PAGE TWO The OREGON STATESMAN, Salem, Oregon, Saturday Morning, August 13, 1938 $ laxaria Crown Placed By King Bingj Flaxarians Escort Queen I and Court to Throne of I: Flax Festival MT. ANGEL, Several thousand people cheered Queen Maxine Friday night as she took her place on the flax . bedecked throne on the steps of St. Mary's school. Kins Bing Tom Hill of the Salem Cherrlans placed the royal crown an her pretty head and handed Iter the sceptre. the emblem of ber rule over the land of Flaxarla. 'The queen and her court were escorted to the . scene of corona tion by the Mt. Angel Flaxarians. There the Salem Cherrlans took charge and they were led up the lone flixht of steps while the Flaxarians stood at attention at either side. - - Quern- Leads Way ' Queen Maxine Berning .with King Bing Tom Hill ,and the two little girls led the wayrCrown Princess Beatrice Marx with "Frank Chatas followed and next ifi.; line came Princess Beatrice IKroard of Silvertoa with Cher riata Claggett, Princess Gladys Matteson. of Molalla with Cher Hal Toeves. Princess Gertrude Meier of Salem with Eric the Red, rt?4 Princess Beatrice . Doty of Portland - with C h e r r I a n Dr. Se&oel. , . tSam Slocum, manager of the Flax' Festival, Introduced Dr. A. Ft u Schierbaam. who acted as master of ceremonies. Her pre sented the festiral committee, Joe Kjfber, Frank Ilettwer, T. j B. Kndres and W. D. Harris. The colorful queen's ball fol lowed immediately. Mu ale was tarnished "by Bill Darby's orches tra of Portland. The Crystal Gar den, old time dance orchestra played for the old time dance In the- gymnasium. Those net I in terested .in dancing amused them selves with the carnival, attrac tions oa the school grounds,1 n, Keber Heads Committee j j Joe Keber, president of j the Fj a x Festival association, j wm chairman of the , receiving com tnittee of business men that Played host to the large Portland Smith, National Labor Relations Board member up for reap deiegation and visitors from sa- pointment this month, be dropped frorri the board. The local I em r and Independence at the luncheon at the Mt. Angel hotel Friday noon. Dr. A. F. E. Schier- baum was foastmaster. -" i.The address of welcome was Clvea by Mayor Jacob Berchtold. The f allowing responded wi th short talks; Joe Keber, Dr. Schier baum. Sam S 1 o c u m , Fred J. Schwab, manager of the Mt. Angel flax plant, Joseph Bernt, president of Mt. Angel Flax ; operative, Tom mil. president ia i the Cherrlans, Mr. Edward of the Pfegoaian. C. P Bishop of Salem, Clarence Porter, chairman of the Portland caravan, Leslie M. Sretr. : of . commerce. R. n Hnrsr ni. , ident of the Flaxarians, Victor !Elverstrom, western representa 1 tire of the Winona, Minn., Flax company, WVD. Harris. Flax Fes tival secretary, and Edward N. Weinbaum, manager of the trade r and commerce department of the Portland chamber of commerce. Many other prominent Portland men :were introduced. J Queen Maxine and , fcr or) n- cesses were presented to the as sembly. Marvin Headrick of Sa lem, the Eric the Red of the Bed head Roundup took a bow as did in queen canaiaaie oi tne inde pendence hop fiesta. Maris De C'osta and Vera Trosper and their escort. Bob Craven. The chap erones of the royal court, Mrs. R. 1 O. Appleby. Mrs. Arthur Holmes and Mr. Lee . Withers W0T-A llVftvlu Inrni4ni.4 - . uw lu V . ITU uvu. - Y7f 17 i f3V tLXnPriPnPPQ . 'ar tXDenences . Will Be Related Bliss Ava B. Milam, dean and director of borne economics at pregon State college, will discuss some of the exciting experiences she! Went through in China about a rear ago tt her address before the! chamber of commerce Mon day noon. - Miss Milam was with a group on a tour through China when the Sino-Japanese hostilities broke out, and It is of being caught in the war that her speech wUI deal. Three Fatalities Reported in Week ;- Three fatalities Were amonr 89 accidents reported during the week ended yesterday to the atate Industrial accident commission. Fatalities were Harold Aaron Litherland, Portland boat . build er, injured. August 1; Vedal Olea- chea,' Blitxner cattle foreman. In jure July 17, and George War ren Pike. Eugene logger, injured USE CHINESE DEKBS WHEN OTHEia FAIL ClI.tRIJR CHAN Chinese Tlrrbs RK3IED1ES . r, nesting virtue has ! beesi tested hundreds jrrars for chronic aLU mi l t a, a o e, throat, sinusitis, catarrh, ears. lungs, asthma, chronic eoaghs. stomach, gall - stones, roritis, constipation, diabetis, kidneys, bladder, heart, blood, nerves, neuralgia, rheum tiara, high tlaox! pressure, gland, s k t sores, male, female and - chil dren disorders. S. B rag. S j mx vrseties tn Cataa Hrb jciUa. Hi JU CmssmkUI St. ttltm. Of. Off lc asars 9 tm av. SudiT n4 W4. t t IS a. aw a. b. rar - ueen Attack Story I ...... -" : i -. ;. .v.;...-. . - ;' vl "w.w. ' r i wW ' - f - f .'. " 'X - . V tN. V; . j : - vn t - Oefense counsel for Francis M. Carroll, former dep uty sheriff charged with murdering elderly Dr. Llt tlefield and hit wife, launched an attack on testi mony of Paul Dwyer 15-year-old youth erving a life sentence for the crime, after Owyer bad ac cused Carroll of the actual slaying. Carroll Is on Silver Falls IEU Urges Roosevelt ! To Drop Donald Wakefield Smith j V From NLRB; Charges Favoritism SILVERTON At its regular business meeting here last night the Silver Falls Local 28, Industrial Employes Un ion of more than 300 members unanimously adoDted a resolti- tion to President Roosevelt asking that Donald Wakefield represents more than 500 IumberO workers. j .Without naming either the CIO or AF of L, the men charged Mr. Smith with hopeless bias in favor of orthodox labor unions over in dependent unions. The resolution said in part: Excerpts of Resolution . - "The Industrial Employees un ion is the only labor onion In the northwest lumber : Industry that had stood firm In following the prime recovery program point you have reiterated: .that is high wa ges for consuming workers.- "The lumber Industry the two orthodox 'unions $ have failed dis mally In support of your high wage point. In one case instances of sub-standard ! wages i tolerated by orthodox union leaders show this unions self-frustrating efforts are effectual as the cat on the tin roof for maintaining decent wage scale. .'. ... ,-, " . . At the behest; of the low-wage hlearchy of unionist orthodoxy the National Labor Relations Board has engaged in a protracted invidious campaign against the Industrial Employes union. . . . (and ) ; has persistently, blatantly shown' hopeless bias In favor of the- two orthodox unions, especial ly the first-mentioned, based on the erroneous assumption that only the wet-nursed orthodox un ions are capable to work for basic union principles and high wages. "With the ending of the Labor Board term of inexperienced, in ept Donald Wakefield Smith this month, once chance to partially eliminate the board's bias arises." The local IEU elected Al Noren to serve a two-year term in the seven-man arbitration board set up at the wage board meeting and heard a report of 22 new mem bers, bringing the total in this lo cal to 340. i ; ' - wi J ' ... conference committee re ported the meeting was held with them-.br M; r- 'Ao4d. with means to be taken to end several grievances. . - . i r ; -An present Officers wc-e nom lnated for reelection: Dal Bowan, imirnuu, tu. j. xsoescn. secre tary; jew Devericks. treasurer. NOTICE OF WARRANT SALE i notice is hereby given that sealed bids will be recerred the undersigned until the hour of iug ther Sch eiock r.m. on the 22nd dirof August.- 193 8, and Immediately thereafter publicly opened by the scnooi District Board of School district No. 9, Marion County, Oregon, at Hayesrille, in Marion. Oregon, for an issue of warrants of said school district In th amount of Forty Five Hundred Dollars ($4500.90), said warrants to be dated Sept. 1. 1938.' and to mature serially jia numerical or der as follows?.; $240.00 on June'l, 1929. $540.00 on June 1. 1940. $1240.00 on June 1, 1941. $1240.00 on June 1, 1942. $1240.00 on June 1, 1943. Said warrants -to beer interest at the rate of not to exceed 4 per annum payable semi-annually, principal and interest payable at the office of the County Treasurer of Marion County, Oregon, or et this fiscal agency of the State 'of Oregon In New York City, at the option of the purchaser.' Said warrants were duly auth orized at an election held on Ana-. 3, 1938. - , : Bids must be accompanied by a certified check la the amount of One Hundred Dollars ($100. 00). . : i - The Board reserves the' right to reject any end til bids. 1 -W. R. POWER, dark, t ; School'District No. 99, Marlon County," Oregon. Publication j dates; Aug. f, 193$, Aug. II. 1939. Af-13. Maxine of Youth in Double J 5- 1 a;v ' Iff 1 Francis 11. OarroII; Barbara -Carroll, Inset; Fan! Dwyer. testifying Prison Is Choice Of Aged Rancher McMINNVILLE, Aug. 12-(iip-James F. Hutchens, 5, Pea vine Ridge oldtimer who won acquit tal in 1913 in a murder charge, has chosen to go to prison rather than pay a f 750 fine. A circuit court jury last month convicted the hill dweller of hav ing fired a rifle bullet into the Ivan May home on Peavlne Ridge after an altercation. The missile narrowly missed a small girl In the mountain cabin. Friday at 11 ajn. was the dead line for Hutchens to take ad vantage of a probation .ruling by Circuit Judge Walker who stipu lated that he pay the county S7S0 in trial costs to avoid Imprison ment. " ; . ? His alternative ia two years in the state prison at Salem.- . Scio Applies for $10,000 WAFuniJ SCIO Application for approxi mately $10,000 federal grant for water system Improvements at Scio was forwarded this week to C. C. Hockley, administrator of the PWA at Portland. A special election at Scio is to be held September: 2 on the proposal to issue $12,000 bonds for the city's portion of the finances. In view of the fact that Scio still -owes something like $9,000 on an old debt of approximately $70,000, doubt is expressed here by some as to whether the bond proposal will carry at Scio. ? - The water system is said to be much, in need , of reconstruc tion and improvement. Federal Hop Forecast Lowered to 37,920,000 Pounds From Earlier ? Higher Estimate of 3910,000 SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 12.-(P) The; American . hop. growing in dustry, located entirely along the Pacific coast, got what was a sur prise to some growers today in a lower crop estimate than that made last month.'. The federal forecast was cut to 37,929.000 pounds from " 39, 310,000. 4 i -'V t.r- -. v The reduction was principally apparent in Oregon, which grows more than half the nation's hops. There was a small reduction in Washington, but no change from July estimates In California. Some growers and field inspec tors had expected an increase, on the basis of less damage from mildew than looked likely -earlier In the season.' Prediction , of the 37,920.000? pound crop came a day - after orders from Washing ton to limit sales to 28.500,000 pounds. " Oregon s new estimate of 19, 350,000 pounds compared with the July estimate of 20.425.000, and the 1937 crop of 23.400.000. Some of the crop went nn har vested last year, not: only In Ore gon but In California and Wash ington as welL - : Washington's estimate was re duced to 8.010,000. pounds from the ' July forecast of 8,325,000. Last- year the crop was around 9,744,000 pounds. ' ? -' v - t ? California's estimate" was '10,- 560.000 pounds. The 1937 crop was figured at 10,880,900. " Growers were somewhat pus- Is Murder Trial Y : V trial at South Paris, U, as a result of a fourth confession of young Dwyer which charged Carroll with slaying the physician and bis wife to allegedly ' cover up illicit relations Carroll had had with hia 17-year-old daughter, Barbara, former sweetheart of Dwyer. Hurricane Roars In Caribbean Sea JACKSONVILLE, Fla., Aug. 1$ -P) A small but "very danger ous hurricane roared through the Caribbean aea off the western tip of Cuba tonight, The weather bureau said the storm apparently was heading for the Yucatan channel and the open waters of the Gulf of Mexico. It was moving west, northwest at the rapid rate of 18 to 20 miles an hour. ; Ships in the path of the distur bance were warned that hurricane winds (75 miles an hour and above) prevailed near the center. Shea Won't Have Trouble Findiiig Deputy Honeycut Pete Shea, caught rummaging in a drawer in the sheriff's of fice recently "looking for Deputy Sheriff B. G. Honeycnt," won't hare any trouble keeping track of the deputy now. The deputy caught him back in Salem yes terday and took him to the county jail to serve the 90-day jail sent ence which Judge Alt O. Nelson had suspended on condition. Shea stay out of Marion county for one year. ' Boundary Board Meets On Petition of Abrams i The county district boundary board will hold a hearing in the county court room at 9:30 o'clock this .morning on the petition of Carle Abrams and others for In elusion of all of Capitola addition in the Salem school district. The north half of - the addition is now a part of the Hayesrille district. Attend Lumber Meet LYONS Mr. Weber of the Linn Lumber company, . Gates Cochran of the Wren Lumber company and Hugo Hallin and George Keeley of the Hallin Lum ber company attended a lumber man's meeting in Eugene the first ef the week. xled by two points in the market control plan . imposed by Wash ington, following the Industry' favorable vote. The points were: 1. Disposal of surplus, and 2. Imports. , E. Clemens Horst, San Fran cisco grower-dealer, said the gov ernment should provide $2,000, 000 to purchase the surplus. If it treated the hop surpluses as it has other farm surpluses. Grower , reports Indicated some would leave the surplus unpicked, while others would store it await ing further word on what might be done with It. r Try 6ndb0 as Salem's Foremost e W rater to baaqnets and private parties. Ph. TOSX a) Special Saaday Chicken Dinner XSOc; Special "Mer chants Loach C3e pre pared by expert Chiaeee. . cook. ... ... Orders te take eat any time. Open Day or Night f Sanitary Kitchen. New OHANGHAI CAFE 121 S. Commercial Opposite Ladd & Bosh Bask Crowned Flax-Parade Governor Martin and Other Dignitaries1 Will Be : Special Guests Mt. ANGEL Headed by Gover nor Charles H. Martin, a dis tinguished group of flax boost ers, including Senator Charles McNary, State Treasurer Rufus Holman, Secretary of State Earl Snell, Mayor Jos. Carson of Port land and other well-known friends of Oregon's newest In dustry, will participate in the program following the grand parade Saturday afternoon. The honor guests will be pres ent with the royal court in the reviewing stand at the city hall while the parade passes. The-parade will -form at the schoolhouse at 2 p.m., proceed down College street to the White corner, thence down Charles street past the reviewing stand at the' city hall to Main street, down Main to College and back up College to the carnival grounds. . . Parade Entries Many ' -Many private , and commercial floats from Mt. Angel and ' sur rounding towns will take part. Rose Festival Queen Frances Hulse will ride in the City of Portland float. Numerous bands and marching bodies haye been entered.' Among .the out of town entries are: the City of Port land, Newberg - Berrlans, Salem Cherrlans, St. Paul , Rodeo as sociation, Fred Meyers, inc.. Dev il's Lake Devils and Devilettes, Redhead oundup -association, and the chambers of commerce of Portland, Silverton, Salem, Newberg and McMinnville. Queen Maxine Bernlng will knight the visiting dignataries as part of the afternoon program. Aignt iu uame A special softball game be tween' the champion Salem Pa- per Mills team and an all-star ML Angel team 7:15 has been ar at the Ebner ranged for ban park. This will be followed at 8 p.m.- by a vaudeville show pre sented in the auditorium by the Oregon WPA theatre project. 14 acts are Included la a varied program of juggling, daring acro batic, music, dancing and witty patter. The grand finale In the form of a cavalcade of popular song hits. The cast is composed ct some 35 professional perform ers and musicians under the di rection of Bess Whltcomb, state WPA theater director.1 A fireworks display at 10 p.m. will bring the day's celebration to a close. Preacher Declares Spain War Tragic PORTLAND. Aug. 12.-fcP)-Dr. J. B. Chapman, general superin tendent of the Nazarene church, said toda the Spanish war proved the truth of a sentiment once voiced by the Duke of Welling ton: "A victory is" only slightly less tragic than a defeat." Chapman, who came here, from Wollostan, Mass., to address the north Pacific camp, said Spain was ruined 4n almost every sense of the word and that the side which wins will lose, "as much as its opponent." He predicted that if Franco won he would never be able to form a government. Chapman, Just b a e k from world tour, said Christianity was on the upgrade despite the preva lence of war. j . i Work Commenced On Banks Project The WPA has authorized $28,020 channel clearing and rip rapping project applied for by the US army engineers for the Wil lamette river approximately two miles below Independence, G. R Boatwright, distript WPA engi neer, announced yesterday. Work on the project has al ready, been; started by the engi neers, who. have, located a drag line dredge at the site, and have begun clearing : away a , large gravel bar, ; The rip-rapping ma terial will be stone, " - Pioneer j Native ; Of Salem . Dead Marion Wlllard Swegle, 77, who was horn in Salem ia 1861, the son of - a' pioneer ot 1848, died Thursday at the home of a daughter, near Walla : Walla, Wash., said -word received here yesterday. Most of his colorful pioneer life was lived at Walla Walla, where he went with his father in 1880 to purchase the original Marcus Whtlmaa claim where Marion Swegle lived for the last half century.: rr--r: Oriental Restauranit. pork Chow Mein fof" 35c; for 2, '50c;Y for f Chicken Chow Mela, 75c i PorVChop Sney ., ."35. Fried Rice. 5c Home-made doodles, 25c. . Event Today Rotary Bread Wins 2 Games Portland Club Is Winner 4-3 Over Wait's and 4-1, Paper-makers By RON GEMMELL Rotary Bread of Portland, 1937 state Softball champs, put on a double dunking exhibition on Sweetland last nighty, dowsing Sa lem's two top team;,-Walt's and the Papermakers, 4 to 3 and 4 to 1, respectively and in that or der. Though Guy.Ruscigno received credit for the -Wait's win. It was the old-veteran. Biff Georgenson, who went in after Ruscigno was Jerked for a. pinch-hitter to put that tilt in the Bread bag. and then turned in a six-hit, 12-str lke out performance to subdue the Makers. ' ,' ' Wait's Ahead in 0th -Walt's, showing more power with the sticks, was out ahead 2 to L going into the first of the ninth, but Pinch-hitter Barry, in for Rusigno. poked a blooper dou ble back of first base to score Brown and Helser. he scoring la ter on Scales' had throw of Hank Helser's ground ball. None of the three ninth-frame runs were earned off George Roth, nor was1 the one tally the Breadmak ers shagged across in the seventh. A pair of pinch-hitters almost put Wait's back in the ball game in their half, Nicholson going in for Adolph after one was away and walking, Garbarino singling him to third and D'Arcyr in for Foreman, doubling hard down the leftfield line to scores Nicholson. Roth had popped out' previously and Beard lined out to centerf ield to end the bait game with the tying and winning tallies on sec ond and third. Scales Drives in Two George Scales drove ia thetwo third-inning runs scored by Wait's, smash ins a single te cen ter to score Adolph and Garbar ino. , ' Against the 'Makers the double- killing visitors had a lead from the first Inning on. Hank. Helser crashed a triple to start the ball game, scoring on Dunn's error of Kohl's grounder. He scored again In the seventh, lining a single to left that bounced off Serdots foot, allowing him the circuit on three-base boot. Again in the fifth, it was his single, combined with one-base blows by Kohl and Klrscb, a passed ball, a stolen base and an Infield out, that al lowed Morrie Helser end Klrsch to romp home. The "Makers snagged their one tally in the sixth, Nicholson drawing a pass, being singled to second by Beard's single, taking third on Kohl'a boot ot Bill Gents kow's bounder and scoring on Keller's clout past third. ueorgensen . limited the "Mak ers to fix hits, Billy Beard and Jimmy Nicholson getting four of . I. . . . , in three and Beard two in four. Beard's two-for-flve while play ing short for Wait's, and two-tor-four while hackstopplng for the 'Makers, gave him four-for-nlne for the evening-. Beard was out done at the plate by Hank Helser only, who tripled once and singled tour times in ten trips.' Rotary Bread -.4 7 2 Wait's . 3 7 3 Ruscigno, Georgensen ($). and Hood; Roth and McFaffery. Rotary Bread ..4- 8 Paper Mill 1 6 Georgensen and Hood; Crofoot and Beard. McCall Is Held To Secret Jury SILVERTON E. Jay McCall waived preliminary heading and was bound over to the grand jury on the charge of assault and bat terr preferred by Mrs. Jim Reed Walter Gilchrist pleaded guilty to a ariving-on-the-wrong-slde of the road charge and paid 810 fine costs to Alf O. Nelson Justice of the peace. The case of Charles Innes. In volvlng a bad' check has been continued for investigation. The prirate prosecutor Is Audney Tok sUd. Pete Schea. who had just com pleted a. Jail sentence at Salem and was - arrested for vagrancy. pleaded guilty and was given a 90-day Jail , sentence and assessed costs. The sentence was suspend ed provided he pay costs and stay out of Marion county. Re-Opening Tonight! Cap ilola ROLLER RINK Redecorated and Equipped With a New Ererett Electric Organ "is ssnassi X. X. Ua MO O. Cfeaa. H D. Herbal remedies for ailments of stomach, liver, kidney, skin, blood, glands. A urinary sys tem 6f men A women. 81 years tn service. Naturopathic Physl- 1 elans. Ask your- Neighbors about CHAN LAM. on. ennn unm CHINESE BIEDICINE CO. 383 Court St.. Corner Liber ty. Office open Twesday Sat urday only. 1 0 A M. to 1 P. M. f to 7 P. M. Censultatlon. bleed pressure, A urine tests are free ef charge. ; I dditics in the News LOUISVILLE, Ky., Aug. 13-(JFy-lt yon think you have trou bles, consider what happened to Elmer: He cat bis feet while swim ming. . Ills clothes were stolen as he swam. Federal agents waited for him at home. No clothes, be appeared at ' preliminary hearing in bathing suit and bathrobe, feet band . aged. 1 He pleaded guilty to an auto theft charge. He was held under fl.OOO bond to a higher court. Elmer Is sixteen years old. PALO ALTO. Calif Aug. 12- UPI Transformation of e baby chick into virtually a chanticleer with a robust crow In a period of nine days was accomplished in ex periments ' announced today at Stanford university. Dr. Calvin P. Stone, psychology professor, said the experiments were patterned after a similar one conducted ' at an eastern university. Dr. Stone said the chicks were injected dsily with a synthetic male hormone substance that ef fected their precocity, which, in addition to the he-man crow. In cluded a mature comb, hair on the chest and a chanticleer strut. The experiments were conduct ed principally to obtain informa tion on rapid sex development. ORAN'GKVILLE, Ont., Aug. Aug. 12-(Cnadian Prcss)-It cost Earl McCutcheon, fanner, $47.07 to give his 17-year-old daughter, Irene, the f 1 r a t spanking of her life. He was fined that sum today when his wife, who said she believed in correcting her children "only by talking to them. had him in court on an assault charge. McCutcheon a a 1 d Irene bad been disobedient in refusing to accompany him to a party. The girl sobbingly told Magistrate W. F. Woodliffe: M3Iy mother was a I c k and couldn't go. I said I didn't want to go and leave her alone. The magistrate held that Mcv Cutrhren had used toe much -strength, and had "little pro. Tocatiou in spanking the girl. Cork Factory Bombed PARIS. Aug. 12-P)-Spanish government sources here received reports today that the American owned Armstrong cork factory at Palantos, .Spain, was set on fire during a night raid by insurgent planes. 0 MELLOW MOON ROLLER RINK ; Presents Tonight GRAND FLOOR SHOW of Oregon Finest Skaters Don't Miss This ) No Advance in Price . . .Skating: From 8 to 12 J nope you 11 she said, but the was crying . . Stirring new serial by Allene Corliss IHrmrrr 'Paeicnca; young, belutiful and wealthy, loved Scott deeply loved huh with an intensity of feeling that passed even her own understanding. And when he rushed into careless marriage with a grasp ing girl, she saw her life pass into the dust. In her innermost heart 'she knew that Scott, itifl loved her, but she had to play fair so that a sem blance of happiness might be salvaged from the wreckage of three lives. But there came a day when the decision was grasped from her hands by an odd r. quirk of fate In this new absorbing serial novel of poignant emo tion, Allene Corliss traces each step in a beautiful woman's quest of happiness. . ' BE SURE TO READ , . , , ...... . . Begins August 17 Daily in The Oregon Statesman Pension Plan Meets Delays Both Police and Firemen in Favor of Plan to Be . Worked out - 'Inability to reach what was termed a sound working plan will cause delay in submission of a retirement-pension plan for city firemen and city policemen, it was decided yesterday afternoon at a combined meeting of mem bers of the two departments. Yesterday's preliminary more men t, which entertained discus sion of a plan of right of retire ment after 20 year's service at the age of 65, or mandatory retire ment after 20 years service at the age ot S3, will be followed up af ter further statistics on its work ability hare been obtained. Would De on Ballot Both departments went on rec ord as In favor of such a plan, provided, individual monthly as sessment is not too stringent, the city financial structure will stand it snd- a citizens' committee will endorse it ia behalf of tax payers. It was hoped to h a v e the plan perfected in time to place it be fore the people in November's election. ' The pension fund, under pres ent plan, would be created by a monthly contribution, from . sal aries ot each member of the de partments, and -by an annual ap propriation in the city budget. Fire Chief Buck Hutton is chairman of the committee work ing on the plan, which includes Captains Ben Taught -nnd C. V Faulkener of the fire department, arid Officers Lou Burgess and Hobart Kiggins of the police de partment. ' '' Delivery of Tuna Ends for 4 Days ' ASTORIA, Ore.. Aug. lt-(JP)-The Columbia River Salmon com pany today ordered all tuna de liveries halted for four days, due to the heavy delivery of fish to California canneries. Deliveries have been heavy from-California-fishermen as well as those of Oregon. The Northwest Ice company which is also buying tuna here an nounced it would continue to han dle limited quantities. "Fishermen reported the sea is till crowded with Albacore tuna and said it wa asy to get a "hold full of fish. be very happy. voice of her heart