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West Nile virus infections confirmed in St. Croix County

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St. Croix County Public Health is encouraging residents to protect themselves from mosquito bites. Photo CDC

Submitted by Adam Kastonek, Public Information Officer, St. Croix County

ST. CROIX COUNTY, WI – St. Croix County Public Health is encouraging residents to protect themselves from mosquito bites as they report this year’s first human infections of West Nile virus (WNV) in three residents of the county. Several other people with WNV have been reported in the state this year. WNV activity has also previously been detected in mosquitoes and animals across the state. For continued monitoring of WNV activity in St. Croix County and the state, visit the Wisconsin Department of Health Services (DHS) West Nile Virus Data webpage.

West Nile virus is spread to people through the bite of an infected mosquito and is not spread from person to person. Mosquitoes get the virus by feeding on infected birds.

According to the DHS, most people (80%) who are infected with WNV do not get sick. Those who do become ill usually experience mild symptoms such as fever, headache, muscle aches, rash, and fatigue. However, some people (less than 1%) who become infected with the virus get seriously ill with symptoms that include high fever, muscle weakness, stiff neck, disorientation, confusion, tremors, paralysis, and coma. Older adults and those with compromised immune systems are at greater risk of developing severe illness that can be fatal. It is important that people contact a health care provider if they suspect they have WNV illness.

WNV illness is most common in Wisconsin during the months of August and September. However, the risk of contracting WNV and other mosquito-borne illnesses such as Jamestown Canyon virus, La Crosse encephalitis virus, or eastern equine encephalitis virus, is present anytime mosquitoes are active. Mosquito activity and the risk of WNV will continue until a hard frost occurs (temperatures below 28 degrees Fahrenheit for at least four consecutive hours. The best way to avoid illnesses spread by mosquitoes is to reduce exposure to mosquitoes and eliminate mosquito breeding sites. DHS offers these tips to protect yourself and your family against mosquito bites:

Avoid Mosquito Bites:

  • Apply an insect repellent with DEET, picaridin, oil of lemon eucalyptus, or IR3535 to exposed skin and clothing.
  • Prior to heading outdoors, treat clothing with permethrin; do not apply permethrin directly to skin.
  • Consider rescheduling outdoor activities that occur during evening or early morning hours, when mosquitoes that spread WNV are most active.
  • Wear long sleeves, long pants, and socks when outdoors to help keep mosquitoes away from your skin.

Mosquito-Proof Your Home:

  • Prevent mosquitoes from breeding around your home by removing stagnant water from items around your property.
    • Empty standing water that has collected in tin cans, plastic containers, flower pots, discarded tires, roof gutters, and downspouts.
    • Turn over wheelbarrows, kiddie pools, buckets, and small boats such as canoes and kayaks when not in use.
    • Change the water in bird baths and pet dishes at least every three days.
    • Clean and chlorinate swimming pools, outdoor saunas, and hot tubs; drain water from pool covers.
  • Make sure window and door screens are intact and tightly fitted to prevent mosquitoes from getting into your home.
  • Trim or mow tall grass, weeds, and vines since mosquitoes use these areas to rest during hot daylight hours.

Zion’s Pastor Ben gets immersed in his ministry at the Fall Festival

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Zion Lutheran’s Pastor Ben Nelson is immersed (dunked) in his ministry at the Fall Festival on Sunday, September 7th. Photo by Paul J. Seeling

WOODVILLE, WI – Zion Lutheran Church, in Woodville, Wisconsin held a Fall Festival celebration on Sunday September 7, 2025, on a beautiful sunny morning that was about 65 degrees, perfect sweatshirt weather. 190 plus congregants met starting at 9:00 a.m. with the worship service in the south parking lot that was set up with tables and chairs, and more chairs had to be brought out as the crowd grew.

The worship service was led by Zion’s Pastor Ben Nelson who became the “participant of the day” as he later became completely immersed in his work, more on that in a bit.

The service began with a “Prelude and Ringing of the Bell” calling all to worship as Zion Lutheran Church “celebrated the changing of the seasons and all of God’s blessings.”

To read this and other premium articles in their entirety, pickup the September 18, 2025 issue of the Woodville Leader newspaper. Click to subscribe for convenient delivery by mail, or call (715) 778-4990. Single issues are also available at area newsstands and our office in Spring Valley, WI.

Norwegian Immigration to America

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Contributed graphic

Submitted by Randi Hoffman, Sons of Norway

WOODVILLE, WI – Join us for an evening of fun and laughter as comedian, storyteller, and author Chad Filley entertains with a program to commemorate the 200th anniversary of the ship, Restauration, which carried the first Norwegian immigrant group to arrive in the United States of America in 1825.

This program is being hosted by members of the Sons of Norway, Valkyrien Lodge 53, on September 22nd.  We meet at Zion Lutheran Church in Woodville, 221 Lockwood Street, with our social time with snacks beginning at 6:00 p.m. and then Chad’s program starting at 6:30 p.m.

Our meeting is open to the public and everyone is welcome to attend.

Kern’s Hometown Café: A fresh gathering place in Elmwood

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Mother and daughter team, Stephanie and Kendra Kern celebrate the opening of their new venture, Kern’s Hometown Café, in Elmwood. Photo by Cari Cornelius

ELMWOOD, WI – Elmwood, Wisconsin has a new spot to sip, savor, and socialize — and it comes with familiar faces. Mother–daughter duo Stephanie and Kendra Kern have officially opened Kern’s Hometown Café, transforming what was once Kern’s Kurbside into a cozy hub for community connection.

Earlier this year, the Kerns closed their bar, ready for a change of pace.

“We wanted a space that brought people together — somewhere friends could gather, families could feel welcome, and kids could tag along,” Stephanie explained. “To me, that wasn’t a bar. A café just felt right.”

To read this and other premium articles in their entirety, pickup the September 18, 2025 issue of the Sun-Argus newspaper. Click to subscribe for convenient delivery by mail, or call (715) 778-4990. Single issues are also available at area newsstands and our office in Spring Valley, WI.

Elmwood 2025 Homecoming Schedule

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The 2025 Elmwood High School Homecoming Court. Contributed photo

Submitted by Nicole Freiermuth, Elmwood School District

ELMWOOD, WI – Here is the 2025 Elmwood Homecoming schedule:

2025 Homecoming Court

  • King & Queen: Crown at First Pep Assembly
    • (Taylor Asher or Nevaeh Zahara and Braeden Bechel or Austin Krentz or Keyden Muniz)
  • Juniors: Tessa Asher and Camren Hokanson
  • Sophomores: Haylee Borst and Tegan Crandall
  • Freshmen: Mikenna Manor and Easton Hardy

Dress Up Days:

  • Monday – Pajamas
  • Tuesday – Class Color Day
    • (Seniors-Black, Juniors-Blue, Sophomores-Pink, Freshmen-Red, Staff-Purple)
  • Wednesday – USA Day
  • Thursday – Happy Gilmore Day
    • *Dress as Adam Sandler or a Country Club Golfer
  • Friday – Spirit Day

Monday-Thursday HS Lunch Schedule:

  • Volleyball – Monday: Sophomores vs Juniors
  • Volleyball – Tuesday: Freshman vs Seniors
  • Volleyball – Wednesday: Losing Team vs Losing Team
  • Volleyball – Thursday: Winning Team vs Winning Team

Monday, September 22:

  • 2nd Period Assembly 9:25 Wolf Den, crown King and Queen

Tuesday, September 23:

  • 3rd Period Assembly 10:20 Wolf Den

Wednesday, September 24:

  • 4th Period Assembly 11:10 Wolf Den
  • Bonfire in Plum City 7:00pm

Thursday, September 25:

  • 5th Period Assembly 12:10 Wolf Den

Friday, September 26:

  • 3rd & 4th hour Flag Football
  • 1:00-1:30 – Volleyball – Winning Team vs Staff Team
  • 1:40-2:40 – All School Pep Fest- Wolf Den
  • 2:50 pm – Homecoming Parade
  • 7:00 pm – Home – Football Game – EPC vs. Spring Valley

Saturday, September 27

  • Homecoming Dance in Elmwood – 8:00-10:00pm – Semi Formal Lien Gym

Queen’s Corner – Rustic Lore Days was ‘Wild West!’

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Syttende Mai Queen Katelyn Gustefson and Princess Addisyn Wichelman at the Glenwood City’s Rustic Lore Days “Wild West” Queen’s tea. Submitted photo

By Syttende Mai Queen Katelyn Gustefson

WOODVILLE, WI – Hi Woodville! Two weeks ago on Saturday, September 6 and Sunday, September 7, 2025, Princess Addisyn Wichelman and I attended Glenwood City’s Rustic Lore Days. Glenwood City’s Rustic Lore Days celebration continues to be the rural tradition that they hand down from generation to generation with a new theme every year. This year, it was the Wild West!

On Saturday night, Princess Addisyn and I attended their coronation. We got to watch the new court get crowned, and our friends give their last words in crown and gown. We’re excited to get to know the new court! New Sparkler Sisters.

Sunday morning, we attended their Queen’s Tea, where we were served a “Wild West” barbecue. We handed out buttons to some new courts we hadn’t met yet, and we hung out with some friends. Throughout the parade, we saw everyone decked out in their Western hats and boots. There were tons of festivity, and we had a ton of fun throughout the parade!

This last weekend Princess Addisyn Wichelman and I were in Amery for their Fall Festival on Saturday, September 13, 2025!

Saturday morning, we went to the Queen’s Tea at the Village Pizzeria. We had breakfast and got to look at all the scrapbooks of the outgoing court. We met some new courts and handed out plenty of our collectable Syttende Mai buttons! After, we went to the parade line up and waited for the parade to start.

We got to watch all the marching bands ahead of us in the parade, and we even saw some past royalty performing! The parade had lots of people, and we got out at the end to watch the rest. We also walked through their craft fair.

Later that night, I went back to Amery to watch their Coronation of the new Miss Amery. I got to meet the new court and see some past royalty Sparkle Sisters I spent time with!

Sunday, September 21, 2025, will be our last parade of the parade season. We will be in Spring Valley for their 57th Annual Dam Days Celebration. We hope to see you there!

Cardinal gridders battle for epic win over Lakers, Cadott visits tomorrow

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SPRING VALLEY, WI – If you are going to win every-other quarter in a football game, you really want it to be the second and fourth quarters – which is exactly what the Spring Valley football team did here last Friday night.

The end result was a 36-28 win over a Turtle Lake football team that is moving to 8-man football next year, and the two teams battled every minute right down to the final seconds. The win improved the Cardinals to a 2-2 overall record with a 2-0 conference mark. Valley will try to build on that as they play hosts to Cadott tomorrow night (Friday, September 19, 2025). Valley travels to Elmwood next week for another conference road game.

The Lakers got on the board first, using a fake-punt deep in their own territory to get a long gain and first down to prolong their drive. The Lakers drove down and scored on a 4-yard quarterback keeper by senior Brody Tarman with 6:49 left in the first quarter. The two-point conversion try failed, but Turtle Lake scored on their opening drive for a 6-0 lead.

To read this and other premium articles in their entirety, pickup the September 18, 2025 issue of the Sun-Argus newspaper. Click to subscribe for convenient delivery by mail, or call (715) 778-4990. Single issues are also available at area newsstands and our office in Spring Valley, WI.

‘Making Magic Happen’ through four decades of community theater

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This is a scene from the hilarious 2025 Stagehands production of “Cheeseheads: The Musical.” Photo by Paul J. Seeling

SPRING VALLEY, WI – The Spring Valley Stagehands have been making community theater magic happen for 40 years. The Sun-Argus is presenting a history of the Stagehands through the decades. This week it is the final chapter of this history of the Spring Valley Stagehands Half Decade of 2020 – 2025.

2020 was the year time forgot as COVID-19 reigned supreme. Not to be deterred, the Stagehands created an online show for the holidays which featured Holiday music and a performance of the Charles Dickens classic a “Christmas Carol.”  This was our attempt to recapture some normalcy in a very abnormal situation.

This first half of the decade, post COVID, featured multiple upgrades in the sound and lighting in the Stagehands Theatre. There were some wonderful donations that allowed the purchase of new microphones, a new sound board, a new computerized lightboard and newer more efficient stage lights. Musicals continued to dominate the summer slots with comedies, murder mysteries, “dramadies,” Christmas offerings and Christmas Community concerts filling out the balance of the yearly schedules. For the first time, the Stagehands presented an Easter show penned “The Passion of Christ” which was so successful in 2025 that it will return in 2026.

To read this and other premium articles in their entirety, pickup the September 18, 2025 issue of the Sun-Argus newspaper. Click to subscribe for convenient delivery by mail, or call (715) 778-4990. Single issues are also available at area newsstands and our office in Spring Valley, WI.

Carroll William Klanderman

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Contributed photo

Carroll William Klanderman, age 95, passed away peacefully at the Baldwin Care Center on September 7, 2025. He was the third of five surviving children of James and Erna (VanDyke) Klanderman, born in their Baldwin township farmhouse on November 12, 1929.

He attended Pine Lake school for all eight elementary grades and graduated from Baldwin High School in 1947.

In 1952, he married Dorothy Halvorson. They had four children and were together for 33 years. Shortly after their first child was born, Carroll was drafted into the Army during the Korean War, where he served as a military policeman in Georgia.

Carroll and Dorothy purchased the Klanderman homeplace in 1956. There, he farmed and ran a carpentry business for 23 years. His feelings for the land and dairy farming ran deep, and he lamented the loss of the small Wisconsin dairy farm. The work was hard, but later in life, he wrote:  “I look back on those experiences with extreme fondness.”

In 1986, Carroll and Dorothy divorced. Shortly thereafter, Carroll met Norma Berkseth in the parking lot of the Coachman Supper Club. She invited him in for what would be the first of many dances. Norma quickly became the love of his life, and they married in 1986. Carroll and Norma were quite the power couple, living their lives to the fullest! Their adventures were endless, traveling to Europe; visiting homesteads in Holland, Norway, and Ireland; tending to their rose gardens; sipping tea on their front porch; reading together at night in their matching wing-backed chairs.

Carroll’s dedication to Norma had no bounds. She passed in 2023, leaving Carroll to mourn her death until his final days. He spoke of her every day, often through tears, sharing stories and saying, “I loved that woman, my darling, my sweetie”.

Throughout Carroll’s life, his talents were abundant. Telling Ole & Lena jokes, speaking Norwegian, wood carving, and the gift of gab were just a few of his most notable attributes. If you were close to Carroll, he likely gifted you a carving. He carved everything from signs and trinket boxes to animals and Celtic crosses, and of course, the occasional bawdy character. Carroll also loved talking while sharing a cup of coffee. His ability to spark up a conversation with anyone was effortless, and he had a knack for finding a connection (whether it be family, friend, or acquaintance), which typically led to a story and more cups of coffee.

To his family, Carroll was a father, grandfather, and great-grandfather. His love and pride for his kin ran deep, and he was not afraid to express it. His intuition in his final days brought his family together. Carroll was not an outwardly religious man, but in the days preceding his death, he expressed his love for Jesus and his peace knowing he would soon rest in heaven.

Carroll is preceded in death by his loving wife, parents, and siblings.  His stories and love live on through his children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren in both of the families to which he belonged.

The families ask that you join them for a gathering to celebrate his life through fellowship, singing, and prayer at Peace Lutheran Church in Baldwin on Friday September 26th at 11am, with a luncheon and informal visitation to follow from 12pm – 2pm.

Cardinal volleyball team continues winning ways

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ELK MOUND, WI – The Cardinal volleyball team continues to build on their strong start to the season with two wins and a loss last week at the Elk Mound quad here.

The pair of wins and loss improved the overall record to 7-2 for Spring Valley with no games played in the Dunn-St. Croix Conference yet. The team traveled to Barron for a quad this past Tuesday against Barron, Bloomer and Chetek-Weyerhaeuser with results in this week’s Sun-Argus. Valley also traveled to Baldwin-Woodville for the B-W quad where they competed against the host school, Spooner and Clear Lake last Thursday. This week the Cardinals had a match against Ellsworth on Tuesday at home. The conference matches begin the following week.

SCC 2, Spring Valley 0 – The Cardinals lost to the Panthers by scores of 21-25 and 23-25 to open up the play at the Elk Mound quad.

To read this and other premium articles in their entirety, pickup the September 11, 2025 issue of the Sun-Argus newspaper. Click to subscribe for convenient delivery by mail, or call (715) 778-4990. Single issues are also available at area newsstands and our office in Spring Valley, WI.

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