*****ECRWSSEDDM***** Postal Customer PRSRT STD U.S. Postage PAID Permit No. 440 Sterling, IL 61081 Want to know how to Whoop it up? All you have to do is axe You can’t put a price on kindness at a local donation center Sterling and the Illinois State Police go way back together New owners of downtown bar think outside the Fox
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4 Let’s Whoop it up!
Want to know how to whoop it up at a Rock Falls couple’s new business? All you have to do is axe.
22
Have
Articles and advertisements are the property of Sauk Valley Media. No portion of Sterling-Rock Falls Living may be reproduced without the written consent of the publisher. Ad content is not the responsibility of Sauk Valley Media. The information in this magazine is believed to be accurate; however, Sauk Valley Media cannot and does not guarantee its accuracy. Sauk Valley Media cannot and will not be held liable for the quality or performance of goods and services provided by advertisers listed in any portion of this magazine.
There’s no place like home, but you don’t need to tap your shoes together to get back to it — just Tap into a Corner of your mind and find the inspiration to write songs from the heart, which is what a former Rock Falls resident did.
Caring is sharing
The people who run a Sterling donation center don’t believe you should put a price on kindness, and the countless people they’ve helped through the years couldn’t agree more.
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Illinois, Sterling ... Partners
Everyone in law enforcement needs a partner they can depend on, and the Illinois State Police has one in Sterling.
34
Thinking outside the Fox
The new owners of Sterling bar put their own stamp on the business by taking lovers of libations on a trip around the world.
A Shaw Media Publication | Sterling-Rock Falls Living | Spring 2023| 3
Director Jennifer Heintzelman
editor & Page design Rusty Schrader For Advertising
Published by Sauk Valley Media 113 S. Peoria Ave., Dixon, IL 61021 815-284-2222
Contact Jill Reyna at 815-631-8774 or jreyna@saukvalley.com
a story idea for Sterling-Rock Falls Living? E-mail rschrader@saukvalley.com
inside
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shot of
A
music ... on the rocks
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4 | A Shaw Media Publication | Sterling-Rock Falls Living | Spring 2023
hen people try to come up with a business plan, they’ll throw ideas at a wall to see what sticks.
For Josh and Meaghan Coward, throwing things at a wall was their business plan — and what they threw were axes. And they stuck.
The Rock Falls couple behind one of Sterling’s newest business have opened their doors to people who want to get a handle on an activity that’s been growing in popularity in recent years: Axe throwing.
Whoop Your Axe opened Oct. 1 in a suite at Lee Wayne Plaza on East Lincolnway, and the cutting edge business has been welcoming people who want to try their hand at the leisure sport where players throw an axe at a target on a wood board — the closer to the bullseye, the better the score; and if you hit either of the smaller blue targets on the board, it’s worth even more.
As axe throwing has grown in popularity, more businesses have opened to meet the demand, and governing bodies for tournaments have been established around the world.
“Our ultimate goal is to make people smile and laugh when they leave,” Josh said. “I’m pretty confident in saying that 99.9 percent of the people we see like it, and we’ve seen many repeat throwers already just because they had so much fun.”
It doesn’t take long to pick up the basics of throwing — about 10-15 minutes — but the more you practice the better you’ll get. There’s coordination, stance, throwing, determining the right release point. After an hour, you should have a better grip on it.
WHOOP cont’d to page 6
Cody Cutter Sauk Valley Media
A Shaw Media Publication | Sterling-Rock Falls Living | Spring 2023 | 5
Who’s going to be the first to hit 21? Competitors can keep track with scoreboards at each lane. Digital timers keep track of throwing sessions, which are charged by the hour.
“Once they’ve figured it out, they’re having fun for the rest of the hour,” Josh said. “It’s a lot like throwing darts: As long as you keep everything nice and straight, you’re good. It’s more adjusting to it being a two-pound axe instead of a two-ounce dart.”
The approximately 4,000 square feet facility has four single throwing lanes, one double-lane for those who enjoy competing against one another, and a party room with a private double lane. Those who just want to watch, or are waiting their turn, can grab a drink and watch TV at the bar, or play some of the arcade games near the throwing lanes. Even if you’re not playing, it’s hard not to get caught up in the excitement, as hoots and hollers can be heard from players.
Ax throwing brings out excitement in everyone, Meaghan said.
“It’s our goal that they get at least one throw stuck to the board before they leave,” Meaghan said. “There’s excitement not just when they stick a bullseye, but just the axe on the board. That’s what gets me excited, when they’re happy and seeing them enjoy themselves.”
A few years ago, Josh and Meaghan were heading to Florida to visit one of his cousins when they spotted an axe-throwing trailer rolling down
the highway next to them.
“We were on the Interstate and we saw a mobile trailer,” Josh said. “I asked my cousin what it was, and he said they were all over down there. He thought it was a great idea.”
The couple tossed their first axes when they got to Florida and they were hooked.
Josh, a former athlete at Rock Falls High School, got the hang of it pretty quickly, but it took Meaghan a little longer to catch on, but once she did it was game on as she gave Josh a run for his money.
“We’re really competitive,” Meaghan said. “We liked the competitiveness of axe throwing, and that’s what sparked our interest.”
WHOOP cont’d to page 7
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WHOOP cont’d from page 5
CODY CUTTER/ CCUTTER@ SHAWMEDIA.COM
WHOOP cont’d from page 6
Josh and Meaghan decided to bring axe throwing back home and bought a trailer to set up their own axe whooping on wheels. They set up at county fairs and parties, and it didn’t take long before they were getting more and more calls.
“I think people were excited and thought it was fun,” Meaghan said. “It was something different that they never tried before. That’s what we get here, too; people will get a little nervous at first because they are axes and they are sharp, but once they start throwing and know that they’ll stick on the board, they get excited.”
Business continued to pick up — “We went around to fairs, birthday parties, rehearsal dinners and weddings,” Josh said — and it wasn’t long before they set their sites on a new target: a brick-andmortar business.
“Everyone really liked it, and said we should have a storefront because it will have more people,” Josh said, and they have.
Customers have been dropping by, businesses have rented out the party
room for parties and retreats — there were even hatchets for the holidays: about 40 Christmas parties scheduled between Thanksgiving and Christmas.
WHOOP cont’d to page 8
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Josh and Meaghan Coward (right) opened Whoop Your Axe on Oct. 1 in the Lee Wayne Plaza in Sterling. CODY CUTTER/ CCUTTER@SHAWMEDIA.COM
There’s more to it than just aiming and throwing; there’s a way to mix some fun in, too, with target-based games. Rules are outlined in a book at each lane. League play is in the works: They plan to run 8 weeks on Wednesday evenings from 6 to 9 p.m. Additional news will be posted on Whoop Your Axe’s website and Facebook page.
Want the axe throwing experience to come to you? No problem. Even through the storefront keeps Josh and Meaghan busy, they continue to rent out the trailer, which has been popular at birthday and private parties, weddings, fundraisers and corporate events.
Customers must sign a waiver before participating and be at least 10 years old. Those ages
10 to 15 must be accompanied by a parent, and ages 16 to 17 can throw without a parent as long as a waiver is signed by one.
Sessions at the store run $20 per person per hour. The party room can be rented for a minimum of 2 hours for $250, and $150 for each additional hour; and if you would like to rent out the entire facility, contact Josh or Meaghan.
The mobile unit runs $400 for a 2-hour minimum and $150 for each additional hour. It’s also available for the whole day for $1,250. There’s a $1 per-mile charge for reservations more than 30 miles away.
WHOOP cont’d to pp. 10 & 11
8 | A Shaw Media Publication | Sterling-Rock Falls Living | Spring 2023
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WHOOP cont’d from page 7
Bailey Schneiderbauer’s husband, Mike, demonstrates his throwing technique at a target at Whoop Your Axe.
CODY CUTTER/ CCUTTER@SHAWMEDIA.COM
A Shaw Media Publication | Sterling-Rock Falls Living | Spring 2023 | 9
10 | A Shaw Media Publication | Sterling-Rock Falls Living | Spring 2023
Whoop Your Axe's private party room can hold up to 20 people, with tables, a TV and a double throwing lane.
CODY CUTTER/CCUTTER@SHAWMEDIA.COM WHOOP YOUR AXE FACEBOOK PAGE
Whoop Your Axe can take its throw on the road, with its mobile axe throwing trailer.
“I’ve had two people say that this is the most fun they’ve had in two years because of COVID,” Josh said. “That was really cool to hear. Then with the business parties that we’ve had: Some have said they normally have Christmas parties but they’re boring and this
was one of the best Christmas parties they’ve had. It’s satisfying for us that we’ve been hitting the community and helping people enjoy the stuff.”
Throwing axes at targets is something most people haven’t done, but more and more are doing it, and Josh and Meghan are happy to bring another entertainment option to the Twin Cities.
“COVID kind of got us all trapped inside, and this is allowing people in the community to enjoy our community instead of traveling an hour to go do something,” Josh said. n
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2317 E. Lincolnway, Suite C, Sterling Online: whoopyouraxe.com, or find “Whoop Your Axe - Axe Throwing” on Facebook Contact: 815-213-7493 or whoopyouraxe@ gmail.com AXE-THROWING HOURS 5-11 p.m. Thursday-Friday 11 a.m.-11 p.m. Saturdays Noon-9 p.m. Sundays ADULT GAMING ROOM HOURS 9 a.m.-11 p.m. Thursdays 9 a.m.-1 a.m. Fridays 11 a.m.-1 a.m. Saturdays Noon-9 p.m. Sundays
CODY CUTTER/CCUTTER@SHAWMEDIA.COM
WHOOP cont’d from page 9
12 | A Shaw Media Publication | Sterling-Rock Falls Living | Spring 2023
By Cody Cutter Sauk Valley Media
o matter how much we grow, we never forget our roots. Joe Ryan is no different — except that his stories come with a backing track.
Ryan is originally from Rock Falls, but today he’s the frontman — swapping a Y for an I in his professional name — for Joe Rian and the A.M. Drinkers, a Chicago-based band that blends folk rock and alternative country music, and mixes in some Twin City inspiration now and then.
In a journey that’s taken him from the Twin Cities to the Windy City, with stops in the Quad Cities and out west along the way, Ryan has honed his craft through the years, but it’s a trip down memory lane where he’s found inspiration for some of his music lately: songs from the heartland — and the heart.
RYAN cont’d to page 14
A Shaw Media Publication | Sterling-Rock Falls Living | Spring 2023 | 13
“Johnny drove a Ford truck down at the mill. When he’d get off he’d drink his fill. He drove all day and he drove all night. Criss crossing the county line. Everything will be alright when he gets home, home tonight ...”
“He threw a football back in high school. Broke his leg now he’s working for the mill. Sometimes he thinks about those days. Criss crossing the ol’ highway. Everything will be alright when he gets home, home tonight ...”
“Johnny saved his money. He’s gonna buy a house some day. Johnny saved some money for a rainy, rainy day.”
“Picks up his girl after his shift. She gets dolled up they hit the strip. Records play their favorite song. And they just scream and dance along. Everything will be alright when he gets home, home tonight ...”
“Mill shut down now he’s hit hard times. He’s at the unemployment line. Looking for work never been so hard. He just wishes he could drive his Ford. And everything will be alright when he gets home, home tonight ...”
RYAN cont’d from page 13
Ryan’s catalog includes numbers that reference family stories, old haunts and Twin Cities staples.
“Corner Tap” tells the story of his parents’ luck and love at the longtime Rock Falls tavern that it takes its name from, and “Joe Bristol” forges tragedy and steel into a song about losing a life to a livelihood.
“I feel like I’m finally writing the best material ever,” he said. Today, he’s got a band, a tour schedule, social media exposure and a pair of publicists; his work has made it onto albums and online streaming platforms, and he’s finally making good money with his music — a far cry from about 15 years ago when he has busking on Windy City streets with a guitar and a bucket for money.
“I feel like now, all of a sudden, I have a little bit of funding behind me so I can get it heard,” Ryan said. “It’s an amazing time to be alive.”
Ryan, 55, was adopted by Joe and Patricia Ryan as a newborn and lived with his parents and adopted sister, Jacquie, in Rock Falls. The elder Joe was a tool-and-die maker at Northwestern Steel and Wire and his father, also named Joe, was one of the first workers at RB&W when it started up in 1902. Patricia worked at the A&P Grocery store and later drove a school bus for KAL Bus Lines.
Ryan comes back home every once in a while, he said,
and the memories of growing up in a rural neighborhood south of Montmorency School, near the Hennepin Feeder Canal are still fresh — fishing, swimming, trail riding on motorcycles, grabbing a bite with friends at the Friendship House in Rock Falls or Parkway in Sterling.
“It was a really great way to grow up,” said Ryan, a 1986 graduate of Newman Central Catholic High School. “It was a really great town. Everyone’s dad made a good living. I thought it was a wonderful place. I’ve often thought of going back. I love the country and stuff. My wife, she’s a city girl, and will be like, ‘What do we do?’ Yeah, I get it. I still wouldn’t mind having a little place there or something.”
RYAN cont’d to page 15
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Today, Ryan lives in Chicago with his wife, Sheila, and their two young children. His current band, The A.M. Drinkers, recently completed a winter residency at the Blue Island Beer Company in suburban Blue Island, and will spend the weekend of March 25 and 26 back in his old stomping grounds with a pair of concerts. They’re scheduled to perform for a crowd of up to 2,000 ticket holders at the Green River Riders Association’s 19th Annual Spring Bash and opening of its new clubhouse in Yeowardsville on Saturday the 25th, and the next day they’ll swing by for a gig at the Corner Tap — after all, how could they not perform at the local watering hole that Ryan tapped into for inspiration for one of his songs?
“Corner Tap” is about how Joe and Patricia got to know one another, with the help of some “lucky charms” and “lucky stars,” as Ryan sings. The song opens with the line, “I’ve seen you down at the Corner Tap each and every night,” and refrains with “we could stumble together out of the Corner Tap tonight.” The promo art for the song, which was released in October, features a photo of Ryan’s parents shortly after they got married. Both of his parents have since passed, but a pair of aunts, Shirley Ryan and Joan Tillie Adams, still live in the area.
“I’ve seen you down at the Corner Tap each and every night. I sure would like to get to know you, but I’m really kind of shy. Maybe if I have a lucky charm, I could rub it real right. We could stumble together out of the Corner Tap tonight.”
“You look so sad ‘cause you lost yourself very deep inside. How could a pretty girl like yourself be treated so unkind? Maybe if I had a lucky star, I could throw it through the sky. We could stumble together out of the Corner Tap tonight.”
“You don’t even know my name, I could be a creeper in disguise. We could stumble together out of the Corner Tap tonight.”
“I took a chance and I bought you a drink, you smiled and said hello. I wanted to say Hi a bunch of times, but I really didn’t know. Maybe we could go to that little place, sit down and get a bite. We could stumble together out of the Corner Tap tonight.”
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RYAN cont’d to page 16
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“My dad met my mom there, supposedly,” Ryan said. “I remember when I was a kid he stuttered terribly, but after a while he didn’t have it at all anymore. He met my mom when he was throwing a guy out of the side door of the Corner Tap. It got me thinking, how does a shy guy with a stutter meet a girl? It must be hard.”
Another new song, “Jim Bristol,” tells the story of the risks of working at the former Northwestern Steel and Wire mill. Bristol is actually Jim Naughton, the father of a friend of Ryan’s who died in an accident at the mill in 1995.
“Jim was like one of those coolest dads, always happy, always positive when he came home, and a company man,” Ryan said.
But one day, “He just didn’t come home. That [stuff] happens at the mill.”
Family and his hometown found a home in other songs Ryan wrote for his most recent album, “Switchyard Sessions.”
Rock Falls is name-checked in “Highway” — “Topped up in Rock Falls, I’ll put the pedal down. Twenty-four more miles, and I’ll be laying down.”
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From left: B.C. Carter (guitar), Jack Conely (drums), Joe Rian (guitar and vocals), and Mike Dumont (bass).
RYAN cont’d
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RYAN cont’d to page 18 SM-ST2056184
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“November Night” tells the story about the time Ryan’s parents were saving money for their children’s Christmas presents: “Mama drove a school bus 80 miles a day, to bring us presents on Christmas Day. Daddy got dirty down at the mill, working overtime so we can get our fill.”
“Johnny” references moments in Ryan’s high school life and what his friends have been up to since graduating. The song’s namesake is a composite of many people, Ryan said.
“You work all day and then get your girl on a Saturday night, get some records and dance and drink your woes away, until you go back to the job,” Ryan said.
Finding inspiration in his own story has been a process of evolution for Ryan.
After a year studying art and playing sports at St. Ambrose University in Davenport, Iowa, Ryan moved to Arizona and found himself working at a machine shop. He hadn’t given much thought about a music career when he participated in a call-in promotion for a radio station one day in 1989. He won a Doobie Brothers CD after that first phone call, but also won the promotion’s grand prize: a trip to the The Fire Meets the Fury Tour with Stevie Ray Vaughan and Jeff Beck in Los Angeles.
In addition to concert tickets, Ryan also got to meet a “who’s who” of musicians, including headliners Eddie Van Halen, Bonnie Raitt and David Bowie. Also in the prize package was a Stratocaster guitar signed by Vaughan and Beck. That guitar would help kickstart his musical journey.
Tragedy struck not too long after the concert, however, when his mother died suddenly after the family Christmas dinner. After a brief stay back home, he set his sights on Chicago — “where the action is,” he said — and landed a job at Buddy Guy’s Legends near Grant Park.
As fate would have it, Buddy Guy’s was where Vaughan was scheduled to perform
next after a concert at the Alpine Valley Music Theater in East Troy, Wisconsin, on Aug. 27, 1990. Ryan attended that concert and heard the news of Vaughan’s death in a plane crash shortly after it took off from East Troy.
“Sometimes I wonder what kind of songwriter I would be if I weren’t a guitar player. It’s one of those forks in the road,” Ryan said. “It may have been totally different and I would have been more into indie rock — which I was into before I won that guitar.”
Ryan bounced around from job to job in the next 20 years, and busked on the streets when he could, before using music as a means of recovering from hard times during the 2008 financial recession. He had to sell his prized Stratocaster to make ends meet, but eventually rebounded and started a family with Sheila.
RYAN cont’d to page 19
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RYAN cont’d from page 17
Ryan continued to work on his craft in Chicago, and it was there that he came up with a collection of songs to record with his group at the time, The Additives. By the time they put out their second album, he learned the value of not just storytelling, but telling stories “from the heart,” he said, writing “about what you know.”
“The minute you stop writing about what you know, it comes through in your music and it’s not believable. If you write what you really know about, it’s completely genuine and people identify with it. They see the truth in it. I just kind of made the switch as I was writing the ‘Switchyard’ record.”
“Switchyard Sessions” was put together during two short periods in a five-year span. He had initially shelved the project and became more interested in collecting vintage motorcycles. However, as his children were growing up, he saw music as another way to connect with them, and give them a sign pointing to their own memory lane. His wife plays the piano at church, and their children play as well.
“These little kids aren’t going to understand how rad this 1978 vintage racing motorcycle is, but they sure will understand music,” Ryan said. “I wanted to kick it in gear, leave the motorcycles behind and finish the second half of
this record, and let me leave behind a plethora of music and interviews and whatnot for the kids that they can appreciate and always come back to.” His hometown roots aren’t the only ones he’s returned to in recent years. Ryan is also busking again — but instead of staking out a place on the street to play, he has his own places on social media platforms, such as Twitter and Discord, where people can hear him play live. Ryan is active on the Twitter Spaces live platform many nights right around midnight. Instead of busking for cash and coins on the streets, online listeners can buy his music as NFTs (non-fungible tokens) — a system similar to cryptocurrency that has become popular in recent years.
While earning money playing is great, Ryan said being on social media brings not only his music to a larger audience, but a piece of his hometown too.
“It’s crazy that I’m busking on my phone now for a living,” Ryan said, adding that it’s not that far removed from busking on the streets. “It’s the same exact thing. It’s not for everyone and it’s extremely hard work, but the good thing is that I can do this, still be with my family and not have to be on the road a lot. I can play to nearly 2,000 people [online] by jumping into a [Twitter] space [platform], saying ‘Hi,” play a song and jump into another space after a while, and I can build a decent following.”
His blend of folk rock and alternate country can be simplified as “tavern music,” he said, a term inspired from feedback he’s received on social media.
“Every time I’ve played for the past year, I always hear people feel like, ‘I’m in some sort of smokey bar and having a glass of whiskey when I hear you singing,’” Ryan said. “It’s like being in this old little tavern — I don’t know how many people have told me that.”
After a lifetime of twists and turns, Ryan sees his music career only getting better. Who knows where the trip may take him, but two things are for sure: He won’t forget where he came from, or how it helped him get to where he is. Rock Falls may be his first home, but the stage is his second one.
“I’m always working some sort of a gig, because it’s a great creative release,” Ryan said. “You can feel the energy off of people. If you can quiet a room full of people, or light up a room with a performance, it’s really gratifying. All of your worries go away after a few songs in, you’re getting sweaty, and you’re not thinking about anything else. It’s an amazing release, and that’s probably why I just keep doing it.” n
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RYAN cont’d from page 18
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22 | A Shaw Media Publication | Sterling-Rock Falls Living | Spring 2023
may be better to give than to receive, but there’s a place in Sterling that does both.
If The Caring Center didn’t receive donations from people, it wouldn’t be able to give as much back to the community as it has — and it’s given back a lot.
The Caring Center offers people who need a helping hand a selection of clothes, dishes, toys, jewelry, home decor and more most of it for free, though there are limits on certain items, and donations are requested for larger items.
The center is supported by donations from the community and a staff of volunteers — about 20 — who sort and stock and take care of customers.
General manager Irene Nusbaum has been with store for 12 years, and in that time she’s seen what The Caring Center can do for people, from being there in a person’s time of need to giving them a much-needed smile when they find what they need.
“It’s a mission where you help so many people,” Nusbaum said. “You just help so many people. All of us volunteers are so blessed.”
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Irene Nus-
and Brooke Cochran, managers at The Caring Center in downtown Sterling, lead an entirely volunteer staff in making clothes, books, toys, knickknacks household items and more available to people who need a helping hand. “It’s a mission where you help so many people,” Nusbaum said. “You just help so many people. All of us volunteers are so blessed.”
CODY CUTTER/CCUTTER@SHAWMEDIA.COM
A Shaw Media Publication | Sterling-Rock Falls Living | Spring 2023 | 23
baum (left)
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Clothing takes up much of the floor space, hung on hangers and sorted on racks by men’s and women’s pieces and by sizes — all free of stains and tears. Elsewhere, dishes, toys, jewelry, decor and shoes fill the floor, all in presentable condition as well.
Books of all kinds also find their way in and out of the store, sorted by genres and categories — anything from a baby’s first book to a postgraduate academic textbook.
Assistant manager Brooke Cochran has seen many people browse through the books as if it were a library trip — no due dates here, though.
“They can get unlimited books when they come in because we have so many, they can take about as many as they want,” Cochran said. “They do go out of here. There are people who only come in here specifically to look at the books, and they may take out 20 at a time.”
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24 | A Shaw Media Publication | Sterling-Rock Falls Living | Spring 2023
The Caring Center is more than happy to give you the clothes off their rack, and they’ve got plenty to give.
CODY
CUTTER/CCUTTER@SHAWMEDIA.COM
Nearby, DVDs, videocassettes, CDs and cassettes can be found, and like the books, there’s no limit on those. There are plenty of puzzles, too.
Donations are accepted when the store is open during mornings and mid-afternoons Monday through Wednesday, and place is literally overflowing with kindness. An off-site warehouse stores what doesn’t fit on the floor and the backroom. Still, enough people come in — and often wait outside until the store opens — to keep items moving and the selection constantly changing.
“They come early,” Nusbaum said. “If you don’t take it when you see it, most likely it will be gone.”
Keeping the store stocked takes a lot of work for the team of dedicated volunteers, and they’re always thinking ahead. Easter items hit the floor as soon as St. Patrick’s Day is over, and preparation for summer stock takes place before the last snow has melted.
Customers can only shop once a week and must sign in before shopping. They then have 30 minutes to go through the store before checking out.
While too much of a good thing can be an issue sometimes, Nusbaum and Cochran have found that most of the customers respect the limits in place, understanding that everyone must play by the rules to help The Caring Center succeed.
“Most of the people are patient and understanding when we tell them they can’t have too many,” Nusbaum said. “They’ll tell us that they’ll give a few dollars for it, or something like that.”
Exceptions have been made when the situation calls for it — losing everything in a house fire, for example.
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CODY CUTTER/CCUTTER@SHAWMEDIA.COM
When building owners Jim and Sheila Gabler donated The Caring Center’s storefront to the donation center, that meant it had a home it could call its own — but it now also had bills and maintenance it had to take care of, which means any extra help is always appreciated. While most of the items at the store are free, donations are welcome.
A Shaw Media Publication | Sterling-Rock Falls Living | Spring 2023 | 25
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A book for the cook, or anyone else for that matter, strollers to take the baby for a walk and shoes to wear on the walk, glassware and goods for the house, puzzles to pass the time and more — The Caring Center has a little bit of everything for people who stop by.
We invite
307 First Ave., Sterling
Monday-Sunday 10am-4pm
“I get a lot of phone calls from the YMCA and a lot of organizations in the community,” Nusbaum said. “[These people] often say they don’t have anything, no bed, no blankets, anything. I’ll tell them to come by Mondays, Tuesdays or Wednesday at 10 o’clock and come back when you want, and I’ll check with them at the checkout counters. They’re very patient when they request something.”
The Caring Center’s mission began about 25 years ago by members of the Science Ridge Mennonite Church north of Sterling. When more space was needed, it moved to West Second Street in Rock Falls for a while before settling into its current location about 10 years ago. The building used to be part of the former Kline’s department store for many years until it closed in the mid-1990s.
When The Caring Center moved in, the building was owned by Jim and Sheila Gabler, who operated the VeriFacts skip tracing business in the former main section of Kline’s. When The Gablers looked to sell the building and move elsewhere in town in 2019, they partitioned off The Caring Center part of the building and donated it to donation center — and while that means having a home they can call their own, it also means paying the bills and maintenance costs. That’s where money from donations helps.
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26 | A Shaw Media Publication | Sterling-Rock Falls Living | Spring 2023
you to stop by and enjoy a multi-level shopping experience
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Sterling-Rock Falls
CODY
CUTTER/CCUTTER@SHAWMEDIA.COM
It’s also where the volunteers come in, because without them The Caring Center couldn’t do what it does. From people behind the scenes on the board of directors to people behind the counter, it takes a lot of work to keep things going — and most of the staff are past retirement age. More volunteers are always welcome, and applications are available at the store.
“These are hard jobs,” Nusbaum said. “You may not think about it, but these are hard jobs when you’re working.”
Luckily, volunteers are up to the task and there’s been enough helping hands to keep things going — and as long as kindness is as plentiful as the supply of items that come through its doors, people who come to The Caring Center will be in good hands for a long time to come. n
Daily Specials
The Caring Center, 210 First Ave. in downtown Sterling, is open from 10 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. Donations can be dropped off at the rear of the building during store hours. Find it on Facebook or call 815499-4953 for more information or to set up a donation of goods or money.
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28 | A Shaw Media Publication | Sterling-Rock Falls Living | Spring 2023
CONTRIBUTED PHOTOS
Integrity. Service. Pride. Those values have been the foundation that’s helped the men and women of the Illinois State Police build a reputation that’s been at the core of their mission to serve and protect the Prairie State’s people.
Each trooper behind the badge makes a solemn vow to the people of Illinois: to promote public safety; to be honest in thought, word and deed; be just, fair and impartial; to be steadfast against problems and issues; and protect the citizens of Illinois along with their rights and properties.
For just over 100 years, ISP members have stood by the words of their oath, and for more than 100 years, Sterling has stood with them. The city has been part of the agency’s history since its beginning in 1922. Today, the local office is in a 20,000-square-foot facility at 3107 E. Lincolnway that opened May 12, 1998 — but its surroundings weren’t always that impressive. Assigned as District 1, Sterling’s first state police headquarters was in a car dealership on the west end of downtown. That building, like the other two local headquarters the ISP would later call home, have since fallen to the wrecking ball.
Today, District 1 — so assigned because of geography, from north to south — encompasses Carroll, Ogle, Whiteside, and Lee counties in a 2,652 square mile area with 700 miles of State and U.S. Routes patrolled by officers in the District.
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Robert Lundstrom Jr. (left) was one of the radio operators at the ISP’s District 1 headquarters in Sterling during the 1930s. The building he worked in on East Lincolnway served as the district’s third headquarters in town, from 1936 to 1998, before the current one (right) was built nearby to replace it. Lundstrom is perhaps best known for operating the Lundstrom Florist flower shop in Sterling.
A Shaw Media Publication | Sterling-Rock Falls Living | Spring 2023 | 29
The “Buck” starts here
Oliver W. “Buck” Kempster of Sterling was the first patrolman assigned to look after northern Illinois’ roads. The Illinois State Police — then called the Illinois Highway Maintenance Police — began on April 1, 1922, with John H. Stack as its first chief. Kempster applied for his job after hearing about the new statewide police force through customers at his family Buick dealership in downtown Sterling. When he got the job, Kempster made his base of operations at the car dealership, which was on the southwest corner of West Fifth and Locust streets (in a building known by locals in recent decades as the George Furniture Co. and razed in 1993).
The Lincoln Highway had been organized through northern Illinois about a decade earlier, and it was a main road across the United States, and that mean a lot of travelers. All that traffic gave rise to the road needing to be patrolled, and that became Kempster’s main watch. In fact, he had pretty much all of northern Illinois to himself — from Chicago to the Mississippi River to the Illinois-Wisconsin state line and the main line of the Hennepin Canal. Today, there are 21 patrol districts in Illinois, but there were a lot less in the ISP’s fledgling days, and less manpower on top of that.
Kempster, a Prophetstown native who was 22 at the time of his hire, was given a surplus World War I motorcycle to use for his patrol. With news traveling much slower in those days, and fewer patrol officers than today, it must have been a little more
difficult for Kempster to prove to a troublemaking motorist that there was indeed an Illinois State Police, and that he was indeed an officer of the law. However, as more of Illinois’ roadways were paved and more vehicles started using them, more officers were needed, and more answered the call.
A new District 1 headquarters was established in 1928 in a large, concrete block farmhouse further east of Sterling on the Lincoln Highway (razed in 2006, the location was were the Corner Gallery now sits). By the time they moved there, Kempster had help in his mission: a staff. He oversaw 16 troopers in various cities, including Rockford, DeKalb and Prophetstown. Another first for the department came that year: Kempster had his own car, a 1928 Chrysler. In 1929, Model A Fords were used by the troopers during the winter months, while the motorcycles served their needs the rest of the year.
Serving on Kempster’s staff from 1924 to 1930 was another Sterling resident: Robert Card. He joined the state police after working at the Illinois Bell Telephone Company in town and left to join the Sterling Police Department in July 1930, but his tenure there didn’t last long. It was cut short only 1 month into his new job, on Aug. 12, when he was murdered by fleeing armed robbery suspects during a car chase in town.
Tragedy struck again a year later when trooper Kenneth Church was killed in a traffic collision in Dixon on his way to Amboy after directing traffic for a funeral.
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Church, like Card, is recognized at the Illinois State Police Wall of Honor in Springfield. He and Card are the only officers to have served in District 1 to have died on the line of duty. Though Card died serving with the Sterling Police Department, he was highly revered among his peers at the state police, and is recognized on the Wall of Honor with his name and end-of-watch date, as is Church.
In addition to his duties as a highway patrolman, Kempster also was a member of the “Secret Six” crime fighting unit that was based in Chicago. In that capacity, he helped solve kidnapping and bank robbery cases throughout Illinois. Kempster resigned from the state police in 1934; he later served as head of the Army’s Criminal Investigation Division in the North Africa Theater during World War II, and died in 1980.
Expansion
By the mid-1930s, a simple farmhouse was too small to serve the needs of District 1, and a new brick building was constructed in 1936 further east on the Lincoln Highway — which would be its headquarters for the next 60 years. The new building was equipped with the state-of-the-art technologies of the time, including a radio station for troopers to communicate with one another and with headquarters. A shooting range also was nearby.
Kempster was replaced by Lt. William Tehen, who oversaw a squad of 18 men and the construction of the new headquarters. District 1 continued to oversee northwest Illinois — Carroll, DeKalb, Jo Daviess, Lee, Ogle, Stephenson, Whiteside and Winnebago counties — into the 1950s.
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From two wheels to four, the ISP has patrolled the state for more than a century. LEFT: Oliver W.
“Buck” Kempster rode a World War I-era motorcycle given to him by the ISP on the state’s earliest “hard road’ highways, which included the famous Lincoln Highway that went through Sterling. TOP: Trooper Josh Vos was assigned District 1’s commemorative 100th anniversary patrol vehicle last year. Each of the 21 state police districts were assigned one of the SUVs, which were a throwback to the agency’s 1950s squad cars (above right). In choosing Vos, 3-year trooper who lives in Whiteside County, Capt. Matthew Hodgdon said, “Trooper Vos is very deserving of being assigned our 100th Anniversary squad car. His work ethic, professionalism, and dedication make him an excellent choice.”
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The current ISP District One headquarters in Sterling (below) was built near its predecessor (top right), which served as the District HQ from 1936 to 1998. The sign at right, with its distinctive lettering, hung on the old building.
Boone County was added to the district in 1958, and DeKalb County was removed in 1970. Also in 1958, Jo Daviess, Stephenson and Winnebago counties were given their own district substation, dubbed “1A” until they and Boone broke off to form the current District 16 in 1972, with headquarters in Pecatonica.
Expansion of the Illinois State Police was necessary as the postwar economy boomed and Illinois’ population reached its peak. In addition, the Interstate Highway System was organized in the mid-1950s, and the state police became the chief enforcers of freeway traffic. A name change came in 1951: Illinois State Highway Patrol, and that name lasted until the current Illinois State Police name began in 1985.
While patrolling highways was the state police’s main task early on, it also took on criminal investigations, missing persons searches, and other law enforcement duties throughout Illinois. The white cars with the gold and brown stripe on the sides are the state police’s most visible arm with everyday motorists, but it also does work in forensic sciences, criminal investigations and internal investigations for cases involving state employees.
Recent years
Illinois’ budget woes that began in the 1980s have been the subject of much debate ever since, and their impact reached the Illinois State Police in the 1990s, with budget cuts and reorganizations. Sterling’s headquarters was on the chopping block and the future of District 1 seemed uncertain in 1992, when a proposal was announced to close the headquarters and divide its four counties among nearby districts. However, the district was saved from closure when the final budget was announced.
ISP cont’d from page 31 ISP
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One of the factors that prompted that discussion was District 1’s facility: It was 56 years old and outdated. That changed in 1997, though, when ground was broken for a new facility to replace the 1936 building at the same address. The new headquarters was the first Illinois State Police site to employ fiber optic communications, technology that is more reliable than traditional methods of communication and less likely to be damaged during lightning strikes.
Among the newest squad cars in the district’s fleet, in commemoration of the ISP’s centennial, is a throwback to the ISP’s 1950s squad car design. Trooper Josh Vos was chosen to use the squad car for its first tour of duty. In addition, every trooper in the state was issued a commemorative 100th anniversary five-pointed star to wear on their uniform during 2022.
Throughout its 100-year history, District 1 has seen many troopers and civilian workers travel through its doors and along its roads — many with their head held high knowing that they did their part in making their region a safer place. Lt. Dyan Talbot is the current commander, in her first year in charge of the district. She’s the latest in a long line of leaders of District 1 that goes back to “Buck” Kempster’s organization of the district in 1922.
If it wasn’t for Kempster’s interest and dedication in keeping northern Illinois’s first motor vehicle roads safe, who knows where other places in the region could have wound up. His commitment to preserving the peace gives him an unofficial title of District 1’s “father,” and his leadership and respect was carried on by those who served with him, and passed on to those who wear the uniform and badge today. n
The Illinois State Police Memorial Park in Springfield honors troopers who were killed on the line of duty, including two troopers who served in District 1: Robert J. Card, who died on Aug. 12, 1930; and Kenneth Church, who died on Dec. 5, 1931.
CODY CUTTER/CCUTTER@ SAUKVALLEY.COM
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When the new owners of a Sterling bar were looking for a way to put their own stamp on their business, they decided to invite lovers of libation to stop by and take a trip to breweries and wineries near and far, one sip at a time
BY CODY CUTTER SAUK VALLEY MEDIA
34 | A Shaw Media Publication | Sterling-Rock Falls Living | Spring 2023
ou’ve heard of taking a trip around the world and drinking it all in, right?
Well now you can, and you don’t even have to leave town — just hitch a ride with a fox.
Darrell Wallace and wife Leslea are the owners behind the bar at The Rusty Fox in downtown Sterling, and they want to be the toast of the town when it comes to a selection of beer and spirits. The Wallaces bought the corner tavern, which first opened in 2014 by Tim McNinch, 2 years ago, and since then they’ve been working to make it a go-to place for people looking to explore a world of wine, whiskey, beer and other spirits.
They invite you to stop by and raise a glass or two — and no matter what your taste, they’re pretty confident you’ll find something you like.
Sure you can hang out with a Bud if you want, or a Miller or Michelob, but run-ofthe-mill domestics don’t dominate the bar’s beer menu. Instead, a whole host of hops from breweries near and far can be found. The couple’s expanded the selection of wines and whiskeys, too.
“It’s basically stuff that nobody can buy anywhere else around here,” Darrell said. “You go out to any of the liquor stores, and you’re not going to find those whiskeys or the wines.”
Darrell has spent the past year focusing on his vision of making The Rusty Fox a destination for spirited connoisseurs looking for a the kind of selection you’d normally find in bigger cities. The bar boasts more than 450 different bottles of wine in stock, more than 100 bottles of whiskey and about 150 different types of craft brew ready to please the palates of even the most discerning of drinkers.
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A Shaw Media Publication | Sterling-Rock Falls Living | Spring 2023 | 35
“For the last year it’s been a work in progress,” Wallace said. “About a year ago, I put all of these shelves up and started stocking them. I started with the wine first, rounded up the whiskey, and then rounded up the craft beers.”
The bar’s west wall is packed with wine, from nearby places such as Massbach Winery in Hanover and Wide River in Clinton, Iowa, as well as more than 25 other countries from six continents. Wallace prints labels affixed to each bottle with a description of what each wine is. Prices range from $15 all the way to a $140 sweet, white dessert wine from the world-renowned Kracher winery in Austria.
Darrell Wallace, who owns The
and Wine Bar with his wife, Leslea, recently has expanded his inventory of craft beers, whiskey and wine. “It’s basically stuff that nobody can buy anywhere else around here,” Wallace said. CODY CUTTER/CCUTTER@SAUKVALLEY.COM
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Rusty Fox Alehouse
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The selection of craft whiskeys also comes from near and far. One should prove to be a hit with sports fans: It’s from Cooperstown Distillery in New York, home to the National Baseball Hall of Fame, and comes in a baseball-shaped bottle. For those looking to try a shot for the first time, Wallace recommends a Japanese blend, Kayio Mizunara Oak, to start.
The popularity of craft brews has been on the rise in recent decades, along with the selection. Today’s zythophiles have never had it so good. Among the regional ones in stock at The Rusty Fox are offerings from Iron Spike Brewing Company in Galesburg (named after the city’s importance in the railroad industry), and a pickle-flavored beer from Destihl Brewing in Bloomington.
Flavors from Drekker Brewing Co. of Fargo, North Dakota, are well represented among the selection.
While some customers have their go-to favorites, many like
to see what’s out there.
“Once they have one, then they want to try all of the different ones because they can be so ridiculous and unique,” Darrell said. “They’re heavy on the fruit, but only a little bit sour. It’s fun to try it.”
Wallace also has expanded the business hours in recent months, changing from a 4 p.m. opening time Tuesday through Saturday to 11 a.m. He also installed a television above the bar for customers to watch live sports and other events, and recently began to offer craft beers on tap. Charcuterie foods such as cheeses, sausages and crackers are available, as well as snacks — cheese curds, mozzarella sticks and pizza from Maria’s Pizza just a block east of the bar. Not thirsty for a brew, wine or shot of whiskey? Martinis also are available.
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The Wallaces hope customers enjoy the laid-back vibe of the bar as much as they do. “I don’t like going out to regular bars,” Darrell said. “I like a little quieter place.” CODY CUTTER/CCUTTER@SAUKVALLEY.COM
38 | A Shaw Media Publication | Sterling-Rock Falls Living | Spring 2023 SM-ST2056206
Special events include comedy shows, drink tastings, open mics, and trivia contests, and customers can pass the time playing one of the board games available at the bar.
If you’re not a bar type, The Rusty Fox stock is available on its website, where customers will find descriptions and prices. Items are currently available only for pickup at the bar. Can’t find what you’re looking for? Give The Rusty Fox a call: Darrell can help find it, order it, and have it ready for pickup through his connections with suppliers.
The Wallaces hope The Rusty Fox will become a destination for people who like to raise a glass but not a ruckus.
“I don’t like going out to regular bars,” Darrell said. “I like a little quieter place. We had only been here a few times, and were here for a comedy show right before COVID hit, and then it was posted for sale. I hated to see the place go because it’s kind of a nice place.”
Now that the Wallaces are on the other side of the bar, they’re hoping others will find their business a nice place too — especially now that it’s brew and improved. n
The Rusty Fox Alehouse and Wine
1 E. Third St., Sterling Hours: 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday, and 11 a.m. to 1 a.m. on Friday and Saturday.
Online: Find it on Facebook, Twitter (@ RustyFoxAles), Instagram (@RustyFoxAlehouse), or go to rustyfoxalehouse.com Call 815-787-8369 for more information.
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A Shaw Media Publication | Sterling-Rock Falls Living | Spring 2023 | 39
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CODY CUTTER/CCUTTER@SAUKVALLEY.COM
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