Serving Southern Jefferson County in the Great State of Montana

Articles from the March 25, 2026 edition


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  • Cardwell School's QUEST FOR PIXIE DUST

    Mar 25, 2026

  • Mark Your Calendars! Community Wide Garage Sales Slated for June 6-7

    ELENA WAGNER, Whitehall Mini Mall|Mar 25, 2026

    Start your spring cleaning now and get ready for Whitehall’s annual Community Wide Garage Sale weekend - this year, June 6 and 7. Registration for the Community Wide Garage Sale MAP is available as of April 1st at the Western Legacy Center, Thriftway SuperStop, M&M Vintage, the Whitehall Ledger, and the Whitehall Mini Mall. Map registrations must be returned to the Whitehall Mini Mall (Elena Wagner) by May 29, 2026, to proceed with official map printing. Ready for this? Whitehall will also be hosting a fall community-wide garage sale, slated f...

  • Whitehall Resident to Facilitate Free Virtual Workshop for Survivors During Sexual Assault Awareness Month

    STEVIE CROISANT, We Are HER|Mar 25, 2026

    Whitehall resident Stephanie Beeman will facilitate a free virtual workshop for survivors of sexual assault and domestic violence. Beeman is facilitating the workshop on Saturday, April 4, 2025, at 1:00 PM as part of Sexual Assault Awareness Month programming for Cardwell-based nonprofit We Are HER. The 90-minute workshop, titled “Reclaiming Your Narrative,” will bring together 8-10 survivors to explore the narratives they’ve inherited about trauma and healing and decide which stories are authentically theirs to keep. “Whether we’re conscious...

  • Jefferson Valley Museum Annual Meeting & Program Thursday, April 2

    ARLENE WEBER, Jefferson Valley Museum|Mar 25, 2026

    The annual meeting of the Jefferson Valley Museum is scheduled for Thursday, April 2nd, at the Star Theatre. A short business meeting to review the past year and nominate board members whose terms are expiring will start at 6:45 PM, with the program following at 7 PM. This year, a different approach to presenting the program will be used. While past programs have featured a single speaker, or sometimes a pair, this year a talkshow format will be used. The "show" From the Whitetail to Waterloo...

  • Easter Egg Hunt Saturday, April 4th at 1 PM

    Mar 25, 2026

    The annual Whitehall Community Easter Egg Hunt is on, with volunteers teaming up with Whitehall non-profit Whitehall Events to make the family-friendly Easter event an even larger success. The hunt will take place Saturday, April 4th, at 1 PM at the Whitehall Elementary School playground. The hunt is for ages 0-12 with Easter eggs filled with candy and easy-to-grab prizes. Please make sure your hunter has a bag or basket to load up with goodies!...

  • Annual Outdoorsman Night This Friday

    ELIZABETH PULLMAN, Whitehall Ledger|Mar 25, 2026

    The Whitehall Baptist Church is hosting the fifth Annual Outdoorsman Night! Bring your family and enjoy an evening of food and friends, all supporting the Jefferson Valley EMS & Rescue! The event will be held at the Whitehall Community Center on Friday, March 27th. Doors open at 4:30 PM, with the fun beginning at 6 PM. ADVANCED REGISTRATION IS REQUIRED by March 27 at $20 per person. For children seven years and under, it will be $5. Space is limited to 250 attendees, and this event has...

  • Dear Editor: Thank You to Those Who Handled Doherty Fire

    TERRY MURPHY|Mar 25, 2026

    Dear Editor, I wish to thank and to praise the firefighters who handled the fire just east of Doherty Mountain. The effort was incredible considering the heat and the wind they had to deal with. The widespread cooperative support was gratifying. Whitehall Fire, Willow Creek Fire, Three Forks Fire, Harrison Fire, Montana DNRC, U.S. Forest Service, Jefferson County EMS, Jefferson County DES, Jefferson County Sheriff, Jefferson County Dispatch, and Gallatin County Dispatch all deserve the utmost...

  • Dear Editor: The American Crisis

    BILL LUSSENHEIDE, Montana Republican Party Treasurer|Mar 25, 2026

    Dear Editor: In 1776, Thomas Paine wrote in The American Crisis, "These are the times that try men's souls. The summer soldier and the sunshine patriot will, in this crisis, shrink from the service of their country." Paine was describing those who are eager to stand up when times are easy, but disappear when real sacrifice is required. That passage has always stayed with me because it reminds us that public service is supposed to be exactly that-service. Not convenience. Not ambition. And...

  • Dear Editor: Support of Trevor Walter

    SHANNON MANESS, Montana Representative HD70|Mar 25, 2026

    Dear Editor, In the last few election cycles, the people of Montana have voted consistently Republican. The Republicans now hold all state and federal offices and majorities in both chambers of the legislature. While in some instances this has been a good change and we have made some progress, in many cases these majorities have not translated into conservative governance of our state. Our state government is still growing, our budgets have not shrunk, and it is operating well outside its consti...

  • Dear Editor: Who is Speaking, and Why?

    TONY HUDSON, Save American West|Mar 25, 2026

    Dear Editor, Who is speaking, and why? One need go no further than the mailbox to realize another election season is upon us. Inside were the usual glossy flyers telling me who to vote for, who not to vote for, and all the reasons why. I filed them where most of them appropriately belong: the trash can. Normally, I file them in bulk. This time, I tossed them in one at a time. As I closed the lid, jumped back in my truck, and started down the road, a thought crossed my mind. Not one of those...

  • Thought Provokers: Week of 3/25/2026

    Mar 25, 2026

    It’s so dumb that if you bite your lip while chewing, it will swell, so it is now much more likely you’ll bite it again. If someone visited Clark Kent’s apartment and found Superman paraphernalia, that would probably actually work with the Clark Kent cover story and make it more believable that he was just a nerd. The power of invisibility would make you blind when active, because light would just pass straight through your eyes. Companies near the airport could make money by selling billboard space on their roofs. It’s hard to poop without pee...

  • Our Town 100 Years Ago... March 1926

    ARLENE WEBER, Jefferson Valley Museum|Mar 25, 2026

    One might think that March 2026 has been unusually dry and warm, but people were likely thinking the same thing back in March 1926. Through March 23rd of that year, only .15 inches of moisture was recorded (much like February), and temperatures ranged from the mid-40s to the mid-60s. The valley had not seen a temperature below zero for more than 450 days. Headlines from the front pages in March included the Whitehall basketball team placing fifth in the district tournament held here in town; Fra...

  • JVCF Invites You to "A Night for Tomorrow" May 2nd

    JOHN KREIS, Jefferson Valley Community Foundation|Mar 25, 2026

    Jefferson Valley Community Foundation (JVCF) is pleased to announce two community-wide events for the coming spring calendar. First of all, on May 2nd, the group will be hosting a fundraiser at the Whitehall Community Center titled A Night for Tomorrow: The Jefferson Valley Gala. The event will begin at 5 PM, and its primary purpose is to create a scholarship fund and to add to the administrative fund, supporting the current and future needs of the community by adding to the endowment fund. Proceeds and other donations from the JVCF Endowment F...

  • Between the Stacks: Week of March 25th

    JEANNIE FERRISS, Whitehall Community Library|Mar 25, 2026

    With this beautiful weather we have been having, everyone seems to be in full spring cleaning mode at the Whitehall Community Library. One of the questions we are always asked this time of year is what types of donations the library takes. Books make up the largest percentage of items donated to us, but there are a few things we ask of patrons before they bring books in. The first is that patrons do not bring boxes of moldy or dirt-covered books to us. It is dangerous for staff when we empty boxes filled with mouse remains or excrement. If...

  • Ledger Looking Back 25 Years: March 21, 2001

    BROOKLYNN LANES, Whitehall Ledger|Mar 25, 2026

    The Whitehall Chamber of Commerce conducted a status check during its annual meeting on March 15, setting goals for 2001. The chamber received four recent grants totaling $26,500. The money has helped fund the Lewis & Clark Bicentennial murals, studies to shape the community's future, and other projects. WHS Creative Leader of the Week: SHAWN PATRICK. Leadership honors go to senior Shawn Patrick this week for his work on the WHS Student Council. Council advisor Lee Ann Gallagher says Shawn is a...

  • Whitehall Garden Club Meeting Recap: March

    LAURA HORN, Whitehall Garden Club|Mar 25, 2026

    Irish eyes were surely smiling as Hostesses Tara Bowery and Laura Horn set the stage for the March Garden Club meeting, held March 4th, with a bountiful St. Patrick's Day-themed snack table, laden with sugar cookies, sweet bread, mini muffins, and green fruit dip with Granny Smith apple slices. Terry Ross stepped up with a last-minute Fast Ten presentation on the Hawthorne tree, the myth & the legend, which happens to grow here in Whitehall. He provided several fascinating facts about the...

  • Garden Club Meets April 1st

    JOAN MYHRE, Whitehall Garden Club|Mar 25, 2026

    The Whitehall Garden Club’s (WGC) regular monthly meeting will be held on Wednesday, April 1st, in the Whitehall Ambulance Barn located at the corner of North Whitehall Street and West 2nd Street. The public is invited to join us. Membership is not required, but you are welcome to join. Social time begins at 9:30 AM with refreshments provided by our hostesses, Natalie Baumeister and Ann Palmer. A short “Fast-10” presentation will be provided by Mesquite Noyes of Ranching Tradition Fiber on using waste wool as a gardening fertilizer befor...

  • Angel Wings Foundation: Turning Loss into Lifelines in Montana

    ELIZABETH PULLMAN, Whitehall Ledger|Mar 25, 2026

    Montana is known for its strength-its wide-open spaces, its resilient communities, and the quiet determination of the people who call it home. But beneath that strength lies a reality that is far harder to see, and far more urgent to confront. Montana consistently reports one of the highest suicide rates in the nation-nearly twice the national average. Each year, hundreds of lives are lost. These are not distant statistics or abstract numbers. They are neighbors, classmates, coworkers, parents,...

  • Angel Wings May 3 Awareness Walk

    Mar 25, 2026

    Whitehall non-profit Angel Wings Foundation will host a suicide awareness and prevention walk on Sunday, May 3, 2026. The walk, which will take participants all around Whitehall, will both help raise awareness and funds for Angel Wings Foundation. Registration forms are available at angelwingsmontana.org and at the Montana Western Legacy Center, Numb3rs Accounting, and Mountain View Real Estate. Registration is $10; each registrant will receive an Angel Wings bracelet at walk check-in. Participants who raise more than $250 will also receive an...

  • Montana Centenarians to be Honored in October

    TESSA BAILLY, Montana Department of Health and Human Services|Mar 25, 2026

    The Department of Public Health and Human Services (DPHHS) will honor Montana’s centenarians during the 57th annual Governor’s Conference on Aging on Oct. 7, 2026 during a noon luncheon. The annual conference and luncheon will take place at the Hilton Garden Inn in Kalispell. DPHHS is asking Montanans who will turn 100 on or before Dec. 31, 2026, and those who are currently over the age of 100 to submit their name and a brief profile. All centenarians who submit information will receive a recognition certificate from Governor Greg Gia...

  • Op-Ed: The Real Story Behind Montana's Budget

    SENATOR RUSS TEMPEL, Montana Senate District 14|Mar 25, 2026

    As a member of the Senate Finance and Claims Committee during the 2025 session, I was there for every budget debate, both in committee and on the floor. Term limits have me stepping away from Senate District 14, so I can speak plainly, without worrying about a campaign. A recent editorial column featured a “17% budget explosion” untruth and a rehashed miscategorization of why members of the House and Senate banded together with Democrats to vote on important finance and budget bills. Carl Glimm’s fiscal math and session history could use some...

  • Op-Ed: Gianforte's Capitol; Working People Not Welcome

    EMILY MARBURGER, Montana Democratic Party|Mar 25, 2026

    Montana is a state rooted in fairness, equal rights, and community. I’m willing to wager that the vast majority of Montanans deeply cherish their Constitutional rights, like the First Amendment. And yet, the First Amendment in Montana is under attack from the very people who claim to represent us. Governor Gianforte quietly decided that because he doesn’t spend time at the Capitol on the weekends, neither can the general public. At Gianforte’s beck and call, state officials changed permitting rules to effectively ban weekend rallies at the P...

  • April is STRESS AWARENESS Month

    NIKKI BUCK FNP, Ruby Valley Medical Clinic|Mar 25, 2026

    According to a 2025 online poll, by the American Institute of Stress, 69% of U.S. adults say they needed more emotional support in the past year, and 76% say the nation’s future is a significant source of stress. Everyone experiences stress, but over time, stress can lead to health problems, such as digestive issues, headaches, changes in breathing, high blood pressure, joint pain, heart and kidney disease, reproductive issues, allergic reactions, etc. The good news is, there are simple steps in managing your stress, to prevent adverse h...

  • DPHHS Recommends Extending Pediatric RSV Immunizations Through April

    Montana Department of Health & Human Services|Mar 25, 2026

    The Department of Public Health and Human Services (DPHHS) is advising health care providers to continue offering preventive immunizations against Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) for infants and young children through April 30, 2026. In accordance with Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommendations, these steps are being taken to address disease trends currently observed in Montana and across the country. While this common respiratory virus often causes mild, cold-like symptoms, it remains the leading cause of infant...

  • Whitehall Indivisible: HD75 Candidate Sullivan Visits

    HOLLY HARPER, Whitehall Indivisible|Mar 25, 2026

    Whitehall Indivisible welcomed a new addition to the HD 75 campaign trail, Pat Sullivan. House District 75 is the district that residents of Whitehall and most of the surrounding area live in, and currently Mark Reinschmidt serves as its Representative, having been selected by the Republican Party as a replacement when Representative Marta Bertoglio vacated the seat to move to the Department of Commerce. Self-described as a “blue-collar PhD,” Pat Sullivan states he is familiar with how the government works, from decision-making to budgeting, at...

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