n officii-. Votes ontl ?av Off : v - Income Pay Totals Over Q11 Billion Quorum Fi4it Flnra O I - TIT 1 CTTTXT-"TV'T T .. 1 ft BTd 4Gam a , Monmoutll ; May income payment to individ- HnlW T?ffntf ninrP uals aggregated $11,132,000,000, -. . . r a. . , ,,t, the . commerce department report- MONMOUTH At the city coun- ed Friday, an increase of 27 per eil meeting Tuesday, nighty $6000 cent; over .the. same, month' last i water Donas, were paiq on, ana l .year, out oj,uuu,uuu unaer wpru the final... payment, of. $2000 was I payments. made on the city hall bonds.. This I After , allowance, however, for payment was made, a year, before I seasonable .influences r- primarily the bonds were due .Mayor Bow-1 the usual Aprilmay drop to div- ersox , stated, that while the cfty j ideno, and interest iisbursements nan r.Donas were outstanding, ; a U1 qeparcmems jnaex .rsoe two total .of $700 interest, had .been points io 210 per cent of the 1935 paid.;' J-VVx 3$ avetage, '- ' ;-' ' An.; ordinance "yas passed , out- J - Farmers' '-'cash income from lawing electric fences within" the 1 marketings -showed' a Iess-than- city. limits. The action was based seasonal increase, the' report said, on assertion: that children 'have been killed by these fences, where weather and land conditions were contributory, van instance, being cited of the death of a six year I In contrast" to marked - gains 1 in previous months. "1; "r " :") - ' vl s: Income payments to individuals for the five month's of 1943 to taled $54,780,000,000, a 27 per cent bid boy at Oregon City, May 1, by J ato over the same 'period last electrocution. i year, r . Mrs. E. F. Barrows, represent ing a citizens' committee, chal lenged the right of the council to transact business because of lack of a quorum as defined in , the city charter. N. A. Nelson, one of - the council men who recently ' moved to Independence, was not present The rightof A. F. Huber j to act as a councilman ' had been challenged at last month's coun cil meeting, on the . ground "that WFA to Hold Canner Price On 1943 Pack WASHINGTON. July 10 -UPi he was assertedly a non-payer of The war food administration an taxes on real property." ylt was nounced Thursday it would sup- pointed out that Hubers ineligi-1 port canner prices of the 1943 bility ". and Nelson's absence ' re-1 pack of 10 major vegetable pro duced the council vote to less than 1 ducts;'at OT ; per cent ' of canners a Quorum. . - - - - I net ceiline nrices. Later. . Huber, refuted the as- - The support program .is de sertion- regarding . him, . and said signed, the WFA said, to eliminate that if instead, of ; thumb Ina risks that might otherwise pre- fhroueh Dallas records the mm-1 vent i maximum ... : production of mittee had come direct to him, he I canned vegetables this summer. could have, pointed out property! Products affected include that he owns. - - cawied tomatoes, tomato Juice. tomato pulp, tomato paste, sweet corn, snap beans, green. beans, lima t beans,' beet and carrots. The! food agency said it would support the prices by purchasing from certified canners any quan tities of the" products the latter may offer : until mid-1944. Cer tified canners are those who pay growers specified minimum prices for their raw: products. The WFA had previously estab lished a program supporting grow- Salem Man Appea rs on Radio Program Albert Lachelle, . VSN, son of i Mrs. Mary ; Lachelle of Salem, came in for ; nationwide public recognition Saturday night, when ln- f m smm John BHughes, commentator, in- peas at-priees above troduced and featured him on his ,. t Kir rni ic r i-Meaning of the News" program To nnt an increase in con- over NBCs blue network, broad- . casting from -San Francisco. Lachelle, who was Organist on sumer prices, however, the WFA is buying these four raw products at this 'year's increased prices and , - . - i . i aa ai J 0 a-uv-. vavu ua-ay uu the progranrwhicn put Hughes on elj them back to canners at wc last year's prices. tuusk vi uic iucuic suugs ue lias used in his .radio vearx. nlavrvf ; the earliest of those compositions I lmrAvvTica-t Saturday night.' - ; 1 J-iY IXctX tX Hughes met Lachelle when the commentator spoke, before a group . of navy men a month ago in San Francisco; late last week he ac- cidentally ran into him on the , street, asked him to appear and, ; with permission of his command- ing officer, Lachelle did so. r Rites Held Saturday Air Express Rate Gut Means Saving Graveside funeral services were held at 5:30 o'clock .Saturday af ternoon for Bruce Everhard, 15, victim of drowning last ' Sunday in the Santiam , river near Talbot. E d w a r & s Terwilliger Funeral home was in charge and Rev. L. F. Noir and Bev. Henry Turnidge read i the service. Burial was to City View cemetery. Survivors Include . the parents. Mr. and Mrs. : Henry Everhard, and three sisters, June, Norma and Lillian, State 'police discovered the body of the boy Saturday , morning about half a mile down the river from the Sidney' mill and about v - Reduction in air express rates ; effective July .15 will represent a saving of approximately a quar ter ' million - dollars ! annually to shippers on XTnited ," Air Lines 'plane s,-officials of UAL an- f nounced Saturday. I i Lower tariffs on air express six miles . from where the drown- have been filed by the air. express I ing -occurred. The body was re- f division of the Railway Express covered by Coroner L. E. Barrick i agency,' which acts as pickup and and Charles C Barrick and was i delivery .system for - the nation's positively identified by papers to -: air lines, practically all of which I the clothing and - by' the. father. "Joined, to over-all reduction of I ,. The . Everhard' youngster - was t tariffs averaging . approximately drowned - last Sunday while out 12 1 per tcent, ; representatives of on the river to a leaky-rowboat UAL said. 7 . - with a friend. Dean Abney. Ever- Officials, pointed out that new j hard, unable d to swim, t became I tariia win oe. oniy about one- panicky when Abney returned to - ; T" .'. ' " , ' : '' ' ' ' ' " I i . i S " f V U- mim - J,: . AT . k- ;:,.:J- :: V; ;n. : ' V. h IV Mr v.l . Vv V : ...... : : . m : ' . i r 1 . z-TN k U ! n nn nnr n n . vyyu uj i II II I I I I II I I I I I I I I I 1 I 1 I IV II I i II 1 I I 1 m fill . '. I I . ; ; shore for - another boat, and at tempted to swim to him, but was swept away. - third., of what , original transcon " tinental , and; inter-city- express r r a-t e s ' were. Simultaneous with t gradual: lowering of . tariffs - has ;been a doubling of speed and ex- ' pansion of services, as to addition i to 300 cities- served directly by t planes carrying express, there al-lT) J' CJ a. State Turkey fao is coordinated plane-rail serv- f ice with. Railway Express , agency .acting as nation-wide pickup and ; and delivery service for. air lines. Simultaneous with reduced air ' express rates effective July 15 will be lower passenger fares on : most air lines. any ISUJ ilLiGt Fcsted New Record CORVALLIS, Ore, July KHR Turkey breeders of r the Oregon Turkey - Improvement association established a record during the past season of .only one reactor to 107,000 turkeys tested for pul- lorium disease. " The 'record -was reported at -the annual meeting of the , group at Oregon State college Friday. The association voted to eliminate all tolerance to this disease. Ceiling prices on hatching eggs, poults and ' breeding stock were opposed as : difficult to enforce and -unfair r to quality - breeders.- The ' OPA, to setting turkey meat price ceilings," was asked to con- t WASHINGTON, July 10 Wf i The navy lannounced Friday 11 ; casualties, including 3 dead, 1 wounded and 7 missing. In addition , 8 names are . listed whose status has changed from prisoner 4 to -dead and me from i rn"g to dead. ' This brinss to 27.068 the total of navy, marine corps and coast J aider that production costs have guard casualties reported to next Increasea at leasx la per cent smce r.f kto since December T. 1941. The last year.- - - rrand' iotal Hncladea 5232 ' dead, I iH. E. Cosby, head of the col- ; 4733 wounded, 10,513 missing, and j lege poultry department, said the 2225 prisoner of war. I feed situation stai is critical put may improve . wiuun - ine next UCI13. Visit Schoenfeld t advised breeders to - 'o a miTTM, Uquidate debts and limit expan- than to credit - Election of officers was post- untn the fall ; llrs. Floyd Owens and daughters ? or Eeattle, Wash,1 were Tuesday ' t;rv-t fuests of I.Ir. and Mrs. Glen i I 'crcrlne." Before -her marriaga, i 2.1r5. Owens was Miss Nina ICtihn cl'th2 Webfoot' district' ' - poned' until the fall meeting, which r will be held around Octo ber!.- - - 11 vi y .-iw. ' . " 100 000 more ikflled tradesmeie-w The Navy ! .M; t-..l lecttidan, der, eo-crete f, yet to be iaVen from IB enemy, and to rcpiac t . ; :An crvr-d rest, .reiBneedoti"'- M from ;Jo - w6rtanm oversea., duty,-are o-r. jjtoed men re M experience nd:.abJItr. . , ; Qedil . exceUent food ainU; and o - .1 J. U-sfnrmis eenerous aUowance for aepen '' ' ep'inciQCiiti -. , ,, : f , r - -Tfi7 ; tno oxp"r- r :777fr(Ta: SQISvi;--OBia. .- POSi; Oi ii .J . BY . . ' . - Ws ADVERTISEMENT COm .. .r.Oft . ,