Time Capsule: From the archives of local weeklies
BERL TISKUS | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 1 year, 5 months AGO
Reporter Berl Tiskus joined the Lake County Leader team in early March, and covers Ronan City Council, schools, ag and business. Berl grew up on a ranch in Wyoming and earned a degree in English education from MSU-Billings and a degree in elementary education from the University of Montana. Since moving to Polson three decades ago, she’s worked as a substitute teacher, a reporter for the Valley Journal and a secretary for Lake County Extension. Contact her at [email protected] or 406-883-4343. | June 13, 2024 12:15 AM
Mission Valley News, June 1, 1977
Day Care plans new program
ST IGNATIUS – The Day Care Center here is trying a new idea this summer: day care for school age children (6 to 9 years).
Working mothers will get first preference, and the enrollment limit is 15. Hours will be from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Local Director Peggy Fleming reports that the Day Care Center will get evaluations of needs and beneficial programs from the public schools for each child enrolled.
Planned offerings include language skills training, field trips, library trips and training in attitudes toward school and study.
The program won’t deal in competitive academic work, but will measure progress individually.
Two win Special Olympic medals
ST. IGNATIUS – Two St.Ignatius youngsters came back laden with awards from the Special Olympics held recently in Bozeman.
Both Rowena Rollins and her brother Darrell earned two medals apiece for their efforts in the special events.
Rowena received a gold and bronze medal, and Darrel won a gold and silver.
MVN, May 25, 1977
Weeds to be tough this year according to Ag Specialist
BOZEMAN – The dry weather isn’t going to have much effect on perennial weeds this year. That’s because they are the first to use moisture due to their established root structures.
Larry Baker, Montana Agricultural Experiment Station researcher and assistant professor of plant and soil science at Montana State University, said infestations of perennial weeds will not be as affected by dry conditions as annual weeds and crops.
“We figure every 13 acres of cropland will contain an equivalent of one acre of one or more kinds of perennial noxious weeds,” he said. “If we restrict this to irrigated land there are even more weeds because the extra moisture helps. That figure is about one in 10.”
Mr. Baker noted the Montana weed law prohibits allowing five noxious weeds to go to seed. These include Canadian thistle, wild morning glory, or bindweed, white top, leafy spurge and Russian knapweed.
For crop-fallow people tillage is the best method of controlling weeds, he said.
“The idea behind this is that most plants grow for a few days, using food stored in the roots,” he said. “If you cultivate at, for example, three-week intervals for Canadian thistle, you will starve its roots and the weed will die.”
Baker stressed this pattern of cultivating every three weeks is essential throughout the entire growing season.
ARTICLES BY BERL TISKUS
Gage Accounting relocates to former law office
Gage Accounting has moved around the corner to a larger space at 15 3rd Ave. E. in Polson.
Shoppers turn out for Shop Small Saturday
With Thanksgiving dinner gobbled, pie eaten for breakfast, and a day of leftovers behind them, people were ready to get out of the house Saturday and shop. After all, only 27 days remained until Christmas.
“Great communities are built on volunteers”
Cars and trucks lined Main Street in Polson to collect Thanksgiving dinners from the Elks Club last Thursday. The drive-through dinner, commandeered by field marshal Tracy Plaiss, served 1,800 Thanksgiving dinners, made from scratch. A few miles south, the Ronan Community Thanksgiving dinner filled a room in the Boys and Girls Club with tables of visiting people and the aromas of roasting turkey and savory dressing.