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Fulcher: Prepare for turbulence
Congressman says war impact will be felt here
Argues that US should "choke off" Putin by ramping up energy production and export to friendly nations.
No dirt left behind
Loren Walz has been selling Kirby vacuums for 40 years
DALTON GARDENS - Ask Loren Walz why he has been selling Kirby vacuums for four decades.
Just stay calm as the market rises and falls
Dugdale says good things are happening despite stock market slump
Dugdale says good things continue to happen despite stock market slump
Some tips to snag seats together on holiday flights
Airlines charging more for people who request adjacent seats
NEW YORK - Flying this Thanksgiving and worried that you won't be able to sit with family?
Op-Ed: Resolving to be civil
It also happens to be the best way to win an argument.
Fresh options
Christmas tree shopping: Cost vs. convenience
VIOLENCE: One side at fault
President Trump on Tuesday was wrong in the news conference when he squarely laid blame on both sides in the Charlottesville melee. Although it was an improvement from his caving to the politically correct communists in this country, in his statement condemning white supremacists the previous day, the blame should rest squarely on the counter protesters, antifa. The so-called white supremacists group had a legitimate reason to be there and held a permit to peacefully protest the taking down of an American memorial. The resistance, counter-protesters, antifa, or whatever one may call them (no one knows for sure who they were) came armed with clubs, suited with shields and helmets, and ready to incite violence. They got what they wanted, violence broke out. Could there have been any other result? Self-defense is an innate characteristic. The supremacist group, I believe, was exercising their free speech rights and had to exercise self-defense in what started out to be a peaceful protest on their part.
Magic Bus
Drawing for classic '76 VW donated by Post Falls Volkswagen raises $40,000 for KHS
VW Bus tickets sales benefit KHS
ADVERTISING: Advertorial — GEORGE BALLING: Getting creative
The state by state restrictions from the coronavirus have been disruptive to most any business. The most significant dislocation though, is in the travel and tourism industry, and wine country-based businesses and winery tasting rooms are certainly taking some of the biggest hits. As restrictions start to lift and businesses reopen, wineries are still experiencing some of the most significant regulatory increases.
West Yellowstone ponders $1.4M forest land purchase
A hull of a business
Duo seeks to make fastest boats in the world, help NIC students in process
Looking for hand sanitizer? Good luck finding it
NEW YORK (AP) — The hand sanitizers on Amazon were overpriced. A Walmart this weekend was completely sold out. Only on his third try was Ken Smith able to find the clear gel — at a Walgreens, where three bottles of Purell were left. He bought two.
Sharp and to the point
Mumbly-Peg sells knives, swords
HAYDEN - Mumbly-Peg is one of those games that while once popular, would not be frowned upon today.
Sports complex land deal endorsed by PF council
POST FALLS - A proposal for the city to buy 61.2 acres on the Rathdrum Prairie for a future multi-use sports complex has cleared its first hurdle.
Council united on river corridor
Resolution allows city to buy BNSF land for $2.5 million
Want to be a millionaire? Not enough, study says
Being a millionaire isn’t all it was cracked up to be.
Soter Vineyards: A review
It occurred to me that while we frequently discuss coming wine events in this article we have rarely gone back to review the events to let you the wine consumer know how they went. That is of even more value when tastings and winemaker dinners involve a winery like Soter Vineyards from Oregon that are either new to the market, or not widely available.
Sharon Kay ‘Sherry’ Willits, 74
Sharon Kay “Sherry” Willits, age 74, of Coeur d’Alene, passed away at Kootenai Health on July 16, 2020, after a long series of illnesses over the past several years. A Denver native, she was born to Leslie Harold Bankson and Mildred Howard on Aug. 18, 1945. Her father passed away while she was just an infant and she was raised by her mother and close relatives. She attended Teller Elementary and graduated from East High School in Denver, Colo.
TAXES: A little paper justified
I just read the article in The Press on putting more information on tax bills. This year my tax went up 78 percent compared to last year. I compared this year’s bill and last year’s. Still confused on how this happened I called the Kootenai County Treasurer to find out why.
WAGE: Minimum must push higher
I was pleased to read an article about Raiseidaho.org in The Press. The petition to raise the minimum wage is positive. The negative blogs to the article are hilarious, containing a lot of the “up by my bootstraps” rhetoric. I will never understand why people who are financially comfortable want no one else to be. At the most, raising the wage might cost us about $18 a year.