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About The Hardin Tribune-Herald (Hardin, Mont.) 1925-1973 | View This Issue
The Hardin Tribune-Herald (Hardin, Mont.), 30 Oct. 1925, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn86075229/1925-10-30/ed-1/seq-14/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
Friday SUPPIRMENT TO THE HARDIN TRIBUNNR-HERALD October 30 h e Thanksgiving D a y. I wrote four verse about it. It snowed all last night and this morning it was about OA ft,. deep in the drifts. A lot of the children played in' the snow at 'recess. I sure will be glad when Thanksgiving comes, wou't you? Friday .a week ago, we started to make fire places for draw- ing and we didn't finish them, so we finished them last Friday evening. On our chart for washing our teeth, there are many gold stars and on some places there are blue places, and Miss Alex- ander said that it Meant - that they didn't wash their teeth. Thursday and Friday the teachers are all going to Miles City to the teachers' meeting. WI' are going to have a Hal- lowe'en party again this year like we did last year. This meriting after recess we had a. match with the fifth grade in long division. We sure had fun. Part of the children were Mat in our room and didn't come to - guess it was too stormy for some of them. Well, 1 will close for now as t don't know much to write As Pvt.r your niece, Mildred Irene Perkin. Grow Agency, Mont. Crow Agency, Mont. Dear Aunt Betty: This is the second letter I have written to you. I have a little step -sister and she is three years 'old. Her father is going to take her to Hardin And is going to get her all kinds of nice things for her birthday. She says \thank and \please\ for whatever you give her. She was Clarence Chyistellia's gjl and now she is our girl. Yours truly, Pauline Sinner. Crow Agency, Mont.. Dear Aunt Betty: ,„Well, Aunt Betty, it has been so long shice I wrote to the Kiddies' Korner that I will try and write. I am n going to school in town. 1 am staying with my sister. My teacher's name is Mr. Mag- nuson. I like town school very much. I am ten years old and I'm in the sixth grade. I go out home every Friday evening , and help my mamma on Saturday and Sunday. Well, I had better close for this time, —From,your loving ( nice, Pearl Bowers. • Dear Aunt Betty: Monday night it started ta snow and when I woke up in the morning the snow was about eight inches deep. When I got dressed I went outside and played in the .snow. They are going to have a Hallowe'en party\ at tiltt assem- bly hall at night: . -A few of the Indian children are having their eyes treated at the hospital. Miss Taut hurt her foot on the step. She was going to get shmething for one of her pupils. She knocked ab one out of place in her foot. It went back again. tier' foot is still sore ani'. it will be quite a while be- fore it will heal up. J o hn Weigand is the police- man of our room. He watches that we don't get out. of order. Yours truly, Peter Muth. Dear Boys and Girls: We are delighted to wel- come the Library Teacher to our Korner and hope that she will write to us often. I trust that. each and .every one of the cousins who can will take ad- vantage of her kind offer to help us in the selection of our books, as well as flood her with essays. We are all glad to hear from Pearl again and hope other cousins wbo lave not written for a long lasite will follow her example. I'm glad Crow Agency is working for the books. It looks as though filsarmight get them, too. But pay *mow there were three prizes of three, two and one book offered. If you can't get first you might get one of *he others, you know. There arc still five weeks left before the judging takes place. We are saving all the, papers and will compare and judge from the points of interest and amount sent in. This snow storm should help poems. I hope you all are busy thinking and writing. Don't let Crow Agency do it all. If they do the work they'll carry off the prize. I like the idea of a few let- ters a week from each School. Why not one or two each week from Kinlaysow Halfway, Og- borne, St. Xavier, North Bench,. Community, Nine Mile, Fairview, and all the rest as well as from Crow and Spring Creek. I t would make our Korner so in- teresting. It is our Korner, you know, and we may make it whar we will. Let's make it the most interesting pail, of the paper so that even the grown-ups will turn to it first. We can do it tor tiii Leys and girls hav so mot..h pep and enthusiasm, n they get properly stirred up and interested. What do you think of this winter weather? Are you glad to have the chance to take out that sled? I, for one, would 'prefer to see sunshine and warmer weather for another six weeks. Then I'd want a good snow storm and some nipping But we'll take what we find as much _pleasure in it as we can. Anyway, I don't mind the cold weather for nrjrself, but I can't help but feel sorry for \the poor, imhoused cattle on the hills. Affectionately, Aunt. Betty. NEWS NOTES (('row Agency 5th & Stu Grades) The big gymnasium which was caught on fire some time ago is now being rebuilt. Last week Margaret Clawson brought the teachers a jar of honey. The befurhers made waffles and they had a waif! party. Peter Muth got the best re- port _card of the fifth and sixth grades, and he is only in the fifth grade. The people of Grow Agency are going to have a Hallowe'en party at the assembly hall. We like to read the news notes, and we all pass the paper down the row. We made some pictures to put up on the wall. They are all very pretty, but Henry Hea- gel's is the best. It looks as though the teacher had made It. John Weigand is policeman of bhe fifth and sixth grades. He has to watch that they don't talk all the time. If they are mean, he has to report them. We had a snowstorm en the twenty-sixth of October. The snow is several inches deep. It snowed for three or four I , ours and this moraing the his was • A. to schoat. The fifth and sixth grade en- cyclopedias are so good that the \seventh and eighth grades fatve to 1,,o them. They have the red encylopedias,• and they aren't much good. The other day Miss Taut was going into the clor.k Flea) to get a little child's cap. She slipped and knocked a bone out of place in her foot,. It went back, so now is getting better. • (Grade 2—See, I—Hardin) My little sister, Jane, is learning to use a pencil. She takes it in her right hand and makes marks. She is just one year old. —Betty Kopriva. Sunday I went to the Corpora- tion and got some wheels for my truck. They wouldn't fit and when I tried to saw them off I could not do it. —Henry Howell. We have eight baby rabbits. They just came last week. They are all brown. —Emma Zier. When we came in from the ranch last\ week we had such a load that I had to sit on a pile of five quilts. When we had started mother said, \Oh I forgot an egg.\ Wallace said, \Well I don't see where we could put it.\ —Flora Olive Shreve Tuesday was my birthday. I was seven years old. Mother made - me a birthday cake with candles on it. I got a jumping rope, a bath robe and a paint- ing book. —Mary Beth Shreve. We went to Sheridan in the car last Saturday and stayed a a -Monday. Sunday after- noon my little *cousin, Ruth, and I went with grandma to a play at the theater. —Zelma Hanes. Sunday was my birthday. I was nine years old. —Hazel Pope. Mr. Powers and Mr. Kimmel came up from Sheridan to at- tend court last week. They stayed at our house until Sun- day evening. When they left Mr. Kimmel gave me two pounds of nuts, a pound of grapes and some candy. Mr. Powers gave my sister, Mary, four pounds of apples. --Allen Roush.