04 June 2020

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Froid Bulls’ “A” Team Downs  Yellow Jackets Saturday

Froid Bulls’ “A” Team Downs Yellow Jackets Saturday


It was a great way to start a new program. The Post 49 Bulls downed Wolf Point in both games of a double-header played in Froid on Saturday afternoon, May 30. The contests marked the first Legion baseball games played in Froid since 2004. The new squad features players from Froid, Culbertson, Bainville, Medicine Lake and Sidney. An excellent pitching performance by Walker Ator led the Bulls

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Firefighter Of The Year

Firefighter Of The Year


Culbertson’s Mike Olson (center) was formally awarded the American Legion Department of Montana Firefighter of the Year Award May 30. He is pictured with Thomas Mann Post #81 commander David Dean (left) and post adjutant Brian Fordyce (right). (Submitted photo).
28 May 2020

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Statewide COVID-19 Cases At 479

Statewide COVID-19 Cases At 479


Only nine new COVID-19 cases were reported in Montana over the past week. The count now stands at 479, up eight from Tuesday, May 19, while North Dakota’s case count increased by 463 to 2,457 in the past week. Montana moves into phase 2 restrictions June 1. Groups larger than 50 will be allowed if people can social distance themselves. Restaurants, bars, breweries, distilleries and casinos

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Kjos Named DUI Task Force  Scholarship Winner

Kjos Named DUI Task Force Scholarship Winner


Froid High School’s Kassidy Kjos received one of two scholarships awarded locally by the Roosevelt County DUI Task Force. She spoke to the Community News while receiving immunization shots with her younger brother at the county complex May 21. Task force leader A.J. Allen was on hand to present Kjos with a certificate. The task force offers the scholarships annually to help promote healthy

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Aurelia Bets His Medicine

Aurelia Bets His Medicine


Aurelia Lilly Half Red Bets His Medicine, 80, of Brockton, died May 16, 2020, in Billings. She was born on the Spirit Lake Reservation in North Dakota on Nov. 10, 1939. She was raised by her mother and maternal grandfather and told many stories of her traditional upbringing. She only spoke the Dakota language until she was forced to learn English during her stints in two boarding schools. Although her boarding school experience was tough, it taught her how to be resilient and she resolved to keep her language alive. She got her teaching certificate and later became a Dakota language instructor at the Fort Peck Community College (NAES) and Brockton High School. She and her mother moved to Montana in 1949 to find a home. They moved around to various places until settling in Fort Kipp where she was later “mutually introduced” to her future husband, Ray, by well-meaning grandparents when they were in their teens. They married in 1960 and made their home on the Fort Peck Assiniboine and Sioux Reservation in northeast Montana, where Ray was an enrolled member. They bought their two- bedroom house in 1968 and had it placed on seven acres in the country so their children could raise animals and have room to run without the hassle of “city living.” They had five children and raised them together, along with various “foster” children, until his death in 1995. They never considered these children to be “fosters,” they welcomed them into their home and eventually had to turn the two-bedroom home into a five-bedroom home to accommodate their own children and the extra children entrusted to their care. After her husband’s death, she continued to open her home to anyone who needed shelter, whether that was a friend running from a dangerous situation with their children in tow or any child needing a safe place to sleep. When her grandchildren and great-grandchildren were born, she took great pleasure in helping to raise them. Stories were told by community members about how she was never alone when she went anywhere. Her van was always filled with children. She was a woman of extreme faith. She is survived by three daughters, Raylene Bets His Medicine, Theresa Bets His Medicine and Anissa Gabrielson; two sons: Travis Bets His Medicine and Dave Bets His Medicine; an adopted son, Carlin Iron Moccasin; numerous grandchildren and great-grandchildren; and sister, Sybil Summers. She was preceded in death by her husband, Ray; her mother, Agnes; father, Loyal Half Red; sister, Eliza Lambert; and grandson, Rocket Speed. A funeral service was held Thursday, May 21, at Clayton Stevenson Memorial Chapel in Wolf Point. Interment was at Fort Kipp Cemetery. Clayton Stevenson Memorial Chapel was entrusted with the arrangements.

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