B6 Columbia Gorge News Wednesday, June 9, 2021 www.columbiagorgenews.com HISTORY VERBATIM Columbia River Rapidly Rising Storms in Eastern Oregon last weekend and a heatwave over the entire watershed of the Columbia River resulted in a rapid rise of floodwater and the Columbia is now at its highest point here in several years. During the first rise, the Columbia remained fairly clear, but is now very muddy since the stormwater began to run into it from the various tributaries further east. On Monday, Harry Munemato, who has the big truck garden on the Button place east of the city, surren- dered his farm to floodwater after pumping continuously to keep out seepage for near- ly two weeks. It is believed that a gopher opened up a way for an inrush of water sometime during Sunday night and on Monday, the entire tract was under water. Much sympathy is expressed for this unfortunate farmer, inasmuch as it is not the first crop of early vegetables he has lost through flood. On Tuesday night, the shack below the depot had to be vacated owing to the ris- ing waters and the transients who had been occupying it were forced to camp out. The White Salmon auto ferry is now landing at the foot of the slope below the depot. — Hood River News, June 10, 1921 River Fighters Hope Crest Under 25 Feet PORTLAND (UPI) — Dikes Items from the cornerstone of the old Methodist Church are removed after completion of a new church building May 9, 1953. Image was along the Columbia River scanned from a black and white, 4-inch by 5-inch negative. were reinforced today as the The Dalles Chronicle photo/file stream continued to inch upwards toward a crest that floodfighters hoped would not reach 25 feet. A herd of dairy cattle was moved from the Ridgeport Dairy in the Vancouver, Wash., area to the Meadowland Dairy southeast of Portland as the Columbia encircled the barn of dairyman Jonas Kommings.A dike nine miles north of Vancouver was being reinforced. A Clark County road department spokesman said anything over a 24.5 foot YESTERYEARS 1921 — 100 years ago Another landmark in the development of Hood River County will be available for all to see when the Columbia Gorge Hotel, built by Simon Benson and to be operated by Henri Thiele, will be open to the public. It is expected that the hotel would be ready to receive guests this weekend, but it was decided to wait a few days and have everything in readiness. One of the big features of this hotel will lat- er be its beautiful grounds. Today, the surroundings do not harmonize with the han- som building but they will soon transform into a park worth of the finest tourist hotel. — Hood River News Barring the possibility of a hot east wind, the dread of all eastern Oregon wheat ranchers, Wasco county will this year have one of the biggest harvests of wheat in its history, according to E. R. Jackman, agricultural agent, who has just completed a general survey of the situa- tion. The county’s 1921 crop will probably yield 1,400,000 bushels of wheat, as com- pared to 1,200,000 bushels grown last year, Jackman estimates. A hot east wind will materially reduce this estimate by causing the wheat to burn. — The Dalles Daily Chronicle 1941 — 80 years ago The board of directors of the County School Unit System, Wednesday night of last week, awarded the contract for the building of the new grade school at Frankton to a Hood River firm of contractors, Bald- win & Wheir. The bid was $34,634.97, $2,634.97 in ex- cess of the sum provided for in the recent bond election. Work is to start immediately, it is stated. — Hood River News Residents in this area may obtain driver’s license re- newals at temporary offices established at the city hall in The Dalles, according to an announcement from the office of Earl Snell, secretary of state. The office will be open here daily beginning Thursday, June 12, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., for the con- venience of local residents who wish to renew their driver’s license, due before July 1 of this year ... Persons who hold current licenses and are under 70 years of age may renew their licenses by filling out the application form and paying the fee of $1.50, it was said. — The Dalles Daily Chronicle 1961 — 60 years ago Fresh off their success- ful assault on a townful of cracked sidewalks, Hood River City Councilmen claimed Monday they may have to use the same tough tactics to clear city vacant lots and cubing areas of unsightly weeds. The council membership decided to make a public plea this week, asking all property owners check their vacant lot areas and curbing areas. They backed that up with the reminder that a city ordinance forbids weeds that become a “nuisance” in those areas. — Hood River News Base price for cherry pick- ing in The Dalles area during the coming harvest season will be four cents a pound, the same as in 1960. — The Dalles Daily Chronicle 1981 — 40 years ago Eugenio “Pepe” Quintanilla became the first non-pitcher in Hood River Valley baseball history to be named to the Oregon Journal’s All State team. The Journal revealed its picks for the first two teams and hon- orable mention Saturday, and Quintanilla was one of 16 players from around the state to be honored as a first team selection. — Hood River News Wasco County should capitalize on the fact both the Lewis and Clark and Oregon Trail come through The Dalles. That is the message from Dr. Eldon Chuinard, a physician from Portland who has spent his life researching and writing about the famed trail blazers. — The Dalles Daily Chronicle A year and a half of mental and physical training helped 10-year-old Chase Duback of Trout Lake take third place in the Oregon State Karate Championships in Portland. Competing in the Peewee (10 and under) division at the Memorial Coliseum, Chase won four of five matches in free-fight- ing competition against BACKED BY A YEAR-ROUND CLOG-FREE GUARANTEE CALL US TODAY FOR A FREE ESTIMATE 15 % OFF YOUR ENTIRE PURCHASE * + level would present a critical situation and if the river got to 25 feet “everything would break loose.” The Columbia reached 24 feet in the area Thursday and was forecast to rise to 24.7 Sunday. Many dikes from Vancouver to the Pacific give protection to 30 feet. Water spilled into a low 200-acre grazing field north of Burlington on the Lower Columbia River Highway. Several cattle had to be moved to higher ground. — The Dalles Chronicle, June 9, 1961 Fireman Dunked SCHOOL’S OUT! — These Coe primary students received no grad- uation ceremonies or diplomas this week, but the traditional end of school ride aboard the Hood River Fire Department’s gleaming red trucks was obviously a more delightful reward. Aboard the ladder truck to help the youngsters on and off were Firemen J.B. Coffey, left, and Police Chief Francis Woolston, right. — Hood River News, June 1, 1961 competitors from around the northwest. The compe- tition was his first. Chase is a first-degree blue belt in tai-kwon-do who will be trying for the purple belt soon. He already has pro- gressed through the yellow and second-degree blue belts as a student of Gary Muma of Hood River. In the semifinal round, Chase faced a brown belt and lost in sudden death overtime. “I was really pleased with his performance,” Muma said. “Chase is really cooperative and really dedicated.” Chase enjoys his lessons and is looking forward to progress- ing to more advanced levels. “I like to free-fight,” he said. “I like to do things that are exciting.” — White Salmon Enterprise 2001 — 20 years ago The City of Cascade Locks is undergoing a face lift to attract new businesses and improve the quality of life for its residents. “We want to spruce up the first impres- sion visitors get when they drive into Cascade Locks,” said Robert Willoughby, city manager. The downtown plaza was revamped by the construction of a terraced rock wall that is landscape with flowering plants and shrubs. The city spent $20,000 from its tourism coffers for that work, which accompanies a $60,000 state-funded repaving of the sidewalk at the eastern end of town and fabrication of a decorative retaining wall. — Hood River News Return on investment, or lack thereof, was one concern shared during a discussion at Wednesday’s Wasco County Court session to a potential golf course on property at The Dalles Municipal Airport in Dallesport. — The Dalles Chronicle The final approval for PacifiCorp to remove the Condit Dam, located on the White Salmon River, three miles upstream from the river’s confluence with the Columbia River, is waiting on an OK from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC). That was expected to be a formal- ity, but now process appears to be snagged a “procedural problem.” After an informal visit to the dam by several members of the FERC staff on May 16, representatives of the agency unexpectedly raised some new issues regarding the agreement PacifiCorp signed to remove the dam. According to one observer, the problem arose because the utility was originally asking for a license to renew operating the dam as an electrical generating facility. Later, they signed a deal to remove the dam altogether. PacifiCorp spokesperson Dave Kvamme said the current techni- cality would not change anything in the utility’s plan to remove the dam. — White Salmon Enterprise Jack Brown Tumbles Into Columbia, Clothes and All Jack Brown, member of The Dalles fire department, proved to the eminent satis- faction of his mates Saturday afternoon that he may be an A-1 land-lubber but that wen it comes to water . . . bring on the inhalator. Brown trekked down to the foot of Union Street Saturday to see a couple of boys on a boat. The boat was somewhat beyond the reaches of the shoreline so Brown started a tight-rope walk on a log. A wet, oil-soaked log, if you please. All went well until Brown reached that portion of the log where the water was the deepest. Then “Brownie” fell in, thoroughly dousing his clothes, self and enthusiasm. His bedraggled appear- ance at the fire station not long after brought many expressions of regret and concern from his cohorts — no doubt. — The Dalles Daily Chronicle, June 6, 1941 GLOBAL HEADLINES 1921 Portland Has Near Riot Over Cheap Berries Machineguns Used On Toledo Bandits Relief Agencies To Be Investigated 1941 Troops Take Over Strike-Bound Plane Plant British Armies March Against French 5 German Ships Sunk By British 1961 Johnson Says We Won’t Surrender Asia to Commies Pro Reds Blamed For Blocking Cease Fire Try Committee Ready to Send Castro Tractors 1981 Hospital Orders Vets Out, 7 Arrested Israelis Spurn World Reaction Reactor Fuel Good For Making Bombs 2001 Global warming issue gets hot Two nuns guilty in Rwanda Killings NEWS TIPS? info@gorgenews.com WKO-High Cascade Mills Buying Logs & Timber Douglas Fir White Fir Pine 1-855-536-8838 10 % + OFF SENIOR & MILITARY DISCOUNTS Mon-Thurs: 8am-11pm, Fri-Sat: 8am-5pm, Sun: 2pm-8pm EST 5 % OFF TO THE FIRST 50 CALLERS! ** | Promo Number: 285 *For those who qualify. One coupon per household. No obligation estimate valid for 1 year. **Offer valid at time of estimate only 2The leading consumer reporting agency conducted a 16 month outdoor test of gutter guards in 2010 and recognized LeafFilter as the “#1 rated professionally installed gutter guard system in America.” Manufactured in Plainwell, Michigan and processed at LMT Mercer Group in Ohio. See Representative for full warranty details. CSLB# 1035795 DOPL #10783658-5501 License# 7656 License# 50145 License# 41354 License# 99338 License# 128344 License# 218294 WA UBI# 603 233 977 License# 2102212986 License# 2106212946 License# 2705132153A License# LEAFFNW822JZ License# WV056912 License# WC-29998-H17 Nassau HIC License# H01067000 Registration# 176447 Registration# HIC.0649905 Registration# C127229 Registration# C127230 Registration# 366920918 Registration# PC6475 Reg- istration# IR731804 Registration# 13VH09953900 Registration# PA069383 Suffolk HIC License# 52229-H License# 2705169445 License# 262000022 License# 262000403 License# 0086990 Registration# H-19114 Jon Paul Anderson 360-921-1541 Mill: 509-427-8413 2022 Wind River Hwy • P.O. Box 8 Carson, WA 98610