Columbia Gorge news. (The Dalles, OR) 2020-current, March 03, 2021, Page 22, Image 22

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    B6
Columbia Gorge News
Wednesday, March 3, 2021
www.columbiagorgenews.com
HISTORY
VERBATIM
Good Girls and
Bad Dress Alike
Says Official
Parental supervisor urged as
check to wayward practice
Five pairs of horses are used to deliver three wagons of wool to The Dalles Wool Trade Center in The Dalles, which operated from 1864 to
1894. The building is located just east of the Sunshine Mill Winery and Tasting Rooms and remains in use today. The sign on the left side
of the building reads, Highest Prices Paid For Sheep Pelts.
Photo courtesy Wilma Roberts collection
YESTERYEARS
1921 — 100 years ago
Contractors are at work
tearing town the old Park
St. School and if able only
the site and piles of lumber
and rubbish will remain at
the end of another week.
The old school bell, which
has rung out the invitation
to Hood River pupils for 25
years at Park St. School, and
which was on the old court
house five years before, will
be transferred to the new
building and installed with
appropriate exercises in the
near future. — Hood River
News
Increase in telephone
rates, granted by the Oregon
public service commission
yesterday afternoon, will
be comparatively small
in The Dalles, according
to Attorney John Gavin,
who represented the city
in the rate hearings held
in Portland. All residence
telephones rates will be in-
creased by 25 cents a month.
All business and office
telephones in the city will
stand a 50 cent increase in
monthly rates. — The Dalles
Daily Chronicle
1941 — 80 years ago
A center of interest in
town on Tuesday of last
week was a giant, portable
concrete mixer, known as
the “Mixermobile,” which
is one of a number of these
machines being built in
Portland. The Mixermobile,
which is fully automatic
in all its operations, has a
capacity of two cubic yards
of mix, yet is so portable
that it can easily be driven
under its own power point
to point on any fair road.
Following the Mixermobile
was a new type of concrete
spreader, also self-powered,
which, it is claimed, will
do a surprising rapid and
efficient job. The equipment
was on its way to Pendleton,
where a new airport is to be
constructed. — Hood River
News
New work on the
Columbia River channel
between Bonneville and
Vancouver, to cost $342,450,
was included in recom-
mendation of the US Army
engineers made today. The
Columbia above Celilo falls
to the mouth of the Snake
river came in for a recom-
mendation of $100,000 for
new work. — The Dalles
Daily Chronicle
1961 — 60 years ago
Cascade Locks, with
what fans call the town’s
best prep basketball team
in recent years, travels to
The Dalles tomorrow for
the first round of District
6-B basketball tournament.
Eight teams from the Big 6
and Deschutes B leagues are
entered. The winner goes
to represent the area in the
B basketball state champi-
onship tournament. Mosier
High also heads to the tour-
nament as the Big 6 loop’s
fourth-place entry. The 6-B
tournament starts Friday
at The Dalles Junior High
gymnasium. Cascade Locks
plays Culver High at 6:30
p.m. — Hood River News
Petitions disapproving of
the “continuous pressure”
being applied on the subject
of fluoride emissions are
being circulated in The
Dalles by a Community
Growth Though Industry
Committee. “We are well
aware that the alleged dam-
age to the cherry industry is
not attributable to the alu-
minum plant,” the petition
states. — The Dalles Daily
Chronicle
been set at $12.7 million.
However, it was noted that
because of requirements
across the country, includ-
ing the St. Helens eruption,
the money might not all be
available this fiscal year.
But the Department of
Transportation plans to let
a contract in May at least
to start the repair work this
year. — Hood River News
A loophole in the city
traffic ordinance makes it
tough to enforce a ticket for
parking in a yellow striped
zone unless the zone also
has signs which spell out
the reasons. Therefore, the
city attorney will adjust the
ordinance to repair the sit-
uation. The situation came
to light some time ago when
City Judge Ron Somers,
following a 9th Circuit Court
of Appeals principle, noting
that proper notice is not
necessarily served simply be
painting the sidewalk curb
yellow because different cit-
ies in Oregon and different
states use different colored
paint to mean different
things. — The Dalles Daily
Chronicle
Citing several legal
precedents and Washington
statutes, Klickitat County
Superior Court Judge Ted
Kolbaba ruled that jurisdic-
tion over a murder trial in-
volving one 17-year-old and
one 18-year-old will remain
government for Indians. On
Dec. 29, Warren Neal Cloud
and Arthur James Cloud,
both aged 17, were arrested
by federal and county police
officers and charged with
first degree murder in the
axing death of Gary Frank.
—White Salmon Enterprise
2001 — 20 years ago
Patricia Roberts had a
“certain feline” something
was up on Wednesday.
Roberts’ cat “was running
all over the house, very anx-
iously,” around her Parkdale
home starting around 10
a.m. Then, at 10:55 a.m., the
floors shook as Wednesday’s
earthquake rumbled
through Hood River County.
“As soon as it stopped, she
calmed right down. They say
cats can sense earthquakes,
and now I know it’s true,”
she said. Throughout the
county, people in homes
and businesses felt their
chairs move, floors rock and
walls wobble, but there was
no damage reported any-
where. — Hood River News
In an effort to cut back
on electrical use because
of the energy crisis the
Oregon Department of
Transportation will turn
off about 75 percent of the
street lights at interchanges
along Interstate 84. — The
Dalles Chronicle
Last week, Westerberg
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with the state. Kolbaba was
responding to a motion in-
troduced by Adam Moorde,
a Yakima attorney, request-
ing jurisdiction be moved to
federal courts. The reason
cited for the request was
that the crime was alleged-
ly committed by Indians
against Indians on land
held in trust by the federal
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trail up Mount Hood, Elk
Meadows and Lost Lake. A
few days ago a prominent
Portland hotel man was ap-
proached with the proposal
that he agree to take up the
management of this hotel
when it is built, and it is
stated that he expressed his
willingness to undertake the
project. Plans are now being
drawn for this new hotel,
and it is expected that a full
announcement will be made
in the future.
— March 4, 1921, Hood
River News
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Drilling (see photo above)
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city of White Salmon. The
well site is near Powerline
Road, a few miles north
of the city limits. —White
Salmon Enterprise
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As stated a few weeks
ago by The News, it is now
assured that a fine modern
hotel will be built on or near
the slopes of Mount Hood.
The News understands
that, at a meeting held in
Portland last week, those
behind the project definitely
decided to go ahead with the
Mount Hood project, and to
postpone any further work
on the project for a hotel at
Crater Lake.
The capital already in sight
is stated to be in excess of
$200,000, and the site will be
somewhere near the regular
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Mrs. Baldwin held the
undivided attention of the
crowd for more than two
hours as she told of her
experiences in dealings with
fallen girls in the various
cities of the Pacific coast.
Closer parental supervi-
sion of children, a communi-
ty center of recreation, prop-
erly supervised, and proper
supervision of all types of
amusement, including pool
halls and motion picture
theaters, were advocated by
Mrs. Baldwin as a few of the
things that must come about
before the boys and girls of
the coming generation can
be “saved from perdition.”
“The Devil hasn’t got all
of the good things yet,” she
explained in closing. “Even
if he has gained control of a
great deal of the music.”
— March 3, 1921, The
Dalles Daily Chronicle
Silver Deluge — All of the available silver dollars in the Pacific
Northwest were being paid to employees of Harvey Aluminum here
today to demonstrate impact of the industry’s payroll on the econ-
omy of the region. The dollars, totaling more than 65,000, were
gathered from Federal Reserve System vaults in Portland and San
Francisco and the Denver mint.
March 3, 1961, The Dalles Daily Chronicle
1981 — 40 years ago
The Federal Highway
Commission has confirmed
the Mt. Hood Loop Highway
is eligible for Emergency
Relief (ER) funds. It means
the federal government will
pay all the costs of repairing
the 6.7 miles of the high-
way (35), that washed out
Christmas night. Estimated
cost of repairs has now
1921
Army Size Is Fixed At 156,666
Ultimatum Served On Germany
Washington Bars Jap Land Holders
1941
Nazi Motorized Units Reported to be Crossing Bulgaria
Minimum Railway Rate Bill Killed By Oregon Senate
War Has Effect On Stock Market
1961
Beatniks Paddle Canoes Protesting Nuclear Sub Base
Extended Jobless Payments Approved By House
22 Die in Banks of Wabash Coal Mine
1981
Nazis Planned Napalm Bombs In KKK Trial
Hijackers Threaten Bombing
Present Theory On Working: Goof Offs Rise To The Top
2001
Napster plans screening to stop song swapping
Taliban blasts religious statues
American hostages homeward bound
“The way modern girls
and women are dressing, the
average man can’t tell a good
one from a bad one.”
“The trouble with the
modern woman is that she is
too lazy to make her children
mind.”
“Modern girls are mar-
rying at the age of 16 and
18; marrying men whom
they wouldn’t even look at
if they were 24; men who
can’t make enough money
even to keep the girls in silk
stockings.”
These shafts at “so-called
modernism” were fired last
night by Mrs. Iola G. Baldwin,
head of the women’s protec-
tive division of the Portland
police department, before
an audience of more than
200 persons, crowded into
the circuit court room of the
local court house. She spoke
at the invitation of the local
chapter of the W.C.T.U.
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