Igloo Chills
Bulldog 11
Last Friday
A giant Igloo team Friday rolled
to a 37-0 victory over the Sundance
Bulldogs here after the Bulldogs
l~ad held the heavily-favored Igloo
club to a 12-0 halftime lead.
Coach Tead Weaver's club bat-
tied stubbornly through the first
half before fumbles and the heavy
Igl0o team opened the floodgates.
The Bulldogs themselves marched
to the Igloo 10 in the first halfI
and were inside the Igloo five but!
were unable to cash in.
Igloo opened the scoring in the
girst quarter returning a Sun-
dance kick to the Bulldog 30. With
Bose and Hardin running, Igloo
ground to the five. After a 15-
yard roughness penalty, one of
WINNING BUSINESS FLOAT in the Oct. 2 Sund-
dance Homecoming parade was the one entered by
Circle S Chevrolet Co. Posing on the winning
float are Teddie and Grace Marie, daughters of
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Rounds, and Donna, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Don Rounds. Driving the float is
Ted Rounds.
POLAROID ON~-MINUTE PHOTO BY THE TIMES
several Igloo drew, Rose went
eight yardsandHedUnfivebef°relWagller Asks Parents
Hardin ran the last ten to pay dirt.
Late in the first quarter, Kenny
Help Protect Children
boards had adopted a regulation
stating that no child was to leave
the school grounds or buildings
without written permission from
the office. The regulation, he said,
was made not only for protection
of the students and their parents,
but for teachers as well.
Frequently, he said, parents call
Fall muffed a kick and DeLeon,
Igloo quarterback, hit Goodman in
the end zone for an apparent touch-
down. However, unnecessary
roughness cancelled the score.
The Bulldogs stopped the threat
on their five and, behind Kenny
Fall's running, moved to the Sun-
dance 37. Hardin picked a kick
out of the air and returned it thir-
ty yards to the Sundance 45. After
three running play~, DeLeon hit
Veren with a 30 yard pass. On the
their children from school withouti
notifying anyone. Wagner said I
the school had no objection to re-i
leasing a student to his parents for
necessary purposes.
"But, please, parents," he said,
"for the protection of your child-
ren, observe the rule of the boardsi
and come to the office with your
In the wake of the kidnap-killing
of a 6-year-old Kansas City boy,
Supt. Frank Wagner this week i
urged parents to notify his office
whenever they wished early dis-
missal of their children from
school. *
Wagner's action follows similar
action being taken by school of-
ficials in other parts of the United
second play, Rose rammed over to States ....
make it 12-0. Veren s kick Was [ In remarking on the enticing of
no good. I children from school, the superin-
The Bulldogs first threat follow-] tendent said, "It could happen
ed. In two plays, Fall picked up[ right here in Sundance should
24 to move to midfield. Beagle[ the right combination of circum-
went for five with a pitchout and] stances prevail. It is imperative
Fall added five more. An Igloo| that all of us exert every effort
penalty moved the ball to the 20 to prevent such a tragedy... Child-
request for early dismissal of your
child. We need your cooperation
in order to do a better job of car-
ing for and protecting all tlie
children in the school."
ren are not always enticed from
legitimate surroundings in the
hope of large ransoms."
Wagner pointed out that several
years ago, the Sundance school
WEATHER
The readings:
Max. Min. Prec.
Oct. 6 ..................... 69 36 0
Oct. 7 ......................... 74 39 0
Oct. 8 ....................... 76 39 0
Oct. 9 ..................... 79 39 0
Oct. 10 ................. 80 45 0
Oct. 11 ...................... 84 50 0
Oct. 12 .................... 66 37 0
--Bull Sale
(Continued from First Page)
1 p.m. The association will hold
its show at 9 a.m..and a free bar-
becue will be served at noon by
the Sundance Commercial Club.
H. B. Sager will again be the
auctioneer while Ken Faulkner
livestock specialist at the Univer-
sity of Wyoming, will do the judg-
ing.
--Hunting
(Continued From First Page)
J
he said, that out of consideration
for the hunters who had made ar-
rangements for hunting, the com-
mission had decided to open the
seasons as scheduled.
where Fall went into the air and
connected with Dennis Hart on the
10.
The drive fizzled when Shewey
last ten on a reverse and a pass
went incomplete.
In six plays at the start of the
third period, Igloo had its third
score behind the running qf Rose
and Hardin with Rose plunging
the last eight yards. Following
the kick 9if, Fall fumbled and Ver-
en scooped the ball up and raced
25 yards to give Igloo a 24-0 lead.
Fall breezed back 25 yards with
the kickoff to his own 30 and on
the first play drilled through the
Igloo line for 20 yards. Igloo was
detected kneeing and the Bulldogs
went to the Igloo 30 yard marker.
Beagle was spilled on the Igloo
40 and a Fall pass fell immmplete.
However, Fall connected with two
tosses and the BulldOgs were on
the 20. Fall, in two plays, ran to
the 12 yard line. Beagle picked
up a couple and Eall,:,on fourth
down, was halted on the six pard
line.
Igloo took over and Pose prompt-
Otto Carlson Loses
Driving Privileges
For Thirty Days
The driving privileges of Otto
Carlson of Aladdin have been sus-
pended for 30 days until Oct. 23,
the Motor Vehicle Division report-
ed this week.
Carlson had his drivers license
Bagley pointed out, however,
ly hopped into the clear on a suspended following his conviction that if the U. S. Forest Service
quickopener and sprinted 93 yards I for drunken driving, found it necessary to close a for-
for a touchdown. The score was'
10bs rvers P0stleat became °f hunter ansed fires'
called back when Rose went out of the commission would probably be
bounds on his own 21. , i
Igloo added its final tallies in i obligated to close the hu~ting area.
the final quarter. Rose intercept- High elk and deer numbers were
ed a pass on the Sundance 40 and
galloped to the Bulldog 12. Hard-
in punched over to make it 30-0
and Veren added the extra point.
Moments later, a Fall to Beagle
lateral went haywire. Veren, again
Johnny-on.the-spot, scooped up the
ball and chugged 25 yards for the
final score.
Operating,rOoorte.[by Bag]ey and he said
Seen that a heavy hunter-harvest would
be necessary to keep the game pop-
ulation down to the carrying ca-
pacity of winter ranges.
In November
Seven Girls Given
Forming of a ground observation
post in Sundance moved closer to
completion Tuesday night when
several Sundance residents attend-
ed a civilian defense meeting at the
VFW hall when an Air Force rep-
resentative from the Rapid City
Filter center showed films on ci-
vilian defense and explained the,
work and the importance of theI
ground observation posts.
Alvin Refiner, county civilian
defense head, has indicated that
the post will be set up, ~probably
next month, in the city hall.
Additional meetings will be held
before the post is established. One
meeting is scheduled for Nov. 4 at
8 p.m. at the VFW hall while a
second will, in all probability, be
held at the November meeting of
the FrA.
FHA Initiation Here
Seven Sundance high school
~irls were initiated Oct. 14 into
the Sundance senior FHA chapter,-
New members of the chapter are
Karol Hooper, Rea Longpre, Car-
olyn Donaldson, Charlene Shipek,
Myrtle Hart, Patsy Nussbaum and
Shirley Mollenbrink.
FHA officers wore pastel form-
als to the initation h~ld in the
home economics room at the high
school. The new FHA members
were given red and white ribbons
to wear for a week.
In charge of recreation at the
meeting were Karol H0oper and
Beverly Humphrey. Refreshments
were served by Shirley Dillavou,
Dorothy Quint and Matilda Peter-
son.
zW~mrlter nmbem at me Tau.
University Testing
Service to AgMn
Give Students Tests
For the 25th consecutive year,
the University of Wyoming's test-
ing service will cooperate with the
state's high schools in testing high
school seniors, Charles H. Thomp-
son, testing service director, said
this week.
Around 3,000 seniors will take
the Kuder and Cloeten vocational
interest tests from Oct. 15-31 and
the Ohio Psychological Test from
NOV. 16to Dec. U.
Students assisting with the test-
are Betty Kirkwood of Kem-
~ Ann Tralll of Green River
~ ,(~Wau~ Sl~deh of x~ramie.
--District Court
(Continued From First Page)
district court.
Two days before his Sundance
arrest, Davis had pleaded guilty
in Hulett Police Court to drunk
and reckless driving.
Harms is appealing a verdict of
drunk and reckless driving return-:
ed by a Justice Court jury here
April 10 while Jackson is appeal-
ing a drunken driving verdict.
Grade School Board
Discusses New Plans
For Local School
Members of the Sundance grade
school board Monday night dis-
cussed building plans for the Sun-
dance school at their regular meet-
ing. Discussion centered around
what could be done with the avail-
able money.
Aside from the plan discussion,
the board conducted routine busi-
ness.
Commercial
Theater
S~I~DANCE
S:O0 ?. 1[
Friday, Saturday
October 1,6, 17
"THE LONE
HAND"
In Technicolor
with
Joel McCrea
Barbara Hale
Alex Nicol
The untold story of the Secret
Outlaw Empire that ruled the
~ockles.
Sunday, Monday
October 18, 19
"THE JAZZ
SINGER"
In Technicolor
Starring
Danny Thomas
Peggy Lee
It's joy that's set to music! A story
that sings out to your heart.
,iMnnlll u m
Weds., Thursday
October 21, 22
"IT HAPPENS
EVERY
THURSDAY"
Starring
Loretta Young
John Forsythe
THE SUNDANCE
Sundance, Wyo. October
Moorcroft Man
Free On Bond
Highway 16
A Moorcroft driver was
over to district court
when he appeared before
Sidney Harvey in Justice
here following a head-on
on Highway 16 Monday in
he suffered minor injuries.
Free on $500 bond is
Fitzgerald of Moorcroft who
ed guilty to a charge of
while his license was sus
and waived preliminary
Justice Court.
Fitzgerald was arrested
night by State Highway
D. L. Webster. Fitzgerald,
a pickup owned by the HiwaY
vice Station of Gillette
a car belonging to Husman
ers of Sheridan 7.7 miles east!
the Moorcroft city limits.
Husman and his wife were
injured while Fitzgerald
a leg injury. Webster
the accident.
Mrs. Bob Sager and
and Mrs. Frank Kauf of
River, Wyo. have been
friends and relatives in
Spearfish, Beulah and Lead
past week.
Tell 'era, you saw K in The
Belle 1
Belle Fourche. South Dakotb
Air Conditioned
WARM AND COOL
CONDITIONED
Thurs., Friday, .Oct. 15, 16
Evening Shows 7:30,
Selected Short Subjects
Saturday Only, Oct. 17th
DOUBLE FEATURE
PROGRAM
Evening Shows 7:00, 9:45
Matinee 1:30
in blazln/
PLUS
Play "WAHOO" Tonight
Sunday, Monday, Oct. 13, 19
Continuous Shows
Shows 1:30, 3:30, 5:30,
ATTEND THE
AVOID THE NIGHT
Monday Evening 7:30, 9:1
h's TECHNICOLOR
It's M-G-M and BIGI : ........... '" ~
!
E
News - Selected Shorts
Tues., Weds., ThursdaY
Oct. 20, 21, 22
Evening Shows 7:15,