PAGE I0
THE SUNDANCE TIMES
JULY 9, 1981
i S U N D A N C E
STATE
BAN K
it isn't often the temperature in Sundance climbs to the 100-degree
mark but when it does it feels like a million.
Everything was sizzling here Monday and Tuesday as a July heat
wave moved into the area. Officially, Tuesday's high was 101. Above,
the bank thermometer reads 100. A Times photographer at the scene
refused to wait for a higher reading and crawled away looking for a cold
ode.
What is
a walk-lest?
Take a vacation in your back
yard. Get exercise and see sights
few people have 'seen and par-
tieipate in one of America's
fastest growing sports. What is
this? A walk-fest!
A walk-fast is a chance for
people to enjoy nature and for a
few hours remove themselves
from the bustle of work and the
rush of things. The Sundance
Recreation board is offering Sun-
dance's first "walk-lest". The
"Fest" will be guided by Dennis
Vail and the walk will be to the
top of Inyan Kara Mountain.
The tour will leave by vehicle
from Sundance at 8 a.m. July 25.
Arriving at the base of Inyan
Kara, the walk-lest begins. At
the top, a small nature-history
discussion will be given and then
back home for lunch.
Join the fun! Walk for
exercise. Participate in the Sun-
dance Recreation Program Walk-
Fest.
For more information, contact
Mel Miller at 283-2784 or pick up
entry blanks at Security Insurance
Agency, downtown Sundance.
Phillips injured
by gun shot
Merle Phillips, Hulett, was in-
jured when a 22 caliber pistol
discharged, according to the
Crook County Sheriff's Office,
Sundance.
According to Reynard Mills,
P~aillips was practicing fast draw.
The gun discharged and entered
the leg in the mid thigh and went
downward. The bullet didn't
come out.
L~ Phillips was brought to the
County Memorial Hospital,
' !fhmdance, but due to surgery, he
WaS transported on to
Spearfish, S.D.
The Sheriff's Office said,
:':'There was no criminal intent."
" Photo by Howard Allen
Fireworks display
brings in donations
Three new displays were fea-
tured during the annual Fourth of
July Firework Display at Sun-
dance Pond the evening of July 5.
The new displays were the bull-
dog, jalopy and the welcome. The
annual event is sponsored by the
Sundance Bear Lodge Snowmo-
bile Club and residents also do-
nate toward the project.
Doners for 1981 were: Mr. and
Mrs. Ted Dorothy, Mt. View
Trailer Park, Jean Jones,Archie
Weaver, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Bax-
ter, Sundance Commercial Club,
Bearlodge Motel, Black Hills
Realty, Mr. and Mrs. Noel Ed-
wards, RC Oil Company, Sharps'
Hardware. Jack and Jill Shop,
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Newlin,
Mr. and Mrs. Kenny Glover, Mr.
and Mrs. Bink Nussbaum,
Leslie's Standard, Chuck Wilson,
Nadine Gassin and Sandy Cundy.
A special thanks goes to
Champion Construction Company
for letting the snowmobilers use
their building to put the displays
together.
The Bearlodge Snowmobile
Club would like to extend its
heartfelt thanks to all of the above
and also to all the people who
generously donated at the gate to
make the 1981 fireworks display
so successful. "Without all of
you," the snowmobilers said,
"we could never put this on.
Again, a great big Thank You!"
Two men
arrested at Hulett
Terry McDaniel and Dale
Singleton were held in the Crook
County jail for Hulett after being
arrested June 27 by the Hulett
Marshal and the Crook County
Deputy. Both were bonded out
• for $100 each.
Singleton wrecked on a motor
bike and was picked up for
DWUI. McDaniels was arrested
for public intoxication and breacl~
of the poace.
NOTICE
Buckaroo Playdays
held at Hulett
The first Buckaroo Playday for
1981 was held in Hulett on June
17. All-around honors went to
Todd and Louise Hoese.
Results were as follows:
BARREL RACE
Up to Nine Years:
Cathy Gaines, first; Tobie
Jesperson, second; and Randee
Jesperson, third.
10-14 Year Olds:
Kathy Davis, first; Louise
Hoese, second; and Todd Hoese,
third.
15 and Up:
Joli Gaines, first; Kris Davis,
second; and Karen Griffis, third.
GOAT TYING
10-14 Year Olds:
Todd Hoese, first; Kathy
Davis, second; and Louise Hoese,
third.
15 and Up:
Dale Davis, first; Karen Cad_ffis,
.second; and Kris Davis, third.
MUSICAL CHAIRS
Up to Nine Years:
Tobie Jesperson, first and
Randee Jespersen, second.
10-14 Years Oids:
Louise Hoese, first; Scott
Johnson, second; and Kathy
Davis, third.
15 and Over:
Joli Gaines, first; Karen
Griffis, second; and Dale Davis,
third.
RIDE AND TIE RELAY RACE
Doug and Karen Griffis, first;
Kris and Dale Davis, second; and
Joli Gaines and Chad Mathews,
third and Todd and Louise Hoese,
fourth.
POLE BENDING
Up to Nine Years:
Randee Jespersen, first.
10-14 Year Oids:
Todd Hoese, first; Louise
Hoese, second; and Bill Morris,
• third.
15 and Over:
Doug Griffis, first; Kris Davis,
second; and Jannice Brimmer,
third.
A short meeting of the officers
and directors was held after the
playday to finalize plans for the
county rodeo and plan next
month's playday in Moorcroft. It
was derided to go with the
buckles as in the past.
Events for the Moorcroft Play-
day will be held July 15 with
barrel racing, pole bending, goat
tying, breakaway roping and egg
race. The playday is set to start at
5 p.m. with entries closing at 4:30
p.m. Anyone is welcome to par-
ticipate in the playdays.
People interested in competing
in the Crook County Fair Rodeo
are reminded of the following
changes: all entries and money
must be in by 7 p.m. August 7;
the rodeo office will again be in
the lobby of the Bear Lodge Motel
and will be open from 10 a.m. to 7
p.m. August 7; entries may also
be sent to Box 126 Hulett, Wyo-
ming; and there will be no
businessmen's roping this year to
try to allow the rodeo to be
finished in time for the livestock
sale. The team roping~will be tie
down.
BLM comment
:leadline extended
The deadline for public com-
merit on Bureau of Land Man-
agement planning in northeast
Wyoming has been extended to
July 30:
Darrel Short, BLM Newcastle
area manager, says the period
was extended because of requests
for it at public meetings last
month in Stmdance, Newcastle
and Lusk. People asked for more
time to send in written comments
on BLM proposals for its planning
framwork in managing public do-
main lands in the three ]]orth-
east Wyoming counties.
The deadline for written com-
ments was June 30.
Final EIS
on schedule
The final Environmental Im-
pact Statement, EIS, is on sche-
dule and will he available by the
latter part of July, according to
the BLM.
Anyone who wants a copy is
asked to sign their names on the
list at the Crook County Clerk's
Office or the Crook County Trea-
surer's Office, Sundance. The
order will be sent bulk so the
county people will have the op-
portunity to receive a copy before
they are out of stock. Orders will
also be taken by Crook County
Representative Marlene Simons.
Petitions sent to the State
Engineer totaled 1293 signatures.
Governor Ed Herschier's Ad
Hoc Committee will meet July 21
at Newcastle. The four state
rtmeting is tentatively set for
August 8 at Rapid City, S.D.
Ja n
services held
Funeral services for 84 year old
Blanche Elizabeth Jackson, Lead,
S.D., were held at 1 p.m. Tues-
day at the Fidler Funeral Chapel
of Lead with Dr. Dwayne F.
Knight officiating. Burial was in
the Mount Moriah Cemetery,
Sundance, at 3 p.m. under the
direction of Fidler.
She died Friday at a Deadwood
hospital.
Mrs. Jackson was born Sept-
ember 22, 1898 at Lead, the
daughter of John and Mary Hose
Johnson. She moved to Deerfield
with her parents at the age of 5
and to the Sundance area at the
age of 13.
She attended schools in Sun-
dance and married Preston C.
Woods in September 1916 in
Sundance. The couple lived on a
ranch near Sundance until his
death in 1923.
Mrs. Jackson moved into Sun-
dance; and later she moved to
Alva and Hulett where she was a
telephone operator. She moved
to a lumber camp and farm south
of Rapid City and lived there I0
years before moving in 1939 to
Deadwood, where she and her
daughter Eleanor operated a cafe
for one and a half years.
She also worked for Swanders
Bakery in Deadwood for many
years and at the Goldberg
Grocery in Deadwood before re-
tiring in 1958 when she moved to
Lead to live with her daughter
and son-in-law, Eleanor and
Leslie Foster until her death.
She was a member of the
United Methodist Church of
Lead. A memorial has been
established for the church.
Besides Mrs. Foster, she is
survived by six grandchildren; 13
great grandchildren; a sister,
Delma Sehroeder of Aloha, Ore. ;
a brother, Harley of Portland,
Ore.; and many other relatives,
including a nephew, William
Woods, of Everett, Wash.
She was preceded in death by
her husband and 18 brothers and
sisters.
Word received
of White death
Word was received here from
Mrs. Earl Shaw, Auburn,
Nebraska, that her mother, Iris
White, passed away July 2 in a
Popillian, Nebraska hospital.
Iris White will he remembered
to friends in Sundance as the
former Energy Electric secretary.
Our sincere sympathy is extended
to the family,
CROOK COUNTY MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL ADMISSIONS
June 29-Mike Barber, Upton;
Herman Habeck, Sundance;
Duane Hartl, Sundance; Sheila
~h, Sundance.
June 30-Anna Ther, Meor-
croft.
July 1 --James Edwards,
Rac~e, W'me.; Beulah Sturgill,
Moorcroft; Amos Ewing, Sun-
dance; Clarence Nebergall,
Devils Tower; Deborah Schriner,
Rozet; Jerry Lind, Sundance.
July 2-Elva Jenkins, Sundance;
Brim Sehleuning, Moorcroft.
July 3-Tummy Feagan, Moor-
croft; Fred Zimmerschied, Moor-
croft.
July 4-Monto Miller, Sun-
dance.
CLASSIRED ADVERTISING RATE
IS NOW 15c PER WORD.
$1.50 minimum
PLUS
We regret having to take this step but
classifieds must be paid for in advance.
The
Sundance
Times
Box 400
Ph. 283-3411
Sundance
CROOK COUNTY MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL DISMISSALS
June 29--Bonnie Shelton, Sun-
dance.
June 30--Joni Lubken, Moor-
croft; Jay Sanford, Moorcroft. '
July 1 --James Edwards,
Racine, Wisc.; Elva Jenkins,
Sundance;~Herman Habeck, Sun-
dance.
July 2--Duane Hartl, Sundance.
July 3--Deborah Schriner,
Rozet; Sheila Christoph, Sun-
dance; Brianna Schleuning,
Moorcroft; Anna Thar, Moor-
croft; Helen Jacobs. Moorcroft;
Beulah Sturgill, Moorcroft.
July 4--Jerry Lind, Sundance;
Clarence Nebergall, Devils
Tower; Fred Zimmerschied,
Moorcroft; Kelly VanPatten,
Hulett.
July 5--Monte Miller, Sun-
dance.
Minnesota couple
in county jail
Rosanne Lecascio, 24, and
Lance Miller, 19, both of Minnea-
polis, Minnesota are incarcerated
in the Crook County jail following
a complaint of alleged breaking
and entering of the Sunny Divide
Community Hall, west of. Stm-
dance Sunday.
According to the Crook County
Sheriff's Office, the two people
were in the area vacationing.
Sunny Divide rancher Hal
Oudin was returning a coffee urn
to the Community ttall about 5
p.m. when he heard sounds.
When he entered, he saw one
young person. "There were two
panels of a five panel door which
had been kicked out," Oudin
said, "The door is barred from
the inside."
According to the Oudins, the
couple left the scene in their
vehicle and Mr. Oudin tried to
follow them. He called the Crook
County Sheriff's Office and re-
ported the incident.
The Sheriff's Office responded
to the call and apprehended the
couple near the I,ori Anderson
ranch near Carlile, according to a
deputy.
Police
Report
During the month of June,
1981, 105 calls were received by
the Sundance Police Department
which required police action, ac-
cording to Police Chief Joe Pol)-
ham.
Breakdown of calls include:
civil assist, 14; motorist assist,
18; assist Wyoming ttighway Pat-
rol, 1; Assi.t hospital, 2; assist
amhulance, 2; open doors. 4;
alarms: Longhorn-3. Turf-4;
bank-I; family disturbance, 2:
accidents, 4: dog calls: loose-2.
bite-l: auto fire, I; horse com-
plaint, 1; suspicious circumstan-
ces, 11; suspicious persons, 3;
housewatches, 9: break-ins, 2:
juvenile disturhances, 2: civil dis-
putes. 1; skunk calls. 5: vanda-
lism, 1; escort to hospital (non-
resident), 1; bar disturbance, 1;
door to door peddler complaint, 1 ;
bar open late compkdnt, 1; fun-
er~d escort, 1 ; and city well light,
1.
l)uripg the month one stolen
bicycle was reported, a theft of a
qW antennae and pole was re-
ported and a large amomat of
chain and binders was stolen off a
truck parked in the downtown
area. The value was about
$2,0(X).
Two female hitchhikers were
heft at Boyd's Super Foods by
male subjects. The men left with
the girls' backpacks and tents.
The men were arrested in Upton
by the Upton police. The men
were not returned to Sundance
due to the fact that they were
wanted by authorities in Wiscon-
sin for murder charges. They
allegedly killed the owner of the
stolen car they were
The men were
to Wisconsin. They
detectives in Upton to
and they are suspect in
killings, according to
report.
*****
It's comfi~rting to
your kids would
been just as had in
had bought the enc,
Among the benefits
ment is
t(mmto vines with
Sometimes the man
the person wh(~ just got~
his feet in hot water.
*****
HILLS
!-90 & ltighway 85
Spearfish
Ph. 642-4212
1 Ends
7&9
"Death hunt" 1
Starts Friday
7&9
hi Ihe Dark Ages,
Magic wa~ a weapon.
And I)[agom ~ere leal
A
PICTUnE
PUBLIC NOTICE
There are a number of water, garbage
and sewer fees which are now three
months delinquent. As of July 10, 1981,
services will be turned off.
Services resume upon full payment and
a $10 re-hookup fee.
4 7:15 & 9:25
TP E ADVENTUJ|
CONTINUE
GENE HACKMAN
NED BEATTY
JACKtE COOPER
s Drive
642-9985
Through
open 8:15 Show
Plus "My
GO INTO THE FIELD WITH THIS
Hay Machinery
FARMALL 1066 DIESEL- $13,
was,S16,000
1980 John Deere 466 Baler
Baled less than 8000 bales, excellent condi-
tion, was $8400
NOW - $7500
Massey Ferguson 125
Excellent condition
$4195
New Holland 846 Round Baler
Slightly used
$8500
New Holland 280
$995
New Holland 1046 Bale Wagon
Self-Propelled
$5800
New Holland 1033 Bale
Pill-type with puller
$8750
International 275 Swather
$3500
I nternational 175
$1500
racy Motor
East l-g0 Interchange Sundance Ph.