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  • Savvy Senior: New Shingles Vaccine Provides Better Protection for Seniors

    May 3, 2018

    Dear Savvy Senior, A good friend of mine got a bad case of shingles last year and has been urging me to get vaccinated. Should I? Suspicious Susan Dear Susan, Yes! If you’re 50 or older, there’s a new shingles vaccine on the market that’s far superior to the older vaccine, so now is a great time to get inoculated. Here’s what you should know. Shingles, also known as herpes zoster, is a burning, blistering, often excruciating skin rash that affects around 1 million Americans each year. The same virus that causes chickenpox causes shingles. What...

  • Good Old Days

    May 3, 2018

    8 years ago The Commoner April 21, 1893 Edward H. King, the Oakesdale attorney, was yesterday arraigned in the superior court on a charge of forgery, in having affixed the name of an Oakesdale woman to a legal document without her knowledge or consent, it is alleged. *** The hearing in the Hay station assault case took place before Justice of the Peace Dillon at 10 o'clock Wednesday morning. The defendant is George Frye, and he was charged with an assault to commit murder by George Krentz, a neighbor. Frye sold the prosecuting witness some... Full story

  • Historic photos on exhibit in superior court room

    May 3, 2018

    Whitman County Superior Court Judge Gary Libey and court administrator Ginger Devorak show photos from a new historic exhibit that now hangs in the courtroom. The exhibit was commissioned by Judge Libey in partnership with Whitman County Library’s online Heritage Collection. The 18 images that were selected for the exhibit come from all across the county. The images shown are the Cashup Davis Hotel on Steptoe Butte from the Irene and Eric Weitze collection (left), Pacific Northwest Bell from t...

  • Dusty BB Club displays historic quilts in Colfax

    May 3, 2018

    Dusty BB club members at a quilt collection display in 1993. Dusty BB Club will celebrate its 90th anniversary with a display of historic quilts May 1-28 at The Center at Colfax Library. Some of the quilts were made by members from about 1930 to 1945. Many of the the quilts were donated to various causes and needs. The group resumed making quilts in 1975 at the request of the younger members who wanted to learn how to quilt. They continued until about 1993. Some of these quilts will also be on...

  • Colton grads on OSU honor roll

    May 3, 2018

    Colton graduates Kendyl A. Druffel of Colton and Brady Chadwick of Uniontown were among students named to the winter scholastic honor roll at Oregon State University in Corvallis with a grade averages of 3.5 or higher on at least 12 graded hours of course work. Both are freshmen at the university....

  • ICS 400 level course set for May 29 & 30

    May 3, 2018

    An Incident Command System 400 course will be Tuesday, May 29, 8 a.m.-5 p.m., and Wednesday, May 30, 8 a.m.-3 p.m., at the WSU Public Safety Building located at 2201 E. Grimes Way in Pullman. There is no charge for the class. Prerequisites are ICS 100, 200, 300, 700, 800. To sign up for the class and discuss parking contact Sarah Kubishta-Blatner at WSU Emergency Management at 509-335-7471 or email her at [email protected] There are many ICS trainings from FEMA and they all build on one another. ICS-400 is training for those who serve as...

  • MY FAVORITE RECIPES By Dee Bryson

    May 3, 2018

    Meet Wes and Shelby Hennigar Shelby and Wes Hennigar at the Farm Chicks Vintage & Handmade Show in the Spokane Valley. Some of you may be familiar with the saying, “A family that plays together, stays together.” Well, what about an extended family that plays together, works together, rides together, laughs together and is simply, always together? Let me introduce you to the Hennigar family. I first met the Hennigar women at the softball park. They are a lively bunch of fun-loving gals. It is...

  • Watershed program now in third year

    May 3, 2018

    The Palouse River Watershed Regional Conservation Partnership Program (RCPP), now in its third year, has assisted more than 40 landowners in achieving conservation goals on their land. The RCPP program covers the entire Palouse River drainage in Whitman, Latah, Spokane, Lincoln and Adams counties. Authorized under the 2014 Farm Bill and directed by the NRCS, RCPP acts as a one-stop shop for landowners to receive assistance that is tailored to their specific conservation goals with funding allocated from multiple sources. Landowners interested i...

  • Billboard addition

    Anne Lowe, Gazette Correspondent|May 3, 2018

    Endicott Jenny Meyer of Endicott Food Center has purchased a free-standing billboard for use in advertising community events. The board will be just outside the store, on the corner, and in use for the next few weeks advertising the Flea Market May 19 at the Endicott Gun Club. Please stop by the store or Town Hall for entry forms for this event....

  • Dahmen Barn exhibit features three artists

    May 3, 2018

    Janene Grende, Sandpoint, is the artist behind this highly detailed silk painting. Three Northwest artists share exhibit space at Artisans at the Dahmen Barn in Uniontown during May. An opening reception will be Sunday, May 6, from 1-3 p.m. Judy Fairley, Janene Grende and Dave Gressard will display a variety of mediums, all depicting northwest birds, wildlife and horses. The show continues through May 27. Fairley, of Clarkston, is a member of the national scratchboard association. She teaches a...

  • Heatons report on trip to Keys

    Karen Broeckel, Gazette Correspondent|May 3, 2018

    Dusty Carmen and Blake Heaton took a 3,500-mile trip along the southern part of the United States in a 1997 Chevy pickup they were delivering to their grandson, Valente Reynoso in Florida. They began the trip by driving to Phoenix where they spent two and a half days with their son Christopher. The next stop was Abilene, Texas, where they had planned to meet an artist Carmen wanted to see. Unfortunately, he was at his day job in court as a judge so was unable to get together with them. He makes sculptures, mainly of animals, out of silverware.... Full story

  • On the Record: April 26, 2018

    Apr 26, 2018

    REAL ESTATE Kevin Kirkman, Pullman, to Raymond and Carla Charfauros, San Diego, Calif., 24 unit apartment on Latah Street in Pullman, $2,860,430, April 9. Ernst Witte Family Limited Partnership to Jenifer Fournier, Henderson, Nev., land northwest of Steptoe, $172,375, April 12. Jesse Anderson, Post Falls, to Justin and Kristin Million, Pullman, house on SW Lost Trail Drive, Pullman, $262,000, April 13. R.B. Olson Construction, Pullman, to Neal and Jeannine Goodwin, house on NW Marshland, Pullman, $429,000, April 13. David Watkins, Pullman, to...

  • Frank Watson: Trade War

    Apr 26, 2018

    I admire leaders who surround themselves with very smart people. Good managers use their experts to make their organizations better. It would seem that President Trump missed that lesson in management class. He has obviously been successful in business, successful enough to fund his own campaign. But managing a private business is different than administrating a government. The profit motive of private business is paramount to all other considerations. Not so in government. Private business is “for the stockholders.” Governments are “for the p...

  • Don C. Brunell: Skilled Jobs Go Unfilled in Our Robust Economy

    Apr 26, 2018

    Millions of college graduates find themselves saddled with crushing debt and more than a third of them won’t be working in their chosen profession. Many will be working for low wages. Meanwhile, there are millions of high-paid jobs available in the skilled trades – electricians, plumbers, manufacturing workers, pipefitters, mechanics, appliance repair, computer techs, medical assistants and welders. Known as blue collar jobs, they routinely pay $45,000 to $65,000 a year or more. According to Salary.com, the average heavy equipment operator in...

  • Rich Lowry: No One Likes a Prig with an Ax to Grind

    Apr 26, 2018

    James Comey did it, naturally, for the children. Why does anyone in Washington take advantage of the most opportune moment to make a mint off publishing a tell-all book? It's never for the profits or the sheer satisfaction of sticking it to your enemies and putting yourself in the best possible light. No, there's always some ostensible higher cause. For the former FBI director, it's demonstrating, through his own sterling example, what ethical leadership is, "especially to young people." That the nation's youth will be riveted to their TV... Full story

  • Bob Franken: Ryan Gets Out While the Getting's Good

    Apr 26, 2018

    In Washington politics, rarely does anybody fully mean what he or she says. But few who know Paul Ryan doubt that he's sincere when he explains that he's abandoning his all-consuming job as House Speaker to spend much more time with his wife, Janna, and their three kids. Believe it when he says he's not running for re-election to Congress because he's longing to be more than a "Saturday dad." So, he'll be going home to Janesville, Wisconsin, as a private citizen next year. However, another reality in Washington is that there usually is more to...

  • Keep the Palouse picture perfect

    Apr 26, 2018

    Idaho has a slogan to encourage highway cleanliness: Idaho is too great to litter. It may be time for Whitman County to start up its own campaign because the picture-perfect Palouse isn't so pretty when its decorated in empty beer cans and broken bottles. Sunday was Earth Day. Thirty-five volunteers from Endicott spent three hours cleaning up along the roadside on the seven-mile stretch between Endicott and Winona. Many of the volunteers were amazed at the number of trash bags needed for this one section of lightly-used county road. The... Full story

  • Frank Watson: Stormy Daniels is an Unwelcome Tempest

    Apr 19, 2018

    I can’t feel sorry for Stormy Daniels. This saga shows American politics at its worst. For those who haven’t followed the scandal in detail, let me recap the sequence of events as I understand them. In 2006, a sleazy British tabloid claimed a professional bad girl had a one-night stand with a rich American tycoon. The bad girl categorically denied the whole thing. Then, ten years later the tycoon decides to run for president. The bad girl threatens to publicly expose the affair that she earlier denied unless she is paid a whole bunch of mon...

  • Don C. Brunell: Streamlining Regulations helps Americans Compete

    Apr 19, 2018

    President Trump campaigned on cutting taxes, streamlining regulations and improving infrastructure. He also vowed to renegotiate our trade agreements calling the North American Free Trade Agreement “the worst deal ever made.” On his first day in office, he signed an executive order aimed at reducing regulations and controlling regulatory costs. However, revamping our vast web of federal rules is much easier said than done. It is even more difficult when state and local rules are considered. The cost of regulations is a key American com... Full story

  • Letters: April 19, 2018

    Apr 19, 2018

    Slipped away When I read Richard Stanton’s rather hate-filled letter to the editor last week, I found myself agreeing with one of his points. Adultery is an egregious and deplorable behavior. But I seem to recall just in my lifetime a lot of politicians that have been alleged to have engaged in that conduct. Let me see … JFK, RFK, LBJ, Bush 41, Bill Clinton, Bush 43, Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, Ted Kennedy ... and the list goes on ad-nauseam. Maybe it would be easier to make a list of politicians who have not had allegations of infidelity th... Full story

  • Rich Lowry: Mark Zuckerberg's Insufferable Tripe

    Apr 19, 2018

    Once again, Mark Zuckerberg is sorry. The founder of Facebook, who has apologized for privacy breaches throughout much of his company's existence, is back at it, on a much larger stage than ever before. The proximate cause is the Cambridge Analytica controversy. In violation of Facebook's rules, the Trump-linked political consultancy schemed to get access to the data of 87 million users. This has made Facebook a scapegoat for President Donald Trump's victory on par with the Russians and James Comey (at least before the FBI director got fired...

  • Bob Franken: Pruitt Awaits His Fate

    Apr 19, 2018

    In spite of all the controversy about Scott Pruitt's cushy D.C. condo, it's entirely appropriate that he was getting a sweetheart deal on a place to sleep. After all, for his entire political career, he's been in bed with the special business interests who resist any and all government efforts to protect against their ravaging of the environment. In Oklahoma, as a state senator, then attorney general, and now the Trump administration's Environmental Protection Agency administrator, Pruitt has been a stalwart opponent of any regulation that... Full story

  • Learning how to be a citizen

    Apr 19, 2018

    In many cases, Americans are struggling to understand what is happening in the country. Most confounding is the role of the various departments and agencies in the functioning of government. Agencies seem at odds, departments seem over-reaching and political appointees seem independent. On top of this, Congress is unable to conduct important business and is becoming more divided along party lines. The president is at odds with both elected and appointed leaders. Democracy is neither pretty nor the most efficient. It can be messy. It can get...

  • Frank Watson: Tax Relief

    Apr 12, 2018

    I finished my taxes a few weeks ahead of the deadline. Yippee!!! Now I can worry about something else. When I talk to my friends, I find I am one of the few who prepares their own tax returns. Most are afraid to make a mistake or decide not to spend the time. The IRS publishes estimates of the time required to prepare each form. They are pretty accurate. By the time I read the instructions, sorted my files into the appropriate piles, and completed the forms, I had invested more than three full days. I recall a big IRS push a few tax seasons...

  • Don C. Brunell: Trade war could hit Washington hard

    Apr 12, 2018

    Any trade war between the United States and China is worrisome, but if it escalated and tariffs are imposed, it will hit Washington particularly hard. Avoiding that possibility should be our primary goal. Our state is our nation’s third largest exporter with more than half of the containers leaving the Puget Sound heading to China. The Port of Seattle estimated that China trade alone accounted for $18 billion last year and 40 percent of our state’s jobs are now tied to trade. President Trump has proposed tariffs as a bargaining chip to get a b...

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