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Jaguar of Week
award begins at
SV High School
Rotating SV staff
member makes award. . .
The staff at Southeast Valley High School will
be naming a Jaguar of the Week, a new form of recognition for SV high school students.
Each week the Southeast Valley High School
staff chooses a student who they feel is deserving of the
title Jaguar of the Week. This means that a member of
Southeast Valley staff noticed this student doing something that stood out from the crowd. At Southeast Valley
High School, we know that the students who work hard
and behave in positive ways succeed highly in all areas of
their life.
Each member of the staff at Southeast Valley
High School (including cooks, secretaries and teachers )
will at some point have the opportunity to pick a student
A steel water main pipe has holes in it from the
water main break in Dayton (see water leakage). The
break was found on Monday, January 23. The city employees fixed the water main break just before the heavy snow
came down on Tuesday, January 24. The water main break
was east of Goldie Mumpers house (308 1st Street NW) and
North Main Street on 4th Avenue Northwest.
Webster Township is bounded on the west by
the town of Lehigh, north by Washington Township, east
by Hamilton County and the south border is the meandering Des Moines River. The whole township is approximately 20 square miles. The north and east portions are
flat and tillable, mostly Clarion-Webster soil, the west
and south are scenic hills and timberland inhabited by
deer, fox, squirrel, several species of wild birds and many
varieties of wild edibles.
Webster Township is the site of Vegors Cemetery which was given to the county by the Vegors family
in 1949. At that time there was a need for a place to bury
Mrs. Lott, the first white woman to die in the county. She
died from exposure after the Indians had raided the Lott
Years ago...
cabin. The Vegors family owned a scenic hilltop overlooking the meeting place of the Boone and Des Moines
rivers. On this hilltop there were also 5 Indian mounds
and Mrs. Lott was buried there.
In 1960, the bones of eleven prehistoric people were discovered by State Archaeologists in a digging near here. They were classified as Middle Woodlands-- people who lived between 500 BC and 500 AD.
Their bones were buried in the Vegors Cemetery with
a headstone explaining the story. Government and Department of Interior had a ceremony with an Air Force
Military plane flying overhead. It is a scenic and historic
site, peaceful and nostalgic. This writer wonders who financed the large spiraling marker, as part of her family
had died shortly after the raid.
Vegors Cemetery
In Webster Township is an old Indian burying
ground, which was taken over by the earliest pioneers
and it is now know as Vegors Cemetery.
Here is buried Benjamin Bell (1751-1853) a
Revolutionary War soldier who served under General
George Washington.
Also nearby is a Memorial shaft to the first pioneer woman to die in what is now the county of Webster.
Luke Vangilder shovels snow on the sidewalk
on the north side of Family Pharmacy. Luke is the son of
Brenda Hagge, who is a pharmacy technician at Family
Pharmacy.
Dayton Review
be announced July 17 at the Iowa Soil and Water Conservation District Commissioners Annual Conference in
Altoona.
As part of receiving the award, the 2017 Conservation Farmer of the Year winner will receive free
use of a John Deere 6E Series utility tractor, for up to 12
months or 200 hours of use. The prize, valued at more
than $12,000, is once again donated by the Farm Bureau
partner Van Wall Equipment of Perry and John Deere.
The Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land
Stewardship is responsible for a wide range of programs
that affect the quality of life of all Iowans, including those
living on the farm and in our towns and cities. The Departments mission is to provide leadership for all aspects
of agriculture in Iowa, ensure consumer protection and
public health, and promote the responsible use of our
natural resources.
Mbeztnjui!
Senator Grassley
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With the power of gospel and the precision of Broadway,
START
AT $25!
U.S. Senator Chuck Grassley will begin holding
meetings with Iowans in every county this new year with
meetings that started on Monday, Jan. 16, in Grundy and
Black Hawk counties.
With these meetings, Grassley will begin his
37th year holding meetings in every one of Iowas 99
counties. Grassley has held at least one meeting with
Iowans in every county, every year since he was first
elected to the U.S. Senate in 1980.
Representative government is a two-way street,
and its strengthened by dialogue between elected officials and the people we represent, Grassley said. I look
forward to events and meetings where I listen to comments, hear concerns and respond directly to questions.
Im committed to keeping in touch with Iowans.
In order to hear from the greatest cross-section
of Iowans, Grassley holds these meetings in a variety of
settings: county courthouses, community centers, hospitals, factories, schools, places of business and others.
This is to allow Iowans to meet with and ask questions
of their U.S. Senator where they work, where they live,
where they worship and where they study. Grassley also
frequently holds more than one meeting in each county
each year in order to visit with as many Iowans as possible.
~ ww.daytongowrienews.com ~
Daven Rees
Robert Jepsen
Ramona Thompson
Ada Hayden Heritage Park Lake--Rainbow
Trout - No Report: The next trout stocking will be Saturday, Feb. 4th at noon pending good ice conditions. A
decision will be made early in the week of Jan. 30th.
Don Williams Lake--Black Crappie - Good:
Use wax worms or minnows. Target the mid-lake section
at depths of 15-25 feet; schools of crappie are moving
through suspended.
Brushy Creek Lake--Ice is variable on Brushy
Creek Lake, especially near shore and areas of inflows.
Expect some open areas near flooded timber and near
shore. Use extreme caution and test ice thickness often
when venturing out. Bluegill - Fair: Use a small jig tipped
with a wax worm. Black Crappie - Fair: Try wax worms
and minnows fished on a small jig.
Moorland Pond--Approximately 1,500 rainbow trout were stocked on Jan. 20th. Fishing was excellent during the stocking event. Fishing remains good for
days and even weeks after the event. Use live minnows
fished under a bobber. Try also small tube and twister
jigs, in-line spinners and casting spoons.
Review
THEDayton
GOWRIE
NEWS
Boxholm minister
speaks Jan. 19
at Dayton Dreamers
Seventeen Dayton Dreamers members and two
guests met at noon at the Dayton Community Center on
Thursday, January 19th. Although the day was sunshiny
and balmy and there were only patches of snow and ice
on the ground, It did not seem that winter had arrived
yet.
However, pianist Alice Johnson, rendered two
wintry songs on the piano.....Winter Wonderland and Let
it Snow! Let it Snow! Let it Snow! Ironically, a week
later, a winter snowstorm swept through our area leaving
5 to 8 inches of snow in its wake!!!
The Reverend Beth Morgan of Boxholm, our
guest speaker, was asked to say the table grace. Our dinner consisted of Lasagna, an Italian salad, garlic bread,
and homemade shortcake cookies for dessert. Beverages
are furnished.
After dinner, President Bonnie Reck introduced
our guest, Jeanette, the daughter of members Willard and
Linda Haglund .
The guest speaker, Pastor Beth Morgan, was
then introduced. She spoke of her lifes journey of after
attending college and receiving a degree in Home Economics, she taught in Illinois for a time. After getting married and having 3 daughters, she moved back to Iowa.
Beth then went back to college and obtained her
Masters degree in Special Education. Eventually, she
became interested in becoming a minister of God. In August, 2016, she received her first call to the Methodist
church in Boxholm.
She also is a pastor at the churches in Otho,
Lehigh, and Farnhamville. She is assisted by a lay minister from Webster City and a retired minister who all have
to follow a rigid schedule having to pastor 4 churches.
She is a proud grandmother of a 4 month old baby boy.
Bonnie Reck opened the business meeting by
leading us in saying the Pledge of Allegiance to the Flag.
Secretary Johnson read the minutes of the December 15th
meeting as well as giving the Treasurers report. A motion was made and seconded to accept the reports as read.
Motion passed.
Secretary Johnson then read correspondence received from Sister Lois Lehman at Christmas time. She is
doing fine and is enjoying her retirement.Sister Lois also
thanked us for wishing her an early happy birthday which
Choose
The Blues
20 Years Ago . . .
Scott Engquist, Owner of Engquist Lumber,
Harcourt, was recently elected to the board of trustees of
the Iowa Lumber Association. Engquist was elected to
this position during the general business meeting of the
ILA at its annual convention in Des Moines.
Engquist brings 13 years experience in the retail
building material industry and currently serves on the associations legislative committee.
Locally Scott serves on the Harcourt Development Community Club. Scott and his wife, Diane and
children Alexander and Thomas are members of Faith
Lutheran Church.
Anita K Dargy, Dayton, received a $250 grant
from DMACC Alumni Association. Dargy is enrolled in
DMACCs Nursing program.
The Tri-County Tourism Group of Dayton has
been awarded a $616 grant to produce a brochure promoting Boone, Hamilton and Webster counties. The
grant is provided by the Central Iowa Tourism Region.
Unofficial results from the Webster County
District 2 special election, Bernard Monson, Gowrie,
461 votes; Dick Tell, Dayton, 334 votes; Arthur Sollie,
Gowrie, 142; Beverly Kehoe, rural Gowrie, 104; Peter
Owenson, Ft. Dodge, 286; Brad VanKooten, rural Callender, 40; Lee Phillips, Otho, 31; Dean Vogel, Otho, 29;
and Donna Dornath, Rt 1 Ft. Dodge, 40.
The Board has been in a program to move classes from the Burnside and Dayton centers so each grade
section is in the same building. This will result in grades
K-2, lower elementary, to be located in Dayton; grades
3-5, upper elementary, to be in Burnside. This will take
effect with the 1995-96 school year.
Earl Wertz, 89 was photographed picking mums
Dec. 5 when the temperature was only 12 degrees above
zero. He took them to Fanny Reed, a former Lehigh resident, currently residing at the Grandview Health Care
Center, celebrating her 103rd birthday.
Evelyn Frances Ervin Enger, Shasta Lake City,
California, celebrated her 86th birthday Saturday, Jan.
14, 1995. Evelyn was born in Dayton and is a cousin of
Mrs. Maurice (Rosalie) Engman, Dayton. She plans to
visit Dayton next summer.
30 Years Ago . . .
The Central Webster Eagles collected another
victory Tuesday Jan. 10 by defeating the Gilmore City
Brigade 58-40. The game was played in Burnside.
The Eagles pulled away by six points in the first
Quarter 16-10 and were never really threatened during
the entire contest. Central led at the half 34-21 and 4732 at the end of the third quarter. Dan Hansen had the
hot hand to claim scoring honors for the night with 28
points for Central: Daymon Peterson had one of his better nights, collecting 15 points. Other points were scored
by Mike Rowen 7, Ron Smith 4, Steve Root 2 and Scott
Housken 2. Central made 28 field goals and two of four
free throws. Hansen also led the Eagles on the defence by
grabbing 12 rebounds. Steve Root was a big help, hauling
down nine rebounds.
Jill Ainslie, 17 year-old Dayton High School
Senior, is having a change of pace from attending regular
classes this semester. Jill was recently selected to serve
as a Senate Page for the 70th General Assembly 1984
session. Jill was selected from nearly 100 applicants and
approved by the Senate Rules and Administration Committee.
Senate Pages perform numerous responsibilities
for Senators while the legislature is in session. Jill is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Ainslie of Dayton.
40 Years Ago . . .
Grand Community School District Homecoming King and Queen were presented to the public Friday
night Jan. 18 following the Basketball game. Reigning as
Grand Community King and Queen for this year are Jim
Hanson and Lavon Johnson.
The Queen candidates were Lavon Johnson,
Jona Baker and Judy Merriam.
King candidates for the occasion were Jim Hanson, Mike Whorlow, and Brian Bovey.
At the Capri Theatre in Lake City the Features
were Dont look in the Basement and Pat Garrett and
Billy The Kid.
Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Skoglund of Dayton, spending the winter months in Tempe, Az., were honored on
their 50th wedding anniversary Wednesday, Jan. 23. The
party, held at Contempo Mobile Home Park in Tempe,
was hosted by their children, Gary and Sue Skoglund,
Connecticut; Charles and Joan Skoglund, Dayton; and
Jim Skoglund, San Francisco, California. Many friends
and relatives attended.
Diane Lundberg, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Lundberg, Dayton began student teaching at Wallace Elementary in Des Moines Jan. 20. She is attending
Northwest Missouri State University earning her teaching degree.
Seth Engman celebrated his second birthday
Monday, Dec. 2. He is the son of Capt. Rodney and Lynn
Engman, Andover, England. Grandparents are Rosalie
and Maurice Engman, Dayton; Mr. and Mrs. Gordon
Plahn, Lehigh; Mr. and Mrs. Keith Squire, Centerville.
Great grandmother is Myrtle Sandholm, Dayton.
Air National Guard 2nd Lt. Kathryn E. Bass,
daughter of Donald W. and Evelyn A. Bass of Harcourt,
has graduated from the U.S. Air Force personel officer
course at Keesler Air Force Base, Miss.
Members of the Dayton girls volleyball team
have been sited for excellence in academic achievement
by the Iowa High School Athletic Association and the
Iowa Girls High School Athletic Union. Excellence is
awarded to teams with a combined grade point average
of 3.0 to 3.24. Dayton Coach Ruth Hoogeveen presented
each member of the volleyball team with a certificate and
the school received a large one to place in the trophy case.
Dayton Cub Scouts Pack 26 held their pack
meeting Jan. 27 at Emanuel Lutheran Church with Cubmaster Cliff Cameron conducting. Troy Troutwine and
Tobie Schuh recieved their Wolf badge, gold arrow and
silver arrow. Ricky Anderson received his Bobcat badge.
Dayton Review
Authorized
independent
Agents for
Wellmark.
BlueCross
BlueShield
of Iowa
You Just Cant Beat The Blues
Mark klever
515-547-2317
Southeast Webster
High School!
since 1949
Carson-Stapp Dayton
Funeral
Home
Card of Thanks!
The family of Mike Picard would
like to thank the great people of Gowrie and
surrounding areas for their love, kindness, and
support.
A special thank you to Aaron, Julie,
Rick, Terry, and Pam for their hours of hard
work and the silent auction donors
for their compassion and generosity.
Thank you!!!
The family of Mike Picard
Box 6 Dayton, IA 50530-0006
Ph# 515.547.2811 Fax 515.547.2337
E-mail daytonreview@lvcta.com
www.daytongowrienews.com
Official
Newspaper of
Webster County, Iowa
Published Wednesdays
DAYTON REVIEW
(USPS 149740) is published weekly for $30 Webster, Boone and Hamilton County, $32 Other Iowa Counties and $34 Out of state;
single copy 85 by the Dayton Review, 25 South Main, Dayton, IA 50530-0006. Periodicals postage paid at Dayton, Iowa.
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to the DAYTON REVIEW, PO Box 6, Dayton, IA 50530-0006
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A Northwest Iowa grandmother recently received a disturbing phone call.
The caller told her, You dont know me, but
your granddaughter is in jail in Michigan and needs
money wired immediately, noted Carol Ehlers, a human
sciences specialist in family finance with Iowa State University Extension and Outreach.
The caller also said, Im calling from a pay
phone and you cant call back. The grandmother identified this as a scam, didnt send the money and hung up!
Ehlers said.
According to Ehlers, recent Iowa police department and Federal Trade Commission reports indicate
scammers are posing as relatives or friends, calling or
sending messages to urge people to wire money immediately.
Theyll request cash to help with an emergency
like getting out of jail, paying a hospital bill or needing
to leave a foreign country. Their goal is to trick you into
sending money before you realize its a scam, Ehlers explained.
Ehlers recommends following the steps recommended by the FTC if someone calls or sends a message
claiming to be a family member or a friend desperate for
money:
Resist the urge to act immediately, no matter
how dramatic the story is.
Verify the persons identity by asking questions
that a stranger couldnt possibly answer.
Call a phone number for your family member or
friend that you know to be genuine.
Check the story out with your family or circle of
friends, even if youve been told to keep it a secret.
Dont wire money and dont send a check or
money order by overnight delivery or courier.
Report possible fraud at ftc.gov/complaint or by
calling 1-877-FTC-HELP.
According to Ehlers, This scam highlights the
dangers of wiring money, or providing prepaid money
card numbers or bank account information to strangers by telephone. The Iowa Attorney General indicates
that these types of transactions, which generally transfer
Competing at large group speech contest performing musical theatre South Pacific were Leah Gibbons, Bailey Miller, Patti Snyder, Claire Whalen, Todd
Hamilton, and Tommy Lennon.
dents boarded
Saturday morning, January 21, 2017, 30 stua bus to Manson Northwest Webster High
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 14 8 pm
JOIN US FOR A PRE-SHOW DINNER!
Dinner tickets are available for purchase at 515-294-2479
or in person at the Stephens Auditorium Ticket Office.
Present this ad for one FREE non-alcoholic beverage at the show!
TICKETS
START
AT $25!
Review
THEDayton
GOWRIE
NEWS
Southeast Valley
Schedule of Events
Week of Feb 1st to Feb 8th
Wednesday, Feb 1
SVHS Band Fundraiser Jan 16 thru Feb 1
Thursday, Feb 2
Early Dismissal @ 2:20PM
PVES - NO PM Preschool
4:00 p.m. Grades 5-12 P/T Conferences 4-8pm
6:00 p.m. B JVR Basketball GAME - Webster City @
Southeast Valley
Friday, Feb 3
NO SCHOOL
Teacher In-service Day - Dayton and Farnhamville
teachers
6:00 p.m. B&G V Basketball GAME - Southeast
Valley @ East Sac County
Saturday, Feb 4
State Large Group Speech @ Spencer
12:00 p.m. B V Wrestling 2A SECTIONAL - @
Humboldt
Sunday, Feb 5
2:00 p.m. Spring Play Chess Tournament
Fundraiser - SVHS Commons and Vocal Room
Monday, Feb 6
STATE WIDE Iowa Assessment Testing Feb 6th
thru 10th
PVES - NO AM Preschool
5:00 p.m. B&G JV & B JVR Basketball GAME Madrid @ Southeast Valley
Tuesday, Feb 7
Drake Honor Jazz
4:30 p.m. B JV Basketball GAME - Paton-Churdan
@ Southeast Valley
6:00 p.m. B&G V Basketball GAME - PatonChurdan @ Southeast Valley
Wednesday, Feb 8
SVHS Tri-M Singing Valentines
*Schedule is pulled from the SV website for your convenience*
www.southeastvalley.org
***Schedules are subject to change at anytime***
Senator Grassley
comments on picking
Supreme Court Judge
Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck
Grassley made the following statement after a meeting at
the White House on the Supreme Court vacancy.
Throughout the past year, I said that no matter who won the election, we would move the process
forward with the new Presidents nominee. And thats
what well do. The consultation today with President
Trump, Vice President Pence, Leader McConnell, Senator Schumer and Ranking Member Feinstein was necessary and a step in the right direction. We had a productive
and frank discussion. For my part, I told the President
that he made a very good start with his list of 21 widely
respected and mainstream judges.
The most important criteria is to pick someone
who will adhere to the law and the Constitution. They
must be committed to following the law, not making
the law. Im looking forward to learning who President
Trump selects and the confirmation process ahead.
B Y
Please go with me on another trip back into my
memories of Mission Jamaica and my having had the opportunity to serve at West Haven Childrens Orphanage.
When the orphanage was first established the plan was
to take in babies and very young children and upon their
reaching eighteen would have to be moved on. The Jamaican government was not rich and to my knowledge,
still isnt. They did their best but as word got out about
this place they soon were overcrowded but it was hard
to turn away those children, some with very severe birth
defects or maladies. In Jamaica most families have
trouble supporting children who are normal and there
are just no or few facilities to handle the cases of a nonperfect baby or family abilities to know how or be trained
to do it. As it has turned out, most will be at West Haven
for life. There simply is no other place.
One of the first young women I met at the orphanage was Colleen. She was around sixteen at the time.
Colleen was a tall slim girl and very loving. She did not
speak though I, as did others, feel she may have had the
ability at one time but ----. The story was that Colleen had
been brought to West Haven on a temporary basis and
that when her sister got established in the working world
and had a permanent home she would be back to get her.
Colleen is now in her thirties and is till at the home. But,
Colleen has grown in her abilities even though she still
does not communicate vocally. She understands what is
said to her and has become quite the little mother, helping with the younger children in many ways. She is a
loving person and likes to have someone give her a little
hug around the shoulders and tell her she is doing a good
job. Colleen is a basically happy person.
Nioki is another adult child, also somewhere
in her thirties. Nioki, a short, a bit pudgy girl, was born
with Down Syndrome and has not developed a long way
S A R A
D O W N S
Southeast Valley
JVR defeats South
Central Calhoun
On January 23rd, the Boys JVR Jaguar Basketball team traveled to Lake City to take on the JVR team
of South Central Calhoun. The final outcome resulted in
a victory for the young Jaguar team by the score of 49-37.
Leading statistical leaders for the Jags were
Chase Swieter with 17 points and 3 blocks, Carter Lane
with 10 points, 5 assists, and 5 steals, Robert Jepsen with
7 points, 7 rebounds, and 3 blocks, Hunter Kruse with 6
points and multiple pass deflections, Ethan Pliner with
4 points, Lincoln Miller with 3 points, and Ross Halligan with 2 points. Also contributing to the efforts was
Joel Lambert with 6 total rebounds, 4 of which from the
offensive glass, Dillon Systma, Gavin Richman, Adam
Dellachiesa, Lucas Samuelson, and Brock Fleming.
End of Quarter Scores throughout the game
played out as followed: Q1: SV 17, SCC 6; Q2: SV 29,
SCC 14; Q3: SV 42, SCC 16; Q4: SV 49, SCC 37.
Thank you, and GO Jags!
Dayton Review
SV Jaguar varsity
basketball team
wins two, loses one
14-2 record...
The SV Boys Varsity Basketball team lost to
Pocahontas Area by the score of 74-56 on January 26 at
Pocahontas.
Leading statistical leaders were Kaleb Jondle,
18; Myles Davis, 17; Dakota Jaeschke, 8; Jaxon Myers, 5;
Alex Pliner, 4; Jaden Cline, 2; and Nolan Brand 2 points.
The SV Varsity Boys' basketball team bounced
back with two wins on Friday Jan. 27 and Saturday Jan.
28 against Graettinger-Terril/Ruthven-Ayrshire (67-58)
and St. Mary's, Storm Lake (83-73).
Graettinger-Terril/Ruthven-Ayrshire
Leading statistical leaders in the GraettingerTerril/Ruthven-Ayrshire game were Dakota Jaeschke
with 18 points, Keegan Goodwin 13 point and 4 assists,
Nolan Johnson 12 points, Myles Davis 9 points and 8 rebounds, Kaleb Jondle 4 points, Alex Pliner 4 points and
14 rebounds, Tommy Lennon 3 points, Ryan Gustafson 2
points, and Nolan Brand 2 points.
St. Mary's, Storm Lake
Leading statistical leaders in the St. Mary's,
Storm Lake game were Dakota Jaeschke with 19 points
and 19 rebounds and 6 assists, Keegan Goodwin 19
points, Nolan Brand 10 points and 7 rebounds, Ryan Gustafson 10 points, Myles Davis 9 points, Nolan Johnson 6
points, Kaleb Jondle 5 points, Jaxon Myers 3 points, and
Alex Pliner with 2 points.
The Jaguars are winding down the season with
only a handful of games left. After a week of some long
distance travel games the Jaguars will enjoy a couple
home games this week. The Jaguars Varsity record is
now 14-2.
Southeast Valley JV girls traveled to Lake City
Monday, January 23rd, to face South Central Calhoun.
The Jaguars suffered a cold start on offense, and struggled
from the free-throw line. Despite a hard fought secondhalf battle, the Jaguars lost 24-33.
The Jags trailed at half-time 7-21. In the third
quarter, the ladies came out firing, scoring nine points,
while holding the Titans to only one point. Cold shooting
haunted the Jaguars again in the fourth quarter. Aggressive play from the girls yielded numerous trips to the freethrow line, but didnt connect, shooting just 4 of 14 from
the line as a team. Delaney Conrad led the second-half
surge, scoring nine of her 11 points. Mackenzie Crampton and Viatris Scott added 4 points apiece. Jaynie Ferrari
ended the contest with 3 points. Cassi Berglund chipped
in 2 points for the Jags.
SV JVR Girls Host Madrid
Southeast Valley JVR girls hosted Madrid
Thursday, January 26th, in Gowrie. The Jaguars battled
tough, but fell to the Tigers 21-39.
Hannah DeVries powered the Jaguar offense
THEDayton
GOWRIE
NEWS
Review
The Jaguar wrestling team closed their dual season with three victories January 26, Thursday night at
Alta. In the first dual, the Jags handled West Bend Mallard 63-12; the second dual came down to the final match
with Coledon Bethel winning the decision and the Jags
won 39-36.
In the final dual the Jags wrestled well and defeated East Sac 60-24. Coledon Bethel, Mason Goodwin,
Colton Klingson, Trey Lawrence, Kaelan Lundberg, Kyler Fisher, and Clayton McFarland went 3-0 for the night.
Sam Hemmestad and Xavier Nichols finished 2-1; Alex
Pudenz went 1-2, Evan McCrady 1-0, Calvin Williamson
0-1, and Jake Peterson finished 0-3. Matt Ross went 1-0
in JV action.
For having three of our guys out of the lineup
y
.the boys wrestled well. We had to shift guys around as
dbest as we could as we had holes at 152, 160, and 138.
In the first dual, Xavier Nichols continues to im-
prove pinning his West Bend opponent that beat him in
dthe conference tournament. Colton Klingson also came
,back with a big pin against his East Sac opponent who
ghad previously pinned him in the conference tournament.
The guys rattled off some nice dual meet wins
-
-in January to finish the season at 15-12. The boys finmish the regular season at the always tough Guthrie Center
fInvite Saturday, January 28 before entering post season
-sectional wrestling at Humboldt, Saturday February, 4th.
i
d
On Saturday, January 28th, the Jaguar wrestlers
wrapped up their regular season participating in the ACdGC Charger Invite, formerly known as the Guthrie Cendter Invite as Guthrie Center and Adair-Casey entered a
sharing agreement this year resulting in the name change
eof the tournament.
The tournament features a JV tournament in the
morning and Varsity wrestling immediately following JV
tournament. Six Jag wrestlers were entered in JV portion
and eight wrestlers competed in Varsity portion. Evan
McCrady, Alex Pudenz, and Matt Ross walked away
with Championship brackets wrestling
in four man round robin
AC-GC Invite
In the last match, Thursday night at Alta, Trey
Lawrence recorded a fall and his 100th career win! Photo
by Emilea Lundberg.
brackets.
Evan and Alex
finished 3-0 while Matt
finished 5-0 in their respective brackets; Calvin
Williamson finished in
second place going 2-1
and Jake Peterson and Sam
Hemmestad went 1-2 finishing in third place.
With only eight
wrestlers in the varsity
tournament, the Jag wrestlers earned some respect
at the end of the day finishing in sixth place out
of twenty-two teams at
the always tough ACGC Invite. 170 lbs. Kyler
Fisher(43-1) won his first
title by defeating Gunnar
Grunsted(38-9) 7-2 in the
finals.
In the first round
Kyler received a bye; in the
quarterfinals Kyler pinned
Alan Wallace(WCV) in
Jaguar wrestling
continued on page 9...
Wrestling Cheerleaders...
The wrestling cheerleaders in the front row left to right are Jessica Shirbroun,
Haylee Keller, and Bailey Dorsey; Back row left to right are Kanyon Pepples, Bailey Miller,
Shelby Hofbauer, and Lauren Jackson. Photo by Niceswanger Photography.
Dayton Review
CHURCH
Vegors Cemetery...
continued from front page...
Worship Schedule
We have SIX
locations to serve you!
515.352.3151
Boxholm Dayton
Farnhamville Gowrie
Harcourt Lehigh
Sandholm Sandholm
Insurance
Real Estate
Dayton
547-2311
23 South Main
Dayton, IA 50530
(515)547-2311
Jim Blair
Sanitation
Roll Offs
& Recycling
(515)359-2211
Carson-Stapp
Funeral Home
515/879-2716
515/571-1271
TCB Sanitation
Tim & Staci Blair
Dayton
Ogden
Harcourt 354-5570
Jeff Heck operates his snowblower on his moms (
Sheri Heck) driveway. Photo by Sheri Heck
Landus Cooperative will have an informative
meeting for farmers on Monday, Feb. 6, at 209 Main Restaurant in Paton.
Registration for all events begins at 9:30 a.m.
with the meeting beginning at 10:00 a.m. There are also
many other meeting dates.
Area growers are invited to a series of informational sessions to learn about results from the largest
farmer-owned cooperative research plot in the nation.
Landus Cooperatives agronomy team will highlight four years of data from the cooperatives 184-acre
Research Plot in Farnhamville, Iowa as well as results
from nearly 90 corn and soybean seed plots statewide.
This is a mass of field data results not available
by any other farmer-owned agronomy retailer in the nation, explained the cooperatives director of agronomy,
Todd Claussen. Our team has done the work to drill
down to actionable steps our growers can take to improve
their bottom line.
Sessions will focus on the return on investment
(ROI) for a variety of management practices and issues
including Sudden Death Syndrome, the impact of seed
rate as compared to planting date as well as the benefits
of fungicide.
Girls basketball...
continued from page 6...
with 9 points, including a shot from behind the arch.
Jaynie Ferrari used her inside game to contribute 4 points.
Savanah Seehusen and Delaney conrad each drained a
three-pointer, ending with 3 points apiece. Taegen Long
hustled for the Jaguars and hit a jumper to collect 2 points.
SV JV Girls Dominate Madrid
The Southeast Valley JV girls hosted Madrid
Thursday, January 26th, in Gowrie. The Jaguars defended their home court, defeating the Tigers 32-18.
The Jaguar JV girls pounded out twenty firsthalf points. Holding the Tigers scoreless until the final
two minutes of the second quarter, entering the locker
room at half-time with a commanding 20-6 lead.
The lady Jags continued their hustle effort in
the third quarter, resulting in eight more offensive points.
Controlling the defensive end, the Jags allowed Madrid
only two points in the third quarter. Mackenzie Crampton
paced the Jaguar offensive effort with a solid 9 points.
Delaney Conrad brought the intensity, finishing
with 8 points. Viatris Scott put the work in, collecting
her reward by scoring 7 points for the Jags. Payton Erritt
stepped up her game, hitting two jump-shots to finish the
contest with 4 points. Jaynie Ferrari and Hannah DeVries
added 2 points apiece for the Jaguars. Defensively, the
entire Jaguar team rose to the occasion, resulting in a true
Team Victory.
The Jaguar JV girls return to action at home on
Tuesday, January 31st, hosting South Central Calhoun in
Gowrie at 4:30. Then the young Jaguars cap off their
season Monday, February 6th, in Gowrie against Manson
Northwest Webster, following the conclusion of the Varsity girls game.
Jaguar of week...
continued from front page...
Review
THEDayton
GOWRIE
NEWS
Jaguar wrestling...
continued from page 7...
the second period and in the semis Kyler defeated Masson Carpenter(CG) 10-6 to earn his spot in the finals.
eThis was the first time Kyler wrestled 170 so it was defi-nitely a good tournament tournament to win as he begins
ethe post season tournament.
106 lbs. Coledon Bethel(28-13), 132 lbs. Trey
t
-Lawrence(36-7), 160 lbs. Kaelan Lunberg(30-11), and
-HWT. Clayton McFarland(28-13) finished in fourth
-place; 126 lbs. Colton Klingson(17-12) and 220 lbs.
eXavier Nichols(20-15) finished in seventh place and 113
lbs. Mason Goodwin did not place.
Coming off a tough Battle Creek Ida Grove
-
-tournament the previous week the guys really stepped up
aand wrestled in another big tournament.
Five of our guys made the semis, stumbled a
.
,bit with only Kyler advancing to finals but came back
nwith one of our best rounds in a long time going 7 for 7
ein wins in the consolation semis placing our guys in the
nthird/fourth place rounds and seventh/eighth place medal
nrounds.
We would have liked to have our guys win their
-
third place matches but that is something we can work on
in the room as we prepare for Sectionals this Saturday at
Humboldt. Wrestling starts at 12:00.
h
g
Team Scores:
1. Clarion-Goldfield - 169.5; 2. Van Meter 156.0; 3. Panorama - 147.0; 4. Underwood, 130.0; 5.
Woodward-Granger, 128.0; 6. Southeast Valley, 119.0;
7. Southeast Warren, 110.0; 8. AHSTW, 90.0; 9. ACGC,
87.5; 10. Riverside, 78.5; 11. East Union, 75.0; 12. Ogden,
70.0; 13. West Central Valley, 66.0; 14. Moravia, 60.0;
15. Coon Rapids-Bayard, 59.0; 16. Manson Northwest
Webster, 52.0; 17. Greene County, 49.0; 18. Tri-Center,
33.5; 19. Nevada, 24.0; 20. Nodaway Valley, 17.0; 21.
Griswold, 16.0; and 22. Collins Maxwell Baxter, 9.0
5727. (INCN)
Kari Swisher
Adam Swisher
Speak To An Owner,
Not A Salesman
Gowrie
515.352.3891
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10
Dayton Review
Public Notice
Your Right to Know
Dayton Light and Power
Public Notice
Your Right to Know
City of Dayton
Abigail Anderlik, Dayton, has been named to
the Kirkwood Community College Deans List for the
Fall 2016 semester.
These students have achieved a 3.3 grade point
average or higher after completing 12 or more credit
hours at the college.
THE Dayton
GOWRIE
NEWS
Review
11
The Southeast Valley girls JV traveled to Glidden Thursday, January 5th. The Jaguars came up just
short of victory 34-37.
Delaney Conrad led the Jaguars offense, bringing in the new year with 15 points. Cassi Berglund came
to work for the Jags, pumping out 8 points. Mackenzie
Crampton scored 6 points to help the Jaguars. Ebony
Scott and Jaynie Ferrari scored 2 points apiece. Payton
Erritt sank a free-throw to finish the contest with 1 point.
The Lady Jags entered half time trailing 12-21. The Jaguars outscored G-R 22-16 in the second half, proving
there is absolutely No Quit in this young Jaguar team.
The Jags will continue to learn and grow and get better.
SV JV Girls Experience Hardwood Heart-breaker
On Monday, January 9th, the Southeast Valley
JV girls hosted Roland-Story, in Gowrie. The Jaguars
dropped the hard fought battle 31-32.
The Jags entered half-time trailing 13-18. In
the second half SV outscored RS 18-14, but that wasnt
enough to overcome their first quarter shooting slump.
Cassi Berglund, Mackenzie Crampton, and Delaney
Conrad pounded out 8 points apiece to power the Jaguar
offense. Jaynie Ferrari helped build Jaguar momentum
by adding 4 points. Savanah Seehusen drained a threepointer in the third quarter to tie the ballgame. Seehusen
finished with 3 points.
Second-Half Rally Not Enough for Jaguar JV
Southeast Valley JV girls traveled to Clarion
Tuesday, January 10th. The Jaguars fell to the Cowgirls
26-35.
Mackenzie Crampton led the Jaguar offense
with 8 points. Delaney Conrad and Jaynie Ferrari contributed 5 points apiece. Viatris Scott sparked the Jags with
a three-pointer, finishing the game with 3 points. Ebony
Scott and Hannah DeVries connected on a jump-shot, to
end with 2 points each. Cassi Berglund took a trip to the
free-throw line to collect 1 point.
The Jaguars trailed 7-20 at half-time. Jaguar defensive hustle opened the second-half, allowing C-G only
five third-quarter points, but only scoring one point themselves. Finally, the Jaguars offense came to life, scoring
14 fourth quarter points. The Jaguar JV girls brought the
hustle, even though shots werent falling. The Lady Jags
continue to display important building blocks, creating a
solid foundation for their future.
SV JV Girls Fall to NF
Southeast Valley JV girls hosted Newell-Fonda Friday,
January 20th, in Gowrie. The Jaguars lost the contest to
the Mustangs 36-65.
Delaney Conrad and Mackenzie Crampton led the Jaguars offensive attack with 9 points apiece. Conrad shot an
impressive 5 of 6 from the free-throw line. Viatris Scott
hustled on the court, scoring 5 points for the Jags. Savanah Seehusen knocked down a shot from behind the
arch to start the second quarter, contributing 3 points to
the Jaguars offense. Payton Erritts hard work produced
3 points for the Jags.
Aggressive play form Cassi Berglund, resulted
in free-throws. Berglund took advantage, sinking 3 of 4,
finishing the contest with 3 points. Lexi Corell swished
a jump shot to collect 2 points. Jaynie Ferrari knocked
down both of her free-throws to end the game with 2
points.
The Jaguars took full advantage from the freethrow line making 12 of 16 on the night. Along with
improvement in the the free-throw department, the Jags
scored twice as many points, and narrowed the loss margin, than in their previous season meeting with the Mustangs.
Lathe Muench and Jesse Hanson have fun in the
snow Saturday, January 28 in Dayton.
12
Dayton Review
Currently 13-2...
The Southeast Valley JV Boys Basketball team
defeated Madrid 55-47 Thursday, January 26 at home.
The boys had a tremendous night of rebounding
with 39 for the night. We also had a great night shooting
68% from the free throw line.
Leading the charge for the Jaguars were Zach
Graves with 15, JJ Graves, 10; Jackson Housken, 8; Nyles Johnson and Mason Ackerson both with 5; and Kenny Blunk, Kyle Zika, and Max Davis all contributed 4
points.
Leading rebounders were Mason Ackerson, 6;
Nyles Johnson, 6; Zach Graves, 6; JJ Graves, 6; Max Davis, 5; Jackson Housken, 5; Kenny Blunk, 4; and Kyle
Zika with 1.
Nyles also lead the team in assits with 6 and
2 steels. The teams current record is 13-2. Keep up the
great work!
SV Jaguar JV team
defeats Madrid
Girls Basketball
Tournament Pairing
February 11th at Cherokee - 7:00 vs Cherokee