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  • How to Pick Plants That Will Thrive in Your Climate

    STATEPOINT|Mar 6, 2024

    When choosing what plants to put down in your yard, you likely focus on the what and the where. After all, a beautiful plant in a prime location enhances curb appeal and even bragging rights. You may pay less attention though to understanding your plant hardiness zone and all the ramifications that come with it. To help ensure your plants don't just survive but thrive, the experts at lawn care equipment manufacturer Exmark are sharing the following insights about plant hardiness: What is Plant...

  • RECIPE OF THE WEEK: Zesty Braised Beef with New Potatoes

    Mar 6, 2024

    St. Patrick's Day presents the perfect opportunity to try authentic Irish cuisine as well as foods and beverages that have become associated strictly with the holiday (like green beer). Someone you know will likely be cooking corned beef and cabbage this St. Patrick's Day. But what if you're among those who don't fancy this familiar favorite's salted and pickled flavoring? Zesty Braised Beef with New Potatoes isn't exactly corned beef, but it can be a worthy alternative. It's warm, filling and...

  • BINGO & Soup Tonight at Trinity Methodist

    TRUDY MCLEAN, Trinity United Methodist Church|Feb 28, 2024

    Everyone is invited to attend an inter-generational (all ages) BINGO and Soup Night on Wednesday, February 28th from 5:30 PM - 7:30 PM at the Trinity United Methodist (102 N. Brooke Street). Come join us for a bowl of soup and time of connection playing Bingo and other games. All are welcome, invited, and encouraged to attend this fun evening!...

  • Ledger Looking Back 25 Years: 2/24/1999

    RITA BROWN, Whitehall Ledger|Feb 28, 2024

    FEBRUARY 24, 1999 Borden's Hotel, a landmark building in downtown Whitehall since 1913, was purchased by Marion and Duane Alberts of Whitehall and reopened for business on February 16th. Sunday afternoon dancing, a 40-year tradition at Borden's, resumed on February 21st and the Alberts said the tradition would be maintained. A group of volunteers was working to provide nest boxes and know-how to encourage recovery of the mountain bluebird population, which once was in deep decline. Volunteers...

  • Between the Stacks: 2/28/2024

    JEANNIE FERRISS, Whitehall Community Library|Feb 28, 2024

    One of the great things about libraries is that the staff learns so many things from the patrons. A patron brought me information on a new Property Tax Assistance Program for the Tax Year 2024. There are applications at the Library and this program offers up to an 80% reduction in property taxes, depending on the owner's income. The applications must be filled out and delivered by April 15, 2024. For all of my favorite techies, the Library will be hosting an evening program on Robotics R What??...

  • WGC Meeting March 6th

    LAURA HORN, Whitehall Garden Club|Feb 28, 2024

    The Whitehall Garden Club will hold its next monthly meeting on Wednesday, March 6, at the Borden's Conference Room. We welcome the public to join us beginning at 9:30 AM to socialize and enjoy refreshments provided by our hostesses Glenna Waltee and Joan Myhre. Our business meeting will begin at 10 AM, followed by an informative program, "Growing by the Moon's Phases," which explores the premise of how the cycles of the moon affect plant growth. The Whitehall Garden Club is a member of the...

  • Long-Distance Rail Route Through Southern Montana Garners Another Nod From Feds

    AMANDA EGGERT, Montana Free PRess|Feb 28, 2024

    A Chicago-to-Seattle passenger rail route that passes through some of Montana's most populous counties has been included in a list of 15 long-distance routes tapped for restoration by the federal government. The development marks the second time federal regulators have spotlighted the Big Sky Passenger Rail Authority's efforts to bring additional passenger train service to Montana. During a meeting on Feb. 8, the Federal Railroad Administration also provided a bit more detail on where the North...

  • Landowners have until March 15 to apply for PALA and UPL programs

    MORGAN E. JACOBSEN, Montana Fish, Wildlife, and Parks|Feb 28, 2024

    Landowners have until March 15 to apply for Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks' Unlocking Public Lands (UPL) Program or the Public Access Land Agreement (PALA) Program. These programs are designed to provide recreational public access to state (Montana Department of Natural Resources and Conservation) or federal (Bureau of Land Management or United States Forest Service) land where no or limited legal public access currently exists. For enrollment in UPL, landowners will receive an income tax...

  • How Montana Pays For Its Public Schools, in Pictures

    ALEX SAKARIASSEN and ERIC DIETRICH, Montana Free Press|Feb 28, 2024

    Educating Montana’s youth is one of the state’s most costly endeavors and a responsibility shouldered by citizens of all stripes: teachers, parents, voters, taxpayers. It’s a promise baked into the very fabric of the state Constitution, which vows to develop the full educational potential of each citizen. How Montana tries to meet that lofty goal, financially speaking, is a constant point of policy wrangling. The intricacies of school budgeting are also a perennial source of confusion for Monta...

  • RECIPE OF THE WEEK: Farmhouse Skillet - A Brunch Staple

    Feb 28, 2024

    On lazy weekend mornings or when entertaining a crowd, it may be more fitting to serve brunch rather than breakfast or lunch. Brunch enables guests or family members to sleep in a little later. Plus the filling combination of menu items can keep people satisfied until dinner later on in the evening. The recipes for Farmhouse Skillet from Lord Honey Traditional Southern Recipes with a Country Bling Twist (Pelican Publishing) by Chef Jason Smith, puts together a blend of savory ingredients into an...

  • Our Town 125 and 100 Years Ago: February, Part II

    ARLENE WEBER, Jefferson Valley Museum|Feb 21, 2024

    8 Years Ago - February, Part II: Depending on who you were, February 1898 was either a good or a terrible month. Things were getting tough for cotton mill owners and workers as the fourth week of a strike moved into the fifth. French Canadian workers from those mills were moving back to Canada causing a potential labor shortage. Heavy rains in Washington, Oregon, Idaho, and western Montana caused many mudslides and negatively affected railroads, especially the Northern Pacific. Yale...

  • 9 Ways to Support Mental Wellness

    STATEPOINT|Feb 21, 2024

    When it comes to overall wellness, focusing on mental health is critical, especially for older adults, according to experts. “As people age, they may experience stressors such as serious illness, losing close friends and family members, managing life on a fixed income, and coping with concerns about their mortality. While seniors may show resilience to these dimensions of vitality when they’re compounded, these losses and stressors can result in a myriad of behavioral health issues, including depression, anxiety, stress, and insomnia,” says...

  • Whitehall Rotarians Help at District Basketball Tournament

    ARLENE WEBER, Whitehall Rotary Club|Feb 21, 2024

    Members of the Whitehall Rotary Club volunteered their time during the District Basketball tournament held at the Manhattan Christian Event Center in Churchill on February 14th through the 17th. More than 65 combined volunteer hours were worked staffing the tournament admission desk, helping with attendance count, and selling tournament programs. Joan Jones, Libby McBride, Karen Burtch, Arlene Weber, Pod Moriarty, and Terry Ross worked in pairs during the tournament putting in at least six...

  • You're Not the Boss in Wilderness

    JOHN CLAYTON, Writers on the Range|Feb 21, 2024

    When my friends and I encountered the fresh grizzly bear scat, we were deep in Wyoming’s Teton Wilderness, 20 miles from a trailhead. I’d seen grizzlies before—from the car. But this experience was on a whole other level. I felt vulnerable, nervous. I also felt fully alive. That feeling owes much to the Wilderness Act, which became law 60 years ago, in 1964. When President Lyndon B. Johnson created a nationwide system of wild landscapes “untrammeled by man,” it gave physical expression to an unusual attitude toward land. The attitude could be...

  • New Hunting, Fishing and Conservation License Year Begins March 1

    MORGAN E. JACOBSEN, Montana Fish, Wildlife, and Parks|Feb 21, 2024

    The new license year opens March 1, which means that is the day you can buy your 2024 hunting, fishing, and conservation licenses and begin applying for permits and special licenses. The deadline to apply for deer and elk permits is April 1. Applications for most species – deer, elk, antelope, deer B licenses, elk B licenses, antelope B licenses, moose, sheep, goat, bison, bear, and turkey – can be made beginning March 1. A new online feature this year is the option for applicants to reapply for the same offerings as last year with just a simpl...

  • FWP Announces Changes to Reservation Process at State Parks

    MORGAN E. JACOBSEN, Montana Fish, Wildlife, and Parks|Feb 21, 2024

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks will implement changes this year to the reservation process for state park sites. The changes will create more opportunities for recreationists to enjoy state parks and comply with legislation passed by the 2023 Legislature. Starting this year, visitors will have up to three months prior to their planned arrival date to make campsite and lodging reservations or purchase tour tickets. This is a change from the six-month booking window in the past. Visitors need to be aware that the maximum stay per site changed...

  • FWP Reopens Public Comment Period for Draft Grizzly Bear and Wolf Management Plans

    MORGAN E. JACOBSEN, Montana Fish, Wildlife, and Parks|Feb 21, 2024

    Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks is reopening the public comment period for the 2024 Grizzly Bear Management Plan and Montana Gray Wolf Conservation and Management Plan to ensure Montana counties, Tribes, and state and federal agencies have a chance for input. The new deadline is March 9. The extension will ensure that the Montana statute requiring FWP to notify county commissioners of opportunities to comment on management plans for grizzly bears, wolves, and other large carnivores has been met. It will also allow for additional time for tribal...

  • RECIPE OF THE WEEK: Deep-Dish Peanut Butter Pie

    Feb 21, 2024

    Math-lovers rejoice each March because they get to celebrate a particular irrational number and mathematical constant that is the ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter. Known more casually as pi (¹), this infinite decimal is typically shortened to 3.14. What does pi have to do with cooking, one may ask? Typically nothing, unless a person is calculating the size of a circular food. However, because the symbol is pronounced with the long "i" (as in eye), it is a homonym for pie, which...

  • Montana Shakes! Visits Whitehall Elementary Students

    Feb 21, 2024

    GOOFS, GAFFES, FLUBS, & FUMBLES: Whitehall elementary students were treated to a live performance by Montana Shakes! on Tuesday, February 20th, as well as workshops following the performance. This event was brought to the school by Gold Junction Presents....

  • Lepinsky Travels to Chile For Adventures

    DON LEPINSKY, Whitehall Adventurer|Feb 14, 2024

    Montana winters can be harsh. Harsh enough that some of us may desire a brief escape. Traveling south is the usual remedy and for five weeks I did just that. I spent most of this time backpacking through Patagonia in both Chile and Argentina. Needless to say, I experienced a mild yet interesting cultural shock. I arrived in Santiago, Chile's capital, and spent a few days exploring this sprawling city of seven million people before continuing south to Patagonia. The beautiful architecture of...

  • Ledger Looking Back 25 Years: 2/17/1999

    RITA BROWN, Whitehall Ledger|Feb 14, 2024

    FEBRUARY 17, 1999 Meadowlark Manor, an assisted living facility located on the west end of Whitehall up the hill behind the Jefferson IGA Store, had been under construction since the spring of 1998 and set March 1 as a target date to open the facility to residents and the public. Golden Sunlight Mine (GSM) received word late morning on Tuesday, February 16 that its parent company, Placer Dome, had accepted the second half of the GSM's current life-of-mine strategic place. The approval gives GSM...

  • Skijoring the Big Rock

    ELIZABETH PULLMAN, Whitehall Ledger|Feb 14, 2024

    Over 150 teams competed in Boulder at the Jefferson County Fairgrounds in the growing sport of skijoring. The Whitehall Ledger was right in the midst of the action; on Saturday, serving as the finish line judge and on Sunday, working three gate posts and the rider’s ring in the center of the action....

  • Between the Stacks: 2/14/2024

    JEANNIE FERRISS, Whitehall Community Library|Feb 14, 2024

    It's beginning to look a lot like spring or maybe that is just wishful thinking. Just a reminder that the Library will be closed for Presidents' Day on Monday, February 19th. We will be open regular hours the rest of the week. The book drop is always open if patrons would like to return things after hours. If you saw the Library staff wandering around with their arms full of roses, it is just staff delivering for AARP's Cupid Crew. The Library was given 75 long-stem roses to share with our...

  • Dunagan Listed to Laramie County Community College President's List

    Laramie County Community College|Feb 14, 2024

    Laramie County Community College is proud to announce the list of graduates for the 2023 fall semester and those students earning a place on the president's and vice president's honor rolls. Students earning president's honor roll recognition have earned a cumulative 3.75-4.0 GPA, and students on the vice president's honor roll have earned a cumulative 3.5-3.74 GPA. Whitehall resident Kassidy Rae Dunagan was named to the President's Honor Roll....

  • Jefferson Valley Museum Offering 2nd Free Program

    ARLENE WEBER, Jefferson Valley Museum|Feb 14, 2024

    The Jefferson Valley Museum will host its second free winter program at the museum barn on Tuesday, February 20th at 7 PM. This will be an old-fashioned slide show of local historic photos. The slide show was assembled by Roy Millegan, Sr. sometime in the 1990s and will be presented in the same order as his original arrangement. Photos include many early mining operations, local people who worked the mines, and some of those who supported the miners. The museum's annual meeting is scheduled for...

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