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  • The Postscript: A night at the funeral home

    Carrie Classon|Updated Jan 8, 2020

    “What do you think?” my husband, Peter, asked about the link he’d sent me as we prepared to head home from the holidays. “The funeral home?” I asked. “Yeah, that one.” “I thought it was a joke.” “No, it’s right on our way.” “We’re going to spend the night in a funeral home?” “It’s very inexpensive!” I suddenly felt like I was in the opening scene of every horror film I’d ever watched. Peter wanted us to spend the night in a historic funeral home on our way home. The funeral ho...

  • View from the North 40: What the heck, Deirdre

    Pam Burke|Updated Jan 3, 2020

    A Maryland woman has proven that, when it comes to Christmas gifts, it’s not the giving that counts — it’s the giving, then taking it back and then cashing it in for $50,000 that really counts. Unified Payments International reported Dec. 27 that Deirdre Stokes of Maryland bought some scratch-off lottery tickets as Christmas presents and the one that she bought her husband was a $50,000 winner. She said she only buys tickets around Christmastime to give as little gifts for f...

  • Looking out my Backdoor: An update on Sondra's surgery, and some poems

    Sondra Ashton|Updated Jan 2, 2020

    I’m writing to you today from warm and sunny Glendive. Mom had her hip repair surgery on Thursday, the 26th. Merry Christmas! The post from her original hip replacement had slipped down into the bone. The doctors knew this and knew they could fix it. After opening her up, while she was still awake (with a nerve block), the doctors discovered the slippage was worse than they had thought. The metal post was grinding and eating away the inside of the bone. Mom explained how t...

  • The Postscript: Sparkles

    Carrie Classon|Updated Jan 2, 2020

    I glanced up as the bells rang to herald new customers walking into the used clothing store. I was looking for a pair of warm dress pants. Visiting my parents in Minnesota, I had forgotten entirely about the possibility of extreme cold and the idea of going out that night in tights and a skirt seemed preposterous. Luckily, I found a like-new pair of black jeans with just a little sparkle on the pocket for a good price. I was wandering around the store with these jeans in my...

  • Letter to the Editor - NWE continues with poor judgement

    Updated Dec 31, 2019

    NorthWestern Energy’s most recent management plan lacks meaningful information regarding energy storage or solar production. They propose to be the major owner of the Colstrip power plants, which have limited years of usefulness, repeated non-compliance, looming expensive upgrades, increasing costs of coal and eventual cleanup costs that will be staggering. Ratepayers will shoulder the costs in cleaning this future superfund site as NorthWestern Energy is lawfully guaranteed a return on their investment, no matter how careles...

  • Look for Legislative Week in January

    Updated Dec 31, 2019

    I trust your Christmas was fun-filled with family, friends and shared. Our holidays were spent with family and friends that included some sledding with grandkids. We now look forward to a New Year that may hold opportunities or challenges. Legislative Week will be in the middle of January, which is something you might want to track. It will be a precursor of the subjects to be covered during our next Legislative Session in 2021. A hot subject for Legislative Week is the discussion of having session every year. There are a...

  • Theodore Roosevelt was one of a kind

    Updated Dec 27, 2019

    We had no television at our ranch because my father thought its absence would encourage his kids to read. I’m extremely grateful to him. I remain an avid reader of history, and discovered Theodore Roosevelt during my childhood years. “Theodore Rex” may have been the most complex and remarkable American who ever lived. Despite severely poor eyesight, he won the Medal of Honor leading a hell-for-leather charge. He also received the Nobel Peace Prize for his skill as a negotiator and peacemaker. He was the first president to dr...

  • View from the North 40: I think of it as Super Me rather than GMO me

    Pam Burke|Updated Dec 27, 2019

    As you take stock of the past year and look forward to the new one along with the renewed hope for the future that it brings, I urge you to consider the traits you wish to develop in the future — traits that will help you become a better human. I have already begun this process by compiling a list of the top three animal traits I would like to have to make me not just a better human, but a super human. Play along with your own list if you wish. I warn you, though, to c...

  • Letter to the editor: Don't let scammers take advantage of your support for Montana's volunteer firefighters

    Updated Dec 26, 2019

    Here in Montana, we understand the dangers of wildfires and structure fires, especially in rural areas. We appreciate the men and women who lay their lives on the line to protect us, and we know that the majority of them are volunteers. So when the phone rings and the caller asks for assistance for Montana’s firefighters, our first instinct is to say yes. Unfortunately, that is just what the scammers are counting on. The Montana State Fire Chiefs’ Association is so grateful for Montanans’ backing but wants to make sure your...

  • Looking out my Backdoor: Whims and wing-dings

    Sondra Ashton|Updated Dec 26, 2019

    December comes to a close with Christmas. Whether one believes the Birth of the Christ Child to be myth or metaphor, history or hysteria, is of no matter. My belief makes it neither one nor another. The timeless story is filled with all one could want: drama, animals, mean people, travel, shepherds, kings and a Baby. In my own personal dictionary, incomplete, abridged, and filled with mis-information, the definition of Baby is hope. After a year such as 2019, who can argue...

  • The Postscript: Caleb the Christmas tree

    Carrie Classon|Updated Dec 24, 2019

    I went with my parents to get a Christmas tree. All the trees were wearing hangtags shaped like bells and all the bells had hand-lettered names on them. At first, I assumed these trees were spoken for and the names indicated the person who had reserved the tree. Then I realized that, no, the names were for the trees. This was a fancy place and apparently, when you spend as much as this store was charging for a tree, the tree came complete with a name. Actually, for what they...

  • Access fuels hunting dollars in north-central Montana

    Updated Dec 23, 2019

    Back in 2007, a hunting organization, the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership, undertook a massive effort to identify the most important regions in the state for Montana hunters. They produced a heat map based on input from over 40 sporting clubs. The more an area was identified as being important, the brighter it got. I recently looked at this map and was struck that north-central Montana was lit up like a Christmas tree. I suppose it’s no secret. Missouri River Country has some of the best hunting in the state. T...

  • Letter to the Editor - 15th Annual Holiday Hoops Blue Pony alumni basketball games set

    Updated Dec 20, 2019

    Havre Public Schools Education Foundation’s is getting ready to host the 15th Annual Holiday Hoops Blue Pony Alumni Basketball Games. It is scheduled for Friday, Dec. 27, at Havre High School gymnasium at 7 p.m. Admission to the game is a non-perishable food item or toiletry item to be donated to the Havre Public Schools Pantry. All Havre High alumni are invited to participate, young and old, guys and girls, whether you played during your school years or not, it’s an evening of friendly competition. To sign up to play you may...

  • View from the North 40: A practical magic in a real world

    Pam Burke|Updated Dec 20, 2019

    I grew up in the “Bewitched” era, and that after-school TV fantasy sitcom probably ruined me forever. I have believed in magic ever since. I’ve looked for it, longed for it. I was absolutely sure that if I could get my nose to wiggle side to side I could do magic. Not card trick and sawing women in half magic, I’m talking real magic — disappearing, doing all my chores done in a blink of an eye and conjuring a flying horse. I wasn’t messing around with this goal. I worked at i...

  • Letter to the Editor - Regarding Trump's letter to Pelosi Dec. 17, 2019

    Updated Dec 19, 2019

    Editor, You Trumper’s may feel the letter was justified and showcased your man’s superior intellect. I and others know it shows how deranged the egomaniac has become. There was no need to show his insanity in an open letter on White House stationary, where all could review. It was like the worst tweet in history. He knows he will be acquitted in the Senate. Most remaining Republican senators have lost their spine and have abandoned the Republican Party to become Trumpers. T-Party republicans used to be gravely concerned wit...

  • Looking out my Backdoor: Breakfast at Calano's

    Sondra Ashton|Updated Dec 19, 2019

    Lani and I sneaked off to breakfast at Calano’s this Sunday morning. It is something we do now and then. We don’t go often, usually, like today, on a whim. If you don’t ride whims, you are missing out. I recommend jumping on every whim you possibly can. Since Lani and I are the only full-timers here, over these few years we have developed a special friendship. This little outing has become a small enjoyment to which we look forward. It’s nothing special except that we make it...

  • The Postscript: Christmas at the greenhouse

    Carrie Classon|Updated Dec 18, 2019

    It is the tender cusp of Christmas. It is that time when emotions run close to the overfill point, when sentimentality and anger and depression and euphoria mix freely together, with not enough space between them to tell the difference from one moment to the next. I am visiting my parents — and of course this does not help. My parents are doing well (thank you for asking). They are in their 80s now, still living in their dream cabin in the woods and, although I know they a...

  • View from the North 40: My dog, in his next life

    Pam Burke|Updated Dec 13, 2019

    It occurred to me this week that, as I have been watching my dog, Cooper, negotiate his way through his elder years, if Cooper were a human I would recognize him immediately. As a dog, he looks exactly like his breeding, a gray Schnauzer and something-black-and-tan-ish cross, with a full beard, perky ears, wiry-haired legs and a pair of wild old-man eyebrows. At 45 pounds, the “something” in his lineage was obviously bigger than his 15-pound miniature Schnauzer mother. An olde...

  • A holiday comeback for Toys 'R' Us?

    Updated Dec 12, 2019

    For many years, Giovanna De La Rosa enjoyed working at Toys ‘R’ Us — especially during the holiday shopping season. “I loved bringing joy to families and to children,” she shared at a recent congressional hearing. “I watched so many of the local kids grow up over the years while shopping in our store.” De La Rosa’s 20-year career with Toys ‘R’ Us came to an abrupt end in 2018, when the bankrupt company shuttered all of its 700 U.S. outlets, leaving more than 30,000 employees jobless. Now Toys ‘R’ Us is trying to make a comeba...

  • The Postscript: The cookie situation

    Carrie Classon|Updated Dec 12, 2019

    “People have been asking about the squeaking of the ship,” our captain reported, somewhere in the middle of the Atlantic, “but I must tell you, this is nothing to worry about.” He then proceeded to explain how a ship needed to give in heavy swells, just as an airplane had to flex during flight. “Otherwise,” he explained cheerfully, “the ship would snap in two!” I’m not sure this was the reassurance worried passengers were looking for. My husband, Peter, and I are on the seco...

  • I see no reason to like APR

    Updated Dec 11, 2019

    It’s been several months (a couple years, even?) since I first started reading letters to the editor about the APR — American Prairie Reserve — and started learning people’s opinions about what its presence in central Montana meant for our rural communities. I have to admit, when I first heard of them, I was intrigued. The idea of hiking and recreating across millions of acres of open prairie land did — and still does — appeal to me. What could be so wrong about this group that seemingly shares so many of the same values...

  • Cooney best choice in governor's race

    Updated Dec 11, 2019

    Have you decided who to support in the next race for governor? It seems early but the primary election is six months away and it’s less than a year to the general election. Mike Cooney is the best choice for governor. Most of us know who Cooney is and some of the things he has done for our state. Most people know he is currently Steve Bullock’s lieutenant governor. Others recall that he was our secretary of state for two terms. A smaller number remember that he was president of the Montana Senate. A few may even remember tha...

  • Looking out my backdoor: Parsing the Fear

    Sondra Ashton|Updated Dec 11, 2019

    On a Saturday I saw an orthopedic specialist. He said, “I can fix your hip and leg.” I’m kind of backward when it comes to medical issues. I didn’t go to him for a fix. I went for a referral to somebody who could make me those horrid ugly black shoes where one shoe is built up with a two or four or six inch sole — you know the kind — the ones I’ve been too vain to consider. The doctor also told me the ugly black shoes would not help. I like to think I am smart. I like to thi...

  • Spending time with family and talking Montana issues

    Updated Dec 10, 2019

    I have spent the past month-and-a-half catching up with family. My two brothers and I, who have not been together for over five years, were able to meet up in Oklahoma and had a great time. Our youngest brother flew in from Las Vegas and thought he was freezing to death at 35 degrees. I mention this not only because it was great to visit and tell stories with family, but to segue into the feral pig problem and overpopulation in Oklahoma. After seeing what the pigs can do, believe me, Montana wants to avoid encroachment of...

  • How would tax cuts be paid for?

    Updated Dec 9, 2019

    At a gubernatorial campaign fundraiser, U.S. Rep. Greg Gianforte, R-Mont., pledged to cut taxes 30 percent over his first two years. The promise of “huge tax cuts” is attractive, but voter beware: Tasty bait often hides painful hooks. State government runs on income taxes. Local cities, counties and schools run on property taxes. Of state taxes, 91 percent support locally delivered services, the big three being education, health care and incarceration. Montana’s Balanced Budget Amendment prevents deficit spending, so … und...

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