Oregon Labor Group
Eyes 37 Resolutions
At Annual Meeting
Seaside, Ore. (U.R) Some
37 resolutions were studied
Tuesday by delegates to the an
nual convention of the Oregon
State Federation of Labor, in
cluding one to make its presi
dent a full-time, $500-a-month
officer of the federation.
The constitutional amendment
would make the president of
the federation an assistant to
Secretary James T. Marr. He
would carry on organizational
work, assist in legislative duties
and take over administration
matters when Marr is at the
state legislature.
Secretary Resigns
The move was made as the
result of the resignation of Fed
eration President J. D. McDon
ald as secretary of the meatcut
ters Portland local. McDonald
resigned because he felt he could
not work under recent consti
tutional changes made by the
local union.
Another radical change In the
organization was a proposal to
organize auxiliaries to unions to
enlist women, who "spend the
money," in a campaign to buy
union-made goods.
A resolution reciting the
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needs for a four year state col
lege in Portland was handed to
the committee on education.
One proposed resolution
would direct federation offic
ers to take steps to have the law
changed under which a teach
er's certificate may be suspend
ed for the rest of the school year
in a dispute with his local board
over "intolerable conditions "
Many of the resolutions had
to do with the increases in un
employment and injury pay
ments, support of federal legis
lation in the interests of gov
ernment employees and for more
voter registration facilities.
Judge To Question
Little Kader Girl
In Mother's Trial
Portland (U.R) An inter
view was scheduled Tuesday by
Circuit Judge Frank J. Loner
gan with little Vickie- Kader to
determine if the foun-ycar-old is
competent to be a witness in
the first degree murder trial of
her mother, Mrs. Jada Z. Ka
der. It was Vickie who told po
lice that Mrs. Kader had thrown
the body of her sister, Sherrie
Ellen, down a sump hole of a
southeast Portland gas works
after her mother had allegedly
asphyxiated the three-year - old
child.
Members of the jury, attorn
eys and Mrs. Kader inspected
the gas sump Monday. The 22-year-old
mother showed no em
otion . as she visited the site.
The court entourage also had a
look at the Kader home, sever
al blocks from the scene of the
alleged slaying.
Alternate Jurors Picked
Earlier in the day, two alter
nate jurors were picked to. hear
the case and Judge Lonergan
over-ruled a defense motion to
block presentation of evidence in
the case. The defense charged
the .indictment against Mrs. Ka
der was vague.
WRONG PORTRAIT
Hamilton, Ont. (U.R) Can
adian counterfeiters have beat
en the government to he punch.
Bogus 10-dollar bills carrying a
portrait of Queen Elizabeth II
have turned up in several stores
here. The government's curren
cy still carries the portrait of
the late King George VI.
Nearly 20 times as many trail
er coaches are sold for perman
ent or semi-permanent location
of homes as are purchased for
vacationing or constant travel.
Wrap and Tie
Tuesday. June 17, 19S2
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE THREE
Less than a yard of fabric for
this rose-embroidered halter that
tops your shorts, skirts, slacks!
Embroider by machine or hand.
Pattern 7236: Small (Sizes 10,
12); Medium (Sizes 14, 16); Large
(Sizes IS, 20). All sizes take V
yard 35-inch. State size.
Send TWENTY-FIVE cents in
coins for this pattern to the Med
ford Mail Tribune, Household
Arts Dept., P.O. Box 5640, Chi
cago 80. 111. Print plainly NAME,
ADDRESS, PATTERN NUM
BER and SIZE.
Exciting! Our 1952 edition of
Alice Brooks Needlecraft Book!
Brimful of new ideas, it's only
Twenty cents. NINETY-ONE il
lustrations of patterns of your
favorite needlecraft designs, plus
SIX easy-to-do patterns printed
right in the book.
One Lightning Fire
Reported on Week-End
Only one lightning-set fire
was reported by the state forest
patrol as a result of the thunder
showers over the week-end. It
was a snag set afire by night
ning, and was near the Cobleigh
road, north of the Butte Falls
highway. A fire crew put it out
Friday and Saturday.
District Warden Ted Maul
said that fire lookouts in some
of the higher elevations were
brought down off their posts ov
er the week-end due to snow
They returned yesterday and to
day. San Fransco (U.R) Wil
liam A. Bingham Monday was
elected vice-president and direc
tor of the Coca-Cola Bottling
Co., of Oregon at a board of
directors meeting here.
f ' -' ' - i li " I uuummmmmm
Would you call
this the world's
greatest invention
Perhaps not. For you recognize it instantly
as the familiar container known aa the tin
can.
But ; : . think for a moment of what it
has accomplished.
It has changed the eating habits of
America ; . . helped raise the national
health level. It has fed our armed forces
all over the globe and provided them with
a nutritious and a balanced diet.
It has permitted an interchange of prod
ucts and a sharing of their benefits every
where. For example, Maine farmers can eat
Oregon fruits and Oregonians can en
joy New England baked beans. You'll find
Hawaiian pineapple in Canada, peaches in
Alaska, American meats in Norway, and
an outstanding variety of canned foods in
far-distant, little-known lands,
i
Through the years American Can Com
pany, working with an alert, progressive
canning industry, has pioneered hundreds
of uses for this famous container not only
for food, but for such diversified products
as motor oil, beer, paint, coffee and ball
bearings.
The miracle of the tin can could only
have happened in America . . . where a
free economy offers such unlimited oppor
tunity for a progressive, forward-looking
industry to create jobs and make better
products available to everyone at lower
cost.
American Can Company
CONTAINERS to help people live better
Made in Canco't Orrgon Plant at Portland
PenneyS
SCHOOL'S OUT OPEN WED. NIGHT TILL 9!
Save at Penney's on rough and
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SIZED FOR
mewh
1
PERFECT FIT!
Mom! Don't guess about his siscTg'j
Penney's Jeans
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11 Ounce Denim that wear up to Twice
as long as ordinary Jeans.
49
Western
Cut
Long-Wearing huskyweight Bar-tacked at all points of
1
denim!
train!
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strength!
Rust-resistant zipper
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Sanforzide! Cant shrink out Sizes 6 to 16 at one thrifty
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"Shrinkage will not exceed 1 .
Boys' 8-Ounce Double Knee
JEANS .1 69
Every lad gets perfect fit in Penney's
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with an easy-working zipper fly and stur
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seams, bartacked at points of strain.
8 to 12.
Little Boys'
BIB OVERALLS
They're made of sturdy .8-ounce
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Sanforized. Age 1 to 6.
Jimmy .
JEANS
$49
Popular jimmle
ens In 8 -ounce
Sanforized
denim . . Care
fully built for
lasting service.
Sizes 4-6-8
years.
9
J' : 4
if . i
JmiVA.r ' -ir i.il. il ,." ' , 5
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iTvTr I boys'V
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r V SPORT
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shirts" of Pprinicd ' I
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3 ' f Thev wash eaillv. I
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pliearfl comfort
ably cool, and so
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They wash easily,
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ironing 4:16.
GIRLS' DENIM
JEANS V
11
98
3 to 6 1.79
Sized for her growing figure. Smooth
fitting yoke back, neat aide zipper.
Bright orange stitching and copper .
rivets just like the boys1, Sanforizedf.
tShrinkage will not exceed 1
Boys' Sturdy Tennis Shoes
Styled and built for wear, Air cooled
duck upper with drill lining . , , non
absorbent Insole . , . balance arch
and heel. Sanlfiied. 2Vi-5H. Value!
10-UVi 2.29
2
49
PENNEY'S STREET FLOOR