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About The North Coast times-eagle. (Wheeler, Oregon) 1971-2007 | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1980)
THE NORTH COAST TIMES EAGLE, FRIDAY, 21 MARCH 1980 Nineteen Twenty-five brought a record crowd fo r the spring season, and in A p ril the golf course issued 300 tickets in one weekend. Page 7 Nineteen Thirty-seven brought a nervous month o r two when Seaside businessmen had to fight a law proposed in the state legislature to close most places of business on Sunday. Obviously, that would cripple a weekend town. The businessmen won. $$$ On September 6, 1937, following Labor Day weekend, bank deposits reached $650,000, the highest in the history of the Seaside bank. New transportation methods also brought wealth to Sea side. In 1927 Cell Line A ir Service Company announced plans for the following summer fo r regular a ir service, with four trip s a day to Seaside and Clatsop beaches from Portland, passengers and express “ to be carried in mod ern enclosed planes.” The plan met with insurmountable d ifficulties, however, in that there was no suitable place to land a large passenger plane. Although consideration was made by Rankin Flying Service to outfit th e ir planes with pontoons to land in the Necanicum River. The a ir service never materialized and neither did the expected flying field and aviation school planned for the Seaside area. And what were the new attractions bringing five thou sand people to the Clatsop beaches over one Labor Day weekend? Perhaps it was watching three loggers from Bend climb to the top of Haystack Rock with hooks and ropes to hoist an American flag on its peak in 1927. Or the festivities of the annual Scotchbroom Festival held in June and featuring sports events between the Seaside K i- wanis, Rotary and Chamber of Commerce. Maybe it was Seaside’s “ only illuminated beach on the Pacific Coast” in the summer of 1928, when four blocks of beach were lighted for night bathing; or maybe it was the bumper cars which bumped into the resort in 1929. A t any rate, advertising was being recognized as a powerful force during this time. In 1926 the Chamber of Commerce asked the voters of Seaside to support a mea sure appropriating $500 of city funds fo r advertising pur poses. Opponents won a court decision declaring the fund election illegal and the city without the authority to levy taxes fo r that purpose. (Do we see some hope fo r the little people here?) Undaunted, in 1927 Seaside sponsored a radio ad three times a week on Portland’ s KEX, and a canvass o f the city was made to secure two dollar pledges from 50 peo ple to pay fo r it. In 1927 came another shred of hope for the ‘ ‘little peo ple” who had moved there to get away. Seaside voters turned down a proposed $2,500 fund for advertising pur poses which had been placed on the ballot by petitions prepared by the Chamber of Commerce. The comeback from that admirable defeat was the Chamber’ s ‘ *9 holes of golf and 9 holes of fishing” event This happening was arranged fo r professional golfer Frank Dolp and Portland news editor Fred Boalt, in which the party invaded the Seaside Golf Course fo r nine holes followed by the fishing event, a ll carefully noted and re corded fo r Boalt’s United Press story which would go the rounds of many newspapers in the country. Ambitious advertisers tend to get careless, however, and in 1929 an “ attractive” ad was printed in the Ore gonian to promote Seaside, but the beach photo used turned out to be o f four Hoquiam g irls bathing on Pacific Beach in Gray’s Harbor, Washington. Meanwhile the “ festive” town worked on its party atmosphere and in 1927 streamer lights on Broadway were left on the entire month of September to lengthen the season and avoid even the “ appearance of a closed town.” Then, in 1928, street decorations of colored flags were strugn over Broadway to give a “ gala” ap pearance” over the summer months. In 1929 a building was constructed to house an amuse ment concession with 15 “ scooters” to give tourists “ fun in plenty.” ■ TOURIST TENT CAMP O N SHELL ROAD September 5, 1929. An estimated 50-ihousand people were in Seaside over the weekend. to the southern end of Cannon Beach. The Seaside Signal of 1934 noted an increase in foreign ers visiting the Clatsop beaches and a large number of cars d riving up the coast highway from California. $$$ ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ The tourist trade in Seaside hardly faltered during the hard times of the Thirties. In 1931 the second minature golf course was built, and in the same year a “ Walkathon” contest was proposed, sim ilar to the one that was being held at Lotus Isle in Portland. Couples were to start walking and keep at it until they were unable to “ pick ’ em up and lay 'em down.” Rules: walk one hour, rest 15 minutes, day and night. And, due in part to the Depression, even tourists rev erted for awhile back to more nature oriented entertain ment. People rediscovered walking. In 1934 more than one thousand persons had walked over Tillamook Head in the month of June alone. In 1936 hundreds of hikers gathered fo r the annual T ra ils Day hike over the Head and a special lowfare excursion was run between Portland and Seattle on the SP&S fo r the event, which brought 625 passengers in one Sunday. In 1934 the fir s t surfboard arrived in Seaside. It belong ed to Lifeguard Jim Reed and was 20 feet long. Also dur ing that year finding Japanese glass floats became a major “ sport.” In fact, by 1935 the discovery of the floats was considered both a sport and an avocation, bringing sales from a nickle to five dollars. Three years later they were being hunted by airplane along the beaches from Seaside Nineteen T hirty-fou r recorded business volume up 25 percent. $$$ The Seaside Chamber of Commerce did not stop dream ing during the lean years and the Signal reports in 1935 that, after six years of effort by the cham ber, the project to build a breakwater at Seaside was finally being consid ered by the U.S. Corps of Arm y Engineers. $$$ August, 1936 showed bank deposits reflecting business 30 percent above the previous year. $$$ W OM ENS CR ISIS SERVICE OF C L A T S O P c o u n t y A V O L U N T E E R O R G A N IZ A T IO N H elp and refckals fo r P R O V ID IN G v ic t im s of FAMILY V IO L E N C E A N D R A P E W E O FFER, •E M O T IO N A L S U P P O R T - to a g e n c ie s a n d s h e l t e r h o m e s - • c o m m u n i t y e d u c a t io n & s p e a k e r s - • n e re R A L S •C N 6 O IN S SUPPORT & RAP G R O U PS- COMPLETE CONFIDENTIALITY 3 2 5 -5 7 3 5 C latso p county w omens J Remember the advertising fund? Well, in 1942 the Chamber o f Commerce tried once more to establish a business advertising fund, this time through a business tax to raise the money. The tax was approved at a city council meeting. C o n tin u e d on Page E ig h t H aystack H ouse $$$ I I I I L The Cannon Beach area contributed to the promotion of the Clatsop beaches when, in 1938 a feature film was released by Universal Studios entitled “ Stranger than F iction,” which was filmed the previous summer at Hay stack Rock. Tourist industry promoters of the area tackled a big problem in 1938. Representatives o f two south Washing ton coastal counties and two northern Oregon counties met to discuss the problem of tra ffic from California being diverted before it reached the northern coastal tourist traps. The committee decided to post a man fo r the summer at Crescent C ity to contact tourists and urge them to continue on up the coast. Nineteen Thirty-nine was a promising year fo r the tourist industry. During that year Seaside sponsored the Northwest Jitterbug Contest; was chosen fo r the 1940 convention of the Oregon Department o f the American Legion; the fir s t shopping guide fo r tourists was publish ed by the Seaside Signal; “ as usual, the ja il capacity was fa r short of requirements over the holidays” (always a good sign); the city installed a blinking light at the Broad way and Holladay intersection; tra ffic congestion on Broadway was a big problem due to tourists driving up and down to go around the Turnaround and watch the crowds (another good sign); and, cf course, the final mea sure of a successful season: Deposits at the bank were up by 19 percent Twenty-four thousand, 174 dollars were marked in building perm its for the fir s t three months o f the year. 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