$ 00 Inclu1des Tax Number 25 Volume 111 Philip, 57567 Thursday, February 9, 2017 www. pioneer-review.com

Keenie Word City council addresses changes and continuations from last year performs in Philip by Del Bartels the city of Midland. During the Philip City Council meeting, In the quarterly report by the police de - Monday, Feb. 6, the new city attorney, partment, police officer Eric Van Der Linden Stephanie Trask, was sworn in. She is also will graduate from the law enforcement the attorney for the city of Wall and for academy in Pierre before the end of this Haakon County. month. The council was updated on airport proj - Public Works Director Matt Reckling will ects. The city and the Federal Aviation Ad - look further into purchasing a phone/radio ministration are still working on getting sewer overflow alarm. Such a sewer back-up easements in lieu of ownership of the run - warning system ranges about $2,000. Mayor way protection zone areas. The city’s airport Mike Vetter said, “I think this is something committee will meet with the engineer to we should install. We should set it low right continue working on the projects. away; if we get a few false alarms, then we The shared use path project is still a go for can adjust it.” Council member Marty Gart - this summer. The city’s 19.8 percent share ner added, “I don’t think we can afford not of the total cost for the sidewalk comes to ap - to.” proximately $20,600 to $22,600, assuming The city’s street department was compli - that the bids are within expected ranges. mented on ongoing efforts to clear the The city has clarified its free water policy streets of packed snow and ice. Council for the parks and recreation water users. member Brit Miller said, “Heck of a good job. The city compared averages of water usage Other communities are 10 steps behind us.” Keenie Word, left, and Marcus Martinez. Bartels over the past four years by the organizations Vetter said, “That’s why we have the A taking care of parks and sports fields around team.” The United Church youth With a family background in the city. From this, the city made allocations Mayor and council petitions must be filed group sponsored a concert Fri - rodeo, she sings country music. for each area. Once a specific park or sports with the finance office by Feb. 24. The elec - day, Feb. 3, featuring Keenie For a while, starting when she field uses it allocated amount of water, the tion is Tuesday, April 11, at the single Word. was 19, she was part of The organization is charged $3.02 per 1,000 gal - polling place of the school library in Philip. Word is 22-year-old singing Damsels duo with 21-year-old lons of water used. For the 10 parks and The three city seats concluding their terms performer from Hermosa. In Aubree Bullock, Loveland, Colo. fields, a total allocation of 1,344,000 gallons for this election are Ward I, now filled by 2011, she released a five-song On Feb. 4, Word performed in is set for this year. That comes to an annual The new city attorney Stephanie Trask Greg Arthur, Ward II, now filled by Marion extended play, “The New Girl.” Rapid City with her mentor, water credit total equivalent to $1,855. takes the city’s oath of office. Matt, and Ward III, now filled by Jennifer Using this as a springboard, she Susie McEntire, sister to coun - The city’s Fiscal Year 2015 annual report Henrie. hopes to begin her journey to try singing star Reba McEntire. is complete and has been filed with the at the job fair and business exposition, March 28. The City offices will be closed Feb. 20 in obser - full-sized music albums and Opening the concert for her South Dakota Department of Legislative fair is being sponsored by the Badlands Bad River vance of President’s Day. maybe to a Nashville record was singer/guitarist Marcus Audit. Economic Partnership. This year, buses of high school The next regular city council Meeting is deal. Martinez, a Philip native. “The auditors were very strapped for time, students from Wall and Kadoka should add to the Monday, March 6, at 7:00 p.m. in the com - thus the slow start,” explained Finance Of - numbers of interested job seekers. The city of Philip munity room. The city council will meet in ficer Monna Van Lint. “We are one of many is specifically interested in arranging for swimming special session, Monday, March 20, at 4:00 municipalities that are late.” Before the pool life guards during the summer. p.m. in the Haakon County Courthouse com - council quickly approved the audit results, The council approved two additional volunteers for missioner’s room to sit as a board of equal - council member Brit Miller said, “I guess we the Philip Volunteer Fire Department, Katrina Gart - ization. Citizens are advised that the official are looking at old information here.” The ner and Ryon Berry. PT-17 form must be filed with the finance of - States settle with Western 2016 audit should be done far more quickly. A list of items has been surplused and can now be fice by 5:00 p.m., March 16. Deputy Finance Officer Brittany Smith sold by the city. Included on the list is a 1973 Ford See the official city council minutes in the will spend part of the day working a booth F600 sewer truck that might be of some interest to next issue of the Pioneer Review. TUhe Sn.D.i aottornney goenenral ’sf ofrficae ududced wsirec trhansefers mes has announced a settlement with •Heightened anti-fraud proce - the Western Union Company, re - dures when warranted by circum - solving a multistate investigation stances such as increased fraud which focused on complaints of con - complaints sumers who used Western Union’s •Due diligence checks on West - Major disaster assistance for South Dakota wire transfer service to send money ern Union agents who process The Federal Emergency Man - can be made available as needed. percent of the approved costs for the winter storm. to third parties involved in money transfers agement Agency announced that Assistance for state and affected hazard mitigation projects by state “I thank President Trump for schemes to defraud consumers. •Monitoring of Western Union federal disaster assistance has local governments can include as and local governments to prevent taking quick action so these com - “The basic concept of a money agent activity related to prevention been made available to South required: or reduce long-term risk to life and munities across our state can con - wire transfer was intended to fill of fraud-induced money transfers Dakota to supplement state and Payment of not less than 75 per - property from natural or technolog - tinue the hard work of rebuilding the need of getting money from one •Prompt and appropriate disci - local recovery efforts in the area af - cent of the eligible costs for debris ical disasters. their cities and towns,” said Thune. known party to another in a quick plinary action against Western fected by a severe winter storm removal and emergency protective Approved public repair projects “Now that this declaration is ap - and safe way. Criminal scam Union agents who fail to follow re - during Dec. 24-26. measures taken to save lives and are paid through the state from proved, I hope folks can have artists have taken this basic con - quired protocols concerning anti- Federal funding is available to protect property and public health. funding by FEMA and other partic - greater peace of mind knowing that cept and pilfered money from con - fraud measures state and local governments and Emergency protective measures as - ipating federal agencies. more help is on the way.” sumers on numerous schemes Western Union also has agreed certain private nonprofit organiza - sistance is available to state, tribal Senators John “A number of South Dakota com - including lottery and contest to pay a total of $5 million to the tions on a cost sharing basis for and eligible local governments on a Thune (R-SD) and munities suffered significant losses scams, grandparent scams and ro - states for the states’ costs and fees, emergency work and the repair or cost-sharing basis. (Source: FEMA (R-SD) and U.S. Rep. during recent thunderstorms and mance scams,” said Marty Jackley, including $43,222 to South Dakota. replacement of facilities damaged funded, state administered.) (R-SD) issued statements after blizzards,” said Rounds. “President South Dakota attorney general. In addition to this settlement with by the severe winter storm. The af - Payment of not less than 75 per - Trump approved South Dakota Trump’s disaster declaration will “This settlement requires Western the states, Western Union also set - fected counties include Haakon cent of the eligible costs for repair - Governor ’s re - help these communities which suf - Union to develop and put into ac - tled claims related to fraud-in - County. ing or replacing damaged public quest for a major disaster declara - fered losses to be eligible for federal tion a comprehensive anti-fraud duced transfers with the Federal Federal funding is also available facilities, such as roads, bridges, tion. The federal disaster assistance as they work to rebuild.” program designed to help detect Trade Commission and U.S. De - on a cost-sharing basis for hazard utilities, buildings, schools, recre - assistance will help communities “South Dakotans are resilient, and prevent incidents where con - partment of Justice that was an - mitigation measures statewide. ational areas, and similar publicly recover from strong winter thun - but disasters like this can threaten sumers use their wire transfer nounced Jan. 19. As part of those Nancy M. Casper has been owned property, as well as certain derstorms and a subsequent bliz - a family’s financial security,” said service.” related settlements, Western named as the federal coordinating private non-profit organizations zard that resulted in flooding, Noem. “President Trump’s actions That anti-fraud program, which Union has agreed to pay $586 mil - officer for federal recovery opera - engaged in community service ac - significant snow and ice accumula - will help make sure South Dakota Western Union has agreed to im - lion to a fund that the justice de - tions in the affected area. Casper tivities. (Source: FEMA funded, tions, and high-velocity straight- communities get the help they need plement and update as warranted, partment will administer to said additional designations may state administered.) line winds across the state. Three to rebuild from a devastating win - includes the following elements. provide refunds to victims of fraud be made at a later date if requested Payment of not more than 75 people lost their lives as a result of ter storm.” •Anti-fraud warnings on send induced wire transfers nationwide, by the state and warranted by the forms that consumers use to wire including South Dakota victims. results of further damage assess - money More information about the FTC ments. •Mandatory and appropriate and DOJ settlement, and the re - Following is a summary of key training and education for Western mission of those refunds, is avail - federal disaster aid programs that McIlravy honored for national project Union’s agents about fraud-in - able at https://www.justice. gov/criminal-mlars/remission. Tanya McIlravy, a program technician at the Philip Jackson counties office, the key to success is to create office of the Farm Service Agency, was recognized at a supportive, positive climate of fun and camaraderie a Zone B employee's association meeting in Sioux that helps each employee. The net result is a produc - Falls, Feb. 2-4. tive workforce that per - McIlravy received her forms at a higher level. recognition from Chris Kyle Bachand, farm King Ranch – Limousin Beyerhelm, acting admin - loan manager at the istrator of Farm Service Philip office, said, “Tanya Agency, Washington, D.C. is well-deserving of this Commercial Breeder of the Year She had done team work award. The Haakon-Jack - on a national project. son FSA staff was happy Being the only team mem - to see her recognized for ber not from Washington, her hard work and dedica - D.C., she administered tion to this project.” her team remotely from McIlravy added, “The Philip. support of my co-workers “We took on the project and supervisor here en - that was designed to this ables me to work on the larger team,” said McIl - workforce engagement ravy. team, and improve em - McIlravy’s FSA well - ployee involvement and ness challenge was titled morale for all FSA em - “Blazing Our Way to Rio” ployees.” to imitate last year’s The coin presented to Olympic theme. The McIlravy is a form of moral-building activity Tanya McIlravy was presented this coin in recogni - recognition done by the was intended to end with tion of her efforts for creating and administrating a United States Depart - the start of the Summer moral-building project for Farm Service Agency em - ment of Agriculture’s Olympics – the timing as - ployees The back side of the coin reads, “The seeds FSA. The workforce en - sociated with the torch of success: cultivating, sowing, tending, harvesting.” gagement team honors Courtesy Photo run of 2016 Summer leaders who successfully The King Ranch, Philip, Rick and Donna King family was also recognized for their dedication to the Olympics in Rio. Each accomplishment of members of accomplish great work. Keepsakes – in the form of and family were awarded the 2017 Limousin Com - Limousin breed. The BHSS ® Limousin bull sale was the team and the agency accumulated “miles” of bear - special coins or lapel pins – are used by FSA man - mercial Breeder of the Year award from the Heart - one of the top sales of the week, with three open Lim - ing the torch to reach Rio from Olympia, Greece. agers for recognizing employees who demonstrate ex - land Limousin Association. The award ousin heifers averaging $2,933; two Limousin bred McIlravy’s initiative ceptional initiative. presentation took place at a banquet at the Black ® heifers averaging $4,100 and 25 Limousin bulls aver - was to support FSA’s goal to create a work environ - The Zone B National Association of FSA Support Hills Stock Show , Rapid City, Feb. 2. Dean Sum - aging $4,468. The champion Limousin bull was also ment that stimulates creativity. The participatory Employees meeting in Sioux Falls included represen - merbell of the Heartland Limousin Association picked as the supreme champion of all breeds, Satur - challenge was designed for employees to become hap - tatives from South Dakota, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, presented the King family the award. Just before ® ® day evening of the BHSS . pier, healthier and more energetic at work through Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma and the BHSS Limousin sale, Friday Feb. 3, the King team spirit. As McIlravy has seen in her Haakon and Texas. 2 Opinion Pioneer Review • February 9, 2017 Steven Livermont Letter to the Editor South Dakota District 27 [email protected] 605-441-1020 Letter to the editor; ceive financial support from DOE posed site. The initial phases of By the time this letter is in the to then approach the residents for the project require the selected paper, RESPEC will have held dialogue about the DBFT project. companies to begin outreach to As week four comes to a close, 267 bills have been leges to owning land is one of the basic rights en - their first public informational Th me this speaks volumes on communities and seek support of filed, compared to 345 in 2016 and 429 in 2015. dowed by our constitution. It will be hard fought as meeting on the Deep Borehole how underhandedly RESPEC and local governments and other com - A lot of the bills have been clean-up bills, where other legislators take a lot of heat from their dis - Field Test (DBFT) project. My DOE worked to sneak into our munity stakeholders.” unnecessary language is changed in an existing law tricts. hope is that many of you made it community. I am sure you are If you oppose this project, it is of to simplify it or make it more clear. We are careful I see issues coming down the tube like Common a priority to attend the meeting aware that both Philip and Mid - the utmost importance that you to read these as sometimes, a few words can change Core, concealed carry, abortion, Spearfish Canyon, and will continue to make it a pri - land have rescinded their letters let your Haakon County commis - the whole meaning of the law. Haakon County bore hole, refugee settlements, and ority to attend other meetings of support until they know how sioners, Philip City Council mem - House Bill 1069 passed the Senate and the gover - adverse possession. These are going to be hotly de - held in different locations. each community feels in regards bers and Midland Town Board nor has signed it. Now there is a bunch of bills com - bated. RESPEC is the forerunner here to the project. Both towns acted members know you do not support ing forward to address the intent of the voters when We are bringing a bill that allows tribal leaders to to sell the project as “solely” a re - hastily in their initial support and the DBFT. they voted for Initiated Measure 22. Out of them all, testify before committees without being required to search project. They have pro - maybe were misinformed on the If Haakon County can show RE - hopefully, we enact some good ones. Being a newby be registered as a lobbyist. Just a bill that should duced a very well-written website. magnitude of this project. SPEC and DOE they do not have to this process, I have to ask myself, is there some have been in effect all along. They present themselves as being If you feel you do not have the the support of Haakon County unethical practices going on and if there is, will I am looking for legislation to address land valua - likeable and trustworthy guys right to oppose a project that is on commissioners, Philip City Coun - these bills address them and level the playing field? tions being viewed as actual use versus the produc - noting they don’t want nuclear private land, I beg to differ. cil, Midland Town Board and Looking forward to the debate. tion model according to soils. There seems to be a lot wasted either. However, at the This project has to have commu - other Haakon County residents, The landowner transferable deer tag has made it of variation in land values from one county to the end of the five years, they pack up nity support, local government then we will be able to stop the out of committee and will be addressed on the floor next. If you have comparisons I would appreciate it their bags and leave; wipe their support and support of community borehole drilling. of the House this week. Looking forward to this. I if you would email me for my information. hands clean with the notion that stakeholders, according to the for - This is a Department of Energy will debate it as a property rights issue, not a hunt - Contact me if you have any issues or thoughts. they performed their duties as mer undersecretary of science and project, paid for with Department ing issue. The idea that a person has certain privi - stated for research only. How can energy, Lynn Orr’s, letter written of Energy money, to solve Depart - we trust the people from RE - on Dec. 16, 2016. “DOE revised ment of Energy’s problem of find - SPEC? We can’t! This is not RE - the request for proposals to reflect ing a permanent storage or SPEC’s project. It is the the department’s understanding disposal area for nuclear waste. Department of Energy’s project. that public engagement and sup - Western South Dakota has paid Why did RESPEC have a few port for this project is para - its dues to the government by local people approach the Philip mount... Each contracting team storing nuclear warheads for City Council, Midland Town selected by DOE will work to many years. Western South Elizabeth May Board, a few local businesses and reach a cooperative and mutually Dakotans did not have a choice District 27 [email protected] 606-773-3851 Haakon County commissioners for beneficial agreement with the when the government decided to a letter of support before a public community before any drilling put the nuclear warheads here, informational meeting was pre - takes place. Only those teams that but we do have a choice and a Legislative Week 4 transparency. HB1034, HB1035, HB1036, HB1073, sented? The answer to that ques - establish an agreement with the voice to oppose Department of En - Week four was somewhat busier than the weeks HB1074, HB1076, HB1089, HB1128, HB1130, Sen - tion came at the Midland Town local community will go forward in ergy’s nuclear borehole project. before, but still nothing like it has been in the past. ate Bill 27, SB53, SB54, SB59, SB67, SB77, SB116, Board meeting held Jan. 10. RE - the competition for the final selec - House Bill 1069 was heard in the Senate this SJR2. http://sdlegislature.gov/Legislative_Session/ SPEC stated they needed those tion... community support is a cen - /s/ Jennifer L. Jones week. After a lengthy debate, it passed off the floor Bills/default.aspx?Session=2017 letters to get “a foot in the door” to tral factor in whether or not the Midland, SD and was signed into law by the governor. HB1069 Due to the time spent on IM22, not much else show some level of interest to re - project moves forward at a pro - was a complete repeal of Initiated Measere 22. At moved forward. I do want to bring attention to last count, there were 27 bills introduced to replace SB135. COOL or “Country of Origin Labeling” is concerns to IM22. back again this year. SB135 would repeal South Due to threats made on legislators and family Dakota’s existing law that says anyone who know - members, countless law enforcement agencies along ingly sells meat from a foreign country must post a with canine units covered every floor of the capital. sign indicating the country of origin. It would be re - I turned my focus on the young pages serving during placed with a provision requiring retailers who sell Fridge Door Notes & Reminders session. Part of their duty is to answer incoming beef and ground beef to label it with the country of phone calls. Because of inappropriate language and origin. If the origin can’t be determined, the product Call 859-2516 | [email protected] threats to legislators, the page staff had to suspend would have to be labeled as “unknown” or “Country THE PHILIP GARDEN CLUB … is hosting a free class on teas – preparation, the practice. of origin unknown.” The measure includes an ex - use, growing the plants and samples for tasting. Tuesday, Feb. 21, 7:00 p.m. in I understand citizen’s compassion on particular is - emption for prepared foods for immediate sale or the community room of the Haakon County Courthouse in Philip. Everyone is sues. What I do not understand is utter disregard ready to eat. If you support “Country of Origin La - welcome! for civility. We are citizen legislators, meaning we beling” I strongly encourage you to contact the com - campaign on our own time and our own money. Our mittee members on state affairs to encourage them FREE TAX PREPARATION … AARP TaxAide will be providing FREE federal yearly salary is $6,000 and we are paid five cents a to support the legislation. Following is the link for tax return preparation at the Bad River Senior Citizen’s Center, Philip, on Tues - mile. We are not subsidized by the state with funds members on state affairs. days from 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. The service is open to all ages with emphasis on low and middle income that would cripple our state economy. Taking eight http://sdlegislature.gov/Legislative_Session/Com - taxpayers. Call Bob McDaniel, 859-2227, for appointment or more information. percent from the state budget to create Democracy mittees/CommitteeMembers.aspx?Committee=356 Credits will do nothing but take away from other im - &Session=2017. PLAY WHIST … at the Bad River Senior Citizen’s Center, Philip, every Thursday thereafter through portant matters such as education, law enforcement Contact me at the House Chamber number 605- February. Everyone welcome. and infrastructure; not to mention it is unconstitu - 773-3851. Leave a phone number and I will call you tional. This session has been burdened with the task back. The fax number is 773-6806. If you send a fax, NURSING HOME ENTERTAINMENT … Chuck Carstensen will provide musical entertainment at the of taking out and fixing IM22, which could be better address it to Rep. Elizabeth May. You can keep Philip Nursing Home the second and fourth Tuesday of each month from 6:30-7:30 p.m. All are welcome. served spending time looking at ways to invest our track of bills and committee meetings at state’s time and money. I encourage everyone to con - http://legis.state.sd.us/. You can also use this link to AA & AL-ANON ... meetings will now start at 7:00 p.m. on Monday evenings. Please notice time change. tact me with concerns regarding IM22, but base the find the legislators, see what committees they are conversation on facts not emotions. on, read all the bills and track the status of each bill, To have your NON-PROFIT meeting listed here, please submit them by calling: 859-2516, or e-mailing Following is a list of bills you can review dealing listen to committee hearings, and contact legisla - to: ads@pioneer-review. com. We will publish your notice the two issues prior to your event at no charge. with elections/public officials/ethics reform and tors.

Country Praises Del Bartels | 859-2516 | [email protected] Governor repeals Initiated Measure 22 Governor Dennis Daugaard has signed House Bill unlikely that it would ever come into effect,” said was not passing on something the dance, that boy offered to get her 1069, an act to repeal and revise certain provisions Daugaard. “For that reason, it makes sense to re - I love you listener should know, but it was a a cup of punch. He asked how her related to campaign finance and to declare an emer - peal this unconstitutional measure. Over the next The grandmother had been realization by the speaker about homework was going. Her dress gency. This bill repeals Initiated Measure 22. few weeks, I will work with legislators to honor the hard pressed to explain anything themselves. was nice. Odd, he never did actu - “The circuit court enjoined Initiated Measure 22, will of the voters – by passing bills to regulate gifts about true love to her teenage Decades ago, the woman knew ally ask her to dance. finding it unconstitutional ‘beyond a reasonable from lobbyists and to strengthen ethics and cam - granddaughter. Stymied, she was the feelings her future husband On the first days of their high doubt.’ It has not been in effect, and it is extremely paign finance laws.” just glad the girl thought of the had for her before he did. The look school years, the boy always older woman as someone who on his face when he first uttered, seemed to find a desk beside hers. should know. I love you, was almost comical. She thought that was okay. He Friendship, infatuation and The concept that he loved her was and she ended up in the same dating were all relatively easy to a self realization, a revelation, study groups. Some time during get a handle on. The girl had ex - one that was obvious to everyone high school, he had grown taller. perienced varying aspects of but to him. It was like a very They were good students; he ex - Antiques Roadshow in Gillette, Aug. 19 these. But, the lasting, two-way young kid exclaiming fire is hot or plained assignments to her or tiques/tickets. For more information, you may call devotion that the teen had grown ice is cold. asked her to explain things to Antiques Roadshow, Public Broadcasting Sta - toll-free 888-762-3749. up witnessing between her grand - The granddaughter had gone him. They went to the junior tion's most-watched ongoing series, visits Gillette, Deadline for applications is Monday, April 10. mother and grandfather was a through the stages. In first grade prom together ... as friends. Wyo., for the first time as part of a 2017 summer Antiques Roadshow is also accepting furniture concept still out of grasp. she had received corny, theme- When he got a used car, she tour. Antiques Roadshow and Wyoming PBS will submissions for the 2017 tour. The series is looking The older woman was too vague oriented valentine’s cards. A cer - was the first to ride in it. She host an all-day appraisal event, Saturday, Aug. 19. for a few pieces of furniture in each city to appraise when saying true love was not tain boy had given her a Bugs liked it when he scraped ice off Three one-hour episodes will be produced from the and display on the set. Selected pieces will be trans - knowing something in your head, Bunny card. No way that could be her car windows before he went to Gillette event for inclusion in the 14-time Emmy® ported to the event and back at no cost to the owner. but realizing something beyond true love. A few years later, she his after school job. They were Award nominated production's 22nd broadcast sea - For more details, visit http://www.pbs.org/ that. Valentine’s Day usually em - had been picked on by that same great friends. They were, just nat - son, to air in 2018. Antiques Roadshow airs Mon - wgbh/roadshow/furniture/. phasized the gushy, often over- boy. Boys were weird. During urally, going to the senior prom days at 7:00 p.m. on Wyoming PBS. At each appraisal event, approximately 5,000 the-top aspects of love. Actually, fifth grade, a bigger boy (acciden - together. The two had chosen the “Antiques Roadshow is so excited to include ticketed guests will receive free valuations of their saying I love you was sweet, but tally or on purpose) knocked her same college. Gillette in our enduring search for the country's hid - antiques and collectibles from specialists from the anticlimactic. If the other person down. That one boy launched into He drove up; they were both in den treasures,” said Marsha Bemko, roadshow ex - country's leading auction houses and independent didn’t already know that, then the larger one. Thank goodness a the pep band. She got her instru - ecutive producer. “This is the first time we have dealers. Each guest is invited to bring two items for the words didn’t really mean teacher broke them up before the ment while the young man po - visited the state of Wyoming, and I can't wait to ex - appraisal. To see frequently asked question and an - much. smaller boy got really hurt. litely chatted. As they left, the plore the area and see what local items we uncover!" swers about Antiques Roadshow events, go to the The grandmother grinned at Everyone thought he was silly, or girl shouted, “I love you,” to her Admission to Antiques Roadshow is free, but tick - tour FAQ webpage. herself; she had learned that suicidal. grandmother. The older woman ets are required and must be obtained in advance. Antiques Roadshow, produced by WGBH Boston, often the person saying I love you At the girl’s first junior high grinned; wait for it... wait for it. Fans can apply now for a chance to receive one pair is seen by an average of 8.5 million viewers each of free tickets per household. To enter the drawing week. Its 21st broadcast season is currently airing for free tickets to a summer roadshow event and to Mondays at 8:00/7:00C p.m. on PBS. see complete application rules, go to pbs.org/an -

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Ravellette Publications is happy to receive letters concerning comments on any news story or personal feeling on any sub - Philip, SD ject. We do reserve the right to edit any offensive material and also to edit to fill the allotted space. We also reserve the right to reject any or all letters. U.S.P.S. 433-780 Our deadline for insertion in the Thursday issue is the preceding Monday at 5:00 p.m. Subscription Rates : For Haakon, Jackson, and Jones counties, Phone: (605) 859-2516; • FAX: (605) 859-2410; Letters intended for more than one Ravellette Publications newspaper should be mailed or hand delivered to each individual Creighton, Wall, Quinn, Marcus, Howes, Plainview, and Hayes ad - e-mail: [email protected] newspaper office. All letters must bear the original signature, address and telephone number of the author. dresses: $41.00 per year. Elsewhere: $47.00 per year. Copyrighted 1981: Ravellette Publications, Inc. All rights reserved. POLITICAL LETTERS TO THE EDITOR: No political letters are to run the two weeks prior to an election. South Dakota residents are required to pay sales tax. Nothing may be reprinted, photocopied, or in any way reproduced from The “Letters” column is intended to offer readers the opportunity to express their opinions. It is not meant to replace ad - Periodicals postage paid at Philip, SD. this publication, in whole or in part, without the written consent of the vertising as a means of reaching people. Postmaster, send change of address notice to: Pioneer Review, PO publisher. This publication’s goal is to protect the first amendment guarantee of free speech. Your comments are welcomed and en - Box 788, Philip, SD 57567; or FAX to: 605/859-2410. couraged. Website Subscription Rate: $36. DEADLINES: E-mail address: Display & Classified Advertising: Tuesdays at 11:00 a.m. (MT) The Pioneer Review • P.O. Box 788 • Philip, SD 57567-0788 • (605) 859-2516 • FAX: (605) 859-2410 [email protected] Legals: Fridays at 5:00 p.m. (MT) Publisher: Don Ravellette website: www.pioneer-review.com General Manager: Beau Ravellette Established in 1906. Kelly Penticoff The Pioneer Review, the official newspaper of Haakon County, the Ad Design: towns of Philip and Midland, and Haakon School District 27-1 is pub - Editor/News Reporter: Del Bartels ADS : [email protected] NEWS : [email protected] lished weekly by Ravellette Publications, Inc. Pioneer Review office is News Reporter: Nancy Haigh located at 221 E. Oak Street in Philip, South Dakota. Ad Sales: Lann Shorb Pioneer Review Advertising Deadline: Tuesdays at 11 a.m. February 9, 2017 • Pioneer Review Rural Living 3 Little Pasture on the Prairie Eliza Blue | [email protected] | littlepastureontheprairie.com

Last week I wrote about writing about trying to enjoy every pre - tradition may in fact have been a of early twilight. The hard winds %B>C::C-B1>CAB?A>@;@C while tucked into my little alcove cious moment I have to share with forerunner of the North American AB?2;>1A;9B?C?@@ 2' beneath the eaves of this old these small humans. Despite that Groundhog Day. have subsided, so the tips of the house. Somehow a week has intention, the days fly by, divided Here in South Dakota, we don’t trees shiver only slightly, and the clouds high above them don’t passed, and here I am, writing only by meals and diaper changes need to watch for serpents or badg - =8<=5676C=8<375=7$8< once again, the morning sunlight and naps. It is morning, then sud - ers to know spring is certainly a move at all. They both look pouring in, while the man of the denly night again, and then just as long way off. Or is it? If the next painted upon the pale blue of the )*(.+,44C0C!"9:9#/C3& ranch and the Bean are out adven - suddenly, morning once more. six weeks pass as the last six have, western horizon. turing. Downstairs I fly through chores it will be March in an eye blink, It could all be a painting, a I say, “somehow a week has – a load of laundry tossed into the and then it will be May. We can grain stolen from time’s hour - passed” because, truly, I cannot machine, a package of hamburger complain that winter drags on and glass, the conceive of it – time is passing so browning on the stove. When the on, but doesn’t it seem we’ve only prairie twilight captured and held quickly that it seems to have no baby tucked in her wrap starts to just finished opening Christmas in its timeless beauty. foundation in the laws of physics. wake, I move even faster, almost gifts and ringing in the New Year? Until the baby stirs and the Perhaps it is sleep deprivation, but jogging around the house, as I try Perhaps that is the reason for light shifts. Outside my window I my mind is like a telescope pulled to tidy one last room before she be - holidays – to divide time and to see Ellie the sheepdog stand and long, then abruptly collapsed. The gins to cry for milk. slow its momentum. As one day stretch, pulling herself up from baby I hold next to my body is tiny I sit to nurse her, and the Bean bleeds into the next, and each sea - the tall snow bank on which she has been sprawled napping. It #"! still, and yet her thighs are plump thinks he should be included. He son melts away so the next can be and sturdy now, her wrists creased comes to settle on the bit of my lap revealed, these traditions, what - will be dark soon, time for her to with new folds of fat. It really feels that isn’t occupied. We sing songs ever they symbolize, are markers. begin work. There is the hen like we brought her home from the and play patty cake until the baby They give us a toehold, albeit a house to guard, and the east corral hospital a few days ago, not seven finishes, then we are up again, temporary one, in time’s forward of sheep to patrol. Like everyone weeks, so I am surprised every heading back to the kitchen to pre - motion. else on the ranch, her duties are time I stop to notice how much she pare the next meal. We slow, but I take a break from writing be - never complete, but she doesn’t has grown. In the same instant, never stop, all day long. cause the boys have returned, and seem to mind. Despite the cold, however, I find it hard to remem - Last week was Imbolc, a gaelic when I sneak upstairs again hours and the days that speed past, we ber the time before she arrived – holiday celebrating the halfway later, the shadows have grown are all pretty thankful to be here, hasn’t she always been here? Or, point between the winter solstice long. The garish light of midday living and working and loving. been here for several years at and the spring equinox. Traditions has given way to the warm amber least? As for the Bean, well, it feels associated with the holiday in - as though we’ve known each other clude watching to see if serpents or for decades, not the 19 months badgers came out from their win - since he arrived earthside. ter dens. This was believed to be a Which is why I wrote last week harbinger of warm weather. The

Ranch/farm records for filing taxes With the March 3 tax deadline there may be many throughout looming for South Dakota's farm - the year. If you simply try to re - ers and ranchers, there is no time count them all at tax prep time, it to waste in gathering the impor - may be quite difficult." tant information and documents Good record keeping makes the government requires. preparing tax returns easier and "While most people must file supports items reported on tax re - taxes by April 15, farmers' and turns. ranchers' tax deadline is more For more information, visit than a month earlier. In general, http://igrow.org/livestock/profit- the law does not require any spe - tips/importance-of-keeping- cific record-keeping system. With records-for-filing-taxes-on-the-ran a few exceptions, a producer can ch-farm/. choose any kind of record keeping system they wish to use for their business," said Jack Davis, South Dakota State University Exten - sion crops business management field specialist. Davis listed off several system options producers can choose from, including Quicken, Quick - Books, Easy Farm, paper ledger, paper journal etc. "Although the Internal Revenue Service and the Farm Financial Standards Council encourages an accrual accounting method for record keeping, producers how - ever can also use cash," Davis said. The record keeping system a producer selects should include a summary of all business transac - tions. "It is imperative producers also keep supporting documents such as purchases, sales, payroll, invoices and other transactions taking place in their business," said Shannon Sand, SDSU Exten - sion livestock business manage - ment field specialist. "It is important to keep these docu - ments because they support the entries listed in journals, ledgers and tax returns." Sand added that producers need to keep these records for three years from when the tax return was filed, however, some records may need to be kept longer. Beyond Taxes Davis and Sand both said there are benefits to keeping records be - yond taxes. For example, accurate BW +2.4 • WW +43 • YW +76 • Milk +22 BW +3.9 • WW +47 • YW +85 • Milk +25 BW +3.8 • WW +47 • YW +76 • Milk +22 records provide producers with a way to monitor the progress of their business. "Records show whether the business is improving, which items are profitable and what may need to be changed," Sand said. "Records also help producers keep track of deductible expenses, as

BW +1.7 • WW +38 • YW +66 • Milk +21 BW +3.1 • WW +42 • YW +75 • Milk +24 BW +2.3 • WW +41 • YW +75 • Milk +28

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SaddleJry, oBonttle &s Vet’ Locally owned & operated 859-2482 • Philip 4 Philip Socials Pioneer Review • February 9, 2017 Fortunately for me, Daddy was an early riser. I was ever so re - Hit & Miss lieved with his cheery greeting the THE LIBRARY SHELF 859-2516 | [email protected] | [email protected] | [email protected] next morning, "What in the hell In cooperation with Mrs. These classes will cover Face - are you doing in here?" Brucklacher’s Family and Con - book, Twitter, Snapchat and In- Elderly Meals the kite flying contest sponsored with pockets that often held News from Loren Kiel sumer Science Class, Service stagram. Bring in your OWN Thursday, Feb. 9: Potato En - by the First Lutheran Church. clothes pins, but sometimes flower With light snowflakes melting Learning, the Haakon County device to play and learn with. crusted Cod, Mashed Red Pota - Reverend Ottorrness, a large Nor - seeds, a pretty rock or round pink as they touch the streets, the Public Library will be holding These classes will begin Monday, toes, Beets, Fruit. wegian with huge feet and a kind peppermints with three Xs on Feeding South Dakota Mobile Basic Computer Classes starting Feb. 13, at 1:35 p.m. and run Friday, Feb. 10 : Oven Baked manner, was in charge. them. We would put together jig- Food Pantry arrived in front of the Monday, Feb. 13. The classes will every Monday and Wednesday Chicken, Baked Potato, Peas, Roll, We met, this windy March day, saw puzzles and listen to the radio Bad River Senior Citizen’s Center meet every Monday and Wednes - for four weeks. We have nine Fruit. on the hill that also hosted the and she would try to drum a few around 12:30 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. day at 11:05 a.m. for four weeks. slots available, so don't delay, Monday, Feb. 13 : Beef United States flag. We appropri - manners in to us. She rarely 31. There was a group of local We have six slots available. Book book today! Rouladen, Mashed Potatoes, ately dubbed it "Flag Hill." This scolded, but did have a thing folks to help unload from the truck your class today. These classes are FREE and Green Beans, Fruit. hill over-looked Philip, South about dirty feet and dirty shoes. carton after carton of a large vari - Also in cooperation with Family will be filling fast! To register for Tuesday, Feb. 14 : Special Dakota, and provided every ad - We would polish our shoes and ety of surplus foods. There was and Consumer Science Class, these classes contact Missy Meal – Assorted Pizza, Tossed vantage for launching my hefty laces too and wash our feet before also someone at a table ready with Service Learning, the Haakon Koester at the Haakon County Salad, Garlic Bread, Fruit. craft. I had a giant ball of string: slipping in between her fat feather a tally sheet for participants to County Public Library will be of - Public Library, 859-2442 Wednes day, Feb. 15: scratchy, lumpy, binder twine, ticks and listen to the canaries sign their names. Tables were fering Social Media classes. Chicken Alfredo, Peas, Fruit . wound on a stick and secured fluff and settle for the night. But lined up almost the full length of *** tightly with plenty of knots and the best part was that we could the room and cartons of food were Haakon County Prairie nails, but once the wind caught have her all to ourselves! One at a stacked under those tables to be the kite, the string quickly ran out time! Oh, how I did love my nights pulled out as needed for replenish - bases which required the gravel - been a student at the SDSM&T, Transportation Bus Schedule ing of roads. What a blessing that but he is presently taking tempo - … Trip to Rapid City every Tues - spinning and jerking the stick in at Grandma's house! ing the supplies on the tables. If was for us ranchers and farmers! rary leave from that and working day and Thursday. To ride the my little hands. Mama told me to check on the you wanted to supplement your During the lunch time at these full-time motel near Cabelas bus please call 605-441-1495 . I was a skinny third grader and new baby chickens on the way to grocery bill, this was the place to card parties, we guys oftentimes northeast of Rapid city as a desk Wall bus to Rapid City every maybe weighed 60 pounds, dirt Grandma's. The old chicken coop come and fill a box with foodstuff reminisce about the weather of clerk. Wednesday – leaves from Philip. and all, and one more gust would was doubling as a brooder house. of your choice. I won’t attempt to the past. This time we recalled in - Actually, the program began For questions please call Kay have pulled me to heaven straight It was earth sheltered on one side list the various kinds of food dis - cidences of the 1949 blizzard. The with Pastor Kathy Chesney lead - Ainslie at 859-2670 or 441-2449 . away. Horror showed on the rev - with windows on the other, played. People have been encour - evening was wrapped up with a ing an opening prayer. She was *** erend's face as he shouted against warmer and snugger than our aged to take advantage of this. lunch of sandwiches, pickles, cook - also on deck to help regulate the This is a true story from my sis - the wind, "Let go!" I did, and the house. However, I still have some qualms ies, coffee and lemonade. sound system. Crystal Thorson in - ter Carol Hansen about her ad - kite sailed into oblivion, carrying I'd just set foot inside the coop about us folks who are really not It was booked, advertised and troduced the first segment of the venture growing up in my stick along with it, and waving and took a whiff: aroma of brooder in the class of the needy taking ad - promoted well in advance! I am program featuring her son. Prior Philip. –MR Hansen its glorious tail. And it made me gas, chicken feed, old hay, new vantage of this program. I suppose talking about the Keenie Word to him coming on stage, Crystal FROM FLYING HIGH TO the clear winner of the First hay, and the ever present chicken there are some in our midst who Lutheran Church's kite flying con - manure, when I heard the horri - meet that criteria, but I would like concert that was held at the thanked those who had given ad - LOCKED UP United Church the evening of vance financial support. Her Carol Hansen Vogan test. ble sound of the latch falling shut to see more efficiency in reaching Feb. 3. It was preceded by a 5:15 hands had been full being in - Mama helped me build the Bursting with pride and a on the outside of the door and I them. I hope a lot of what is left supper in the church basement volved with the planning and strongest box kite ever assembled healthy respect for the South knew I was stuck there until over at the end of the day eventu - sponsored by the church youth. preparations for the concert. Mid - on a kitchen floor. She got the di - Dakota wind, I claimed the prize someone came to check on the ally finds its way to the food Keenie, daughter of Kelli Powers way during the program, there rections from big brother Wayne, of 24 HERSHEY'S CHOCOLATE chickens. They would not be com - pantries. Word and the late Grady Word is was a break to pass the plate for a she said. We used lath, real lath, BARS! A whole box, and they were ing to check for me. I would not be Just out of curiosity, I re - an up-and-coming western Gospel free will offering to help meet the an inch across and a quarter inch all mine! missed. Grandma would think I searched on Google concerning the singer with some impressive ad - rest of the expenses. thick and 30 inches long, mostly I knew they would not last long forgot to come and Mama and source of the food supply distrib - vancements of her singing and They presented a well-balanced used to separate the hundreds of around the pack of little brothers. Daddy expected we would do what uted by Feeding South Dakota. performing career. As stated in program that lasted about 90 min - sign boards we painted. They were But to show good faith, I passed we were told, by God! Still, the It’s source is ‘The Emergency Food the program bulletin, a highlight utes to an audience that nearly also handy spanking sticks. Like out one Hershey bar to each per - sting of sleeping in the stinking Assistance Program’ (TEFAP), an for Keenie was being a part of the filled the sanctuary of the church. the time we were fighting over son at home and headed out to chicken coop instead of Grandma's agency of the U.S. Department of Armed Forces entertainment tour Two of the well-known hymns who gets the blue plate. This spend the night with my Grandma soft bed did not seem fair, even Agriculture. Certainly not all of performing for our troops in re - sung by Keenie were “Amazing spanking called for a fist full of Palmer and stash the rest of my with the glory of winning the kite the food is what one would classify mote bases throughout Africa. grace” and “How Great Thou Art.” lath, not just one! However, a winnings at her house for safe flying contest fresh on my mind. as staples. I noticed a lot of canned Keenie has recently joined forces For most of Keenie’s program, she longer lasting impact on my psy - keeping. Grandma lived alone just But there I was, warm enough baby food which is good if it gets with Susie McEntire-Eaton bring - used a recording with backup. I che was that Daddy broke the blue across the valley and we took in the dark with only the light of where it is needed. We have no - ing their “Pamper Me” conference did not find out if the back-up har - plate, right there, no negotiation, turns staying the night with her, the brooder and stocked with the ticed that many of the food pack - for the first time to the Black Hills monizing voice was her own pre- no second chance. partly to keep her company, but remaining candy bars. The baby ages are labeled outdated. Stock Show®. That performance recorded voice or if it was of We used real cloth to cover the mostly for ourselves. She was a chicks had water but it was doc - Just as sure as I am sitting here was to be presented at the Black another person. It was a pretty sturdy kite body, material from an wonderful Grandma, made the tored with medicine to keep them at my computer, you can be as - Hills Stock Show® in Rapid City lively program. old skirt given to us by a well- way they used to make grandmas; well, and I knew I couldn't drink sured that I will continue to report the very next day. In other words, In Marcus’ introductory pro - meaning town lady, and topped it soft and round, kind and gentle it. I perched on an empty water on the series of Thursday evening she is rubbing elbows with gram, some of his music was his off with a spectacular tail of big and with braided hair on top and can, ate chocolate until my mouth whist card parties held at the Bad Nashville stars. own composition; one number he bows tied at intervals. I entered an apron that went all around her stuck shut, and waited for dawn. River Senior Citizen’s Center throughout January, February I did a little bit of Internet re - had just finished putting together and maybe into March. It was the search and learned that Susie is a early that day. One number he did fifth night of this series Thursday, younger sister of Reba McEntire, was a song, music and lyrics com - Feb. 2. As I stepped out of our that redheaded western singing posed by Kianna Knutson. Marcus apartment to head for the senior star, songwriter and actress who is also an accomplished guitarist. started her career in the 1970s His music was very controlled Feb. 10-13 citizens’ center, I was surprised to Monster Trucks be greeted with about a half inch and just hasn’t stopped. Susie, in with vocal variations, slipping into Rated PG blanket of snow on the sidewalks. contrast to her older sister, has a soft falsetto at times. * * * Seventeen folks, six men and 11 turned to gospel music, and that is While Keenie’s parents lived Feb. 17-20 how Keenie made connections Patriots Day ladies showed up to play. Jerry near Hermosa, her father grew up Rated R Neville opted to sit out the games with her. Keenie does a superb job in the Belvidere area. She men - * * * leaving four tables of whist player. of witnessing her Christian faith. tioned that her father, Grady, was Feb. 24-27 What made this concert more killed about 10 years ago; kicked The LEGO At the end of the seven games, Batman Movie high scorers were Ruby Huston special in our Philip community is in the head by a bronco he had Rated PG taking first prize with a score of that another possibly up and com - been riding. Her mother, Kelli, 61, yours truly coming in second ing western singing star and com - was in the audience. with a score of 53 and Joy Neville poser, Marcus Martinez, Rapid I might share a bit of trivia. Fri: 8:00 p.m. Sat: 8:00 p.m. having a score or 49 for third City, who grew up here in Philip, Keenie’s great-uncle, Zack Word, Sun: 1:30 p.m. Mon: 7:00 p.m. prize. For a change I broke out of performed prior to her perform - Rapid City, married Norma For updates on movies, call: my rut of middle of the road type ance and also some with her. Chamberlain (Word) who gradu - scoring. Back before we had gravel Marcus is the son of Steve Mar - ated from the RCHS Class of 1952 Gem Theatre roads out in the country, we trav - tinez, Rapid City, and Crystal as did I. Zack was a younger 859-2000 • Philip eled middle of the road mud ruts Thorson, Philip. Again, as printed brother to Keenie’s granddad, Don many times to get to town! It was in the program bulletin, he won G. Word, Belvidere. better to try to stay in the ruts the S.D. Youth Talent contest Steve Martinez made it a point rather than slither all around on when he was 17 years old after to be here for his son’s perform - the road and possibly land in the competing for five consecutive ance as well as did his brother, ditch. One would grind along in years. I recall those contests as a Blake, and friend, Myah Pilar. Be - the ruts slowly making headway, part of the 4-H Achievement Days sides Crystal, members of the provided the ruts were not too events. In 2015, he was selected as Thorson family in attendance deep causing the vehicle to high- one of the emerging artists at the were her mother, Phillis Thorson, center. I especially remember Dahl Fine Arts Center. He has en - Spearfish, her brother, Bill, and doing so in order to get to town for tertained at Relay for Life and friend, Annette Nelson, Belle the Philip’s golden anniversary in well as many other local events Fourche, Bob and his wife, Jodie, June of 1957. That was only a few over the years. Marcus graduated and her little granddaughter, years before the crash program in the PHS Class of 2012. I recall Mayzie Booth, and cousin, Doug was implemented for the construc - him playing the slide trombone in Thorson, his wife, Nancy, and tion of the Minutemen Missile high school band. Marcus has daughter, Hannah, all from the Grindstone community. Oh yes, Jeanette Burnett, who has re - mained a grandma in reserve to Crystal’s larger family was able to You’re invited to an Open House to celebrate come from her swing-bed in the hospital after knee surgery to the 85th Birthday of enjoy the concert. Eleanor Kroetch Phillis Thorson planned to be in Saturday, February 11th from 2 to 4 p.m. Philip for a few days before re - If you’re unable to turning to Spearfish. Sunday at the Bad River Senior Citizen’s Center attend, but wish to morning, she walked from her send Eleanor daughter, Crystal’s, home to at - a card, her tend worship services at First Downtown Philip address is: Lutheran Church. Pastor Lauren PO Box 256 Ley and his wife, Sarah, were out Philip, SD 57567 of town and Dave Ohrtman, Long Valley, conducted the worship services in First Lutheran and the other Western New Hope Lutheran Parish churches. Many folks will recognize Dave as a rancher/farmer in the Long Valley area besides being a teacher and coach in the Kadoka school sys - Join the Celebration! tem. When called upon, he has been serving in the capacity of a at an Open House for lay-preacher for some years now. After coffee, rolls and fellowship in Floyd & Donna Cammack’s the church basement following worship services, Phillis walked 65th Wedding Anniversary back to our apartment with us to visit for an hour or so before re - Sunday, February 12th turning to Crystal’s residence. Phillis was a classmate of my from 2:00 to 4:00 p.m. brother-in-law, Clyde Persons, until her senior year when she fin - at the Union Center Baptist Church ished high school in Rapid City. She missed the memorial service Cards may be sent to: for Clyde held at First Lutheran 17027 Old Stoneville Rd., Church in August of 2016, as the Union Center, SD 57787 Thorson family had a family re - union in the Black Hills that continued on 12 February 9, 2017 • Pioneer Review Church 5

Obituaries Floyd J. “Shorty” life include his two daughters, Vogelgesang, age Adele Samuelson and her hus - 82, of Wanblee, band, Wes, of Rapid City, and Floyd “ShoSr.tDy.,” d Vieod gTehlugrse-sang Rhonda Antonsen and fiancé, Joel day, Feb. 2, 2017, Aeschbacher, of Wanblee; three at the Rapid City Regional Hospi - grandchildren, Audra Antonsen Gene Leroy Fairbault; five great-grandchil - tal. and boyfriend, Sam Aman, of Ab - Cressy, age 79, of dren, Neveah, Jesse, Jenni, Avy - Floyd J. Vogelgesang was born erdeen, Todd Antonsen and Bobbi Murdo, S.D., died ona and Jackie; a sister, Janice Jan. 24, 1935, to Charlie and Ila Antonsen of Wanblee. Gene Leroyon C Mreonsdsay y, Jan. (Ray) Pike of Draper; a brother, (Hibbert) Vogelgesang. As a very Shorty was preceded in death by 30, 2017, at the Mike Cressy of Pawhuska, Okla.; young child, Floyd gained the his wife, Barbara Vogelgesang; Golden Living his miniature Schnauzer, Mali; a nickname “Shorty” from his ability parents, Charlie and Ila Vogelge - Center in Pierre. special friend of the family, Janet to walk under a table without hit - sang; one brother, Lloyd “Doc” Vo - Gene Leroy Cressy was born Penticoff; numerous nieces and ting his head. From then on, he gelgesang; and one sister, Janice Oct. 15, 1937. He was the third nephews; and a host of other rela - was always known as “Shorty” by Hibbert. born child of Everett and Lola tives and friends. his family and friends. Services were held Tuesday, (Pierce) Cressy. He attended Gene was preceded in death by Shorty spent his childhood Feb. 7, at the Presbyterian Church school at the Cressy School in the his parents; one brother, Dale, and growing up in the Wanblee area. should and more. Learning to in Kadoka with Pastor Gus Kolls School District for his first his wife, Betty Cressy; a father, He attended Garner School, Wan - drive a stick shift before driving Craven and Pastor Gary McCub - eight years then attended Murdo and mother-in-law, Max and blee School and Kadoka School. an automatic, how to bait a hook, bin officiating. High School and graduated in Bertha Horsley; a sister-in-law, He went on to graduate from how to cook and eat what you hunt Music was provided by Rani 1955. In the fall of 1954, during Bonnie Cressy; a sister-in-law, Kadoka High School. and the importance of being kind Oyan, pianist, and Kassidy Fergu - his senior year, he was pound-for- Colleen Anna and her husband, Shorty enlisted in the U.S. to others and so many important son, vocalist. Ushers were Blake pound the toughest defensive line - Bob; a brother-in-law, Robert Army in 1955. He served until life lessons. Hicks and Mark Slovek. Pallbear - man Murdo High School ever saw. “Bob” Tenant; a niece, Susie 1957 and was honorably dis - When the grandkids started ar - ers were Boyd Kennedy, Dewayne During the summers he worked Rankin; and a nephew, Monte charged. Shorty came back home riving, he took the role of Grandpa Kennedy, Joe Amiotte, Robin for the railroad between VanMetre Horsley. to Wanblee where he spent his very seriously. He loved his grand - Amiotte, Steve Arment and Jay and Philip. He attended Dakota Memorial services were held early adult years working for the kids dearly. He taught them how Vogelgesang. Honorary pallbear - Wesleyan University to play foot - truck tires until the early morning Saturday, Feb. 4, at the Methodist South Dakota Game, Fish & to hunt, fish, drive, cook, how to ers were Tom Kukal, Fritz Ar - ball for two years. hours only to do it all over again Church in Murdo with Pastor Rick Parks, Jackson County ASCS of - care for the cattle, how to be a kind ment, Pat Weaver, John On June 8, 1960, he was united the next day. He then worked for Hazen officiating. fice and helping his dad on the person, to forgive, to enjoy life, to Eisenbraun, Mel Eisenbraun, in marriage to a cute little cheer - Horsley Farms and Horsley Insur - Music was provided by Karen ranch. take chances, and so many lessons Bruce Conlee, the Wanblee com - leader named Carol Jean Horsley. ance Agency until he retired. Gene Royer, pianist, Luke Dowling and On Jan. 4, 1964, he was united only a Grandpa could teach. He munity and all relatives and Upon return from their honey - served on the board of directors for Kyle Roth, vocalists. Ushers were in marriage to Barbara Amiotte. once said, “I was the lucky one. I friends in attendance. moon they received an overdraft Missouri Valley Insurance Agency Tracy Dowling, Tryston Horsley They eventually made their home got to raise two families.” Interment with military honors from the bank, short on money, for 25 years. He continued to go to and Heath Bryan. Register book on Eaglenest Creek. While living Shorty will always be remem - was at the Kadoka Cemetery. but with plenty of love for each Draper daily to care for his farm attendants were Patti Greenseth on Eaglenest Creek their first bered for his quick smile, kindness Arrangements were with the other. kitty. and Karen Dowling. Honorary daughter, Adele, was born. towards others, his quick helping Rush Funeral Chapel of Kadoka. To this marriage were born Survivors include his wife, pallbearers were the former Dry Shorty continued to work for his hand and his infinite knowledge of His online guestbook is avail - three children, Patricia and Gene, Carol, of Murdo; three children, Creek Dribblers. dad and the S.D. Game, Fish & so many things. able at www.rushfuneralhome. who were born in Hawaii while Patricia “Patty” Cressy of Pierre, Interment will be at a later date Parks. After the passing of his fa - Grateful for having shared his com. Gene served in the Navy, and later Gene (Gayanne) Cressy, Jr. of at the Murdo Cemetery. ther, Charlie, Shorty took over full Kathy, who was born after they re - Summerset, and Kathy (Lonnie) In lieu of flowers, a memorial time operation of the ranch. He turned to Murdo. Roth of Faribault, Minn.; six has been established to the Jones and Barb moved from Eaglenest Gene served in the U.S. Navy grandchildren, Kyle (Melissa) County Ambulance Service. Cards Creek to the home on the ranch. A from August 1961 to August 1965. Roth of Fairbault, Khrystyne and memorials may be sent to P.O. second daughter, Rhonda, was He worked at Murdo Oil for 20 Dummer of Sioux Falls, Jarrod Box 487, Murdo, SD 57559. born to them soon after. Shorty Andrew “Jim” Walden, age 68, years with his good friend, (Cindy) Roth of Rockwell City, Arrangements are with the continued to ranch and reside here of Wall, S.D., died Feb. 6, 2017, at Howard Peters. During this time, Iowa, Ashley (Richard) White of Rush Funeral Home of Philip. until his passing. his home. he played basketball for the Dry San Antonio, Texas, Kayla His online guestbook is avail - Shorty and Barb continued to A Jnimd rweaws b “orJnim M”a yW 5, a1l9d48e, n to Creek Dribblers, a local town (Xavier) Christmas of Westmin - able at www.rushfuneralhome. ranch and farm together for many Harold and Hilda (Heggeseth) team. He spent many nights fixing ster, Colo., and Brenna Roth of com. years. Together, they made quite Walden in Britton. the team. They loved the commu - He was united in marriage to nity they had made their home in. Kristi L. Krueger on May 5, 2012, From card playing to helping pull in Deadwood. a calf to spring branding time, Survivors include his wife, they treasured the many friend - Kristi Walden of Wall; two broth - ships. Many a young person was ers, Larry Walden of Forman, Tyler Bowling taken under Shorty and Barb’s N.D., and Roger Walden of Cali - Public Affairs Specialist | Social Security Administration wings, whether it was nephews, fornia; and a host of other rela - nieces or any young person, Shorty tives and friends. Question: turns 18, we conduct both a med - Question: and Barb would take them in. He was preceded in death by his I lost my Medicare card. How ical and a non-medical review to If I have a question about my Shorty was well known for his parents. can I get replacement? see if they are still eligible for SSI Medicare bill, who should I con - love of the outdoors. This love was Memorial services will be held Answer: payments. If the child continues to tact? fostered from a very early age. His at a later date in North Dakota. The easiest and newest way to meet the income and resource re - Answer: knowledge of wildlife, hunting, Arrangements are with Rush get a replacement Medicare card is quirements, and is still considered F irst, contact your provider. If fishing and the outdoors was un - Funeral Home of Wall. by using your my Social Security to be disabled under the adult dis - you are unable to get your ques - believable. Shorty was always account. Go to www.socialsecu - ability rules, then payment contin - tion answered or the problem re - willing to share what he had rity.gov/myaccount for more infor - ues. For more information, please solved, then contact 1-800 learned from his experiences. He mation on how to create an visit www.socialsecurity.gov/ssi/ MEDICARE (1-800-633-4227). For was always up to share a story or account. You also can get a re - text-cdrs-ussi.htm. more information about Medicare two about his experiences, and so placement Medicare card by call - benefits, visit www.medicare.gov. enjoyed listening to other’s stories. ing us toll-free at 1-800-772-1213 As a father, he taught his (TTY 1-800-325-0778). Keep your daughters all the things a parent card in a safe place. You don’t want anyone getting hold of your Social Security number.

Question: Are Supplemental Security In - Show them You Love them with:. come (SSI) benefits subject to fed - Don’t Forget Your Valentines eral income tax? Balloons , Wine, Flowers, Candy, Answer: Stuffed Animals, Plants & Cards No. SSI payments are not sub - ject to federal taxes. If you get SSI, We will be Open Monday through you will not receive an annual form SSA-1099. However, your So - Sunday that week, 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. cial Security benefits may be sub - for your convenience. ject to income tax. The cooler and back room at Coyle’s SuperValu Question: My child receives SSI. He will be in Philip will be well stocked with items. 18 in a few months. Will his SSI Call 279-1115 to get your order in payments continue after he turns 18? and set up for delivery. Answer: When a child who is on SSI • Wall, SD 4th Avenue Floral

PHILIP COMMUNITY Bible Study - 7:00 p.m. Ladies’ Aid - 2nd Tuesday at 7 p.m. EVANGELICAL FREE CHURCH Wed. Night Prayer & Bible Study: 7 pm Bible Study & Prayer, Pastor Gary Wahl – Philip, 859-2841 Everyone Welcome!! Mondays at 7 p.m. Local Church Service Schedule Sunday School – 9:15 a.m. HARDINGROVE COMMUNITY * * * * * * * Sunday Services – 10:30 a.m. EVANGELICAL FREE CHURCH Last Sunday of the month – Pastor Gary Wahl – Philip ST. PETER LUTHERAN CHURCH SACRED HEART (Jan-March-May-July-Sept-Nov) TRINITY LUTHERAN potluck dinner following church services 10 miles SE of Midland Confession: Before Mass 859-2841 • [email protected] CATHOLIC CHURCH Midland – 843-2538 Last Monday of the month – Worship Service: 8:00 a.m. Pastor Ray Greenseth Monday Mass: 4:00 p.m. Sunday Worship: 10:30 a.m. Philip – 859-2664 – [email protected] Evangelical Ladies Service/ Children's Church: 8:30 a.m. Sunday Worship: 4:15 p.m. CT Fr. Gary Oreshoski * * * * * * * * Ruth Circle: 3rd Tues, 10:30 a.m. Saturdays: Confession from 3 to 4 p.m. UNITED CHURCH OF PHILIP Nowlin Circle: Last Wed, 9:00 a.m. Saturday Mass: 5:00 p.m. Pastor Kathy Chesney • 859-2310 Rebecca Circle: Last Wed. at 7:00 p.m. Sunday Mass: 8:30 a.m. Sunday Worship: 9:00 a.m. (Nov. thru Feb.); 6:30 p.m. (Mar. - Oct.) Wednesday Mass: 5:30 p.m. 1st Wednesday of the Month: * * * * * * Thurs., 10:15 at Philip Nursing Home Contemporary Worship, 6:00 p.m. DEEP CREEK LUTHERAN Friday Mass: 8:30 a.m. UCW meets 2nd Friday at 9:30 a.m. Moenville – 843-2538 * * * * * * * * * * * * Sunday Worship: 7:00 p.m. (CT) ST. WILLIAM CATHOLIC CHURCH FIRST PRESBYTERIAN * * * * * * Midland – 859-2664 or 843-2544 CHURCH OF INTERIOR OUR SAVIOR’S LUTHERAN Fr. Gary Oreshoski Pastor Kathy Chesney • 859-2310 Long Valley Thou shalt Saturday Mass: 7:00 p.m. E-mail: [email protected] Sunday Worship: 6:30 p.m. (Feb., April, June, Aug., Oct., Dec.) Sunday Worship: 11:00 a.m. * * * * * * Sunday Mass: 11:00 a.m. * * * * * * * OUR REDEEMER not steal. (Jan., Mar., May, July, Sept., Nov.) WESTERN NEW HOPE LUTHERAN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Philip Confession: Before Mass PARISH, Pastor Lauren R. Ley (605) 669-2406 • Murdo Exodus 20:15 (KJV) * * * * * * Pastor Ray Greenseth ST. MARY CATHOLIC CHURCH FIRST LUTHERAN CHURCH Sunday Worship Services: 1:00 p.m. Milesville – 859-2664 859-2336 • Philip * * * * * * * * Fr. Gary Oreshoski Sunday Worship: 8:30 a.m. OPEN BIBLE CHURCH, MIDLAND Most of us don’t spend our days planning Sunday Mass: 11:00 a.m. Bible Study: 2nd Thurs. 1:30 p.m. Pastor Walter Switzer (Feb-April-June-Oct-Dec) at the Senechal Apts. lobby Sunday School: 9:30 a.m. an armed robbery. Do we accidentally Sunday Mass: 7:30 a.m. (August) Release Time: Wed., 2:15 p.m. Worship Service: 10:30 a.m. Saturday Mass: 7:30 p.m. Youth Group: 6:00 p.m. Bible Study: Wed. at 7:30 p.m. pocket a pen at the bank? Do we sneak a * * * * * * Women’s Ministries: 2nd Thurs., 1:30 couple of flowers from the neighbor’s garden? Do we copy some personal papers at Rush Funeral Home Ronald G. Mann, DDS Scotchman work? Perhaps. God, however, forbids believers Chapels in Philip, Wall & Kadoka Industries from stealing in any way. Heed His Dentist Jack, Gayle & D.J. Rush 859-2542 • Philip, SD commandment and do not take without asking. www.scotchman.com Philip, SD

859-2491 www.rushfuneralhome.com 6 Midland Area Pioneer Review • February 9, 2017 Midland Sonia Nemec | 843-2564 | [email protected]

It's time to get at the local news and a wake up call, unless it's an seeing different sights with Jim The Western Great Plains middle bad that I couldn't have a party for The Lion's Club held their first of this Monday, Feb. 6, 2017, with an emergency situation, stay home, or and Jessie and having some visit - school boys’ basketball tournament her birthday. Bernadette and some three bingo nights Feb. 1 at the overcast sky and little to no wind. find shelter in a motel. For not only ing time. Fredy and Margie also was held Saturday, Feb. 4, at White other neighbor girls, Deanna and senior center. A good crowd at - The winds have been brutal this is your life in danger, the lives of visited with Richard and Teddy River. Kash Block and Cass Finn Faye Anderson, daughter's of Curt tended. Steve Reed, as the caller, past week, making for icy road con - those who come to rescue you are at Baye, Philip, in Mission, Texas, re - played on the Kadoka Kougars and Thelma (Martin) Anderson, kept everyone on their toes. Lunch ditions. Our neighbor, Lisa Oburn, stake, as well. Our deep thanks and porting there were rubber tree team, while Clark Hindman-Hop - somehow learned of the situation was served by the youth group of from across the street, had gone to gratitude to those who give their plants 30 to 40 ft. high and poinset - kins, Carson Daly, Colby Fosheim, and decided to make it special day the Methodist church. The next the Rapid City airport Thursday to service to those in need! Just as in tia and bougainvillea plants the and Eagan Fitzgerald all played for for a little girl named, Charlene. bingo night will be this coming pick up their son, Trent. She re - that Cottonwood Fire, the winds size of lilac bushes here at home, the Philip Scotties team. The above There were homemade cookies and Wednesday, Feb. 8. I believe every - ported the road conditions coming were strong and the flames of fire with beautiful colors which are students were mentioned as they a treasure hunt in the mix, making one appreciates this time to get out home were horrible, as strong were spreading quickly across the sometimes used as a hedge. Fredy once attended school in Midland. for a fun birthday. It warmed my and have some fun! Thanks to the winds picked up blowing snow South Dakota prairie, burning and Margie spent time in Texas Kash and Cass, still do, but are a heart and made for another great Lion's Club for providing this! across the highway, which made for everything in it's path, the firemen when their boys were small, but part of the Kadoka team, as there memory for my memory box! "Tokyo Sonata" was the Febru - very icy conditions. We've had a lot needed to think clearly and quickly once they got in school it was time is no longer a team here in Mid - Jerry was reading the Capital ary foreign film held Thursday, of that this winter! All this snow as the wind changed directions. to be at home in Kadoka. The two land. Journal newspaper Monday Feb. 2. This film told the story of a and wind have made for tough trav - Artist, Ray Kelly put it well below of them checked out the area where Matt and Bri Jones invited peo - evening when he came across a pic - Japanese family who had to deal eling conditions for our rural mail the picture he had drawn of that they lived during those years. The ple to their home for Super Bowl ture of Don Sandal and three other with their father losing his job. To carriers, as country roads get fire, "Cottonwoods Wild Fire" Fire week passed by so quickly and soon Sunday. Shad and Jenna Finn and men who were cutting up lutefisk save face, he didn't tell his family cleared out, only to be blown back Fighters Commemorative - by Ray it was time to fly home to the cold, family were among them. For those at the Lutheran Memorial Church what had happened and pretended in again. On Groundhog Day the Kelly. snow, ice and wind! who don't know, Matt is the son of Saturday, Feb. 4. The lutefisk to be to go to work. Other problems arose sky was overcast in our neck of the Our thoughts and prayers are Richard and Carrie Butler live at Scott and Jana Jones, and the served at the lutefisk and meatball with his two sons, the youngest woods, so my vote is that we will with Dorothy (Williams) Hunt, Casselton, N.D., and their son, grandson of Shorty and Maxine supper Monday, Feb 6. Your quitting school and spending his not have six more weeks of winter. Spearfish, who recently suffered Soren Butler, is a college senior in Jones. Grandma Anna (Olson) Sandal lunch money on piano lessons- Everyone is ready for spring! another stroke. Last I heard she Alaska and is a member of the Clint and Brenda Jensen had a would be so proud, Don! which his father strongly disap - As I read in the paper of Pastor had not regained consciousness and Alaska Nanook Athletics. Soren Super Bowl Sunday party at their Pete and Sylvia Fosheim and proved of. In the end, this boy Gary McCubbin's article, "The the doctors were doing what they has grown into a fine looking young nice addition onto their store, Mid - Orlyn and Tina (Fosheim) Haug, all became a very successful piano Christmas blizzard rescue of 2016," could to relieve pressure on the man with a full head of red hair. land Food and Fuel, with a good of Pierre, attended the lutefisk sup - player. Again thanks to Mike it brought out the reality and the brain. Dorothy and her husband, Soren's dad, Richard, graduated crowd enjoying the night. I believe per at Memorial Lutheran Church McMillan for making it possible for hazards that come with those Gary Hunt, both attended school in from Midland High School with the Deb Vollmer of Lost Soul's on main in Pierre Monday evening. Reports us to view these films! storms of nature. Not only for the Midland and have lived in Class of 1988 and his grandmother, street also had a Super Bowl party are the food was very delicious and Teresa Palmer made a quick trip folks caught in a blizzard, but those Spearfish for a number of years. Marcia Jackson, with the Class of at her place of business. they had a large crowd. to Pierre Friday, Feb. 3. She also who go out to rescue them. Some of Gary and Dorothy have two sons, 1964. It was a great day for Soren We were in Pierre the other day Last Thursday, Ross Jones, son- stopped in to wish her sister, Peggy you may remember hearing of a Shad and Eric. Praying for God's and his teammates in Columbus, taking care of taxes and stopped in in-law of Bob and Verona Evans, Johnson, happy brthday! She also - man, his daughter and their dog healing, Dorothy! Ohio, recently, as they took part in at the pizza place for a bite to eat. stopped in for a visit, having lunch had a quick visit with Peg, Roger, heading west on Interstate 90, los - Fredy and Margie Peters, the Patriot Rifle Conference Cham - Jerry's cousin, Bernadette Knox, with them before heading home to and Chad and got to see all her ing their way and stopping under a Kadoka, decided it was time to take pionships at the Hugh W. Wylie and her husband, Dick, Highmore, Rapid City. Ross is president of flowers and gifts she had gotten for bridge at Exit 131, which wound up a break from the snow, ice and Range on the Ohio State University were also there having come for home builder's association in Rapid her birthday. Peg has provided day being 11 miles from Interior. The wind so they hopped a plane and campus Saturday morning. The taxes, as well. Bernadette has held City and had been in Pierre to the care for many years, so had several man opened the door and with the flew to Texas where they visited headline read, "Butler Named Pa - a special place in my heart ever legislature for a few days. cards from the children she cares 70 mile per hour wind the door with long-time friends, Jim and triot Rifle Conference Smallbore since she had a birthday party for Teresa Palmer reporting on hap - for. flung out wide, springing the hinge, Jessie Root, at San Juan, Texas. Champion @ Nanooks Rifle Ranks our daughter, Charlene. penings in her neck of the woods! While at work Saturday at a local making it impossible to close the Jim had radishes planted which he Second in Opening Day." In the fi - Bernadette was in high school at Margie Peters, Jackie Fosheim and motel, Teresa had a chance to see door. The 911 call coming in at 7:00 shares with others, but they nals, Soren went on to claim the in - Midland and lived in the basement Teresa Palmer joined other Murdo Gwen and Josh Horsley just long p.m. and the rescuers unable to weren't quite ready to pick. Jim dividual smallbore conference of Elsie Haddock's house and Jerry and Draper gals as they attended enough to say, “Hi!” and get a hug find them till 11:00 a.m. the next and Jessie bought the doublewide championship title. I have to admit and I and our four kids, at that the monthly coffee time at Draper from both of them. Teresa taught day. As Pastor McCubbin wrote of trailer home that once belonged to I don't really know what it all time, lived in a trailerhouse just to Feb. 1. Rosa Lee Styles brought her both of them over at Draper when the search and rescue mission, my Conrad and Marilyn Gillaspie, who means, but I do know it was an the east of Elsie's house. Valentine cards and stuffed ani - they were third and fourth graders. heart ached for all involved, know - are both deceased. Jim had our extra special for Soren. Congratu - Bernadette oftentimes made home - mals to decorated the tables in cel - They were there to attend the fu - ing for certain God was with them, tiller, mower and landscaper Wyatt lations, Soren! Your relatives here made cookies in her basement ebration of the upcoming holiday. neral of their uncle, Gene Cressy. for all could have perished, it was Trapp, till up a garden spot for his in Midland are happy for you and apartment and our kids were Margie, Jackie and Teresa provided As I close my column for another that bad. Traveling to find that car, garden before they left for Texas. the rest of us are, as well. drawn to that open basement win - the treats for this gathering. They week, I leave you with the follow - they came across others stranded, With all of the snow we've had this It was an exciting night in dow and the smell of those cookies. decided to do it as it's just a fun ing: " To make a difference in some - as well. It's a true reminder, with a winter, it should be ready for those Kadoka last Friday, in the boys’ Bernadette passed cookies through time to get together and visit and one's life you don't have to be deep respect for Mother Nature, radish seeds, Jim. They enjoyed varsity basketball game between the open window to the kids and they appreciate the Prairie Home brilliant, rich, beautiful or perfect. Wall and Kadoka, with Kadoka from then on it became a special ladies who host it each month. The You just have to CARE!" - Mandy winning by one point. The crowd, treat in that moment in time. In numbers were down a little from Hale coach Mark Reiman and his team this one particular day of June 21, previous coffee times, but they still Have a good week! Midland School Booster Club is hosting of players were justifiably excited Charlene's birthday, I had come enjoyed the time they spent to - and deserved to be. And to top the down with the flu and was feeling gether. “Country Kids on Wheels” night off, the Midland Tumblers, combination of Midland school kids Roller Skating and kids from the Kadoka Area school put on a fine performance Senate Sunday, February 19th with a large number of young chil - Bill to help renters dren performing to the delight of 1:00 to 4:00 p.m. at the the crowd. Those little ones are so defeats fun to watch! Head tumbling coach potentially pay less More people are renting homes “As this sector of the economy Midland School Gym and former Midland Tumbler him - in South Dakota than buying. But grows, it is important for local and vehicular self, Nathan Nemec, and another renters now pay 30 percent more in state governments to understand $6 per person former Midland Tumbler, Jason taxes than their home owning the tax impact of leased residential Harry, and great organizer, Katie homicide bill counterparts. The South Dakota rental homes when considering any by Dana Hess Sammons, as helpers. The Midland Multi-Housing Association is pro - future changes to our property tax Tumblers will perform at halftime Community News Service posing new legislation for 2017 to policies,” said Brian Majerus, pres - Attorney General Marty Jack - of the girls’ varsity basketball team make it easier for government ident of the South Dakota Multi- between Philip and Lyman, at ely’s second attempt at getting ve - agencies to understand this trend Housing Association. hicular homicide classified as a Philip, Friday, Feb. 10, around 6:00 and create better data to improve House Bill 1106 would make it p.m. violent crime was defeated in the the lives of renters. possible for researchers to acquire . more accurate and complete data Vehicular homicide, a Class 3 on available rental housing by sep - felony, is punishable by up to 15 arating residential rental real es - years in prison and a $30,000 fine. tate from commercial rental real Under Senate Bill 24, the prison ( "&#.*%-!',.+,$-$ estate. This would make it easier ( "&#.*%-!',.+,$-$ sentence would remain the same, for policy makers to accurately ad - but by classifying it as a violent *"6.33$5.11/'-' dress needs for housing in the state &@?=>6=8*A+98A=3@A 394@A+;$>4*A>?:40<>?%A98=39<9?=>:6 of South Dakota. The bill was crime, offenders would spend -::@#=6A(@<>:;>?608;?:@6 scheduled to go before the House more time in prison before they *"6.4.44'"#-.2.22 50 '.. were eligible for parole. (<--=75=3<;=<9=<4452973;97= 271='6*=#.34<=758<:+ Taxation Committee, Tuesday, Feb. 7. A violent crime first offender 5./A';8#@4

Suzan Berry Tax Service Serving Philip & Surrounding Communities • Registered Tax Return Preparer • 19 years’ Experience • Authorized e-file provider • Personal, Partnership, Corporate, Estate & More Call (605) 209-5846

PHILIP, SD 300 Wray Ave. 605-859-2636 Chet James Schofield 1-800-416-7839 Son of Jace & Tara Schofield 1 Born January 17, 2017 • 8 lbs., 12 oz. • 21 ⁄2 inches long Big Brother: Cordell 4 FULL SERVIC4E WELDING Maternal Grandparents: Jim & Joan Cantrell Includes Repairing of Stainless Steel & Aluminum Custom Fabrication 4 Paternal Grandparents: Tom & Janet Schofield Repair Augers, Stock Trailers & Implements 4 No 3rd Party Involved Means Shortened Repair Maternal Great-Grandparents: Joyce & Justin Wheeler 4 The late James Cantrell & Doneta Cantrell Flat Steel Inventory on Hand Times on Your Equipment! Paternal Great-Grandparents: The late Bud & Helen Schofield, 4 the late Maurice (Pete) Peterson, Off Sale Steel Available the late Marilyn Bergheim, Warren Bergheim February 9, 2017 • Pioneer Review Sports 9 Brawlers pull out front for win After a week off due to a storm, the Philip Area wrestling squad headed to Hill City for the Black Hills Classic, Feb. 4. The team decided not to partici - pate in the Minuteman Open, Jan. 28 in Wagner. Philip topped 13 other teams at the Black Hills Classic, to take home the trophy. McCoy Peterson was named as the tournament’s Outstanding Wrestler. Team points were Philip Area –217, Rapid City Central – 202, Hot Springs – 134, Lead- Courtesy Photo Deadwood 125.5, Custer/Edge - Trey Elshere works to get his opponent in a place where he can either score points mont – 125, Rapid City Stevens – or get a pin. 113, Lemmon/McIntosh – 95.5, Sturgis – 79.5, Douglas – 77, Sun - dance, Wyo. – 65, Newell – 51, Hill Courtesy Photo City – 32, St. Thomas More – 11 e Philip Area wrestling team picked up a team win at the Black Hills Classic in Hill City, Feb. 4. Each varsity wrestler and Red Cloud –2 earned an individual win as well. 106 lbs: McCoy Peterson 1st 22-3 record 145 lbs: Trey Elshere 7th •Bye •Dec to Aren Wells (RCC) 2-5 •Bye 11-9 record •Fall Tanner Ellefson (DOU) 1:49 •Dec. to Zechariah Patterson (RCS) •Fall Christian Keller (DOU) 1:27 •Bye •Fall Patrick Rondestvedt (RCS) 2-7 •Fall Wyatt Dooley (CUS) 1:55 •Dec. to Kody Hagen (HS) 2-8 1:59 •Dec. Luke Sullivan (SUN) 4-2 •Fall Dylan Wolf (L/M) 1:29 •Fall Brendan Deide (SUN) 2:51 •Fall Aaron Jones (CUS) 3:14 The last tournament of the 113 lbs: Jadyn Coller 1st •Dec. to Nate Allen (RCS) 4-8 182 lbs: Blake Crowser 2nd season is in Kadoka, Saturday, 26-5 record •Forfeit win Colby Fitch (PA) 21-11 record Feb. 11, hosted by the Badlands •Fall Heather Bintliff (HLC) 2:39 145 lbs: Colby Fitch 8th •Bye Brawlers. •Fall Jacob Harris (LD) 2:11 10-11 record •Fall Jackson Witte (RCC) 1:31 •Fall Darien Malone (DOU) 2:33 Region 4B action is Feb. 18 at •Fall Pratt Williams (LD) 1:14 •Major Dec. Nolan Smith (RCC) 14- the Rushmore Plaza Ice Arena. •Dec. T.J. Morrison (RCC) 7-0 •Dec. to Stone Durham (STM) 3-4 5 132 lbs: Cash Wilson 1st •Fall Ash Cox (STU) 3:50 •Fal to Kolby Kost (RCC) 3:24 Teams include Bennett County, 14-8 record •Dec. to Levi Mines (CUS) 0-5 220 lbs: Jory Rodgers 4th Custer/Edgemont, Hill City, •Fall Daniel Gleason (DOU) 1:30 •Forfeit to Elshere 15-11 record Harding County, Hot Springs, •Fall Tekuani Maestas (RC) 1:20 160 lbs: Nick Donnelly 1st •Bye Lead-Deadwood, Lemmon/ McIn - •Dec. Kayleb Twomey (RCC) 9-2 35-1 record •Fall Caleb Maciejewski (HS) 5:12 tosh, Little Wound, Lyman, •Sud. Vic-1 Dylin Johnson (LD) 5-3 •Bye •Fall to Timmy Paris (RCC) 3:38 McLaughlin, Mobridge-Pollock, 138 lbs: Hunter Peterson 1st •Fall Ashlee Kritenbrink (CUS) 0:19 •Fall John Shirley (RCS) 0:48 Newell, Philip Area, Red Cloud, 16-4 record •Fall Josiah Rudloff (SUN) 0:40 •Dec. to Yuli Viergets (SUN) 2-4 St. Thomas More, Stanley County •Fall Elijah Steele (CUS) 1:37 •Dec. Forrest Lewis (CUS) 8-4 285 lbs: Geoffrey DeVries 5th and Sully Buttes. Courtesy Photo •Fall Taylor Coffield (STU) 1:44 170 lbs: Keagan Fitch 1st 14-18 record Nick Donnelly took first place in the 160 pound weight class at the Black Hills Clas - •Fall Wyatt Pulscher (HS) 1:28 sic last weekend in Hill City. 25-5 record •Bye •Dec. Jeremiah Palmer (STU) 11-9 •Dec. Jake Ellison (L/M) 4-0

Scotties outplay Oelrichs Tigers Wall/Philip gymnastics A weather-caused postponed Wynn Schaack – 15, Scott Rafter – 13, Wade richs – 0/4 Kroetch – 7, Dawson Reedy – 4, Mark Stan - Three-point goals: Philip – 0/1 Oel - boys’ basketball match was made gle – 3, Jet Jones – 2 richs – 10/31 - 32% up in Oelrichs, Saturday, Feb. 4. Rebounds: Philip – 43 Oelrichs – 40 Philip scorers: Kroetch – 8, Stangle – 6, team headed to state The Philip Scotties varsity team Philip leaders: Rafter – 18, Schaack – 11, Mason Mansfield – 4, Carson Hamill, Seth Wall and Philip athletes com - gion 2A meet was Chamberlain the same place, but school teams had earned a three-point lead over Kinsley – 7, Kroetch – 5, Jones –2 Addison, Conner Dekker and Brandon Assists: Philip – 12 Leaders: Reedy – 9, McLaughlin – 2 each peted in the Region 2A Gymnastic with 126.70 points, second was in the same class are judged in re - the Tigers by the end of the first Kinsley –3 Rebounds: Philip – 32 Oelrichs – 29 Meet, Friday, Feb. 3, in Chamber - Hot Springs with 126.30 points, lationship to only the other teams quarter. By halftime Philip still Steals: Philip – 5 Leaders: Reedy and Philip leaders: Dekker – 9, Kroetch – 7, lain. and third was Vermillion with in that same class. held the lead, and had doubled it Rafter – 2 each, Jones –1 Hamill and Seth Slovek – 4 each, Addison – The team qualified to compete 125.95 points. Wall/Philip took Region 2A : Philip – 2 Leaders: Jones and 3, Mansfield and McLaughlin – 2 each, Stan - to six points. Blocks at the state meet. The South fourth place at the meet, and Team: 4th – Wall/Philip – points Schaack – 1 each gle –1 118.575 The third quarter saw a con - Turnovers: Philip – 12 Oelrichs –4 Assists: Philip – 5 Leaders: Dekker – 3, Dakota State Gymnastics Meet, earned the ninth berth position Bars: 25.375 Leaders: 5th – Abby stant edging away by the Scotties, Fouls : Philip – 9 Oelrichs – 21 Hamill –2 for all school classes, is Friday and that qualifies them to go to state. Turnovers: Philip – 23 Oelrichs –4 Moon – 7.50, 7th – Anna Belle McIl - who now had again doubled the The junior varsity game was Saturday, Feb. 10-11, at Central Not only do the team members ravy – 7.325 point spread to a 12-point advan - just the opposite for the Philip Fouls : Philip – 2 Oelrichs – 71 The Philip Scotties played in High School, Aberdeen. who competed at regions get to go Beam: 28.000 Leaders: 10th – tage. The fourth quarter saw the team. Each quarter the Tigers Wall against the Eagles, Monday, “This year has been all about to state, but because they won as Moon – 7.775, 16th – McIlravy – 7.325, Scotties continue expanding the pulled further away. In the first 21st – Marissa Lanfear – 6.900 Feb. 5. Philip competed in Murdo, learning,” said Sorrel Muscat, as - a team, all members get to go. point spread, but they could not quarter, the Scotties trailed by six Floor: 30.025 Leaders: 8th – Moon – Tuesday, Feb. 6, against the Jones sistant coach for the Wall and There is a maximum of how many again double it. Philip expanded points. The second quarter was Kadoka gymnasts. “With new team members may compete in 8.325, 9th – McIlravy – 8.275 County Coyotes. Philip’s next 35.175 Leaders: its lead by another six points. Con - not any prettier for the Scotties. coaches and a young team, we all each event. The Wall/Philip ath - Vault: game is a doubleheader hosting 1st – Karlie Dartt – 9.35, 4th – McIl - stantly pulling further and fur - The third and fourth quarters the Newell Irrigators, Thursday, had to learn the best of each other. letes going to state are Karlie ravy – 8.950, 11th – Abby Moon – 8.650 ther ahead makes for an easy win. were increasingly closer, but Feb. 9, starting at 2:00 p.m. Philip I could not be more proud of the Dartt, Anna Belle McIlravy, Abby All-Around : 118.575 Leaders: 6th – Scoring By Quarters Philip just could not equal Oel - then hosts the Lyman Raiders, hard work these young ladies Moon, Marissa Lanfear, Regan Si - Moon – 32.250, 7th – McIlravy – 31.875, 1234 richs, much less diminish the 19th – Lanfear – 27.075, Regan Si - Friday, Feb. 10, starting at 3:00 have put forth. They have im - mons and Brea McConnell. Philip 9 25 44 62 point spread. mons – 20th – 26.100 p.m. The Scotties then get a proved so much in their own indi - The “AA” and “A” school teams Oelrichs 6 19 32 44 Scoring By Quarters break, in that their next games is vidual ways. Now, as we head to compete at the same time and at Field goals: Philip – 21/60 - 35% Oelrichs 1234 the state meet as a team and in – 19/76 - 25% Saturday, Feb. 18, in Faith Free throws: Philip – 19/34 - 56% Oel - Philip 5 12 18 26 some individual events. I would Oelrichs 11 32 41 50 against the Longhorns, starting at richs – 1/3 - 33% 3:00 p.m. like to say to my girls, you have Three-point goals: Philip – 1/9 - 11% Field goals: Philip – 12/36 - 33% Oelrichs nothing to lose and everything to Oelrichs – 5/32 - 16 – 20/64 - 31% Philip scorers: Dalton Kinsley – 18, Free throws: Philip – 2/10 - 20% Oel - gain. Give it all you’ve got, but Dakota Territory Gun Collectors Assn., Pierre, SD leave it on that blue mat. I’m so proud of you.” UY February The last time the local team B 18 & 19 qualified for team competition was in 2011. In doing so, Karlie Dartt SELL Ramkota Scotties defeat College Brief broke the Wall High School school RADE River record in the vault, scoring a 9.35. T Admission: Centre The 2016 fall semester dean’s Anna Belle McIlravy’s vault was a K Lead-Deadwood list at Dakota Wesleyan Univer - personal record for her. LOO $5.00 in Pierre Philip – 16 Lead-Dead - The Scotties boys’ varsity bas - Turnovers: sity includes 297 students. The three top-scoring teams Saturday, Feb. 18 ...... 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. (CT) wood –7 ketball team easily bested the To qualify for the dean’s list, a from each of the two regions auto - Sunday, Feb. 19 ...... 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. (CT) Lead-Deadwood Golddiggers dur - Fouls : Philip – 14 Lead-Deadwood – student must have a semester For more info., call Steve Livermore: (605) 280-2438 19 matically qualify for state. Then, ing a home match, Feb. 2. grade point average of at least 3.5 The Philip junior varsity game the next three highest scoring The game started out as a on a four-point scale. They also turned out to be a different story. teams from either of the two re - strong match, with players on have to complete at least 12 hours The Scotties grabbed the initia - gions also qualify for state. The each team studying the abilities of of academic work during the se - tive and held a three-point lead by Wall/Philip team scored at total of Philip League Bowling their counterparts. The first mester. the end of the low-scoring first 118.575 points and edged out the scores were free throws made by Included on the DWU dean’s list quarter. The second quarter saw a Sisseton team by just .15 points. Monday Night Mixed Chiefie’s Chicks...... 11-13 Philip about a minute and a half is Rachel Parsons, Milesville. Rockers...... 14-6 99 Pins...... 9-15 tipping of the teeter-totter, and The first place team at the Re - into the game. Philip sank a field Badland’s Auto...... 13-7 Highlights: the Golddiggers forced the first goal, only to have the Golddiggers Petersen’s Variety...... 10-10 Karen Nelson...... 184; 5-6-10 split half into a tie. narrow the lead by sinking a Kadoka Tree Service...... 3-17 Kathy Arthur...... 182/534 The third quarter saw Lead tak - Highlights: Marlis Petersen...... 185/507 three-pointer. After further play, ing the lead and inching it up to a Carl Brown...... 521 Amy Morrison...... 178 a Lead free throw tied the game 6- five-point spread. In the final Tena Slovek...... 183 Christy Park...... 177 6 just before the end of the quar - quarter, the Scotties just could not Clyde Schlim...... 497 Lois Porch...... 5-7 split ter. The second quarter saw more Andrew Reckling...... 545 Brenda Grenz...... 5-6 & 4-5 splits get any traction. It turned out to scoring by both teams. The lead Ron Coyle...... 532; 6-8 split Debbie Gartner...... 3-10 split be the lowest scoring quarter for “I can find now, by just one point, belonged to Connie Schlim...... 2-7 split x 2 Philip. The final buzzer an - Lead-Deadwood. WHATEVER Trina Brown...... 3-10 split Thursday Night nounced a 13-point deficit for the O’Connell Const...... 10-6 The Scotties had learned what Scotties. you’re looking Tuesday Night The Misfits...... 10-6 they needed. Before the third Barr’s Signs...... 10-2 McDonnell Farms...... 9-7 quarter was over, Philip eased Scoring By Quarters for!” 1234 Philip Motor...... 8-4 A&M Laundry...... 9-7 into a nine-point lead. By the end – David Burnett, Midwest Co-op...... 5-7 The Steakhouse...... 8-8 Philip 5917 19 of the game, the Scotties’ lead had Owner Wagon Wheel...... 5-7 Coyle’s SuperValu...... 7-9 Lead-Deadwood 2922 32 Kennedy Impl...... 4-8 Here For the Beer...... 6-10 inched up to 11-points. Field goals: Philip – 8/33 - 24% Lead- Scoring By Quarters Scotchman’s...... 4-8 West River Seeds...... 5-11 Deadwood – 12/38 - 32% Highlights: Highlights: 1234 Free throws: Philip – 0/0 Lead-Dead - Tony Gould...... 203/575 Jay McDonnell...... 232 clean/631 Philip 6 17 31 46 wood – 6/11 - 54% Fred Foland...... 192 clean/565 Doug Hauk...... 212/588 Lead-Deadwood 6 18 22 35 Three-point goals: Philip – 3/11 - 27% Terry Wentz...... 546 Jan Bielmaier...... 211/569 Field goals: Philip – 15/47 - 32% Lead-Deadwood – 2/12 - 17% Tyler Gartner...... 543; 6-7-10 split Harvey Carlisle...... 200/558 Lead-Deadwood – 11/49 - 22% Philip scorers: Jones – 10, Chael Steve Varner...... 202/524 Jordon Kjerstad...... 203/551 Free throws: Philip – 12/23 - 52% Thorn – 5, Keldon Fitzgerald and Seth Earl Park...... 202/5423-10 split Stacey Johnston...... 213/547 Lead-Deadwood – 8/14 - 57% Slovek – 2 each Bart Guptill...... 187 Jason Petersen...... 203/546 Three-point goals: Philip – 4/13 - Rebounds: Philip – 17 Lead-Dead - Todd Radway...... 3-10 split Ron Coyle...... 214 clean/542 52% Lead-Deadwood – 5/21 - 24% wood – 17 Philip leaders: Conner Dekker – Harlan Moos...... 544 Philip scorers: Dawson Reedy – 11, 4, Jones and Kroetch – 3 each, Seth Addi - Wednesday Nite Early Neal Petersen...... 539 Cooper West – 10, Scott Rafter and Dal - son – 2, Carson Hamill, Fitzgerald, Mark Moses Bldg Center...... 17-7 Earl Park...... 538 ton Kinsley – 7 each, Wade Kroetch – 6, Stangle, Slovek and Brandon Mclaugh - Shear Perfection...... 17-7 Nathan Kjerstad...... 537 Jet Jones – 3, Wynn Schaack – 2 lin – 1 each Splitz Happen...... 15-9 Bryan Buxcel...... 531; 5-6-10 split Rebounds: Philip – 30 Lead-Dead - Assists: Philip – 6 Leaders: Hamill – 2, First National Bank...... 13-11 Matt Schofield...... 3-10 split wood – 20 Philip leaders: Kinsley – 7, Jones, Stangle, Dekker and Kroetch –1 The Pin Ups...... 12-12 Schaack and Rafter – 6 each, West and each Kroetch – 4 each, Reedy –3 Steals: Philip – 1 Leader: Fitzgerald – 2003 Buick LeSabre Limited Assists: Philip – 7 Leaders: West – 1 Just another good Buick!! 2, Reedy, Schaack, Rafter, Kinsley and Blocks : Philip – 2 Leader: Kroetch _ 2 Rock ’N Roll Lanes Kroetch – 1 each Turnovers: Philip – 12 Lead-Dead - Cell: 605-441-2859 • Res: 605-859-2875 • Fax: 605-859-3278 Steals: Philip – 5 Leaders: West – 3, wood –5 859-2430 • Philip Fouls : Philip – 10 Lead-Deadwood – 6 Open at 11 a.m. Rafter and Kroetch – 1 each 520 E. Hwy. 14 PO Box 38 Blocks : Philip – 1 Leader: Schaack – Monday thru Friday 1 Philip, SD 57567 • www.all-starauto.net 10 Sports Pioneer Review • February 9, 2017 Scotties dump Golddiggers Scotties skin New Un - quarter leniency played little dif - Scoring By Quarters derwood Tigers ference in who the eventual win - 1234 ning team would be. Philip 8 18 30 45 Scoring By Quarters Lead-Deadwood 10 21 27 31 1 234 Field goals: Philip – 15/52 - 29% Lead- Deadwood – 13/37 - 35% Philip 11 26 41 45 Free throws: Philip – 13/24 - 54% Lead- Lead-Deadwood 4 10 11 18 Deadwood – 3/13 - 23% Field goals: Philip – 17/51 - 33% Lead- Three-point goals: Philip – 2/5 - 40% Deadwood – 7/45 - 16% Lead-Deadwood – 2/8 - 25% Free throws: Philip – 8/17 - 47% Lead- Philip scorers: Fillingim – 15, Josie Deadwood – 7/45 - 16% Rush – 9, Morgan Cantrell – 8, Kaitlyn Fos - Three-point goals: Philip – 3/9 - 33% heim – 6, Joey Carley and Tessa Menzel –3 Lead-Deadwood – 2/7 - 29% each, Sage Gabriel – 1 Philip scorers: Cylver Lurz – 13, Tia Rebounds: Philip – 23 Lead-Deadwood – Guptill – 10, Jada Jones, Cappie West and 15 Philip leaders: Gabriel – 7, Fosheim – 6, Kiley Sieler – 6 each, Jewel Jones and Rush – 4, Carley – 3, Cantrell – 2, Menzel – Samantha Fillingim – 2 each 1 Rebounds: Philip – 31 Lead-Deadwood – Assists: Philip – 12 Leaders: Carley and 25 Philip leaders: Lurz – 12, Guptill – 8, Shay Gabriel – 3 each, Rush and Menzel – 2 each, Hand – 4, Jada Jones, Jewel Jones and Fosheim and Fillingim – 1 each Sieler – 2 each, Fillingim –1 Steals: Philip – 12 Leaders: Carley – 6, Assists: Philip – 8 Leaders: Jada Jones, Rush and Fillingim – 2 each, Fosheim and Hand and Lurz – 2 each, Guptill and Jewel Gabriel – 1 each Jones – 1 each Blocks: Philip – 3 Leaders: Rush – 2, Car - Steals: Philip – 12 Leaders: Guptill and ley –1 West – 4 each, Josie Rush, Jewel Jones, Hand Turnovers: Philip – 17 Lead-Deadwood – and Sieler – 1 each 11 Blocks: Philip – 3 Leaders: Lurz – 2, Gup - Fouls : Philip – 16 Lead-Deadwood – 17 till –1 The Philip Lady Scotties trav - Turnovers: Philip – 13 Lead-Deadwood – 12 eled to Murdo, Tuesday, Feb. 7 to Fouls : Philip – 9 Lead-Deadwood – 13 challenge the Lady Coyotes in a The Philip junior varsity had to girls’ and boys’ doubleheader. come back from behind in the first Philip hosts the Newell Irrigators half, to controlling the second half. in a doubleheader, Thursday, Feb. The first quarter saw the Lady 9, starting at 2:00 p.m. The Scot - Cappie West on defense Scotties trailing by two points. ties will host another double - The second quarter ended with header Friday, Feb. 10, this time The Philip Lady Scotties bas - Philip dominated the third Philip trailing by three points. against the Lyman Raiders, start - ketball teams hosted the Lead- quarter, scoring 15 points and al - The third quarter was more ing at 4:00 p.m. Yet another dou - Deadwood Lady Golddiggers, lowing the Golddiggers only one than just a turn-around. Philip bleheader, this time in Dupree, is Thursday, Feb. 2. point. For the fourth quarter, the not only negated their opponent’s set for Saturday, Feb. 11, against The first quarter was a good in - Scotties eased off their hard-hit - lead, but claimed a three-point the Tigers, starting at 11:00 a.m. dication of how the rest of the ting offense and their smothering lead all in just one quarter. The The Faith Lady Longhorns will be game would go. Philip quickly con - defense, letting their opponents final quarter was a walk-away for in Philip, Tuesday, Feb. 14, to go trolled a seven-point lead. By the get more points of any other quar - the Scotties. By the closing against the Lady Scotties, starting end of halftime, the Scotties en - ter and a little breather space for buzzer, Philip had sailed further at 6:00 p.m. joyed a 16-point lead. their defense. Still, the fourth ahead to win by 14 points. Del Bartels Scott Rafter gets a shot off despite three New Underwood defenders.

The Philip Scotties boys’ basket - ball team easily defeated the New Underwood Tigers in a home 2004 Dodge Ram 3500 SLT game, Tuesday, Jan. 31. Dominating the first quarter, Moses Building the Scotties more than doubled their opponent’s score. The second quarter saw the same, with Philip Center in Philip leading by 20 points at halftime. The second half started with New Underwood playing their will be closed most productive quarter and Crew Cab, 4x4, Diesel Philip playing its worst. Both Saturday, $ teams had an 11-point third quar - Was $19,700 ter. The final quarter, though, saw Now 15,500 the Scotties continue their earlier February 18th Give us a call! offensive game, earning another 19 points. The Scotties also held 859-2744 the Tigers to only six points for 685-3068 the quarter. Philip eased into the Ask about our final buzzer with a solid 33-point Philip lead. Auto Loan Scoring By Quarters Financing! 1 234 Philip 15 34 55 64 New Underwood 6 14 25 31 Field goals: Philip – 27/68 - 38% New Un - derwood – 13/50 - 26% Free throws: Philip – 7/23 - 30% New Underwood – 3/17 - 18% Three-point goals: Philip – 3/9 - 33% New Underwood – 2/5 - 40% Philip scorers: Cooper West – 12, Scott Rafter – 11, Jet Jones and Dalton Kinsley – 9 each, Dawson Reedy and Conner Dekker – 6 each, Wynn Schaack – 5, Mark Stangle and Wade Kroetch – 3 each Rebounds: Philip – 52 New Underwood – 28 Philip leaders: Rafter – 18, Schaack – 11, Reedy – 6, Kinsley – 4, Stangle, Dekker and Kroetch – 3 each, Jones and West – 2 each Assists: Philip – 12 Leaders: Reedy – 4, Rafter – 3, West – 2, Jones, Kinsley and Stan - gle – 1 each Steals: Philip – 12 Leaders: Reedy – 4, Rafter – 3, West and Kinsley – 2 each, Stan - gle –1 Turnovers: Philip – 18 New Underwood – 9 Fouls : Philip – 20 New Underwood – 23 The Philip junior varsity also won their game, though it was more of a roller coaster of a ride. The first quarter was almost all Philip. The Scotties sank 14 points, and stopped the Tigers with just one point for the quarter. The second quarter was a wash for Dalton Kinsley goes for a layup. both teams with no points. The third quarter somewhat It was the highest scoring quarter mimicked the first in that Philip of the game for both teams. The easily outplayed New Underwood. final quarter saw the Philip team easing back on both offense and defense, gaining only three points and allowing the Tigers to claim 11. Still, Philip walked away with a 14-point win.

Scoring By Quarters 1234 Philip 14 14 36 39 New Underwood 1115 26

Field goals: Philip – 15/41 - 37% New Underwood – 10/35 - 29% Free throws: Philip – 9/19 - 47% New Underwood – 4/10 - 40% Three-point goals: Philip – 0/3 New Underwood – 2/7 - 29% Philip scorers: Dekker – 13, Jones – 11, Seth Addison and Kroetch – 4 each, Schaack – 3, Brandon McLaughlin – 2, Carson Hamill and Chael Thorn – 1 each Rebounds: Philip – 34 New Under - wood – 13 Philip leaders: Addison and Dekker – 7 each, Mason Mansfield – 5, Hamill, Keldon Fitzgerald and Seth Slovek – 3 each, Schaack and Kroetch – 2 each, Jones and Thorn – 1 each Assists: Philip – 8 Leaders: Jones – 5, Mansfield – 2, Dekker –1 Steals: Philip – 6 Leaders: Jones – 5, McLaughlin –1 Turnovers: Philip – 18 New Under - wood – 11 Fouls : Philip – 13 New Underwood – 17 February 9, 2017 • Pioneer Review Community 11 Humility, humor and honesty: living legend Slim McNaught by Chastiy Julson meeting to try to oust Slim, but “that didn’t get too far,” Slim Western South Dakota cowboy poet, journalist, leather artist said. and western musician Slim McNaught epitomizes humility and In addition to policing the town of New Underwood, Slim was the gentle stoicism of the iconic American cowboy. cross-deputized as a Pennington County sheriff’s deputy. The Despite an ever-growing list of accomplishments and honors, sheriff and the New Underwood mayor had met and decided that the most recent of which is the Black Hills Stock Show ® Pioneer Slim should have jurisdiction to protect the county residents as Spirit award, Slim insists that he has just lived the life set before well. Slim was the last person to receive cross-jurisdiction in him. Pennington County. Slim was born in 1934 in Stuart, Neb. He soon became a South Ever willing for a new adventure, Slim had his first public Dakota transplant, though, as his parents moved to a ranch poetry performance Valentine’s Day 2004. He was an instant southwest of Wanblee the following year. Slim spent his forma - hit. Throughout his career, he has released seven books of po - tive years as a South Dakota ranch boy. Many of the talents for etry, one of which he did with his 101-year-old mother, who still which he would be recognized later in life were germane to that lives with Slim and Darlene, and three poetry CDs. One of those point in his life. Slim began leatherwork by working on saddles CDs has been sold out, and a fourth CD is currently being com - and headgear for horses that his family used. He was introduced piled, using material that had been recorded prior to 2016. to poetry by his mother, a poet in her own right. Slim’s album “Reminiscin’ ” received the prestigious Academy After Slim graduated from the eighth grade in 1948, he ven - of Western Artists 2009 Cowboy Poetry Album/CD award. Slim tured far north into Canada for a year of high school. Though he has also promoted poetry as the poet laureate for the popular left the country for school when many of his peers simply went Live with Jim Thompson radio show. to a neighboring town, Slim shrugs at any suggestion that this Slim and Darlene faced a major trial in 2016, when Slim had was an extraordinary thing for a South Dakota ranch boy to do. a massive stroke in the left side of his brain that left him para - “We had friends up there. I went all over the country,” Slim said. lyzed on his right side. It left this wordsmith, who was so well- Indeed, Slim spent his high school years exploring new terri - known for his talent with the spoken and written word, unable tory. Following his freshman year of high school, Slim trans - to form words. Slim was diagnosed with aphasia, which essen - ferred to a parochial Methodist school, which served as both a tially leaves a person unable to speak or to comprehend the writ - high school and college, in Wessington Springs. While there, he ten word. met his wife, Darlene, who was several years behind him in Courrtesy Photo Again, though, Slim and Darlene made adjustments and re - school, and who attended the local public high school. Having five generations together is a common occurrence in the McNaught family. They fused to be defined by this setback. Slim spent countless hours Darlene boarded at the high school, and she recalls sitting in gathers for many reasons, including this picture from 2016, when the family hosted a "pan - in therapy to regain control of his right arm and to learn to speak the windows with her schoolmates and talking to boys – after eling party" to panel Slim and Darlene's dining room. again. He is able to converse now, and penmanship exercises on the hours that visiting was supposed to occur. Slim in particular their dining room table are testament to his dedication to being caught her eye. Slim returned to Martin for his final year of high able to write again. His gains have been tremendous, though work, and the McNaughts opened their own leather shop in Kadoka in school, but then came back to Darlene when he went to work for a place Darlene admits that she sees his gains where he does not. ’76. at Gann Valley. Slim and Darlene became engaged the summer between In many respects, going from a gifted orator to a person whose mental Darlene worked alongside Slim, perfectly complementing him. Slim her junior and senior years. words will not translate into audible words “has been pure hell,” Darlene took care of the tooling, while Darlene proved to be an artisan in her “I was told in my home ec class to never marry an only child. I never said. Slim had 47 poems, or about three performance hours worth of ma - work, combining different leathers for a unique look. Together, the two did listen,” Darlene said. Darlene did heed her mother, though. Her terial, memorized. Now, due to a combination of recall problems and the created all manner of leather products for people across the area and mother told her she was allowed to wear Slim’s ring so long as the actual inability to speak the words into being, Slim struggles to recite at all. He even across the United States. Guitar straps made by Slim and Darlene subject of marriage was not broached until after high school graduation. has been working on a poem, though, and Darlene recently made him adorn the shoulders of several country music legends. Numerous rodeo The young couple honored these wishes, and waited until a few weeks read it aloud to her, showing yet further gains. athletes at the Kadoka Rodeo Bible Camp from1980 to 2015 received after graduation to marry. The year was 1954. Music, a prominent feature in Slim’s life, has proven to serve him well hand-tooled leather Bible covers from Slim. Slim and Darlene also pro - Fresh out of school and now newlywed, Slim and Darlene traveled as he has recuperated from the stroke. While a person’s verbal skills vided leather plaques for Western Junior Livestock Show and Bible cov - back to the Martin area to ranch. Darlene adjusted to life in the middle come from the left side of the brain, the side that was injured by the ers for the New Underwood Rodeo Bible Camp. of nowhere by asking for more milk cows. Slim was surprised that his stroke, melody and harmony come from the right side. This meant that, While in Kadoka, the McNaughts stayed busy by working numerous young bride wanted more cows than the five they already had. “I told during speech therapy, there were some words that Slim could not speak, jobs, both paid and volunteer, in the community. Darlene cleaned hotel him, if I’m going to milk five cows, I had better milk enough to make it but he was able to sing. According to Darlene, he had to sing certain rooms in the morning, then worked the leather shop in the afternoon. worth it,” Darlene said. words until a new neural pathway formed, and it became natural for the In addition to his leatherwork, Slim worked in law enforcement. He The couple added 12 more cows to their dairy herd. The cows were ac - word to be spoken. served as a reserve officer when the local law enforcement needed some - customed to women, but not to horses. Slim and his horse had a mishap Evidence of the impact Slim has had on people throughout his life can one else to aid in the public safety efforts. Slim and Darlene were both getting the cows home, ending in a broken ankle. Eventually, they did be seen in the well-wishes sent his way following the stroke – notes were emergency medical technicians on the Kadoka ambulance as well. make it, though. While Slim worked the long hours of a rancher, Darlene sent from all of the 48 continental United States. Slim’s impact is also Another life change occurred in ’89, when Slim suffered a heart attack. ® milked 17 cows, cared for their calves, kept 200 chickens for their eggs on display as he is the third recipient of the BHSS Pioneer Spirit award, He and Darlene relocated to New Underwood in order to be closer to the and kept pigs for good measure. Twice a week she would set a full cream an award which recognizes someone who, though not currently in agri - doctors in Rapid City. Slim’s healing was complete. “They had me fixed can out by the mailbox, where it would be picked up by the cream col - culture per se, is still actively involved in promoting the spirit of agricul - up better than if I’d never had a heart attack,” Slim said. lector. A check for the cream would arrive in the mail later. ture throughout the area. Slim and Darlene got right to work in their new community as well. This life continued for three years, until a needed reservation lease As they reminisce over their varied and active life together, Darlene They opened Slim’s Custom Leather first on Main Street, then later in was lost. Looking at their options, Slim and Darlene decided to cash in remarks that it has been quite a ride. Slim, still every bit the iconic cow - the building that currently houses Harry’s Hideaway. In recent years, on the place and go chase new dreams. In 1957, they left Martin to start boy, grins a comfortable smile across the table at Darlene. After nearly the intrepid McNaughts put their leatherwork online, and have contin - over-the-road trucking throughout the United States. New life came to 63 years of marriage, the two think that they stand a good chance of hav - ued to traffic their wares through that venue. their home, too, first in the form of their daughter, Candace, who was ing their marriage work out. In light of all the adventures and accom - Slim also used his years of experience in law enforcement by becoming followed 13 months later by their eldest son, Rockie. Four years passed, plishments, Slim easily sums his life into one thought, “Thank God the chief of police in New Underwood. It had been six or seven years then Monty and Kevin were added to the family, just 18 months apart there’s a good woman around.” since the position had been filled, and Slim found that he had his work from each other. cut out for him. “I arrested all the speeders in New Underwood,” Slim Though Slim had done leather work since he was 12 or 14, he took his said with a chuckle. first paying leatherwork job in 1973 when he went to work for Jay This did not sit well with some of the townspeople, who had Crowser in Philip. Slim found he was particularly talented at leather - apparently rather enjoyed some level of lawlessness. They hosted a town

Theft/confict of interest bill The South Dakota Senate has inappropriate self-dealings and Free tax return passed Senate Bill 27 to address conflicts of interest. I appreciate criminal self-dealings and conflicts how the Senate has improved and of interest strengthened this bill,” said Attor - preparations Under current South Dakota ney General Marty Jackley. For Philip and its surrounding in South Dakota helped more than law, it is only a misdemeanor to en - SB27 passed the senate on a vote communities, Bob McDaniel is of - 10,000 people file their federal tax gage in self-dealings of taxpayer of 33 to 0, with 2 excused. It previ - fering free tax return aid every returns. This free program is money for personal benefit or gain. ously passed the senate judiciary Tuesday morning at the Bad River available at approximately 15 lo - See SDCL 5-18A-17.4. on a vote of 7 to 0. Senior Citizen’s Center in Philip, cations in nine South Dakota com - “Public officials who illegally A public official who commits a take taxpayer money that has been criminal conflict of interest would through April 11. munities. Nationwide since 1968, entrusted to them, violate the pub - be guilty of theft as set forth under This free, confidential tax aid is the TaxAide program has helped lic trust and should be held respon - existing law. Under current theft being provided in cooperation with nearly 50 million taxpayers at sible and treated as any other law, when the value of the theft is the Internal Revenue Service and more than 5,000 locations. The criminal thief. This legislation fur - $1,000 or less, it’s a misdemeanor. AARP to help taxpayers file their program, in its 49th year, is the ther removes the presumption for If the value is greater than $1,000, personal income tax returns. nation’s largest free tax assistance probation that limits the sentenc - it is a felony that further increases There is no limit on ages or in - and preparation service, offering ing discretion for both the prosecu - based up on the amount. come, and taxpayers do not have free tax preparation help to any - tors and the courts in EB-5 and This bill, if passed into law, to be an AARP member to take ad - one, especially those who are 50 GEAR UP type financial cases. It would not cover officials on reser - also provides whistleblower protec - vations. vantage of this service. and older. tions for employees who report any Hours of operation are Tues - days, 9:00 a.m. through noon. Ap - pointments are preferred, but walk-ins will be accommodated as time permits. The Philip chapter of AARP has supported McDaniel’s free tax fil - ing assistance, through the AARP TaxAide Foundation, for many years. “Quality is Our Game Sale” TaxAide volunteers, such as Mc - Daniel, are trained in cooperation 7th Annual Private Treaty Sale • 1:00 p.m. (MT) with the Internal Revenue Serv - ice. Volunteers are trained to as - at the ranch located 13 miles northwest of Wasta, SD sist in filing tax forms and basic schedules, including the 1040, 1040A and 1040EZ. Their use of E-filing ensures a more accurate tax return and faster processing of tax refunds. The computer soft - ware used is provided by the IRS. Call McDaniel at 859-2227 for Yearling Angus Bulls an appointment or for more infor - 35 mation. Opening Day: Tax filers are requested to bring JJN their Social Security card, identi - JJN Rick fication, W-2 forms, Social Secu - rity statement, education Cash O’Shay Feb. 17, 2017 expenses, dependent care ex - 6002 6051 penses and other documents relat - BW: 70 • 205 Wt: 687 • 365 Wt.: 1210 BW: 94 • 205 Wt: 794 • 365 Wt.: 1325 BEEF FOR SALE: ing to income or expenses, EPDs: BW -1.5 • WW 47 • Milk 26 • YW 90 EPDs: BW 2 • WW 58 • Milk 30 • YW 106 information on dependents, bank 16 head reserved for butcher at the end of May. routing and account numbers for These are bulls that didn’t make into the catalog this year direct deposit of refund. A copy of and have been steered and put into our feedlot that will be last year’s tax return would be fed a ration of corn, silage, ground hay, along with helpful. The tax returns that Mc - molasses. They are fed this ration for 110 days Daniel prepares include 1040, before they are butchered. 1040A, 1040EZ with schedules A, Barbie Nachtigall • 605-391-2362 B, C-EZ, D, dependent care, earned income credit and educa - tion credits. JJN The program does not include Come have lunch with us on Feb. 17th items such as rental income and JJN Rick depreciation. If a taxpayer’s situ - Target O’Shay ation exceeds any of McDaniel’s J.J. Nachtigall Angus Ranch perimeters, he will advise the 6034 6023 client of that. BW: 96 • 205 Wt: 638 • 365 Wt.: 1126 BW: 90 • 205 Wt: 686 • 365 Wt.: 1108 22178 Little Alkali Road • Owanka, SD Last year, 148 AARP volunteers EPDs: BW 2.8 • WW 34 • Milk 16 • YW 57 EPDs: BW 0.1 • WW 50 • Milk 26 • YW 97 (605) 798-2313 or (605) 685-8629 Pioneer Review • February 9, 2017 12 Public Notices Deadline: Friday at Noon

SECTION 00110 contractors and their subcontractors on BY ORDER of the City of Midland the project, must be registered in SAM Advertisement (System for Award Management). Date______Lookin’ Around Syd Iwan | [email protected] For Bids The low responsive bidder will be re - By______quired to certify to compliance with the Jared Fosheim, Board Chairman Notice is hereby given that the City of American Iron and Steel provision of the want to. During parts of the year, ticed that a lot of slightly older ve - Midland, SD will receive bids for their Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2014. [Published February 2 & 9, 2017, at the Midland Water System Improvements, Please be advised that waivers or ex - total approximate cost of $60.15] From An Old Salt they consume very little of it, and hicles had quite a bit of corrosion located in Haakon County in South emptions from the American Iron and Sodium (salt) is an essential nu - other times you can’t keep the sup - along the bottom from driving on Dakota. Construction of the project will Steel provision that cite International trient for human health via its role ply boxes filled. This has been one salted roads. It didn’t seem to hap - be on City owned lands and rights-of- Trade Agreements DO NOT comply with as an electrolyte and osmotic of the contributors to my long- pen to my car, but then I never way. Bids will include the following scope the Consolidated Appropriations Act of of Work: Notice to Creditors solute. “Say what?” you might ex - standing opinion that you tend to needed to drive a lot on salted 2014 as it applies to the SRF programs. of Informal Probate claim if you aren’t into chemistry crave the foods your body needs. If streets for some reason. Salt can Claims from suppliers that the American that is so with cows, it is probably be corrosive, and we Navy people • Installation of approximately 3200 lin. Iron and Steel provision does not apply and related fields. We won’t here ft. of 6 and 8 inch Water Main Pipe to certain products based on the Interna - and Appointment of go into exactly what that means so with humans. Accordingly, I know how much work it takes to and appurtenances. tional Trade Agreement exemptions of Co-Personal scientifically, but let’s just say you tend to eat what I’m hungry for keep metal ships from rusting • 53,000 gallon ground storage reser - the Consolidated Appropriations Act of need enough salt in your body or and that has seemed to work out away. voir with mixing system. 2014 will not be accepted. okay so far. Luckily, I don’t hunger The good news, by the way, is • Add Alternate 1: Installation of 330 lin. Representatives bad things can happen. For instance, if you are working for lobster or caviar that often, but that salt has no calories. It might ft. of 6 inch pvc pipe and appurte - The low responsive bidder will be re - IN CIRCUIT COURT nances. SIXTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT all day in the hayfield with tem - steak is often on the menu. Luck - make you retain water to a certain quired to comply with the Davis-Bacon ily we are ranchers so steak costs degree and actually weigh more, • Add Alternate 2: Demolition of Exist - Federal Labor Standards Provisions ap - 27PRO-17-000001 peratures close to or over a hun - ing Water Tank, foundation and ap - plicable at the time of bidding, as pub - dred degrees, you can sweat out the same as hamburger, generally but it won’t put fat on your midsec - purtenances. lished, and provided within this bid set. STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA ) too much of the salt you need in speaking. When you butcher a tion. This is in contrast to its look- • Erosion control and traffic control. ss. your system. This might make you critter that you own, it all costs the alike, sugar. It is hard to • Clean up and all other miscellaneous A pre-bid meeting will be held at the City COUNTY OF HAAKON ) same. By the way, a lot of us coun - distinguish salt from sugar just by work required but not herein men - woozy or even cause you to faint. of Midland office on February 16th, 2017 This is not good. It once happened try people have at some time or looking at them, but a taste test tioned but inferred from the construc - at 10:00 a.m. MDT. All potential bidders In the Matter of the Estate of ) tion Contract Documents. ) to one of the guys on the place other sampled the salt we put out will quickly tell the difference. are encouraged to attend this confer - who, after a visit to the doctor, for the critters. You might taste a And, although I generally don’t ence. NANCY MARIE WENZEL, formerly ) The bids will be prepared and delivered known as NANCY MARIE ) started taking salt tablets when few grains of loose salt or lick a hunger for a lot of salt, I am fond in a sealed envelope to City of Midland, A complete set of Contract Documents OLDENDORPH ) the weather was such that sweat - block of it. I don’t know why this is of sweet things. This is the one South Dakota, City Finance Officer, 509 may be obtained from Banner Associ - Deceased ) ing was extreme. This seemed to so, but I know it is. Curiosity prob - major hole in my theory that you Main Street, Midland, SD 57552, ATTEN - ates, Inc., 409 22nd Ave. South, P.O. Box keep the problem at bay. ably, but in this case it doesn’t kill hunger for what your body needs. TION: Midland Water System Improve - 298, Brookings, SD 57006-0298; phone Notice is given that on January 10, 2017, the cat. Livestock salt, as you My body often hungers for more ments, not later than 2:00 p.m. MDT on Noel Kaneko of Lake Forest, California As in many things, people have (605) 692-6342 or online at www.ban - different requirements concerning might imagine, tastes pretty much chocolate and other sweets than I February 22, 2017, at which time and nerassociates.com. Paper copies may was appointed as personal representa - place the bids will be read aloud publicly tive of the Estate of Nancy Marie Wenzel; what they need to keep them - like what you sprinkle on your really need. I guess you have to be obtained upon non-refundable pay - food. keep your wits about you in refer - and in the presence of the bidders and ment in the sum of $40.00 for each set of f/k/a Nancy Marie Oldendorph, De - selves going and in good health. I their representatives. Bids will not be ac - Contract Documents plus tax. Electronic ceased. Creditors of decedent must file personally do not use an awful lot We are all familiar with the use ence to what you eat just like in cepted after the specified hour and date copies are also available to be down - their claims within four (4) months after of salt, but I do need one or two of salt to remove ice on sidewalks everything else. Isn’t that a pity? and will be returned to the Bidder(s) un - loaded online for a non-refundable the date of the first publication of this no - light shakes of it on every bite of and highways. If you want to know By the way, we Christians are opened. Bids which are not prepared and charge of $25.00 plus tax. No partial sets tice or their claims may be barred. steak I eat. Otherwise, my salt in - why that works, you’ll have to con - described in the Bible as being the filed in accordance with the Instructions of Contract Documents will be issued. No Claims may be filed with the personal to Bidders may be rejected. representative or may be filed with the take isn’t outrageous, but I do buy sult a scientist. I just know it does. salt of the earth. I assume this fee will be charged to South Dakota Gen - salted peanuts instead of unsalted. It has something to do with lower - means we may make life tastier eral Contractors for electronic plan sets. clerk of courts, with a copy of the claim Bidders on this work will be required to mailed to the personal representative. Chips have a lot of salt too, but I ing the level at which water and probably also that we help comply with the President’s Executive All bids must be accompanied by a bid don’t eat a lot of those. freezes. When I lived in urban preserve useful things. I hope this Order Nos. 11246 (Equal Employment) security. Bid security will take the form of Dated this 18th day of January, 2017. Wife Corinne does watch her areas during my earlier years, I applies to me, but I think the jury as amended, 11518 (Small Business a bid bond in an amount of ten percent salt intake for legitimate health worried about what salt would do is still out on that. Time will tell. Concerns), and 11625 (MBE) as (10%) of the Bidder's maximum Bid price /s/Noel Kaneko reasons, and she especially likes to the underside of my car. I no - Here’s hoping. amended. The requirements for bidders or a cashier's or certified check made Noel Kaneko, and contractors under these orders are Personal Representative her soda crackers to have “un - payable to Owner in an amount of five salted tops.” This is fine when I explained in the specifications. percent (5%) of the Bidder's maximum 21062 Champlain Bid price. Lake Forest, CA 92630 can find them in the grocery store, Bidders on this work will be required to but they aren’t always available. comply with Title 40 CFR 33 and Execu - The bid security will be retained by the Haakon County Clerk of Courts She ran out the other day and had tive Order 12138 (WBE). The require - Owner as liquidated damages if the suc - Haakon County Courthouse to resort to the ones I use which ments for bidders and contractors under Crossword Fun! cessful bidder refuses or fails to enter 140 S. Howard Street probably have salted tops. I told this regulation that concerns utilization of into an Agreement within fifteen (15) Philip, SD 57567 Disadvantaged/Minority Business Enter - her I could lick the salt off the tops days after Notice of Award or fails at time for her if she wanted me to, but prises (DBE/MBE) and Women's Busi - of executing the contract to furnish a con - Prepared by: ness Enterprises (WBE) are explained in struction performance bond and con - Andrew J. Knutson she turned me down on that. I’m the specifications. The goal for struction payment bond guaranteeing the Gunderson, Palmer, Nelson & Ashmore, not sure why. I’ll guess I’ll have to DBE/MBE participation on this project is faithful performance of the work. LLP really stock up on her crackers the 4% and the goal for WBE participation is Attorneys for the Estate next time I run across them. 2% of the total dollar value of the con - Bids may not be withdrawn after the time P. O. Box 8045 As all ranchers know, cattle struction contract. fixed for opening them. The Owner re - Rapid City, SD 57709-8045 (605) 342-1078 need a good supply of salt to keep serves the right to reject any and all bids, them in good shape. As a result, The successful bidder – including any and to waive any irregularities therein. [Published Jan. 26, Feb. 2 & 9, 2017, at we either have boxes in which the total approximate cost of $67.15] loose salt can be poured, or we put out solid blocks of salt. This is mostly by the watering holes. The cattle lick them whenever they

ACROSS 7. Of less wisdom 1. Bathroom item 8. Confectionary or candy 6. Down Under 9. Freshman, probably 15. High water-proof boot 10. Faze 16. Entwining 11. "___ Maria" 17. Arab leader 12. Flax fabric 18. Sugar substitute 13. Dead to the world 19. Ballpoint, e.g. 14. City on the Yamuna River 20. Hard to miss 21. Appropriate 22. Victorian, for one 24. Building where hides are Hit & Miss 23. Gait between walk tanned and canter 27. Inane 25. Fly, e.g. 29. "Fantasy Island" prop continued from 4 26. Fluff 31. ___ canto weekend. 28. Black igneous rock 33. Independent worker I called Crystal at the bank 30. Put in 35. Inconsistent, irregular Monday for her to answer a few 32. Nitrogen compound 36. Cessation of menstruation questions and fill in some gaps for 33. At liberty 37. Promoted military rank my reporting. Among other 34. Foot 39. "Chicago" lyricist things, I learned that her son, Blake, completed his sophomore 38. Smarter, cleverer 41. More, in Madrid year here at PHS, then trans - 40. One who distributes charity 44. Like a snail, but worse ferred to Stevens High School, 42. "Trick" joint 47. Break time while living with his dad. He is 43. Number one 48. "___ we having fun yet?" presently in his second year at the 49. Drudge SDSM&T. 45. Agreeing (with) I am not a sports reporter or 46. Riot 50. Kind of nerve even much of a sports fan, but I 48. Russian writer 52. Accumulate did watch the Super Bowl LI Sun - 49. ___ bean 54. Maple genus day – allowing for a few interrup - 51. Pinocchio, at times 56. Duck's home tions along the way. This year, it proved that unpredictable sur - 53. Supergarb 57. Broad valley prises can and do happen in pro - 54. Matterhorn, e.g. 60. "Much ___ About Nothing" fessional sports. The score was 55. Sent unwanted emails 62. ___ constrictor lopsided at halftime with the New 58. Back muscle, familiarly England Patriots trailing the At - 59. Psychomotor disturbance lanta Falcons 20 – 3. (Incidentally, I was not especially impressed 61. Circa with Lady Gaga and her gang in 63. Set of things to help form a the halftime entertainment per - conclusion formance, but then that is to be 64. Spoil, with "up" expected considering my ancient of times background.) This was a 65. Cousin of the flute (plural) first to have a Super Bowl game, 66. Alleviated in the last moments of the fourth quarter end in a tie score, result - DOWn ing in an overtime game. Coming 1. Rearward angled up from behind the New England Patriots did accomplish their fifth 2. One who takes photos Super Bowl victory having previ - 3. Component of nucleic acids ously won it in 2002, 2004, 2005, 4. "Malcolm X" director and 2015. (I did a little homework 5. Blows it on the Internet!) 6. Bridal path

Pioneer Review is a legal newspaper for the City of Philip, Haakon County, Haakon School Dist. 27-1, Town of Midland, West River Rural Water Development District. February 9, 2017 • Pioneer Review Classifieds (605) 859-2516 13 INDOWS HAAKON COUNTY CONSERVA - DAKOTA MILL & GRAIN, INC is W TION DISTRICT is accepting looking for a full-time person to CUSTOM BUILT WINDOWS for applications for an individual to handle bookkeeping and light Corner Pantry + A&W in Philip older homes or new construc - plant trees in shelterbelts for the warehouse work. Some lifting re - tion. Manufactured right in district. Please stop by the office, quired and various other tasks MANAGEMENT OPENINGS South Dakota. Double hung, call or email for an application. to take care of our customers. bays, bows, sliders. Call Chris Equal Opportunity Employer. Call 279-2261 or 279-2255. Manager Grillo at Exact Contracting now 605-859-2186 ext 3 or hccd@ Stop by pick up an application for an in-home demonstration goldenwest.net P8-2tc or go to www.dakotamill.com Assistant Manager and free estimate. Thank you. PW8-tfn 605-890-2696 K17-tfn DAKOTA MILL & GRAIN, INC. Food Service Manager is looking for full or part-time EMPLOYMENT: Jackson Highly Competitive Wage & Benefits Package person to add to our team at County is accepting applications USINESS ERVICE Wall. Job responsibilities in - / resumés for Jackson County Send Resumé to: [email protected] B & S clude warehouse loading/un - Sheriff. In lieu of application / TAX PREPARATION SERVICE: loading, fertilizer spreading, resumé, applicants may com - Contact Eileen Stolley, Stolley grain operations, and various plete the Standard LES form. Tax and Business Service, for other tasks to take care of our For information call 605-837- your personal or small business customers (Class A CDL a plus 2422. K8-3tc MISC . F OR S ALE tax service needs. E-file avail - or willing to obtain one). Wage FOR SALE: Clean ink barrels able. Registered Tax Return Pre - DOE. Benefits included. EOE. HELP WANTED: Various posi - (not burn barrels). Contact Pio - parer. 837-2320, Kadoka. Call 279-2261 or 279-2255, tions at The Steakhouse in neer Review in Philip, 859-2516. K8-4tc Wall. Stop by to pick up an ap - Philip. Stop in to apply or call $30 each – only 6 available. plication or go to www.dako - 859-2774. P4-tfn PR10-tfn O’CONNELL CONSTRUCTION, tamill.com PW8-tfn INC., PHILIP: Rock, Sand, HELP WANTED AT THE PEN - Gravel (screened or crushed). We WALL GOLF COURSE is looking NINGTON COUNTY COURANT: can deliver. Dams, dugouts, for full-time greens keeper and Newswriter for weekly newspa - NOTICES /W ANTED building sites. Our 42nd year. part-time help for the weekends. per, responsible, dependable, FENCING BIDS NEEDED FOR Glenn or Trace, 859-2020. Call 279-2643. WP25-1nc full or part-time, willing to train TOWN OF QUINN: fencing five PR11-tfn the right person. For more infor - acres, woven wire, 2-10 foot DAKOTA MILL & GRAIN, INC. mation or an application, call: steel gates. Due no later than HILDEBRAND STEEL & CON - is looking for a seasonal CDL Don or Beau at 859-2516 (Philip March 1, 2017. Mail bids to CRETE will do all your concrete Class A Driver with tanker en - office). WP17-tfn Town of Quinn, PO Box 71, Wall, construction jobs. Call us and dorsement that will be stationed SD 57790. PW9-2tc we will give you a quote. Office, at the Wall location. Call 279- HELP WANTED: Apply at Philip 837-2621, Rich’s cell, 431-2226. 2261 or 279-2255. Stop by to Custom Meats. Full and part K27-tfn pick up an application, or go to time positions. PR10-tfn www.dakotamill.com PW8-tfn REAL E STATE NEED A PLUMBER? Licensed BUS DRIVERS: Kadoka School PRICE REDUCED: 3 bdrm, 1.5 plumbing contractor for all your DRIVERS: CDL-A, $70,000/ is seeking applications for extra baths, 3 heat sources, attached indoor plumbing and outdoor year average! Sign-on bonus! curricular bus drivers. Applica - shop/garage, partially fur - water and sewer jobs. Call Dale Full benefits! Brady Trucking, tions are available on the web - nished, one block from Main Koehn, 441-1053, or leave a drivebrady.com . Oil fields - site www.kadoka.k12.sd.us and Street in Kadoka, space in - message at 837-0112. K38-tfn Williston, ND. 855-301-7523. can be mailed to Kadoka Area cluded for expansion, call 605- P6-4tp School, Attn. Jamie Hermann, 840-0163, 605-840-2533, WEST RIVER EXCAVATION PO Box 99, Kadoka, SD 57543. 605-842-2533. K32-tfn will do all types of trenching, EMPLOYMENT: Jackson For more information contact ditching and directional boring County is accepting applications Supt. Jamie Hermann at 837- WANTED: Ranch/farm with or work. See Craig, Diana, Sauntee / resumés for Jackson County 2171. EOE. K37-tfn without cattle and equipment, or Heidi Coller, Kadoka, SD, or Deputy Sheriff. In lieu of appli - approximately 500 to 2,000 call 837-2690. Craig cell: 390- cation / resumé, applicants may acres located in South Dakota, 8087, Sauntee cell: 390-8604; complete the Standard LES house optional, private party wrex@ gwtc.net K50-tfn form. For information call 605- cash transaction. Call Don, 413- 837-2422. K8-3tc 478-0178. PR3-tfn FARM & R ANCH LASSIFIED OLICY TRAILER TIRES FOR SALE: C P 235/85/16R 10-ply, $130; 14- PLEASE READ your classified HELP WANTED ply All-Steel, $170. All prices ad the first week it runs. If you Part-Time Custodian, 6-12 hours per week include mounting. Les’ Body see an error, we will gladly re- Shop, 859-2744, Philip. run your ad correctly. We ac - •Flexible Hours• P52-tfn cept responsibility for the first incorrect insertion only. Rav - Scotchman Industries ellette Publications, Inc. re - SUMMER PASTURE WANTED quests all classifieds and cards PO Box 850, Philip, SD 57567 for 80 to 200 pairs. Call 605- of thanks be paid for when or - 685-3801. P8-4tc dered. A $2.00 billing charge will (605) 859-2542 ---,.2/10/&+210)1*,.2' !2(1$.2/10/&+210)1*,.2' be added if ad is not paid at the FOR SALE: Grass alfalfa mix time the order is placed. hay, 90 ton 2016 hay; 390 ton '-#"%1/10!.)(* 2015 hay. Also straw bales. 605- 843-2147. P7-6tp +/-.)$10+)%1,0 %+(2/)0*3#0" 0/ '-*,/. &/(-*0+1.(&1, FOR SALE: Millet hay, oats hay, BUSINESS & PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY wheat straw and millet straw, all in net wrapped round bales. CALL 859-2516 TO PLACE YOUR AD!! Milesville, 544-3363. P6-tfn /((1-#1,0"/'1$0+1/1&-0,*10.1'0-+1.* ,1%+/).1!). WANTED: Farm ground to lease )!5"816#$ 6%58+-,.334/422*88'&7708(1 to plant alfalfa on. 1000-2000 RONALD G. MANN, DDS acres preferred. Minimum of 6 PH•CIoLmIpPlete BAutOo BDodyY R eSpaHiringOP year lease. Within 50 miles of •Glass Installation •Painting •Sandblasting FAMILY DENTISTRY Wall. Tracy Trask 605-685- Toll-Free: 1-800-900-2339 PHILIP: Mon-Tues-Thurs-Fri • 8-5 3761. P3-18tc Pee Wee & Toby Hook 859-2337 • Philip, SD WALL: 2nd, 3rd & 4th Wed • 8:15-4 WANTED: Hay ground to rent or put up on shares. Will do cus - 104 Philip Ave. • 859-2491 • Philip tom haying too. 3x4 big squares. Prefer within 50 miles of Wall. Tracy Trask 605-685-3761. P3-18tc Statewide Classifieds FOR SALE: Alfalfa seed, Vernal and Common available. Call ADVERTISE IN NEWSPAPERS statewide for only $150.00. Put the South 605-299-6264 or 859-2334. Dakota Statewide Classifieds Network to work for you today! (25 words for P40-tfn $150. Each additional word $5.) Call this newspaper, 605-859-2516, or FOR SALE: Rope horse halters 800-658-3697 for details. with 10’ lead rope, $15 each. Call 685-3317 or 837-2917. K44-tfn ANNOUNCEMENTS: 2001) seeks FT customer service $107,268.05-124,398.05. For de - WILKINSON RANCH BLACK agents. Work online from home. tailed information on qualifica - ANGUS yearling bull sale, starting $12/$20 hourly. Management ex - tions and requirements, visit HELP W ANTED February 11th. Selling sons of perience a plus. Some evenings/ www.cityofpierre.org. Open until PHILIP HEALTH SERVICES – leading A.I. sires: Waylon, Ab - weekends. Resume, questions: ca - filled. EOE. BUILDING OUR TEAM! Full solute, Rampage, and Outright, [email protected]. FOR SALE: time and part time. More details and many more. All bulls have RAILROAD VEGETATION CON - RAUSCH HEREFORDS Monday at www.philiphealthservices . been Zoetis HD 50K tested. Sale at TROL: Full-time traveling oppor - com. Full time benefit package February 20th. 150 Bulls & 230 the ranch, from DeSmet, 8 miles tunity, 60-80 hours/week, heifers. www.RauschHerefords. available at 30 hours per week west, 3 south on 425th Avenue, $13-$15/hour starting, meal al - (health, dental, life, vision). Drug com has videos. 605.948.2146 1/4 west on 211th Street. Call for lowance, paid lodging, 95% paid Hoven, SD on hwy’s 20 & 47. test and background check re - information or a catalog, Mark health/dental, 401(k) & Paid Time quired. EOE. Apply in person, 605-203-0380. Off. RAW, Inc. in Cooperstown, ND MISCELLANEOUS: email questions@regionalhealth . FREEMAN'S SCHMECKFEST – 888-700-0292 www.rawapplica - MEET SINGLES RIGHT NOW! No com, or call 605-859-2511, ext. tors.com or info@rawapplicators. 191. Nursing: RN, CNA/Nurse March 24, 25, 31, April 1. Ger - paid operators, just real people com Aide. Paid training, must be 60+. mans-from-Russia foods, displays like you. Browse greetings, ex - Health Unit Clerk. Dietary: Di - Sell it and demonstrations plus the mu - BOWES CONSTRUCTION, change messages and connect etary Aide. Housekeeping: FT sical “Brigadoon.” Tickets at BROOKINGS is seeking: drivers, live. Try it free. Call now: 1-800- position. P7-tfn schmeckfest.com. various operators, welder, me - 958-7963. AUTOMOBILES: chanic, laborers, and road re - SNOWMOBILERS! Great nightlife, claimer. For complete details call steak restaurants, free hot break - FOR SALE: 2014 Chevy High 605-693-3557 or email fast, spa, indoor pool, Bighorn HERE!! Country, loaded, 6.2L, 12,000 [email protected] Mountain trails, great winter fun! miles, heated and air condition m. Comfort Inn 24/7! 307.684.9564, Home: (605) 837-2945 seats, $40,000. For more informa - PBrenteters Excavation NEWSPAPER MANAGER Buffalo, Wyoming on I-90. Peters Cell: (605) 381-5568 * * * * tion call 605-460-0709. NEEDED in Edgemont, SD. Re - NOTICES: Excavation work of EMPLOYMENT: sponsibilities include: gathering Located in news, covering events, photogra - ADVERTISE IN NEWSPAPERS W ALL types! Kadoka, SD AMPI IN HOVEN has openings in Backhoe phy, etc. Pay depending on expe - statewide for only $150.00. Put W Packaging and Production. For Trenching the South Dakota Statewide Clas - W more information or an applica - rience. Benefits. Send resume to Tire Tanks Call email: scherermandy@gmail. com. sifieds Network to work for you W tion please contact Kevin or Angie Vacuum today! (25 words for $150. Each Excavation at 605-948-2211 or www.ampi. CITY ADMINISTRATOR Pierre, SD W additional word $5.) Call this Cobett Waters com. is seeking and experienced and W newspaper, 605-859-2516, or Directional SMART SALES AND LEASE (est qualified leader. Salary 800-658-3697 for details. Boring 859-2516 CLASSIFIED RATE: $7.00 minimum for first 20 words; 10¢ per word thereafter; included in the Pioneer Review, the Profit, & The Pennington Co. Courant, as well as on our website: www.pioneer-review.com. CARD OF THANKS: Poems, Tributes, Etc. … $7.00 minimum for first 20 words; 10¢ per word thereafter. Each name and initial must be counted separately. Included in the Pioneer Review and the Profit. BOLD FACE LOCALS: $10.00 minimum for first 20 words; 10¢ per word thereafter. Each name and initial must be counted separately. Printed only in the Pioneer Review. NOTE: $2.00 added charge for bookkeeping and billing on all charges. DISPLAY AD RATE: $9.00 per column inch, included in the Pioneer Review and the Profit. $6.10 per column inch for the Pioneer Review only. PUBLISHER’S NOTICE: All real estate advertised in this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968, which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, or discrimination on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin, or any intention to make any such preference, limitation, or discrimination.” This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is a violation of the law. Our readers are informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. 14 Pioneer Review • February 9, 2017

emption and the earned income the credit exceeds the tax liability. ated write off of 50% first year de - credit. Apparently many eligible he general rules for claiming a preciation on purchases of new de - grandparents are not claiming the child as your dependent include: preciable property with a life of 20 John Mitchell credit. IRS states that millions of 1. The child is under age 19 or years or less. This would cover CPA, CVA, CFP Casey Peterson & Associates, Ltd. grandparents or other relatives are under age 24 and a full time stu - things such as equipment, vehicles, caring for children but not claiming dent. breeding livestock, fences, water - the credit. 2. The child lived with the tax - lines and barns. The issue that IRS Recent Tax tice to taxpayers regarding the have earned income below a The earned income credit is a re - payer for more than half of the has been reporting about is that Issues From The IRS Earned Income Credit. threshold amount. fundable tax credit of up to $6,269 year. bonus depreciation is the default In an acknowledgement of the The Earned Income Credit is a The notice from IRS acknowl - depending on the number of quali - 3. The child did not provide more and an election must be made if not changing demographics of the credit for taxpayers who have chil - edges that many grandparents are fying children and total earnings. A than half of their own support. claiming bonus depreciation. United States, the Internal Rev - dren under age 19 who qualify as caring for grandchildren and are el - refundable tax credit means that 4. The child is the taxpayer’s What IRS is reporting is that enue Service has issued a 2017 no - dependents, and the taxpayers igible for both a dependency ex - the IRS will send a refund check if child, grandchild, foster child, step taxpayers who did not claim bonus child, sibling, niece or nephew. depreciation, and did not attach an The earned income credit is a election not to claim bonus depreci - bell shaped curve that starts out at ation but continued to depreciate zero with no earned income, and the property under normal rules. then gradually rises to a peak IRS is disallowing subsequent de - Johnny & Shelly McGriff For Sale: 55 1st X BWF BV F1 Heifers when earned income is approxi - preciation because the bonus de - Selling All Horses mately $20,000 and then declines preciation was “allowed or 725#, out of Hereford cows back to zero when income exceeds allowable” in a prior year. It is im - February 21, 2017 $47,500. portant to attach an election out of Selling at Philip Livestock Auction A couple of other tax issues that bonus depreciation to the tax re - we are seeing almost weekly in IRS turn, if not being claimed. Bonus at Philip Livestock Auction pronouncements and tax court re - depreciation is 50% on qualifying Tuesday, February 14th porting are: property for 2016 and 2017, 40% More info on Facebook at (All BWF heifers in town) 1. Bonus depreciation issues, for 2018, 30% for 2019 and zero McGriff Quarter Horses and thereafter. 2. portability elections. Portability election has to do Buster Peterson • 605-837-2531 Bonus depreciation is an acceler - with the Federal estate tax. The Federal estate tax exemption for 2017 is $5,490,000. Property pass - F ing to a surviving spouse is exempt REE from Federal Estate tax. The result Sunday Juke Box is often that when the first spouse Fr iday Nig dies that the taxable estate is quite Night hts low because of property passing to Bingo!! The Steakhouse & Lounge a surviving spouse. Making a portability election moves the un - Open Daily Monday thru Saturday Downtown Philip Reservations: 859-2774 used Federal estate exemption of Starts at Sa Lunch Specials: Monday thru Friday • 11:00 to 1:30 ~ Call for specials! Regular Menu Available Nightly! lad Bar the first spouse to die to the second A spouse. This then makes full use of 6:00 p.m. vailable at two Federal estate tax exemptions Lunch! totaling $10,980,000. What the IRS reporting is indi - Tuesday, Wed., Monday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Package cating that if a Federal estate tax February 7 February 8 February 10 February 13 return is not filed on the death of February 9 February 11 Liquor & Ribeye Indian Taco Chicken Prime Rib the first spouse with a portability Walleye Prime Rib Casino Fried Steak election made, that the second Special or Taco Salad Sandwich spouse is barred from claiming the unused estate exemption of the first spouse.

Markets Midwest Cooperatives WEBSITE ADDRESS: End of Day 2/6/17 www.philiplivestock.comPHILIP LIVESTOCK AUCTION 12 Pro Winter Wheat ...... $3.66 859-2577 14 Pro Spring Wheat ...... $4.84 Email: [email protected] HILIP OUTH AKOTA Philip, SD Milo ...... $2.49 P , S D Corn ...... $2.72 TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 2017 18BLK & BWF SOLID & BROKEN MOUTH COWS 1571#... .$985.00 RODNEY SHARP - KADOKA 4...... BLK COWS 1484#...... $61.00 DANIEL KRUSE - INTERIOR 5...... BLK & BWF STRS 829#...... $125.00 2...... BLK & BWF COWS 1633#...... $60.00 Millet ...... $6.00 Big run of all classes of cattle, including 9...... BLK BROKEN MOUTH COWS 1379#...... $860.00 4...... HERF STRS 788#...... $127.50 CARL & JUDY KNUPPE - NEW UNDERWOOD SFS Birdseed ...... $14.75 weigh-ups, bred cattle and feeder cattle. ASA LEE HICKS - MARTIN SCHNEE SHEEP RANCH - KADOKA 2...... BLK COWS 1213#...... $67.00 Very cold day, but a decent crowd. Next 21...... BLK & BWF BROKEN MOUTH COWS 1275#...... $825.00 5...... CHAR & BLK HFRS 618#...... $126.50 CREW CATTLE COMPANY - PHILIP week, Big Special Feeder Cattle Sale with CLAY SHORB - HERMOSA WEIGH-UPS: 7...... BLK COWS 1193#...... $66.00 27BLK & BWF SOLID & BROKEN MOUTH COWS 1251#... .$810.00 CLAY & HOLLY SCHAACK - WALL LARRY CARLSON - PIERRE 6000 head. 9:00 AM start on weigh-ups. FEEDER CATTLE: 1...... BLK BULL 1910#...... $87.50 1...... HERF COW 1155#...... $65.00 WHEELER RANCH - PHILIP RASMUSSEN LEHMAN 33 RANCH - BELVIDERE CASEY KNUPPE - NEW UNDERWOOD BRED CATTLE: 68...... RED & BLK STRS 701#...... $138.25 8...... BLK COWS 1459#...... $68.50 3...... BLK COWS 1375#...... $62.50 Area Weather DON & JUDY RAWHOUSER - NEWCASTLE, WY 4...... BLK & BWF STRS 555#...... $149.00 JERRY GRIMES - KADOKA 1...... BWF COWETTE 1160#...... $78.50 17...... BLK HFRS 1148#... .. $1,625.00 71...... BLK & BWF HFRS 653#...... $129.50 4...... RED COWS 1180#...... $72.50 GRANT PATTERSON - KADOKA 43...... BLK HFRS 1148#... .. $1,575.00 3...... BLK HFRS 512#...... $125.00 EMMIT DICKSCHAT - HERMOSA 8...... RED & BLK COWS 1347#...... $62.50 AMSEY AMSEY HILIP Forecast R & R - P BILL KOPP - BOX ELDER 15...... BLK COWS 1311#...... $65.50 ARLIE RADWAY - HOWES 67...... BLK HFRS 1109#... .. $1,610.00 61...... BLK & BWF STRS 794#...... $127.50 2...... BLK COWETTES 1028#...... $82.50 4...... BLK & BWF COWS 1959#...... $62.00 Friday: Partly cloudy. 49...... BLK HFRS 1087#... .. $1,610.00 9...... BLK & BWF STRS 687#...... $135.00 5...... BLK COWETTES 1118#...... $76.50 GENE & SHERYL MICHAEL - PHILIP 14...... BLK BROKEN MOUTH COWS 1446#...... $960.00 46...... BLK & BWF HFRS 734#...... $122.00 2...... BLK HFRTS 1078#...... $105.50 1...... BLK COW 1260#...... $61.00 High 44F. Winds WNW FLYING C GUEST RANCH - WHITEWOOD 10...... BLK & BWF HFRS 591#...... $128.00 1...... BLK BULL 2275#...... $82.50 3...... BLK COWETTES 1140#...... $71.00 at 5 to 10 mph. Friday 37...... BLK HFRS 1093#... .. $1,575.00 RUSTY LYTLE - WALL TIM & DENISE NELSON - MIDLAND MARG PETERS - MURDO Night: Cloudy with show - SHAW RANCH INC. - WHITE OWL 51...... RED & BLK STRS 666#...... $137.50 2...... BLK HFRTS 995#...... $110.50 2...... BLK & BWF COWS 1488#...... $60.50 26...... BLK HFRS 1078#... .. $1,500.00 8...... RED STRS 556#...... $145.50 SHAW RANCH INC. - WHITE OWL JAY LONG - SPEARFISH ers. Low near 35F. Winds light 9...... BLK HFRS 999#...... $1,450.00 49...... RED & BLK HFRS 587#...... $132.00 2...... BLK HFRTS 988#...... $108.50 4...... BLK & BWF COWS 1385#...... $60.50 and variable. Chance of rain CLIFF POSS - PHILIP 6...... RED & BLK HFRS 448#...... $147.00 2...... BLK COWETTES 1113#...... $82.50 ROBIN & SANDRA GITTINGS - PHILIP 60%. 20...... BLK HFRS 1043#... .. $1,460.00 LYLE SMITH - LANTRY 3...... BLK COWS 1412#...... $62.00 1...... BWF COW 1565#...... $60.00 16...... BLK HFRS 1048#... .. $1,450.00 5...... BLK STRS 529#...... $152.00 BURJES FITCH - PHILIP 1...... BLK BULL 1950#...... $83.50 Saturday: Periods of 12...... BLK 3 TO 6 YR OLD COWS 1250#... .. $1,310.00 4...... BLK & BWF HFRS 553#...... $134.50 10...... BLK HFRTS 1025#...... $83.50 BOB PEARMAN - EAGLE BUTTE LK SOLID BROKEN MOUTH OWS rain. High 41F. Winds 23...... B & C 1418#...... $975.00 TODD & NANCY COLLINS - STURGIS JOHN & DEDE LONG - UNION CENTER 1...... BLK COWETTE 1050#...... $83.00 JERRY GRIMES - KADOKA 18...... BLK HFRS 585#...... $134.50 6...... BLK & BWF COWS 1508#...... $64.50 1...... HERF COWETTE 1035#...... $76.00 NW at 10 to 15 mph. 10...... RED 3 TO 4 YR OLD COWS 1204#... .. $1,450.00 SCOTT TIPTON - BOX ELDER 1...... BLK COW 1300#...... $63.50 NORDINE BRINK - MIDLAND Chance of rain 80%. 13...... RED SOLID MOUTH COWS 1436#... .. $1,450.00 5...... BLK HFRS 602#...... $133.00 13...... BLK & BWF COWS 1168#...... $62.00 4...... BLK COWETTE 1096#...... $74.00 19...... RED BROKEN MOUTH COWS 1305#... .. $1,000.00 SDSU AGRI EXPERIMENT STATION - PHILIP 1...... BLK COW 1185#...... $61.50 ROSS BLOCK - MIDLAND Rainfall near a quarter of an SAM STODDARD - NORRIS 6...... BLK STRS 578#...... $143.50 1...... BLK BULL 1975#...... $84.50 2...... BLK HFRTS 953#...... $76.00 inch. Saturday Night: Cloudy 5...... RED 3 TO 6 YR OLD COWS 1168#... .. $1,375.00 ED BETTELYOUN - LONG VALLEY A CONSIGNMENT O'NEILL FAMILY RANCH - HERMOSA skies early, then partly cloudy 8RED & BLK SOLID & BROKEN MOUTH COWS 1316#...... $885.00 7...... BLK HFRS 523#...... $135.00 28...... BLK & BWF COWS 1479#...... $65.75 1...... BLK BULL 1845#...... $85.50 HOWARD WIESINGER - LEMMON DEEANNE KILNESS - HOWES 16...... BLK COWS 1463#...... $64.75 1...... BLK BULL 1665#...... $82.50 after midnight. Low 27F. Winds 28...... RED & BLK BROKEN MOUTH COWS 1411#... .. $1,000.00 7...... BLK & BWF STRS 688#...... $134.00 JUSTIN LONG - UNION CENTER BYRON DENKE - QUINN NW at 10 to 20 mph. GITTINGS RANCH - PHILIP 3...... BLK & BWF STRS 503#...... $140.00 2...... BLK COWS 1498#...... $64.50 1...... BLK BULL 1525#...... $85.00 4...... BLK 3 & 4 YR OLD COWS 1310#... .. $1,300.00 HEINRICH RANCH - CAPUTA 1...... BLK COW 1430#...... $64.00 GWENDOLYN KILNESS - HOWES UDY ALY TEVE ULIE ALY IDLAND Sunday: Abundant sun - J D & S & J D - M 19...... BLK & BWF STRS 901#...... $121.50 4...... BLK & BWF COWS 1233#...... $63.00 1...... BLK BULL 1975#...... $82.50 34...... BLK BROKEN MOUTH COWS 1396#...... $985.00 4...... BLK & BWF STRS 734#...... $133.00 JIM JOHNSON - QUINN GARY BLOCK - MIDLAND shine. High 37F. Winds JUSTIN WULF - OWANKA 13...... BLK & BWF HFRS 839#...... $120.50 1...... BLK COW 1295#...... $64.50 1...... RED BULL 1910#...... $82.00 17...... BLK & BWF BROKEN MOUTH COWS 1445#...... $985.00 WNW at 10 to 15 mph. Sunday Night: Clear. HENDERSON – 80 BLK BV HFRS; FS,NI...... 700# TUESDAY, FEB. 21: SPECIAL STOCK COW & BRED TUESDAY, JULY 11: REGULAR CATTLE SALE Low 24F. Winds W at 5 to 10 UPCOMING SALES: HULM – 80 CHAR X CLVS; FS...... 750# HEIFER SALE & REGULAR CATTLE SALE TUESDAY, JULY 18: REGULAR CATTLE SALE mph. TUESDAY, FEB. 14: SPECIAL FEEDER CATTLE WHEELER – 75 BLKSTRS; FS,NI...... 650-700# TUESDAY, FEB. 28: SPECIAL FEEDER CATTLE SALE TUESDAY, JULY 25: SPECIAL ANNIVERSARY YEARLING CLEMENTS – 75 BLK HFRS; FS,NI...... 700# SALE FEATURING BANGS VACCINATED HEIFERS & FEATURING BANGS VACCINATED HEIFERS & REGULAR & FALL CALF SALE & REGULAR CATTLE SALE & Go to pioneer-review.com & ARTHUR – 70 BLKSTRS; FS...... 650-700# CATTLE SALE ANNIVERSARY BBQ click on the weather icon for REGULAR CATTLE SALE. (ESTIMATING 6,000 HEAD) ARNESON – 65 BLK & BWF CLVS; FS,NI...... 500-600# TUESDAY, MAR. 7: SPECIAL STOCK COW & BRED HEIFER WEIGH-UPS 9:00AM THORSON HEREFORDS JOBGEN – 65 BLK BV HFRS; FS,NI...... 600# up-to-the-minute forecasts SALE & REGULAR CATTLE SALE 12:00PM (MT) YEARLING & CALVES TO FOLLOW JOHANNESAN – 60 BLK CLVS; FS,NI...... 750-800# TUESDAY, MAR. 14: SPECIAL FEEDER CATTLE SALE THORSON HEREFORDS: WHITCHER – 60 BLKHFRS; FS,NI...... 600# UPCOMING BULL SALES 35 –H EREFORD TWO YR. OLD BULLS M. WILLIAMS – 60 BLK STRS & BV HFRS; FS... .550-700# FEATURING BANGS VACCINATED HEIFERS & REGULAR TUESDAY, FEB. 21: STOUT CHAROLAIS & MILLIGAN 20 –H ERERFORD BV HFRS; FS,NI 650# BARRY – 55 BLK & BWF HFRS; FS,NI...... 550-600# CATTLE SALE HEREFORDS 12:00MT CALVES & YEARLINGS: FS=FALL SHOTS, NI=NO IMPLANTS, BENNETT – 55 BLK CLVS; FS...... 800# TUESDAY, MAR. 21: SPECIAL STOCK COW & BRED TUESDAY, FEB. 28: DEEP CREEK ANGUS 12:00MT ETERSON WF ST CROSS HFRS FS NI AN=ALL NATURAL,ASV=AGE & SOURCE VERIFIED, P – 50 B 1 BV ; , ...... 750# HEIFER SALE & REGULAR CATTLE SALE TUESDAY, MAR. 7: CHEYENNE CHAROLAIS 12:00MT GRUBL – 50 BWF 1ST CROSS BV HFRS; FS,NI... .. 600-700# HR=HOME RAISED TUESDAY, MAR. 28: SPECIAL FEEDER CATTLE SALE TUESDAY, MAR. 14: TRASK & PETERSON ANGUS ONG ONG LK WFSTRS FS NI HODGEMAN – 50 BLK CLVS; FS,NI...... 600-650# L & L – 500 B & B ; , ... .525-700# EATURING ANGS ACCINATED EIFERS EGULAR 12:00MT ILLIAMS LK HFRS FS NI F B V H & R STILWELL – 310 BLK & CHAR X CLVS; FS...... 700-750# W – 50 B ; , ...... 550-625# TUESDAY, MAR. 21: NELSON RED ANGUS, 12:00MT ORK LK ED STRS REPLC HFRS CATTLE SALE SCHULZ – 300 BLK & BWF CLVS; FS,NI...... 700-800# B – 45 B & R & BV 700-750# TUESDAY, APR. 11: STOMPRUD ANGUS 12:00MT A CONSIGNMENT – 45 BLK & BWF CLVS; FS,NI.. 500-600# TUESDAY, APR. 4: SPECIAL STOCK COW, BRED HEIFER THOMPSON – 285 BLKSTRS; FS,NI, TUESDAY, APR. 18: COTTONWOOD ANGUS 12:00MT WILLIAMS – 40 BLK CLVS; FS,NI...... 600-750# AIR ALE EGULAR ATTLE ALE HOME RAISED...... 650-700# & P S & R C S TUESDAY, APR. 25: FORTUNE’S RAFTER U CROSS SIMMONS – 35 BLK HFRS; FS,NI...... 550-600# BARTLETT & AMIOTTE – 225 BLK CLVS; FS,NI... 700-800# TUESDAY, APR. 11: SPECIAL FEEDER CATTLE SALE ANGUS 12:00MT L. SMITH – 35 BLK BV HFRS; FS,NI...... 700# DICKSCHAT – 200 BLK HFRS; FS,NI...... 600-700# FEATURING BANGS VACCINATED HIEFERS & REGULAR TUESDAY, MAY 2: BULL DAY WELLER RANCH – 35 RED ANG BV HFRS; FS,NI...... 700# SMITH – 190 RED ANG STRS & BV HFRS; FS,NI CATTLE SALE UHREKA – 30 FANCY BLK BV REPLC HFRS; FS,NI700-800# (EVERY HFR IN TOWN)...... 600-750# TUESDAY, APR. 18: SPECIAL STOCK COW, BRED HEIFER, J. LONG – 175 BLK STRS; FS,NI...... 700-800# T. WILLIAMS – 30 RED BV HFRS; FS.NI...... 600# & PAIR SALE & REGULAR CATTLE SALE BERNSTEIN – 175 BLK CLVS; FS,NI...... 650-50# NEUHAUSER – 30 BLK & HERF STRS; FS...... 700# UPCOMING HORSE SALES TUESDAY, APR. 25: SPECIAL FEEDER CATTLE, STOCK TUESDAY, FEB. 21: OPEN CONSIGNMENT FOLLOWING H & K RANCH – 150 BLK CLVS; FS,NI...... 700# KINSLEY RANCH – 30 BLK BV HFRS; FS,NI...... 550-700# ATTLE ALE ARNESON & ELSHERE – 140 BLK MOSTLY BV HFRS; PRESTON – 25 BLK CLVS; FS,NI...... 600-650# COW, BRED HEIFER, & PAIR SALE & REGULAR CATTLE SALE C S UESDAY AR PEN ONSIGNMENT FS,NI...... 550-600# UPELL – 25 BWF CLVS; FS...... 600-700# TUESDAY, MAY 2: BULL DAY & REGULAR CATTLE SALE T , M . 21: O C OLLOWING ATTLE ALE BOOMER – 130 RED ANG CLVS; FS,NI...... 600# FARLEE – 25 BLK CLVS; FS,NI...... 600-650# TUESDAY, MAY 9: SPECIAL FEEDER CATTLE SALE & F C S ITZGERALD LK CLVS FS TUESDAY, APR. 18: OPEN CONSIGNMENT FOLLOWING MOON – 120 BLK STRS; FS,NI...... 750# F – 24 B ; ...... 600-650# REGULAR CATTLE SALE S. RIGGINS – 23 BLK CLVS; FS...... 600# CATTLE SALE GEIGLE & GEIGLE – 110 BLK STRS & BV HFRS; UESDAY AY PECIAL AIRS TOCK OW T , M 16: S P , S C , & UESDAY AY PEN ONSIGNMENT FS,NI...... 650-750# COLEMAN – 20 RED STRS; FS...... 700-850# T , M . 16: O C BRED HEIFER SALE & REGULAR CATTLE SALE OLLOWING ATTLE ALE FRINK – 100 BLK CLVS; FS...... 600-700# PAULSEN – 12 BLK & BWF CLVS; FS,NI...... 550# F C S TUESDAY, MAY 23: SPECIAL PAIR SALE & REGULAR SERR – 100 BLK BV HFRS; FS,NI...... 650-700# IRELAND – 12 BLK STRS; FS,NI...... 725# TUESDAY, JUNE 20: OPEN CONSIGNMENT ATTLE ALE HEATHERSHAW – 100 BLK BV HFRS; FS,NI...... 650# K. RIGGINS – 11 BLK & BWF CLVS; FS,NI...... 550-600# C S FOLLOWING CATTLE SALE WELLER RANCH – 100 BLK & RED BV HFRS DELBRIDGE – 11 BLK STRS; FS,NI...... 725# TUESDAY, MAY 30: NO SALE TUESDAY, JULY 18: OPEN CONSIGNMENT FOLLOWING FS,NI...... 600-650# BRUNSCH & JONES – 10 BLK CLVS; FS...... 450# TUESDAY, JUNE 6: SPECIAL FEEDER CATTLE SALE & CATTLE SALE SHAW RANCH – 100 BLK HFRS; FS,NI...... 600# MORE CONSIGNMENTS BY SALE DAY. FOR MORE INFORMATION REGULAR CATTLE SALE LEHRKAMP – 95 BLK STRS & BV HFRS; FS,NI... .650-750# CALL THOR ROSETH AT 605-685-5826, JEFF LONG AT TUESDAY, JUNE 13: REGULAR CATTLE SALE PLA Café Marit Clawson, Mgr. HOWIE – 90 BLK & BWF HFRS; FS,NI...... 550-600# 605-515-0186 OR OFFICE AT 605-859-2577 TUESDAY, JUNE 20: REGULAR CATTLE SALE PROKOP & DEVRIES – 90 RED & BLK HFRS; FS, TUESDAY, JUNE 27: DRY COW SPECIAL Mon-Fri, 6 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. HAY FED...... 600# TUESDAY, JULY 4: NO SALE Extended hours on sale days. G. FORTUNE – 80 FANCY BLK STRS...... 750-800# ENNEN – 80 BLK & BWF 1ST CROSS HFRS; FS,NI 725-750# Philip Livestock Auction, in conjunction with Keep supporting R-CALF USA! Superior Livestock Auction, will be offering PLA is now qualified to handle third party verified NHTC cattle (Non Hormonal Treated Cattle). video sale as an additional service to our R-CALF USA is our voice in government consignors, with questions about the video to represent U.S. cattle producers in please call, Jerry Roseth at VIEW SALES LIVE ON THE INTERNET! Go to: www.philiplivestock.com. Upcoming sales & trade marketing issues. Join today 605-685-5820, Jeff Long at consignments can be viewed on the Internet at www.philiplivestock.com, or on the DTN: Click on & help make a difference! 605-515-0186 or Randy Curtis in the SALE BARNS NORTH CENTRAL Black Hills area at 605-892-5694. TO CONSIGN CATTLE OR HAVE A REPRESENTATIVE LOOK AT YOUR CATTLE, GIVE US A CALL: THOR ROSETH, Owner JEFF LONG, Owner & Auctioneer DACE HARPER, BOB ANDERSON, Fieldman PHILIP LIVESTOCK AUCTION (605) 685-5826 Red Owl • (605) 985-5486 Fieldman/Auctioneer Sturgis • (605) 347-0151 Cell (605) 515-0186 Faith • (605) 515-1535 (605) 641-1042 (605) 859 2577 BILLY MARKWED, Fieldman LYNN WEISHAAR, Auctioneer DAN PIROUTEK, Market Rep. BAXTER ANDERS, Fieldman Midland • (605) 567-3385 Reva • (605) 866-4670 Milesville • (605) 544 3316 Wasta • (605) 685-4862 www.philiplivestock.com