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State Historical Society THE RATHDRUM TRIBUNE VOL. XXV, NO. 45 KATHDKUM, KOOTENAI C OUNTY, IDAHO, FBiIdaY, APRIL », 1920 ' I fl .00 PER YEAR < A MERITORIOUS BILL! Truth In Fabric Measure Favored By Many. (9t. Paul Farmers' Dispatch) The thousands of readers of the Farmers' Dispatch who clip and rket wool should be greatly ma interested in the bill by Represen tative French of Idaho introduced jn congress recently which would "all wool"' fabrics to require contain all virgin wool, instead of the large amount of shoddy and mixed with wool which cotton most of the so-called all-wool goods of today are made of. The treasurer of the Ohio Wool Growers association has character ized shoddy as the "arch-enemy Shoddy is made of old tt of sheep. soft woolen rags shredded and The life of the original It may look like respun, wool is gone, wool to the untrained eye and may feel like wool, but it is not the real stuff, and it quickly shows up in the wear. There would be no objection to that from the wool growers,if it were properly labeled, and was sold at a price commen surate with its cost or worth. But unscrupulous manufacturers not only palm off shoddy as virgin wool,but they charge a price based on the cost if it were all virgin wool. Thus they libel the wool growing industry, increase the cost of clothing abnormally, taking all j the profits themselves, and reduce \ the demand and consumption of virgin wool. AH this hits the wool growers right in the pocketbook. The French bill, now known as the "Truth in Fabric" bill, is de- ; signed to stop the evil. It will 1 protect both the consumer and the ! Shoddy and cotton ] j . , , , , , . , than should oleo be sola as butter j or horsemeat as potted bam. The | Farmers' Dispatch not only gives ! producer. should no more be sold as all wool ! its complete endorsement to the proposed law, but it hopes every reader will write bis congressman and senators urging them to support it. Idaho State News Items. Payette is to have an alfalfa mill. Boise Is to have a new lighting system Idaho farm lands have doubled in average price since 1916. Carey has voted $40,000 bonds for the erection of a new school building. The state land board plansche sale uf 150,000,000 feet of timber in the inmhern part of tbe state. A county fruit growers' association w as organized Id Boundary county last week. A log drive on the North Fork Parted with twenty million feet of '"«s on the Way to mills down the fiver. A Moscow farmer's hogs showed films of being "drunk" after eating Clirn silage that had become too ,IJ t cow feed. sour An early morning blaze at Buhl •st week caused a property loss of H60,000. High wind and low water Dessure hampered the fire fighters. Nonpartisan league is lining forces for ihe coming fall * Meins in Idaho, according to the e *aue's official publication. ' Stron public « demand for draft hprses foi work and for those heavy practical service on is reported by E. F. Rinehart, ^oiiual husbandmao of the U. of * mu uh to he of Tifiu-, ■*. I. extension division. Col. E. G. Davi«, Boise attorney, is tbe fourth candidate to enter the race for the republican nomination for U. S. senator from Idaho. . was a former opponent of D. W. Davis for the republican He nomination for governor. Suit of the state of Idaho Leroy C. Jones, former against state game warden, for recovery of about $24,000 the value of game licenses Tor which he is alleged to have failed to account, has reached supreme court on appeal from order denying a change of the state an venue. to of While bear is classed fur bearing animal there Is no closed season on them. as a Bear may be taken all the year round if a regular huntl and Ashing license and ng a trapper's says the license is first procured, attorney general. Governor Davis will ask Dr. E A. Bryan, state cummij-sioner education, to represent the state of Idaho at a conference of and state representatives sooo to be held in Washington, D. C attempt to solve the teacher shortage puzzle. Adjutant General L. V. Patch did not file bis resignation April 1 as he had intended doing according to his announcement of six weeks ago iu order to campaign foy U. S. senator. He now intimates he will continue to hold the office of adjutant general for awhile. of governors in an in j closed a contract with the Potlatch White fir from Latah county will be used by the Inland Paper company at its Millwood plant in tbe manufac ture of paper. Toe company has \ Lumber company to take all the of Turkestan alfalfa seed amounting to yvbike flr, cut i tu 16-Xoot logs, that it can deliver at the plant. Upon information that a cargo of ; 160 carloads has reached the north 1 wes t from Siberia, Deputy State Seed ! Ios P ect,,r ' G Ablsou bas issued a ] j statement ad vising that this variety [benot planted io the iriigated sections of Idaho, j | Unable to meet its obligations with ! actual casb ' lbe state üf Idaho be « aü Saturday to register against future tax payments tbe warrants with which it pays employes and contrac tors. These warrants will cost the state 6 per cent interest/ until they are called, which may be after several months. ! to Teachers Suggest Minimum. The twenty-second annual meeting of the Inland Empire Teachers' asso ciation closed at Spokane April 2. Orville C. Pratt of that city being elected president for the ensuiog year. In their resolutions the teachers favored establishing a salary mini of $1200 a year for inexperienced in mum teachers having twoyearsol training, $1300 for those haviog three years the training training and $1490 if The plan would covers four years, add $190 a year for each year's exper ience in teaching until the salary reached $1800. Teachers having only emergency certificates would receive $900, according schedule. of to the proposed Chinese Lanterns. Particularly gay and attractive are the shops of the lantern venders In the Chinese cities. All varieties of lan terns are to be seen—the large silken three and four feet high, gor ones geously painted with variegated colors, embroidered in gold and silver or dec orated with deep fringe of the same material, costing from $100 to $200 and used by the wealthy mandarins and others; and common small horn and lanterns, used by the coolies. of paper which cost one-sixteenth of a dollar. The mode of making horn lanterns is very Ingenious ; the horns are cut into remarkably thin slices which, by means of heat Vnd pressure, are Joined to cether and formed Into various shapes; round square, hexagon, octagon, and shaped to resemble an hour glass. on of some TO SAVE FORESTS M. I 1 Valjie of Periodical Surface I Fires Is Urged. For hundreds of years prior to the advejit of the white man,the Indians, who were then the only custodians of our fjirests, prevented Öres jiy periodically setting surface tires to remove the litter of dead leave*, twigs, underbrush, etc., thus preventing its accumulation to the exteot of furnishing fuel for destruc tive or crown flres, saysaSalem, Ore., news bureau. Thslt this method of preventing destructive fires was successful is shown by the fact that the forests taken over by the white man rarely bore scars of trees destroyed by flres. On th<t contrary, the-e forests, includ ing thi|i Big Trees, thousands of vears old, al^o the ordinary furests were in tact,wijih trees uninjured by Öre, hun dreds of years old. Almost all of these trees, however, bore evidence by tbeir charred bark of surface tiring prac ticed bÿ the Indians. Notwithstanding the fire protection affordeq to the forests by tbe ltidiars, the white man, oblivious of th'e wisdom be might have learned from tbe lOdiao, insists upon rigid suppression of all forest flres, with the result that the, accumulation of litter iu a few years furnishes the fuel for conflagrations which entirely destroy the forest. Captain Joseph A. Kitts of Grass Valley, California, a civil engineer of many yejirs experience in the woods, has prepared a plan which deals with tbe historical facts of this situation, and elucidates tflftei, practical methods which uifght be adopted by government to protect our forests from destructive flres and encourage the reforestation of areas now bare of trees. sjich reforestation is essential to our timber supply, but is now largely delayed and prevented by the ioefficicnty of our fire protection. Tbo Southern Pacidc company is leading u| a movement to bring the importance of this matter before the public. destructive of 7, to m our Sunday School Convention The Kootenai County Sunday school convention will be held at Post Falls on Wednesday, April 14. Sessions will be at 2 and 7:30 p. m. A splenqid program of addresses and music is being prepared for this convention, and Post Falls is extend ing a cordial welcome to all who can attend, according to Eric Johnson, County S. S. Superintendent. FROM OVER THE COUNTY POST FALLS O. R. Shdrn, principal of the school at Athol, was in Post Falls last week. He was formerly principal of the school here) and afterward county superintendent. Frauk Poteler arrived from Califor nia to oversje his mother's 800 acres of land on tljie prairie. A Are in the Dillard borne was ex tinguished wjitb tbe chemical engine It is believed to followed by water, have started from a defective flue. Tbe county Sunday school conven tion is to be held in Post Falls April 14. The school was closed two days last week to permit the teachers to attend their convention in Spokane. ^ g McLèod has sold his place Spokane Bridge and moved soutn or ap to Post Falls, purchasing be J .L Schick residence property. Mr. Schick has purc hase(ji a 10 acre irrigated | SPIRIT LAKE The traie Iasi week swept the lake clear of ice. An Easter dance was Riven Monday evening. County Assessor Smith appointed M. B. Peterson to assess property in I Spirit Lake precinct. Mr. Peterson 1 has assessed the north end of the county for the past seven years. A baseball team is being organized and funds raised in various ways for its support. HARRISON Captain Eli Laird Steamer Flyer has severed his Section with the Red Collar line lake a position with Fred Herrick, ijbe lumber manufacturer. He has been on the lake and river for about 16 years. Thomas O'Donnell, 60 years old, a hlacksmlth at Lane, dropped dead w|itn heart disease. of tbe lake con to On Monday a card parly and dance wUs given at the Hotel Harrison for tljie benefit of tbe Aiuer.cau Legion. Tbe s Methodist ladies Erster social last Saturday Au egg supper was gave an evening served to tbe public. CŒUR D'ALENE A. Cook received son, Earl Cook, at Tekoa, brijike his leg while working tetjm pulling an auto out of a hole. jvirs. Ada Betsy Nogle, age 67, wife of E M. Nogle of Post Falls, died Sunday, after long suffering with cancer, having been bedridden since the first of the year. April 2 the highway deoartinent received à carload of T. N. T. and a similar shipment arrived Saturday to he ijised on highway construction in tbi* district. The explosives are being stored in Tuft's warehouse. lî|obert D. Leeper was selected as delegate of the Kootenai post to attend the state convention of the American Legion at Twin Falls,April 7, 8 and 9. Besides the many im portant questions which will come before this convention officers of the statif headquarters of the legion are to btj: selected. Kootenai post of the American Legljjn at a well-attended meeting in their club rooms Monday night adopted this resolution: "We are opposed to the noDpartizan league or auy cjther secret meeting being held m mijinicipal buildings." The call for the republican party county central committee has tuen issued by County Cbaiimin Ezra R. Whitla to meet April 10. Each of the 3(( precincts in Kootenai cooutv will b^ represented by a delegate, and upon f.heui will devolve the duty uf selecting six delegates to the republi can state convention io C<Eur d'Alene on April 20. Through the cooperation of County Agent II. II. Beier and the Armour Packing Cu., the following Kootenai county boys aod girls have been elected in the Armour pig club aod will receive a purebred Duroc-Jersey gilt frc|iu Armour: Robert Yoweli, Marvin Wing and Virgil Pierson of Wuricyl, Margaret Ford of Belmont; Vina 1^1. Kyle of Post Fails aud Robert Pyers of Mica. woTd from his 1 hit tie with a in it of in of The democratic county central committee in session Saturday atfer noon selected 12 delegates to the state convention in Lewiston on June 15, and placed the delegation uuder tbe unit rule, requiring them to vote as a unit on all questions. The dele gates wèrt: Charles Waggoner, T. J. Deck, Clyde Quarles, R. II. Elder, K M. Haj isori, H. C. Shaver, George | Peiers, Mrs. M. M. Barton, T. L. Quarles and G. W. Flemming. Weeks, Mrs. Theresa Graham, Ernest Reiniget, R. D. Leeper, J C White aid Arnev. Alternates were: and J. W Mrs. B. J. Glrking, John Wood. Gust FARM REFERENDUM On Proposition to Tax Large Land Holdings. t Boise, Idaho.—About 14,000 Idaho farm bureau members will be called upon before April 15 approve or disapprove a tax plan proposed by a bill in congre; s whereby land holdings valued in excess of $10,000 will be taxed ooe 40 per cent. The American Faim Bureau association will compile the results of the referendum ard make recommendations to congress. k L. W. Fluharty, secretary of tl e state farm bureau, issued the fo' lowing statement on the referen dum: Submission of this referendum is the first result in Idaho of the action of the Idaho state farm bureau, at its recent meeting in Biise, in deciding to join the national federation. At the Boise meeting, especial approval was given by the delegates to the pro vision in the proposed federation constitution, that the federation s îould not be committed to opinions on national policies with out submission of such questions to a referendum of the membership. The referendum says: "Feb ruary 7,1930, Representative Nolan introduced in the house of repre sentatives a bill to pjeovida for the raising of pubfic revenuès by fl tax upon the privileges of the use and enjoyment of lands of large value. Section i of said bill defines land to be "the surface of the ground with all assessments in,on aud over sime," includes forest, water rights and minerals, "and not including improvements the result in whole or in part of the application of labor to land." "Section 2 provides: 'That all persons, firms, associations and corporations owning land in value in excess of $10,000, whether in possession or leased to others, shall be subject to an excise tax upon the privilege of the use and enjoyment of such excess at the rate of 1 per centum. The referendum says: object of this act is to raise public » >* "The It is not supposed that revenues, it will do away entirely with, but be supplementary to the present income tax laws. The proponents of this and similar measures be h :) lieve that land does not at present [tear its just proportion of taxes as compared to the industries. y, "Effect: In considering this act ' you should not allow the fact that the revenues therefrom will come in principal part from the fanners, to prejudice your judgment, but should consider it in relation to fairness to other interests; and whether or not it would be of suffi cient burden to affect land values, rentals or incomes and thus affect production. There is no provision made for deductions for liens or mortgages. The provisions merely call for one per cent per annum annually cn actual valuations of all holdings above $10,000. Since the farmers of the nation are most vitally con cerned in this proposal we ask that you give this careful consideration and return the enclosed ballot to the American Bureau Federation, Ames, Iowa, not later than April 15, 1920. It « i ft