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About The Rimrock Echo (Billings, Mont.) 1930-1943 | View This Issue
The Rimrock Echo (Billings, Mont.), 29 Nov. 1933, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/TheRimrockEcho/1933-11-29/ed-1/seq-6/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
Alumni Listed by Counties Big Horn—Ruth Korber, Eva , Romine, Frances Nelson, Bernice Sever- son. Carbon—Margaret Baker, Cecilia Duffy, Ivy Nelson, Glennis Lee Mc- Clurg, Ruth Luckett, Alice Lumley. Carter—Don Steele, Agnes Stark, Cleo Wright, Hazel Jacobs. Cascade—Elizabeth Briscoe, Hazel Cosman, Mildred Lord, Louise Solem. Choteau—Grace Cain. Custer—Carola Sunell, Mildred Laney. Daniels—Bessie Pace. Dawson—Marguerite Evans, Helen Jacobson, Ruth Oie, Gladys Staf- ford, Margaret Malone. Fallon—Eleanor Slater, Genevieve Gregerson, Eugene Frates. Fergus—Helen Buechner, Marie Day, Ardell Kemnitz, Grace Simpson, Milada Walter, Norma Root, Emma Vanek, Mildred Votruba. Flathead—Elizabeth Antila, Nellie Redlingshafer. Garfield—Nellie White, Barbara Beiver, Jane Brown, Martha Calvert, Geogria Crist. Golden Valley—Madeline Keil, Jeanette Mellon, Marie Danielson, Madeline Mashino, Thelma Bakken. Judith Basin—Nina Hershberger, Sophia Loberg, Clara Calone. Lake—Ethel Hodges, Mary Herak. McCone—Hazel Burghart, Margaret Arnett, Ingrid Undem. Madison—Rhoda Satterthwait. MUsselshell—Gertrude Gonion, Lorene Laurie. Park—Gladys Pepper. Pondera—Kathe Elsberry Whitmore. Petroleum—Alma Ellis, Mary Leonard. Powder River—Celia Abbott, Delores Bohling, Dorothy Hart, Eva Lu- cille Turner, Theo Anderson, Helen Greer, George Richardson. Richland—Freda Moyer, Lulu Barnard, George Jaros. Roosevelt—Edith Miller, Tena Penner. Rosebud—Helen Daniels, Albert Frazier, Astrid Wirak, Margaret Mar- sell, Elsie Toothaker. Sheridan—Norman Larson. Stillwater—Alice Clement, Bess Deeney, Grace Hoogland, Willamae Hurst, Horace McBride, Marion McKay. Sweet Grass—Olin Metzer. Teton—Hazel Tresoott. Toole—Lucyle Dornblaser, Elma McSweeney, Minnie Yochin Reichert, Annetta Zell. Treasure—Evelyn Danielson. Valley—Ethel Everson, John Peterson, Louise Cain. Yellowstone—Dorothy Hass, Florence McBratney, Elizabeth Matheson, Mildred Moyer, Genevieve Spurgin, Helen Wullum, Annie Harper, Tom Pemberton, Virginia Conway, Theta Davis, Alice Folkins, Ursula Miller, Adele Day, Gladys Smith, Virginia Dove, Ethel Wagstaff, Dorothy Holley, Isabel Hunt, Montana Jones, Johanna Richter, Myrtle Welton. Out of state—Martha Erickson, William King. 6 THE RIMROCK ECHO WANDA SLUSHER WEDS Miss Wanda Slusher, class of '33, was married to Mr. Wilford Han- cock on Saturday evening, Novem- ber 18, at the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Slush- er, of Huntley. Following the ceremony a recep- tion was held, atfer which the bride and groom left for a wedding trip to Wyoming. Mr. and Mrs. Han- cock will make their home in Bal- lantine. Mrs. Hancock will be remem- bered by her Eastern Montana Nor- mal School friends as a prominent member of the Katoya Players. Alumni Notes Mr. Foote has been receiving some very interesting letters from former students who are teaching this year. Helen Buechner, '33, is teaching a school near Roy. She has in school five Bohemian pupils who have never seen or heard a radio, never been to a motion picture show, or a county fair nor seen the inside of a train. Emma Van Hour is teaching near Plum Creek. Ben Nutt, '32, is teaching a school of 26 pupils at Kadoka, S. D., ac- cording to an exceedingly interest- ing letter received. However, he is homesick for Montana. Frances Nelson, '33, has an In- dian artist in her school, at Xavier, named \Star Not Afraid.\ Maxine Ellithorpe has a \cracker box\ school with 15 pupils near Mildred. Ruth Korber, '33, is teaching the four upper grades in an old Baptist Mission at St. Xavier. She has in her school 13 pupils including five Indians and one half-breed. Martha Erickson, June '33, has charge of the primary department of the Voltaire School at Velva, N. D. Hazel Burghart, '33, is teaching a little school of four pupils at Paris. Charles Beardsley, '29, is teaching at Libby and has seven classes in Junior High English each day in addition to three hours of music classes a day. He is directing two orchestras and a band, each one of 35 to 40 pieces. Elsie Toothaker, '33, teaching 45 miles from Forsyth, has organized a Sunday school class in her school. Louise Solem, '33, has charge of 32 pupils in the fifth and sixth grades in Great Falls. Miss Naomi Luckett, June '32, now teaching at the Canyon Creek School, was visiting in Billings, Fri- day, November 10. Mabel MacDonald is enjoying her work. She teaches second grade in the McKinley School at Great Falls. BREAKFAST CLUB FORMED Marian Brandon, June '32, now teaching the Corinth School in Big Horn county, has organized a 4-H breakfast club in her school. The club is most unusual because of the fact that four boys have joined with two girls in its formation. This is the first time that boys have been enrolled in a \girls' \ club project through the Yellow- stone extension office. They will learn to make biscuits, muffins, and hot cakes, and to cook cereals, and prepare fruit and egg dishes for the daily noon lunch at school. Miss Brandon was a state cham- pion 4-H canning club member in 1929. +- Miss Willette , Gummow of Laurel, June '33, is visiting relatives in California. Miss Lois Gaynor is teaching school near Glendive. She has four pupils and enjoys teaching them. Duncan Is In \Hi finks ' Dave Duncan is to take part in the 1933 Hi Sinks, an all student musical revue, to be presented De- cember 8, at the Fox Wilma The- atre in Missoula. Dave's perform- ance in \The Front Page,\ the major fall production of the Mon- tana Masquers, was considered one of the three best by the reviewer of the play in the Montana K,aimin. PETERSON AT AVONDALE We hear that John Peterson is doing good work at Avondale in Valley county. He is helping his pupils work out a project in con- nection with the Fort Peck dam, which calls for a skating rink near the school house. The children are constructing a dam across the gulch nearby, which will fill with water and form the rink. Roosevelt's new deal is dictated but not Red. MISS MEEK GIVES RULES FOR PAPER CONTEST OPEN TO RURAL TEACHERS All former E. M. N. S. students who are now teaching in the state are invited to enter their schools in the annual rural school paper con- test, sponsored by Miss Meek, who offers a prize of ten dollars to the winning school. The rules stipulate that there must be at least five issues of the paper, put out at reasonably reg- ular intervals; that only schools taught by alumni or former stud- ents of this institution are eligible; and that the teacher must be a sub- scriber to the Rimrock Echo. The value of the paper to the school and the quality of its compo- sition and organization, as well as the form in which it is presented, are the most important factors to be considered by the judges. Since the purpose of the contest is to encourage many schools to have papers, the prize will not be given unless there are at least ten con- testing schools. Mr. Foote is to select the judges for the contest, and information about the rules may be obtained from either him or Miss Meek. Each issue of the Rimrock Echo will contain information as to the progress of the contest. 4 TEACHERS TELL ABOUT EXPERIENCES IN THEIR SCHOOLS Margaret Lynch, who teaches third grade in Great Falls, finds keeping one jump ahead of thirty- five youngsters very difficult. Grace Cain reports from Gerald- ine, \We are presenting a Mother Goose festival and operetta, in which every grade child has a part. Ella Stewart says there are stir- ring times in Wolf Point since work on the Fort Peck Dam has been begun. Mrs. Clara Grothe, a member of the first graduating class, sends \Best wishes to everyone in E. M. N. S.\ Georgie Fenton reports from Montague, \We have a good rock collection, and I often wish for more knowledge about rocks. I plan to enter the newspaper contest.\ Mildred Merritt is having a de- lightful time witnessing Glasgow's boom. - She hasn't seen so many men for a long time. Mary Walker teaches seventh and eighth grades in Frozen. She coaches the high school girls' bas- ketball team. Hazel Jacobs is teaching near Ridgway. She is apparently find- ing both school and community life delightful. Rhoda Satterthwait, March '33, editor-in-chief of the '33 Rimrock, is teaching the third and fourth grades in a four room school at Ennis.