october 8 (tuesday)

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  • 7/27/2019 October 8 (Tuesday)

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    Vol.2,No

    .167 Tuesday,October8,2 0

  • 7/27/2019 October 8 (Tuesday)

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    BUZZ

    pti is now hiring: FT & PT Drivers to transpoin North Dakota & Montana. Retirees, Semi-Reencouraged to apply. CALL (812) 893-1220.

    BUZZ

    CAshiEr nEEDED iMMEDiAtELY: Come join ouCoOp in Glasgow! Looking to fil l part-time/fustarting wage $9.00/hr or higher D.O.E. AppLYthE stAtion.

    BUZZ

    sAgEBrUsh LoUngE is hiring : The Sagelooking for a part time bartender to cover mix

    week and Saturday day. Pay is D.O.E. pLEAsECottonwooD inn front DEsk or CALL 228

    for MELissA.

    BUZZ

    grD is hiring: The Glasgow Recreation Departmfill a part time/full-time recreation clerk position. Dare not limited to: greeting customers, answering preceipts, making appointments, setting up for leagmaintaining cleanliness of facility. This position pro-rated benefits including: sick, vacation, healthWork schedule will essentially be 3 PM to 9 PM, Friday. Hours per week will range from 30 to 40 hoYoU ArE intE rEst ED YoU CAn piCk Up An

    hErE At thE rECrEAtion DEpt. or At JoB

    BUZZ

    JoB opEning: First Community Bank, Glasgowfor an Operations Specialist. Full time with benefitssErviCE. EEo/AA EMpLoYEr.

    BUZZ

    EZZiEs MiDtown is Looking for fULL-tiME

    wage is $9.00/hr with some benefits after a 3 moperiod. Employee will work some 5am shifts & somweekends & holidays. Some duties include runningfil l ing propane, stocking inventory, making sure stand doing daily paperwork. AnYonE intErEstEAn AppLiCAtion At thE stAtion.

    BUZZ

    for sALE: Whirlpool washer & dryer, $200. CALBUZZ

    pigs for sALE: Butcher Pigs & Wiener Pigs.2226 or 406-648-7308.

    BUZZ

    hoUsE for sALE: Single level, 2 car garagbedroom with master bath. Quiet neighborhooDry Prairie Rural Water. Recently updated. As

    Reasonable offers considered. CALL 406-230-1www.ZiLLow.CoM.BUZZ

    BoY sCoUt popCorn sALEs : Support your#898 by buying delicious gourmet popcorn. If youor would like to place an order, CALL MikE 654-

    BUZZ

    sALEs ConDUCtED: So much stuff you dont knoIts overwhelming. Estate, moving, downsizing. Wout. CALL pAtsY tihistA 406-785-2321 or 263

    BUZZIFIEDS

    Might seerain Friday

    Tonight: Mostly clear, with a low around 34. West wind6 to 15 mph, with gusts as high as 22 mph.

    Wednesday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 57.Northwest wind around 6 mph becoming light andvariable.

    Wednesday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around40. East southeast wind 7 to 9 mph.

    Thursday: Mostly cloudy, with a high near 61. Eastsoutheast wind around 14 mph, with gusts as high as20 mph.

    Thursday Night: A 20 percent chance of rain. Mostlycloudy, with a l ow around 38. East northeast wind 6 to8 mph becoming north northwest after midnight.

    Friday: A 20 percent chance of rain. Mostly cloudy,with a high near 55. Windy, with a northwest wind 17to 22 mph increasing to 25 to 30 mph in the afternoon.Winds could gust as high as 43 mph.

    Friday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 31.Blustery.

    Saturday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 55.

    Saturday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 31.

    Sunday: Partly sunny, with a high near 54.

    Sunday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 29.

    Columbus Day: Partly sunny, with a high near 53.

    A low pressure system will move across the area onFriday and Saturday along with abundant moisture romthe Pacic and the Gul o Mexico. Tis will result in agood chance or moderate rainall along the Montana-North Dakota border, although the storm track couldshi east or west by Friday.

    228-9239www.polsontheatres.com

    DAILY CINEMAS: 4:00 & 4:10 PM - $5.75/PERSONFREE TREAT TUESDAY!Free popcorn with every paid admission at 7&9pm showings

    Rated PG: for mild rude humorRated R: for disturbing violent content includingtorture, & language throughout

    95 Min. 153 Min.

    4:00 - 7:00PM4:10 - 7:15 - 9:15PM

    OCTOBER 4 - 10SHOWINGS

    HELD

    OVER

    Fresh Bread &Cupcakes Daily!

    $6WRF Lunch Combosandwich, chips, drink & a cupcake

    Cupcake BarFridays

    $2.50 Caramel Rolls &$2 Cinnamon Rolls

    Saturdays

    Hours: Wed & Thu11am-3pm, Friday 11am-5pm, Saturday 7:30am-Noon

    233 4th St South

    230-2177

    Dakota snowstorm claims

    unknown numbers of cattleWhile power outages remain throughout southwest

    North Dakota and northwest South Dakota, thesnowstorm along the North Dakota-South Dakotaborder last Friday has mounting losses.

    A large, yet still unknown number o cattle werecasualties to snow that was belly deep or the victims.While ranchers tried to save their cattle, the surpriseseverity o the storm prevented many rom making

    decisions beore it was too late.Most o the numbers o the dead cows donteven match with the dead calves, so there are cowsmissing calves and calves missing mothers, said DanChristman, who lost at least 20 black Angus cows andtwo dozen calves. You cant move any o them nowwithout snowmobiles or big tractors. Tat area downthere could be without power or close to two weeks.

    Late Night Government ShutdownWeve got the government shutdown, but the beginningof Obamacare. You know what that means? You can nowcomplain to your doctor about the government makingyou sick. Jay Leno

    The government shutdown is going to slash the budgetfor food inspection. That is bad news for health advocates,but great news for the new Japanese restaurant Leap ofFaith Sushi. Conan OBrien

    Almost a million non-essential government employeeswere let go. Well, isnt that the problem, that theres that

    manynon-essential

    employees? David Letterman

    Im glad the government has shut down. Think about it,for the rst time in years its safe to talk on the phone andsend emails without anybody listening in. Jay Leno

    Even the NSA is out of business. And while theyreclosed, while the government is shut down, they areasking citizens to please spy on each other. DavidLetterman

    Human Resources

    Manager: What is yourgreatest weakness?

    Old man: Honesty.

    Human ResourcesManager: I dont thinkhonesty is a weakness.

    Old Man: And I dontreally give a crap whatyou think.

    Old man at a

    job interview

    Befor e you do THI S:

    GIVE BR I AN A CALL.

    (406) 230-0643 Repairs Virus Removal

    Private Lessons

  • 7/27/2019 October 8 (Tuesday)

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    Varsity Girls scores: Glasgow 39,Havre 84, Malta 85, Browning 99, Belt-Centerville 119, Lewistown 126, CutBank 160Josie Braaten 1st 19:10Rachael Zeiger 3rd 19:34Emma Fewer 9th 20:28Amanda Wolff 10th 20:35Amanda McDonald 13th 21:06Ellen Walstad 16th 21:12Julia Kolstad 30th 23:09

    Junior Varsity girlsAlex Simensen 3rd 21:27Faith Sallee 5th 23:32Kerry Hoffman 6th 23:34Brinlie Nielsen 8th 24:00Mary Fewer 9th 24:27Rachel Overby 28:35

    Varsity Boys scores: Browning 54,Lewistown 56, Havre 89, Belt-Centerville119, Glasgow 161, Cut Bank 171, Shelby189Walker Allen 20th 17:45Bridger Sanders 25th 17:56Matthew Phillips 26th 17:58Kasey Seyfert 41st 19:11Braden Meland 49th 19:44Ethan Jamba 57th 20:45Andrew Fransen 61st 21:55

    Junior Varsity BoysChase Hughes 16th 20:46Anthony Kaiser 21st 22:07Jared Chalmers 22nd 22:17Logan Gunderson 25th 23:28Kevin Frigon 28th 25:58

    by Bruce AuchlyFall is a welcome assault on the

    senses. We see it, hear it and smell it.Most o us welcome it, a ew shun it.

    Te days are shorter, though still

    warm with lots o sunshine; the nightscooler and longer, and sleeping is morepleasant with the windows open.

    For those who hunt, or wait orcooler water to sh again, this is theseason. Tere are no others like it. Fromnow until early December it is a timeto dial into our hunter-gatherer geneticcode.

    For those who garden, its the seasonto stock the larder. Put up beans, cantomatoes, pickle cucumbers, bake thenreeze zucchini bread.

    But in Montana, hunting and all aresynonymous.

    Already there are stories in town obull elk taken by archers, or retrieversbouncing through a coulee to bring backa pair o downed Hungarian partridge.Soon antelope season will be upon usollowed all too quickly by the deer andelk general rie season.

    Hunter-gatherer or not, right now,today, i its sunny go outside and marvelat the striking blue o our big sky. akein the warmth o the sun. Ten store thatknowledge or a January night.

    Aspen tree leaves will soon turnyellow and all to the ground.

    ry to nd a patch o yellow

    cottonwood leaves still on the tree, nowin the minority soon to be part o abroader autumn palette.

    For anglers, catching a brook troutin all spawning colors rivals a visit to anyart museum.Autumn, which ocially crashed thecalendar Sept. 22, has sounds and smells

    as well as sights.Its the sound o antelope bucks

    galloping aer each other, or somearchers decoy, trying to run of theinterloper who wants a dalliance with thebucks harem.

    Its a bow hunter listening in thepredawn gloom to a bull elk bugle andbugle to a crescendo beore crashing ofthrough the orest.

    Later in the all, its the martialthumping sound o a pheasant beatingits wings in a desperate attempt to gain

    altitude and elude a predator.Or it can be as simple as the rustling

    o leaves blowing across the driveway intothe neighbors yard. Tats nice, let himworry about them. Know that eeling?

    Te smells o autumn can be assimple as gunpowder hanging in theair rom a shotgun blast; wood smokecurling rom the chimney to a leaden skyas snowakes dot the cabin roo.

    Or as complex as the odors that hita bird dog in the nose. Tink you have agood sense o smell? ell it to Fido.

    Scientists tell us dogs have about300 million olactory receptors in their

    nose, we have close to six million. Andthe portion o a dogs brain that analyzessmells is proportionally 40 times biggerthan ours.

    Whatever your internal timepiecesays, its time to get outside and enjoythis season beore it too quickly turns towinter.

    MontanaTales & Trails

    Fall is here

    Dogs, pheasants and bird hunters are a commonsight every fall in Montana.

    Scotty Cross Country

    at Havre Invitational

    Te Scotties will be in Miles City this Saturday. TeState Meet rapidly approaches, scheduled to be held inMissoula on October 26th.

    Call for reserva228-

    Sr. Citiz

    WED

    Pork

    GLASSCHOOL

    Break

    WafeMixed FLun

    Turkey & Gravy Corn Cranberry J

    w/Jelly Choic

    WEDN

  • 7/27/2019 October 8 (Tuesday)

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    Montana State University College o Agricultureexperts will be co-hosting a seminar on the use o sensor-based technologies or precision agriculture on Oct. 24 at theBest Western Plus Heritage Inn in Great Falls.

    Te seminar is organized as part o a project to educateand train wheat producers on how sensor-based technologiescan increase the eciency and protability o their armoperations.

    Precision sensors enable armers to develop crop-specicand site-specic nitrogen ertilizing recommendations toincrease nitrogen use eciency and overall crop yield. Teproject, called Proessional + Producer, aims to pointproducers toward the use o reerence strips and precisionsensors or increased nitrogen use eciency in wheatproduction. Western Sustainable Agriculture Research and

    Education (WSARE) program is unding the project.Tis seminar will be a great opportunity or the

    agriculture community producers, industry representatives,crop advisors and academic researchers to share inormationon benets and challenges associated with a variety oprecision agriculture tools available, said Olga Walsh,assistant proessor in MSUs College o Agriculture andconerence coordinator.

    Te all-day ree conerence will cover a variety o topicsincluding: precision seed placement, precision agriculturerom the growers perspective, nutrient management systemsand precision weed management. Lunch is included.

    Tere will also be a round-table discussion and question-and-answer session exploring issues regarding precisionagriculture methodologies. Tese interactive sessions aim toencourage an inormal dialog between the experts and the

    attendees.Te WSARE is a western branch o the U.S. Departmento Agricultures Sustainable Agriculture Research andEducation program. Its mission is to advance to the whole oAmerican agriculture innovations that improve protability,stewardship and quality o lie by investing in ground-breaking research and education.

    For more inormation about the seminar, contact: OlgaWalsh, (406) 278-7707 or [email protected].

    Seminar Precision Agriculture

    to be in Great Falls on Oct. 24