B1 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, JULY 30, 2019 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, JULY 30, 2019 • B1 WATER UNDER THE BRIDGE COMPILED BY BOB DUKE From the pages of Astoria’s daily newspapers 10 years ago this week — 2009 P igs squealing, enthusiastic young people in 4-H T-shirts and FFA jackets, tents ascending skyward. It all means it’s time for the Clatsop County Fair. The fair, located at the Clatsop County Fairgrounds and Expo Center on Walluski Loop in Astoria, starts today and runs through Saturday. Each day will be fi lled with a variety of food, com- petition and entertainment. Davis NW Carnival will be there with rides. There will be a petting zoo, vendors, and interactive gaming experience and more. It was a bittersweet goodbye as Capt. Peter Troedsson gave up the reins of command of Group/Air Station Astoria to Capt. Douglas E. Kaup on Friday. Hundreds of area leaders, community mem- bers and Coast Guard personnel gathered to witness the traditional change of command cer- emony, held in the air station’s immense han- gar, and while everyone was enthusiastic about Kaup, many were disappointed to see such a beloved fi gure in the community have to move on. Energy Northwest is proposing to build a wind farm on Radar Ridge near Naselle, Washington, but oppo- nents worry about the fate of federally protected marbled murrelet. The proposed wind project in Pacifi c County would be within the fl ight path of the robin-sized seabird, which was listed as threatened in 1992. The ridge sits between the ocean and the only marbled murrelet nesting area left in southwest Washington. “If you wanted to have an issue with marbled mur- relets, you couldn’t have picked a better place,” said U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service spokesman Doug Zimmer. Energy Northwest wants to install as many as 32 wind turbines on land leased from the state Department of Nat- ural Resources. The proposed project could produce as much as 82 megawatts of energy. It’s offi cial. Cannon Beach is among the most beautiful places in the United States. At least that’s what ABC’s “Good Morning America Weekend” show will say when it airs a segment on Cannon Beach in September. A “Good Morning America” producer and fi lm crew visited the town Tuesday, exploring Haystack Rock, checking out the produce at the farmers market and interviewing local res- idents about the town’s history and activities. 50 years ago — 1969 Glynn T. Price Sr., a 53-year-old supervisor of food services at Tongue Point Job Corps Center, is missing and presumed drowned today following the crash of his small plane Sunday night into Youngs Bay. Price, a naval aviator during World War II, was returning here from Belfair, Washington, when his Piper Cherokee 140 went down about 9:30 a half mile south- west of the entrance buoy to Youngs River. Dick Kelly, a versatile cowboy from Walla Walla, Washington, won three events and the all-around title at the 10th annual Clatsop County Rodeo as a capacity crowd watched Sunday in Gearhart. Kelly, in fourth place in all-around standing of the Northwest Rodeo Association coming into the Clatsop rodeo, took the bulldogging, calf roping and wild-cow milking events. That was half of the total number of men’s events. Nineteen sailboats from Portland have tied up at the West End Mooring Basin after completing the fi rst half of a Columbia River race under auspices of the Oregon Centurion sailing organization. The boats, from the Corinthian Yacht Club in Port- land, are tied up at D fl oat at the mooring basin. Ranging in size from the 22-foot Columbia to the 40-foot Jolly Roger, the 19 boats are carrying 80 per- sons on the venture. Most of the boats are between 22 and 30 feet, one observer noted. Docked at Astoria for the Regatta festival Aug. 21-24 will be the Canadian vessel HMCS Hiramichi. The Hiramichi, a Bay-class coastal mine- 1969 — The wreckage of Glynn Price’s plane. 2009 — A crew from ABC’s ‘Good Morning America Weekend’ interviews Nala Cardillo, director of the Haystack Rock Awareness Program, during the crew’s visit to Cannon Beach. 1969 — Clatsop College’s training vessel, the 50-foot Seaduce, has arrived from California. The vessel carries 34 persons and has sleeping room for 14. sweeper and third ship of her name in the Cana- dian navy, was commissioned Oct. 29, 1957. 75 years ago — 1944 Paul Bunyan’s eyes — reputedly the size of Hay- stack Rock — would drop from their cavernous sock- ets if he could see what is happening today on the undu- lating, giant logs that are boomed into the Columbia River, because skipping about on them is a 5-foot, 1-inch log scaler — historically a man’s job — but in this case in full command of a lithe little woman, Mrs. Delbert Farmer. Mrs. Farmer wears lightly and with typical femi- nine unconcern the distinction of being the fi rst and only woman in the Columbia River Scaling and Grad- ing Bureau. Mrs. Farmer is measureman for H.C. Whitehouse, one of the oldest scalers in the area. Carrying a 10-foot bamboo measuring pole and a tallying book, she mea- sures the length of the logs, then marks the measure- ments and gradings in her book as the scaler calls them to her. She said it takes several years for “measuremen” to learn enough to qualify as a full-fl edged scaler. Neat, stylish and exceedingly feminine when seen in her own home, this log scaler entered the business in June 1943, working with a neighbor, C.V. Boone, also a mem- ber of the bureau. Boone had seen her walking a “boom stick” (long log used to hold booms together) at the back of her boathouse, which has been transplanted to the mud fl ats of Youngs River. Remarking on her sure-footedness, he joked one day, “You should be working for me.” She said seriously she would do it, although she had never done anything like it before. She worked from June to December of 1943, then resumed the job this spring. She earnestly explained that she looks on her work as 1969 — Fisherman Edward Koski delivers a load of fl ounder, green sturgeon, white sturgeon and a few salmon at Bumble Bee’s George and Barker receiving station in Astoria. purely that of a wartime substitute. She fi lls the place of Walter Larson, Youngs River boy, now with the Army in the South Pacifi c. Cloudy and partly-cloudy days continued to dominate the weather report for July issued by the Astor experiment station. Only a trace of .26 of an inch of rain fell however, which is almost an inch less than the average for this time of year. Twenty-nine nurses from Astoria hospitals have enlisted during the war in the Army and Navy nurse corps, according to a list released this week by Mrs. Rose Reith, chairman of the local nurse recruitment committee. Mrs. Reith said that presently the only nurses in Asto- ria eligible for the nurse corps are already in key posi- tions and would be diffi cult to replace. “In recent months the nursing situation has been acute here,” said Mrs. Reith. “Some of the married nurses who have gone back to work are working hours that seem impossible, sometimes doing double shift besides run- ning their own households.” About 200 claims a year are fi led in the Social Security board’s itinerant offi ce in the Astoria post offi ce building. Twice each month, the second and fourth Tuesdays, Miss Nanette E. Schymuki, fi eld representative of the Port- land offi ce, is in Astoria to assist claimants and others covered by the federal program. Over 500 Social Security claims every month are now being paid to Oregon residents, accord- ing to James E. Peebles, manager of the Portland offi ce, which serves nine Northwestern Oregon and fi ve Southwestern Washington counties. 1969 — Bob Conforth, of Weiser, Idaho, in a rough ride in the bareback bronc riding.