Distinctly Montana Magazine

Distinctly Montana Summer 2018

Distinctly Montana Magazine

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W W W. D I S T I N C T LY M O N TA NA . C O M 101 CONTINUED ON THE WEB… .COM EVERYTHING IN THE MAGAZINE, AND MORE: • PAST ISSUES IN DIGITAL • NEWSLETTERS • VIDEOS • OUR MONTANA WRITERS' AND READERS' PERSONAL EXPERIENCES • READERS' SHARED PHOTOS • SHOPPING AT DistinctlyMontanaGifts.com • SEARCHABLE ARCHIVES • CONTEST INFO • MONTANA NEWS • WHAT TO DO IN MONTANA • YEARLY CALENDAR • SUBMISSION GUIDELINES www.distinctlymontana.com $5.95 Display until Dec. 15, 2014 A d v e n t u r e u inspiration u s p i r i t B r ing ing B Ac k B ig ho r n sheep Mo ntA nA 's new dro ne e rA 5 g r eAt p ho ne A pps f o r Mo ntA nA fiel d notes f ro M the hig h p lA ins ...A nd Mo r e! spec iA l : M o n t a n a ' s L E a D I n G L I f E s t y L E M a G a z I n E Gal Gal Gal Gal o u r 2 0 1 4 Fall i s s u e www.distinctlymontana.com $6.95 D I S P L AY U N T I L D E C. 15, 2015 A D V E N T U R E u inspiration u S P I R I T THE WIL D MAG RUDER C O R R IDO R YO UR INNER WO L F S WEETG R A S S HIL L S PIE A L A ROA D: MO NTA NA 'S PIE TR A IL M O N T A N A ' S L E A D I N G L I F E S T Y L E M A G A Z I N E Fall I S S U E O U R 2 0 1 5 Did you know that our FACEBOOK PAGE has become the #1 PAGE FOR "LIKES" and followers, exceeding all other Montana media—TV, radio, newspaper, magazines? YEP, A BIG FB "THUMBSUP FOR US!" Yay! D E PA R T M E N T B A C K I N T H E D AY In 1900, the fashion for girls imitated that of adults, who in turn were influenced by Euro- pean couture. The dolls' dresses and tea set also mimicked that of adults. Source: Museum of the Rockies Photo Archive Dry cleaning business. People wait about 15 minutes while their clothes are cleaned, pressed, or sewn. Dry cleaning used non-wa- ter- based solvents to clean; garments were placed in a basket or drum—the garments were in an outer rim, the solvent separate. The solvents used could be highly toxic. Photo: Gallatin County Pioneer Museum Potato field around 1920. The first thing a homesteader—man, woman, child—did was plow through dense prairie grasses. Farmers soon learned to diversify their crops. Photo: Museum of the Rockies Photo Archive Shoemaker Jacob deRvig is engrossed in his craft in his Manhattan shop in 1912. Because of access to Montana's superior livestock industry, Montana was a center of quality leather shoes and boots. Source: Museum of the Rockies Photo Archive

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