Flora Hanson, 96

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Flora Ellen was born on Jan. 30, 1920 to Harvey and Frances (Kaplan) Newland in the Norden, Nebraska area.

Flora attended school through the 8th grade in the Sparks and Norden Nebraska area. She also attended high school for a short while in Millboro, South Dakota. She was then needed at home to help her mother care for her father who was in poor health.

September 13, 1937 Flora and Ernest Hanson were united in marriage and to this union seven children were born.

Flora was a stay at home mom and was very committed to her husband Ernest and her family. She was also very involved with her church which she and Ernest helped establish in their community which is now known as the Shadly Valley Church. Together they would house the missionaries and evangelists that came from time to time.

Flora was an excellent cook and many people were fed at her table. Flora loved the farm and working with her family. She was very strong and committed to the tough things as Ernest struggled with many health issues. She had a heart that was so strong and committed to the Lord. It was always about pleasing Jesus and she always instructed her family in His ways.

Flora’s cinnamon rolls were always the best. She toiled in her garden and she had a love for the country and all of the animals and along with Ernest built their farm from the bottom up and was never known to complain.

Theresa Elizabeth Ruth (Betty) Devish, 93

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Theresa Elizabeth Ruth (Betty) Devish was born May 22, 1923. She was the sixth child of George and Theresa (Salzmann) Kenzy. She was born at the farm home near Iona, SD. Her brothers were Sam, Carl, Paul, Leo, and John. She attended school in the community, starting at Iona High School and later graduating from Gregory High School in 1940. She became a certified teacher attending Springfield Teachers College. Elizabeth Kenzy taught at the McKinley School near Iona in 1943. She lived with her parents behind the school, and would get there first to light the wood and coal burning stove.

On August 25, 1950, she married Floyd Devish. To this union joined a son ,Mark and a daughter, Mariann. In 1959, Betty cared for her parents in Gregory. Floyd owned the dry cleaners in Gregory until 1962. “Moving west”, they made their home in Winner, SD, where Floyd ran the Pheasant Cleaners, and then Modern Cleaners. Betty taught second grade and later Title teaching at West Side Elementary. She spent summers attending USD inVermillion, SD, and then received her Masters in Education. She was a member of Alpha Delta Kappa, and later she was the treasurer for the retired Winner Teachers group in which Arvis Simkins and she managed together. When Floyd passed away in 1978 at the age of 52, she continued to teach until 1991.

She enjoyed traveling to Sioux Falls to help with her grandchildren Michael and Nichole Devish. They loved grandma’s mashed potatoes and pies! In 2002, along with her brother Paul from Idaho, Betty moved to Oacoma and Chamberlain, SD, to help with raising her grandsons, Matthew and Marc Schwenk. They too loved grandma’s cooking! She to kept her home in Winner, traveling back and forth. Along with her friends and sister-in-laws, she would travel near and far; Betty never meant a stranger. She was also an avid reader, and enjoyed ordering many books,music tapes, and videos from Reader’s Digest! In her earlier years, she loved to dance. She was a very kind and gentle soul, loved by her family, friends, cats, especially Shadow and many former students.

Betty continued to live to the present with her daughter and grandsons in Chamberlain, SD. Her health had declined previously at home, and continued to decline during a short respite care stay at the Aurora-Brule Nursing Home in White Lake, SD, upon her death on October 29, 2016. She had entered hospice care earlier in October.

The Many Nicknames of South Dakota

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The Mount Rushmore State. The Sunshine State. The Swinged Cat State.

Of all the nicknames for South Dakota, perhaps none is more unusual than” The Swinged Cat State.” This nickname originated from remarks made by South Dakota’s first governor, Arthur C. Mellette, according to an article from the South Dakota State Historical Society – State Archives.

In 1890, South Dakota was in the midst of a drought. Mellette was doing everything in his power to help settlers and keep them from leaving the state. On a trip to Chicago for aid, Mellette was met by Moses P. Handy, a friend and newspaperman. Handy asked Mellette, “Well, governor, how is South Dakota?” Mellette replied, “Oh, South Dakota is a swinged cat, better than she looks.” By swinged, Mellette meant “burnt” or “singed,” according to the article. The next day, the Chicago Inter Ocean newspaper had a story about Mellette, governor of the “swinged cat State.”

“Coyote State” might have been its first nickname, and while most people probably assume the nickname was inspired by the state animal, it may actually have been inspired by a horse.

According to Volume IX of South Dakota Historical Collections Compiled by the State Department of History, a race took place in October 1863 at Fort Randall between horses owned by two soldiers from Company A Dakota Cavalry and a major from the 6th Iowa Cavalry. The major’s horse was badly beaten. A soldier from the Iowa infantry remarked “that the Dakota horse ran like a coyote.” The owners immediately gave their horse that name, which became applied to the entire Dakota Company and to all residents of the state. With a nod to the number of artesian wells in the state, another South Dakota nickname is “The Artesian State.” With plains, hills, mountains, cities, towns, farmland, pasture, lakes, rivers, hot weather and freezing cold, South Dakota has also been called “The Land of Infinite Variety” and “The Land of Plenty.”

Weather is a factor in two of South Dakota’s nicknames. As “The Blizzard State,” it shares a nickname with Texas because of both states being subject to frequent storms. And while “The Sunshine State” is Florida’s official nickname, it was also South Dakota’s slogan for decades.

In 1992, the sun set on “The Sunshine State” as South Dakota’s official nickname. State Rep. Chuck Mateer, a Republican from Belle Fourche, introduced legislation that year to change the state’s nickname from “The Sunshine State” to “The Mount Rushmore State.” “Everybody’s got a lot of sunshine, but we’re the only ones who’ve got Mount Rushmore,” he was quoted as saying in an article in the Jan. 26, 1992, Sioux Falls Argus Leader. Getting the bill passed wasn’t all sunshine for supporters. Opponents argued that dropping the nickname “The Sunshine State” would cause people to think the state was in a “frozen tundra,” according to Republican Rep. Mary Edelen of Vermillion in the Feb. 1, 1992, Argus Leader. Others in favor of keeping the sun shining on South Dakota said that the state’s American Indian population did not want South Dakota to be known as “The Mount Rushmore State.”

The legislation did pass and was signed into law by Gov. George S. Mickelson, who favored the new nickname. Who knows what the future will hold for South Dakota’s nicknames? While “The Mount Rushmore State” might seem set in stone, clearly nicknames come and go.

This moment in South Dakota history is provided by the South Dakota Historical Society Foundation, the nonprofit fundraising partner of the South Dakota State Historical Society at the Cultural Heritage Center in Pierre. Find us on the web at www.sdhsf.org. Contact us at info@sdhsf.org to submit a story idea.

17 Apply to be Executive Director of Activities Association

By Dana Hess
For South Dakota Newspaper Association

PIERRE—The South Dakota High School Activities Association has received 17 applications for the position of executive director. Current executive director Wayne Carney is retiring.

According to board member Brian Maher of Sioux Falls, they would meet in executive session at its Nov. 2 meeting to vet the applications. Interviews would likely take place in January or March to coincide with SDHSAA board meetings.

To determine the characteristics and qualities of the next executive director, SDHSAA surveyed state groups representing school superintendents, athletic directors and high school principals.

At its meeting, the board heard from Lynn Vlasman, superintendent of the Lyman School and president of the South Dakota School Superintendents Association. He presented the SDHSAA board his organization’s four recommendations for qualities needed in the next executive director:

Leadership and a broad sense of the importance of athletics and fine arts in the development of young people.

A commitment to expanded use of technology to enhance communication, transparency and accountability.

A broad sense of school finance and how mandated expenditures in one budget area can negatively impact financial priorities in other ares of a district budget.

The ability to follow through on initiatives that represent the will of the majority of the association’s member districts even if they conflict with the director’s personal vision.

Cheer Team ties for 8th at State

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The Winner High School competitive cheer team competed at the state meet in Aberdeen.  The girls tied for 8th place with Arlington/Lake Preston with 215 points.

“As a coach, I could not ask for a better bunch of girls. These girls went out there Friday, Oct. 21, and left everything on the cheer floor,” said coach Val Ewing. “We stuck all our stunts and the girls did their best routine yet.”

“I am disappointed in how we placed, not is how the girls did or in their performance, but in how the judges scored us,” said Ewing.

“There is a rubic to be followed and I don’t feel that we received the scores we earned. It’s disappointing to know where we have been placing and to hear other coaches tell you that your performance was amazing and then not have the scores reflect that. I honestly think we should have been top four. I am extremely proud of the girls and how far they have come and can’t wait for next year,” said Ewing.

Simpson Honored as Hometown Hero

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Freya Simpson, Tripp County Librarian, has been recognized as a Home Town Hero.

Freya was honored at a recent Retired Teachers Meeting in Winner. Freya started her position on Dec. 1, 2008. As a county librarian ,she has the responsibility to make the library function well; to make the public feel welcome and to accommodate their library needs.

She said she is constantly challenged to keep our library up to date in this fast paced 21st Century. To help reach that goal she achieved Public Libraries Accreditation. This is to be done every three years. Current accreditation continues until 2017. She instituted a new library digital system, Destiny, which allows a continual assessment of what is needed and what should be weeded out. She believes the library should provide a safe, clean and friendly place for the public and staff.

One of the biggest challenges is to keep up with technology, public access to computers, and WI-FI; E-books and more. Just recently she, with the help of the library staff, kicked off the first Lego challenge which will provide opportunities for kids from age 5-9 to work/play with Legos and to stretch their imagination and creativity. This after school program will continue for two times a month for the next three months.

Each fiscal year, Freya presents a comprehensive report of the budget, activities and requests to the County Commissioners and to other interested groups. This reveals a tremendous record of activity at the library including the out of town visitors who stop by to read the newspapers and to use the internet. This is an increasing activity indicated by a high number of requests.

The library is funded through the Tripp County Budget, the City of Winner and through various other charitable givings. Guidance for the library come through a Library Board and through a group known as Friends of the Library.

Freya makes use of the local newspaper and the radio to inform patrons of the various services available, new programs and even for requests of needed items . She said, “We live in a caring community and it’s an honor to serve our patrons”.

The award was presented by Marsha Risseeuw, local Modern Woodmen Hometown Awards chair.

QB Club has Big Impact on Athletic Program

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By Dan Bechtold, Editor

Through its dues and fundraisers the Winner Quarterback Club is there to support, assist the athletic program at Winner High School.

In so many ways, the quarterback club has an impact on the community and the school district.

The officers of the club are: Jason Bartels, president; Scott Schuyler, vice president; Suny Bruun, secretary/treasurer and Sara Hammerbeck, incoming secretary/treasurer.

Kauer Family Donates to Community Foundation

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The family of the late Lawrence “Larry” Kauer donated $3,000 in memorial money to the Tripp County 4-H trust fund that is maintained by the Tripp County Community Foundation.

Kauer’s family wanted to put the money someplace where it would be used in remembrance of him into perpetuity. They also requested that the earnings from these funds be used to sponsor the Tripp County Club feeder calf pen of three contest. This is a new contest that was started in 2014 and until now has not had a permanent sponsor. Larry enjoyed taking care of his calves. He was excited that a young 4-Her chose to show one of his calves and he loved helping wash and groom that calf.

As most people know, Larry lived to help others and especially enjoyed those things where kids were involved.

50 Years of Selling Avon

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By Dan Bechtold, Editor

Fifty years ago, Clarice Poler of Colome started selling Avon products.

Avon is the world famous manufacturer and seller of cosmetics and personal care products.

For the Colome woman it was a change to start an exciting career.

She started selling on Nov. 8, 1966 and has no plans to retire. However, this month she will celebrate a milestone with Avon.

Her sister, Dorothy Rohde sold Avon and was moving to town. She asked Clarice if she would like to take over her job. Poler explained she received encouragement from several people to take on the new job.

She was assigned a certain area to sell and had between 40 to 50 customers. Mainly working in the rural area. She would drive and visit the women, showing them samples of new products and taking their orders.