Columbia Gorge News HoodRiverNews.com • TheDallesChronicle.com • WhiteSalmonEnterprise.com Wednesday, October 14, 2020 B5 HISTORY Press Room The press room at The Dalles Chronicle, date and photographer unknown. The newspaper was printed at the time with a letterpress, an early form of the printing press which used movable lead type to reproduce text and engraved blocks of various metals to reproduce graphics and, in later decades, photographs. Pictured below are engraved metal plates mounted nailed to wooden blocks, from the letter- press used by the Hood River News prior to conversion to modern offset presses, the photo mechanical process currently used to print the Columbia Gorge News. Pages were laid out and secured in a “forme” which was rolled with ink and squeezed or pressed against each sheet of paper. High points transferred ink to paper, low points remained white. Text and art was composed in reverse, reading left to right, and can be viewed as printed in a mirror. Letterpress blocks, both three inches wide, advertise coffee, at left, and the Hood River Apple Growers Association, above. National Newspaper Week is celebrated in the Oct. 13, 1960, Hood River News. Hood River News file photo YESTERYEARS 1920 — 100 years ago Members of the Immanuel Lutheran Church decided Saturday to dedicate their new church, which was pur- chased from the Unitarian ssociation, on Sunday, Oct. 24. The church is located at Ninth and State streets. This service will be conducted in English. Louis Plog is in charge of the disposition of the old church and reports that he las already had sever- al inquiries for the property. — Hood River News The manufacturing industries, in The Dalles and Wasco county, bring into this district some $7,000,000 every year, according to figures gathered from the local chamber of commerce, and (according to) the office of County Agricultural Agent E. R. Jackman, agricultural produce including wheat, vegetables, fruits and live stock add some $6,000,000 a year, figures show. It can thus be seen that, by totaling the money from the manu- facturing industries and the money secured for produce, Wasco county is richer by $13,000,000 every year. — The Dalles Chronicle If you are one of those who drove over to Moro yesterday to attend the Sherman county fair, you are probably toasting your toes today and still blowing your fingers. It was surely a cold voyage for Dalles-ites who essayed the grades and ruts and chuckholes of the road between here and the Deschutes, enjoying with keener exhilaration the excellent roads of Sherman county because the bumps that had gone before. — The Dalles Chronicle 1940 — 80 years ago Contrary to rumors circu- lating in town last weekend, to the effect that last-minute Democratic registrations had turned the tide in favor of the Democrats, an incomplete tally yesterday revealed that Republicans are at least 200 ahead, and their lead will be further extended when returns are complete. It is also reported that a number of former registrants, who have not voted in the past two years, will be struck off the list, as their whereabouts are not known. — Hood River News Fire of undetermined origin broke out at the home of Mrs. Agnes Brown at 1111 Elm St. this noon, when the fire department was called out to quench a blaze which destroyed a mattress and a pillow. Inasmuch as no one had been home during the morning, Chief Leon L. Mohr reported that the department was at a loss to know how the fire started. It GLOBAL HEADLINES Headlines around the world, from the archives of The Dalles Daily Chronicle. 1920 — 100 years ago More Credit To Farmers Will Boost Necessities High Court Refuses To Again Hear Dry Cases, Prohibition Stands 1940 — 80 years ago Italy Admits British Attacks Berlin Suffers Heavy Damage In Night Raid 1960 — 60 years ago Cuba Takes Over Most Business Russians Await Nikita’s Version of UN Routine Gunmen Flooded Floor of UN During Dictators’ Visit 1980 — 40 years ago Iraquis Invade Oilfield Cuba To Free U.S. Prisoners Car Sales Showing Gain For First Time In 1980 2000 — 20 years ago Mideast fighting escalates as Palestinians start ‘day of rage’ New York markets shake off Middle East tensions is estimated that the damage did no exceed $15. — The Dalles Chronicle An ordinance “granting to the Northern Wasco county Public Utility district the right and franchise to con- struct, maintain, and operate an electric transmission and distribution system in Dalles City, Ore.,” was presented as a “surprise” move before the city council last night. — The Dalles Chronicle 1960 — 60 years ago More than 40 dignified Portland businessmen spent a busy Wednesday in Hood River this week, examin- ing the remarkable reality that was once a vision for a handful of valley pioneers. Main point of interest for the Portland Chamber of Commerce delegation is the valley fruit industry, about 105 years old now, if Nathaniel Coe really planted the first fruit tree in 1855, as recollection and records claim. From those experi- mental trees and the vision, the hopes of men like Coe and E.L. Smith (first com- mercial orchard, 1876) are in explosive and dramatic evidence this week as the valley swings through anoth- er heavy harvest season. — Hood River News Speculation about the future of the Court Street school property took several new turns today follow- ing disclosure that School District 12 doesn’t even own the land on which the old brick structure is located. The school, taken out of ser- vice this year for the second time, is the most antiquated building in the district’s physical plant. But because of surging enrollment in the local school system, the Court Street building prob- ably will be put back in use again next year. Dalles City, however, has much to say about this: It owns the land. — The Dalles Chronicle A fire on which pass- ersby sounded no alarm completely destroyed an implement shed and ware- house at Parklawn Memorial Gardens on Three Mile Road lat Thursday. — The Dalles Chronicle 1970 — 50 years ago The Dow Chemical Company announced today that it is delaying the instal- lation of the Magnesium and Chlorine plant at Dallesport. During the next few months the company plans to assess adjacent engineering devel- opments affecting the plant design and to review the im- pact of general inflationary increases for operation and capital costs of the project. — White Salmon Enterprise 1980 — 40 years ago A major industrial ex- pansion that will increase production capacity by more than a third is starting into the construction state at Hanel Lumber Co. Permits have been cleared for a 100 by 160-foot structure at the present mill site that would eventually house a small log processing operation. Harley Horn, a spokesman for Hanel Lumber, said the new mill will manufacture lumber ranging from two- by-fours to two-by eight sizes. — Hood River News An ordinance “granting to the Northern Wasco county Public Utility district the right and franchise to con- struct, maintain, and operate an electric transmission and distribution system in Dalles City, Ore.,” was presented as a “surprise” move before the city council last night. — The Dalles Chronicle Wasco County CowBelles are searching for contes- tants for the 1980 Beef Princess contest scheduled to end Dec. 12. Debi Ashley, Maupin, won the contest last year and is the first princess selected following institu- tion of the contest by the CowBelles last year. — The Dalles Chronicle (1979) Rose Wilson turned 85 Thursday, but it didn’t slow down her bowling … at least not too much. After finishing her birthday cake, Rose rolled games of 139, 122, and 102 — not half bad for a bowler half her age. But for Mrs. Wilson, who is sporting a 140 average as a member of the Millers HiLifers, it was a sub-par night. “I was too excited,” she said of her surprise party put on by her fellow bowlers. — White Salmon Enterprise 1990 — 30 years ago Recently, the Mayor and Mrs. Charles Long were please to receive a phone call from Chamber of Commerce President Chuck and Foye Webster request- ing an appointment with Prepare for unexpected power outages with a Generac home standby generator Timeshare Cancellation Get your free information kit and see if you qualify: 855-385-4473 of Cascade Locks, which was approved for a $180,000 loan for its entrance road/land development. — Hood River News Intuition figures strong- ly in the life of William O. Gregg, who was ordained Sept. 23 as the sixth bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Eastern Oregon. Bishop Gregg succeeds Bishop Rusty Kimsey in that position, which is based in The Dallles but covers a wide-ranging territory comprising 60,000 square miles. — The Dalles Chronicle The Paul G. Allen Forest Protection Foundation has awarded the Columbia Land Trust a $1.25 million grant to purchase and conserve 203 acres of forest and agricul- tural lands in the Little White Salmon River watershed. In a unique partnership, the Columbia Land Trust will acquire and own the land for conservation, and the Cold Spring Conservancy will accomplish its goal by creating the Little White Salmon River Biodiversity Reserve. “This partnership will protect, maintain and help us learn more about our natural environment in the region,” said Jody Allen, executive director of the Paul G. Allen Foundations. — White Salmon Enterprise NO MORE GUTTER CLEANING, OR YOUR MONEY BACK GUARANTEED! CALL US TODAY FOR A FREE ESTIMATE 15 % AND! 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When Mayor Erick Naujack became aware of their pending visit to this area, he appointed them as goodwill ambassadors and request- ed them to present Mayor Charles Long with a per- sonal letter and copy of the latest published history of the Bingen, Germany, area. The letter expressed Mayor Naujack’s greetings and best wishes to the mayor, council and citizenry of the City of Bingen, Wash. — White Salmon Enterprise 2000 — 20 years ago On Wednesday, President Bill Clinton signed off on nearly $2 million in long awaited economic develop- ment funds for the Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area. The fiscal year 2001 Interior Appropriations bill includes $1,878,000 for eco- nomic development in the Gorge, money authorized in 1986 when the Scenic Act was signed into law by President Ronald Reagan. Other local businesses and agencies that have received the funding include the Port Help Prevent Blindness Get A Vision Screening Annually 7-Year Extended Warranty* A $695 Value! 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