua Park
Complex, Hwy. 70 West
in Minocqua. Benefits the
Oneida County Humane
Society. This is 3.1 mile
walk/jog participants can
do alone or with their dog.
Cost is $30 and includes a
bandana and a T-shirt. Call
715-362-5992 to register
or for more information.
Harvest Festival and
Auto Show: 9 a.m. to 3
p.m. in Lake Tomahawk.
Crafters, farmers market,
pumpkin decorating, food,
music and more.
Model Railroad Show:
9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the
Sloan Community Center
in Lake Tomahawk.
Enchanted Doll Club
Open House: from 10
a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Olson
Memorial Library, 203 N.
Historic Homes Open
House: 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
several of Rhinelander’s
historic homes will be
open for visitors to tour.
Tickets are $20 and can
be obtained from the
Rhinelander Fire/Inspection Dept., Rhinelander
City Hall or Trig’s. Call
715-365-8606 for tickets
or more information.
Parts & Accessories
Misc. Transportation
7562
CHARLIES AUTOMOTIVE
Ask About Our FREE Towing
Automotive Transmissions,
4-Wheel Drive Repair.
All transmissions dyno tested for
top quality performance & long
life. All transmissions backed by
12 month,
12,000 mile warranty.
Satisfaction guaranteed.
Delivery available.
Antigo - (715)623-7756
COUSINEAU AUTO PARTS Always paying top $ for damaged or disabled and end of life
vehicles. Responsibly recycling
with prompt and courteous
service. (800)642-2550
FOUR-POST Auto Lift, 8000 lb.
capacity, new-never used, $1,800.
Call 715-487-4462.
GMC POLISHED Aluminum 18"
rims with 265/65R18 tires, $800
set/4; Michelin radial LT tires,
LT245/75R16, less than 100
miles, $640 set/4. 715-904-2131.
Heavy Trucks
7570
2003 Ford F-350 truck. 75,000
miles, 7.3 Diesel Newer Power
unit 11.6 Bed Good condition asking $10,900 OBO Call 715-3412835
7574
CASH FOR CARS: All
Cars/Trucks Wanted. Running or
Not! Top Dollar Paid. We Come
To You! Any Make/Model. Call For
Instant Offer: 1-800-864-5960
CHECK US OUT! SAVE MONEY!
Affordable advertising in MANY
papers! WISCONSIN COMMUNITY PAPERS (WCP) and the
WISCONSIN CLASSIFIED AD
NETWORK (WCAN) Call toll-free
1-800-727-8745 or visit our website: www.wisad.com (wcan)
DONATE YOUR CAR, TRUCK,
OR BOAT, to HERITAGE FOR
THE BLIND. Free 3-Day Vacation. Tax Deductible. Free Towing.
All paperwork taken care of! 800856-5491 (wcan)
$ ave
Shop the
Classifieds
$$$$$
Page 20 • Star Journal • Sunday, September 7, 2014
OUTDOORS
Outdoor Report
September brings the
season of change
It gets dark early now; gone are the times of June
when daylight lasted until well after 9:00. Here now the
ever shortening span of daylight hours, darkness seemingly in a rush to cover the world, to take back minutes
of light every day. Days of temperatures that bump 80
degrees give false hope; darkness that falls earlier every
day gives reality.
Those shorter days mark September; make it different, dramatically so, from August. But also we are now
into hunting season and the next days and weeks bring
change on that front as well. Bear hunters have their
day now as do goose hunters. Next weekend, the 13th,
sees archery season kick off and with it the all-new
crossbow season (now open to all comers). Deer numbers took a hard hit last winter but hunting enthusiasm
remains steady.
Next weekend also brings the opening of grouse season and with it conditions of thick cover that makes an
open shot nearly impossible. But that will not slow the
stalwarts. Fall turkey season starts as well and the week
after, September 20, woodcock are fair game.
All of which is to say that the length of days is not
all that is changing. We are seeing splashes of early fall
color, red leaf among the green. Ferns will change soon.
Blackberries are ripening but the crop is thin. Birds are
gathering now; early migrants are already on their way
south.
Through all of this season change fishing remains a
constant; that season is long and with the exception of
trout closing soon, will mostly stay open. This month
is the month when we can expect waters to cool off
and fish to come on, bulking up for winter. As September ushers in the hunt so does it give hope to big-fish
anglers who know that the waning months of autumn
holds potential for larger fish.
It is fair to say that no matter how warm it may get
on a given day, the summer has passed; fall is here and
change will come quickly now. And it is best not to
waste time waiting for a better day to get outside.
The Outdoor Report is provided by the staff of Mel’s
Trading Post in downtown Rhinelander.
What’s Your Story?
[email protected]
For news, sports, outdoors
and event submissions!
Outdoor Adventures
Time travel amid years
of plaster and dust
By Mitch Mode
On a clear, cool day on the cusp
of autumn I wear a dust mask,
pull a cap tight, adjust glasses.
My gloves are leather but worn;
dirt-stained, thin spots showing.
I reach for a pry bar and swing it
into old ceiling above my head;
bar bites into plaster, dust rises
like smoke. Bits of plaster fall on
my head and face. I repeat. And again.
Chips of old plaster fall hard, the small shards hit
like summer hail, the large ones drop to the floor, shatter like plate glass. Above the plaster as I work upward, thin strips of wood, lath, nailed in place, the base
for the old concrete-like plaster. How old I wonder?
How old the plaster and the lath?
It is very simple, very dirty work. Simple for the basic hammer and pry bar; dirty for the decades old dust
that falls everywhere.
I rip out the lath and above that, insulation. Or what
passed for insulation then; a light, fluffy buff material
that may have provided a modicum of insulation but
has seen its day. It falls like snow but brown and dirty
and overpowering.
I pull more lath and more insulation falls and my
glasses are clouded with breath-fog and insulation dust
and I think to myself that on a nice day in early September there are better ways to spend my time. There
is a bicycle to ride, there are berries to search for, there
are sandhill cranes dancing in the fields where they are
staging for fall flight.
There is clear Wisconsin air to breathe, far more desirable than the musty dirt of the ancient insulation and
decades old dust.
But there is also the work and the work needs to be
done and so I keep at it. More plaster cracks and falls;
more lath splinters and is tossed aside; more insulation
falls.
A sheet of paper falls to the floor; a fluttering, sideslipping fall like a bat in flight or a goose tilting wings
to lose air in descent. The paper flashes color; lands in
dust at the feet of the step-ladder.
I pause, consider things; the paper lies facing up;
an advertisement in full color looks back at me. From
where I stand on the ladder I cannot read it. I will, at
this juncture, take any reason for a break so I climb
down, lift the dust mask, wipe the glasses clean and
pick up the paper.
There are actually several sheets of paper and the one
I look at is an advertisement, full page, full color that
suggests I change my house “…into a Victory Home”
and that I best do that by using Earl May’s plant seeds
to do so and offers a coupon for “New 1944 Nursery
and Seed Catalog”.
And I think: 1944. Nineteen forty-four. Nineteen
forty-four, when the country was at war and times
were hard. Nineteen forty-four; history book times for
me in school. Over a year before World War II would
end but nobody knew that then.
I flip the page over; another seed ad, this time for Inter-State Nurseries located, as Mr. May’s seeds, in Iowa.
Another page, another advertisement; full page,
color, expensive. A Norman Rockwell-style painting
of a family in the kitchen; dad and son lifting bottles.
Mother and daughter (or young man’s wife?) with
plates of food; smiles all around.
It’s an ad for Coca-Cola: “Have a Coca-Cola=Here’s
to old times…or welcoming home a sailor son”. For
the bottles the men are hefting are, on closer inspection, bottles of Coca-Cola and the younger man, the
son, is in his Navy blue uniform.
I carry the sheets of magazine to the kitchen table
and call Sally; “Hey, look what I found”. But I’m dirty
and dusty and no time to read so I go back to the room
where the floor is covered with scraps of wood lath
and pieces of plaster and, everywhere, billowy brown
insulation. Then I climb the step-ladder and reach into
a the darkness to pull out more insulation.
I let the insulation fall, reach again for more; but
there is something else. I squint in the haze of dust
and see more paper and I pull my work glove off and
carefully reach in and feel the smooth touch of paper,
a thicker bundle. I lift it out.
It is a magazine, Better Homes & Gardens. The back
cover and a few pages seem missing; that is what I’d
found minutes ago. But the front cover is intact and
most of the magazine as well.
I climb back down, toss mask and cap and gloves to
the floor, walk to the other room, head down, reading
what I can.
Better Homes & Gardens: February 1944. Seventy
years ago and then some. February, when winter still
held grip in Wisconsin and war held its grip on the
world. When the seeds from Iowa were more than
mere seeds for carrots or onions, tomatoes or peas;
those seeds were the seeds of optimism in winter that
summer would come after the months of cold and
snow and life would bloom.
[Indeed the ad copy for Deepfreeze freezers reads,
“Glistening snow may blanket the spot that was last
summer’s Victory Garden” as if it was written specifically for Wisconsin residents.]
And if the plant seeds bore optimism before they
bore fruit so did the ads, for the advertisements were of
better days ahead. General Electric promised women
“..good-bye forever to K.P.—after Victory”; Wurlitzer
pushed war bonds “…to speed their victory…:;Norge
let on that they were “…planning new household helps
for the women in the postwar homes”.
There was talk of rationing food, of conserving, of
victory gardens. There were helpful hints (taking care
of your vacuum cleaner; preparing dinners; upholstering chairs) but overlying it all, in ads and in stories,
overlying it all was the war.
I paged through the old magazine on a sunny September afternoon. The pages were musty but in good
shape; it was if the magazine had been put there a year
ago, two or three years ago. But seventy years? Yet
there is was.
There was no good reason for the magazine to be
where it was. It served no purpose. It did not plug a
knothole or serve as a crude patch of sorts. None of
that.
It had been placed with purpose in a cavity between
two ceiling joists, above the layer of lath and plaster
and there buried under the insulation.
It had been placed there, hidden in the insulation,
and then closed in; hammers drove nails, shut out the
light, closed it in. And then the carpenters went away
and for seventy years the darkness held it, held the old
magazine until I cracked the plaster, ripped off the lath,
let the insulation fall; and daylight broke the darkness.
And I thought to myself; they did this on purpose.
They put the magazine there with intent and in so doing did they say to themselves, Someday someone will
find this and know something of our lives.
I paged through the magazine and an ad caught my
see adventure, page 21
Sunday, September 7, 2014 • Star Journal • Page 21
2014 marks the beginning
of DNR’s E-registration
pilot program
The Wild Side
The flight of the hummingbird
By Jeremy Holtz
Wisconsin DNR
wildlife biologist
My mom always used to tell me that
hummingbirds travelled south for the
winter riding on the backs of Canada
geese. While this is a charming and
compelling tale, the fact is that these
little birds migrate the same way all
other birds do – they fly.
Migration is an amazing survival adaptation that allows
birds to travel long distances between winter and summer
homes. They use many different tools to navigate. Some
species use geographical landmarks, others fly at night
using heavenly bodies, and some have a kind of built in
magnetic compass in their heads. Birds also have many
different ways of travelling south. Some leave early, fly
extremely far, and come back as soon as possible. Shorebirds fall into this category—they actually started migrating south in August, leaving from near the Arctic circle
and travelling 3,000 miles or more to Central and South
America. I was reminded of this when I saw a shorebird
this weekend that I usually only see in spring; he was actually a bit behind schedule, and has a long ways to go.
An interesting contrast is a distant shorebird relative, the
American Woodcock. This bird has adapted to living in
fields and forests, where it finds its food in the shallow
mud. The woodcock won’t be migrating for at least another month. These birds fly in rather small groups, just
above the treetops, and might only travel a few miles a day.
Other birds will gather up to migrate as a large group,
heading south just ahead of freezing water. Ducks and
geese are good examples; they “stage” in areas before
they migrate, then move south in large flocks, staying
just south of the snow and frozen water line. The nature
of waterfowl migration easily debunks my mom’s “old
wives’ tale” about hummingbirds and geese. Geese can
fly in the upper atmosphere, at average speeds of 40 mph.
I doubt a hummingbird could even hang onto a goose’s
Ruby throated hummingbird
Stock photo
back at those speeds, heights, and temperatures. Additionally, I believe Canada geese stop in the gulf coastal
region, too far north for hummingbirds. (Thanks, mom!
Oh, and another thing—if you touch a baby animal, the
mother will not necessarily abandon it. And toads do not
give you warts.)
Many small songbirds, what we biologists call neotropical migrants, form such large flocks that they can
be picked up on weather radar. They can travel halfway
across the continent without stopping, if the conditions
are right. They travel to Central America or northern
South America and settle into their winter home.
So what do hummingbirds do? They leave Canada
and the northern U.S. and fly solo about 2,000 miles to
Panama. Their straight-line flight would have to include
passing over the Gulf of Mexico, hundreds of miles over
open water—during hurricane season. Thanks to specially modified wing bones, they flap their wings about 80
times a minute. They can sustain a speed of 25 miles per
hour, and they can fly up to 600 miles before they use up
all their available fat and fuel reserves. They may need to
cross up to 500 miles of the Gulf to get to Panama. Once
there, they rest, feed, and prepare to head back up to our
latitude first thing in spring. These birds travel thousands
of miles annually to spend the growing season in Wisconsin and drink from my bird feeder.
Jeremy Holtz is a wildlife biologist with the Wisconsin
DNR and writes a weekly column in the Star Journal. To
contact him, call (715) 365-8999.
Registering your deer just got even easier with eregistration. Wisconsin’s e-registration pilot program
is kicking off in 2014. According to the Department
of Natural Resources, some randomly selected hunters
will have the opportunity to test the electronic registration program. They are expecting deer registration will
be easier with the e-registration. In 2015, e-registration
will be made available to all hunters. If you have not
been selected for this season’s pilot program, please
continue to register your deer as you have in the past.
For other rule changes for the upcoming hunting seasons, see the website dnr.wi.gov.
Adventure
continued from page 20
eye; an advertisement for Balsam-Wood insulation,
insulation the ad bragged, that would “Avoid those
Fuel Shortage Blues”, insulation that looked, when I
checked it out online, exactly what had been falling on
my head on a nice September day when I ripped out an
old ceiling and found far more than I expected.
I looked at the newly opened ceiling and the equally
open walls where 2x4 studs will hold drywall in place.
But behind that drywall, between those 2x4s would be
a space, a cavity clean and dry and protected. A good
place for me to stash a magazine, a newspaper, perhaps
a note: “Greetings from 2014”. And then to cover it
with drywall, lock it in the darkness, nail it shut, then
walk away from it.
And leave it to the future.
An assortment of outdoor products is available at
Mel’s Trading Post in downtown Rhinelander. Call
(715) 362-5800. To comment on this story, visit StarJournalNow.com.
Don’t be late with your Classified Deadline
Wednesdays at 4:00 pm
Page 22 • Star Journal • Sunday, September 7, 2014
SPORTS Round-Up
Send sports submissions to
[email protected]
Star Journal photos
by Tim Smith
Another busy week in Hodag sports
Boys football played to a 7-7 tie in
the rain against Wittenberg.
The Hodag defense pushes the
Chargers back as the rain comes
down.
Brandon Reinthaler hands the ball to Cole Oettinger
for a gain.
Erik Tracy breaks a tackle as he turns a short pass
into a big gain.
Mason Shallow catches a pass across the middle and goes all the way
for the score.
Mason Shallow catches a pass across the middle and goes all the way
for the score.
After being forced out of the pocket, quarterback Brandon Reinthaler
gets around the corner for a gain.
The Hodags sit in the gym as a thunder storm rolls past
Get half-price Golf when you book within 10 days of your last round!
Northwood Golf Club
3131 Golf Course Rd.
Rhinelander, WI 54501
715-282-6565
05072573
northwoodgolfclub.com
Sunday, September 7, 2014 • Star Journal • Page 23
Girls tennis beat Lakeland 6-1.
Theresa Bloch ready to return the ball
Ivy Packard serving
Theresa Bloch
Eva O’Melia volleying
Eileen Emond returns a serve
Eileen Emond sets up her serve for her second game
Ivy Packard waits for her opponent to serve
Page 24 • Star Journal • Sunday, September 7, 2014
Want Your Ad To Stand Out In The Crowd?
Try One Of These Classified Enhancements!
LARGER TEXT
BOLD LETTERING
THE LOW COST OF
BEING NOTICED!
BORDER
Or combine 2
or more of these
enhancements
for even more
visibility.
LARGER TEXT BOLD LETTERING
Add
2.00
BORDER
PHOTO/LOGO
PHOTO/LOGO
Add 3.00
Add 3.00
Add 6.00
per enhancement to the base price of your ad.
$
$
$
$
BASE PRICES: • Private Party=3 lines $5.00 • Rummage Sale=5 lines $7.50 • Commercial=5 lines $25.00
Business, Real Estate, etc.
24 W. Rives Street • Rhinelander, WI 54501
715-369-3331
BUY
HODAG
®
e
d
i
u
g
RS’

Similar documents

- Waupaca Special Sections

- Waupaca Special Sections Evangelical Lutheran Church with the Rev. Matthew Schoell officiating. (Carlson Funeral Home)

More information

- Waupaca Special Sections

- Waupaca Special Sections interment following at the Monico Cemetery. (Hildebrand Russ Funeral Home)

More information

- Waupaca Special Sections

- Waupaca Special Sections 2660 Cty. Hwy. G, Rhinelander 1 mile south of Nicolet College on Hwy. G

More information