At 91, Spokane Valley, Wash. resident Jean Nellavene Repp, has experienced an array of dips and peaks in the American economy, including the Great Depressing of the 1930s.
She was born in 1917, the youngest of nine children and has spent much of her life — first as a child and then as a mother of four — on wheat farms in eastern Washington.
"I can remember when I came home from school and my mother told me the bank had closed," she recalls of the Great Depression of the 1930s.
"The banks closed and the stock market went caput and people who had been living pretty comfortably found themselves broke."
Repp continues: "Men worked for a $1 a day. Women – if you could get a job for 50 cents a day, you were doing good."
"Sometimes you were lucky to have 2 cents to mail a letter."
Today the circumstances are different, but "This is probably as scary as they get. We went into World War II to make the rich guys rich again," she says. "We're already in a war; I don't know what were' going to do to get out of this."
Author Archives: Sharon
Lookin’ sharp on a Monday
Coeur d’Alene Press
The city's daily newspaper, also owned by Hagadone, employs a staff of seven full-time reporters. Its primary coverage area is Kootenai County, where its print-based circulation is between 18,000 and 20,000 readers.
Education reporter Maureen Dolan took a few minutes to chat with me, Monday.
She's been at the paper three years and made it past a small round of layoffs, recently.
"We were doing pretty well (before the recession),"
she says. "I really think the economy just accelerated what was happening with newspapers."
The paper is slowly increasing its web presence, Dolan says, "But there's no big rush, at this point."
She adds: "I feel pretty confident that papers that are committed to community will ride this out in some format… and I don't think the print edition will ever completely go away."
Coeur d’Alene, Idaho
With an estimated population of just over 40,000 residents (up from 17,000 in 1973), Coeur d'Alene has a disproportionately busy downtown.
Its entire strip of shops and bistros is easily walkable, with free parking for up to two hours.
Hagadone Corp.'s resort towers over the long, jagged lake, attracting national and international tourists.
The resort's setting in conservative, rugged Idaho helps prevent things from feeling too commercialized.
On the northeast edge of the lake, next to the resort, the city boasts the longest boardwalk in the nation — a pleasant promenade that takes you over a small twisting stairwell and bridge and past a marina of colorful, well-kept boats.
I may post pics of the lake later, though that would be soo predictable.
'Till then, enjoy some shots of art, cars and buildings found downtown, along with a "who's that girl?" shot just for fun.
Dick’s Hamburgers in Spokane
Late nights hanging out at Seattle's Dick's Drive-In are pretty much a required rite of passage for teenagers and young adults living in Seattle, where I'm from.
But it turns out there's another Dick's, under different ownership, in Spokane. The menu is almost the same!
I checked it out on Saturday after the Lilac Parade and thought the food was decent. Hey – a decent hamburger and small bag of fries for exactly $2 is worth coming back for.
An unexpected flag waver
It was a pleasure Saturday meeting Harold Lawton, a Ponoka, Alberta resident who had traveled to Spokane with his wife to watch the Lilac Parade.
I was struck by his "all-American" demeanor, complete with a lit cigarette and small flag sticking out of his shirt pocket.
"We're big supporters of the U.S. We support your troops, because they support us," he says.
Red, white and electric blue
"I wear all bright jackets. I grew up wearing them. I got my first red jacket when I was 8. I've got purples, reds, greens, blues, lavenders – you name it!."
The late gospel pianist Hovie Lister came to my church in South Carolina when I was 12 and I asked him, "Why are you wearing my red jacket?"
— Edward C. Cato, retired E6 in the U.S. Air Force, 75, Spokane
Spokane’s Lilac Parade
Conversation with a horsewoman
This weekend in Colbert, Wash. (about 15 miles north of Spokane), I spent a few minutes talking with Ann Kirk about horse behavior. Kirk, a horse trainer and Elk resident, is working with 30 quarter horses for an upcoming event at a ranch in Colbert.
Her method focuses on teaching a horse to control its emotions so it will pause and face what it is afraid of rather than running away.
"From as far back as I remember, I always heard horses were just a money pit. I wanted to learn to make enough money working with them, to keep them," she says of getting into the trade.
The horse industry has been hit particularly hard in recent years, with increasing feed prices, among other things.
It's nice to see horse lovers can still make a living.