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Page 8, St Paul RECORDER, Friday, July 18, 1952 WOMAN'S WORLD Make Practical, Pretty Clothes For Tots to Wear in the Summer By Ertta Haley ONE of the main requisites in dressing children, especially the younger ones, is comfort This is. of course, true of any clothing they wear but it's especially important in their clothes for sunning and playing out-of-doors during mild weather. Play togs for tots indicate defi nite styling, as well as an eye for comfort these days. They're not only practical, but they’re pretty because they’re colorful and casual. Mothers are cheering them for another reason also: they're easy to tub and few of them require Ironing. Some require none at all while the remaining ones need only the lightest press of an iron to smooth out the material tor perfect ly pressed, good looks. New materials now on the scene are one of the big advances made in the clothing picture. This has ex tended far beyond the entrancing fashions for teen-agers and older Women. Even tots who are Just dis covering the world can discover it In comfort. Seersucker, for example, is not a new material, but the current types are a far cry from the old, somewhat wrinkled and messy fab rics. The crinkle is so fine in the new materials as to be almost un seen by the eye unless you’re close enough. This adds up to material which looks smooth and pressed, and all without any work with the iron, on a hot summer's day. Texturizing is another important advance because these materials not only resist soiling, but they're virtually wrinkle-free. In addition body is added to the material by this means and no starching is re quired. Everyone who does laund- B’ \ '"h ■ I 13 --i Ltl girlr 1 lummor drtuti itrvt ... ering will admit the big time-saving feature of this! Practical Styles uive more wear With the new styles now avail able, you'll find, happily, that your youngster requires less clothing for summer than in the past You can tub these fashions so easily, dry them and have them ready for wear so quickly that you don’t have to figure on having extra clothes while you get the ironing done. There are the clever one-piece sunsuits for boys and girls alike In the two and three year old bracket. Those for boys, naturally, are tail ored and they dry wrinkle-free. The suits for the girls have clever ruf fling in the back, but you don't have to worry about them, as they, too. need no Ironing. The same holds true of over-alls for this same group as well as old er children. Many of the older ma terials required light pressing to smooth out wrinkles and make them look neat, but these do not. If you like to vary the fancy with tailored clothes, you'll like the boxer shorts available for both boys and girls. Here, again, seersucker is used, and so is denim in many wonderful and attractive colors tor the younger set. Boxer shorts may be worn with all kinds of shirts, the most popular being the T shirt since it's comfort able, soft and easy-fitting. The shirts as well as the shorts can be mixed and matched provided you choose all of them in colors that can be worn with each other. «i For rll 4<ll»rrul Mtiiititi On the very warm days, and pecially after the youngsters h acquired enough tan so they an no danger from the exposure to sun, the boxer shorts can be w by both boys and girls without coverings. Simplicity Featured In Youngsters' Clothes One of the newest topping: wear with the boxer shorts are loose, tailored Jackets. These are excellent for little boys because they give such a tailored outfit They may match or contrast with the shorts and are fastened simply by a tie or single button at the neck Terry cloth or toweling is being used extensively in the little fastiion Just described. White as well as JIT'l ER _____________ By Arthur Pointer d r Tijn i V-J-LL.I I d'doT Cool Comfort •’I 1 Whisk through your household chores In a comfortable and cool dress, and then go about your marketing and errands without having to change. The dramatic contrast of white pique banding against dark blue chambray styles this coat dress that's suit able for every occasion. The fabric should be aanforlrcd be cause of frequent washings, and you'll want no shrinkage to mar perfect fit. pastels are featured, nnd the con trasting piping for trimming Is an effective touch. The little Jackets serve a double purpose, actually: they may be used to shield the shoulders from the sun. <• •* they can also be used If the weather suddenly turns cooler and more clothing is needed. Made In denim, the same outfit is also effective. It’s crisp, durable, and even more tailored than the toweling. Striped fabrics in heavy cotton are also employed for this style. For older or younger boys, an other alternate topping is a man tailored sports shirt. Many of these are made in rather large, masculine prints and they are worn loosely over the shorts Just described or over boxer shorts in matching fab rics. As can readily be seen these clothes are made for comfort, and that means comfort during active play. Just as it does in the less strenuous activities. The shirts and shorts are roomy without being bulky, they're tailored looking but not fussy so they're ideal for play, and the light pastels as well as ma terials make them as cool as any clothing can be during the hot weather. Select Dresses For Party or Play Mothers with little girls usually find themselves investing in one set of clothes for parties which are sel dom worn and usually outgrown be fore they've given sufficient wear for the money spent Then clothes for play are worn and worn so much, that they have to give more than should be expected. Why not get some dresses that will go to both parties and play* In that way you can have more clothes for the girl, and distribute wear more easily. The pinafores remain as popu lar as ever and they may be made of so many different fabrics from the sheere .t to the heaviest mate rials. You may choose organdie and ruffle it In lace or more organdie Go to the other extreme and choose a, texturized chambray which doesn't need starching and trim it in rick-rack or with Contrasting binding The pinafores will be lovely for playing, for dressing up a tut in the afternoons, or for going to a party. Occasionally you might like to team a Simple dress with a pinafore, or even use a blouse underneath the pinafore. They're versatile Then there are very enchanting sundresses for the younger set Made of texturized pique, they shed wrinkles and dirt, tub easily and dry almost wrinkle-free These come with and without the briefest of bolero Jackets and may be worn with or without them Sun dresses, as you’ve guessed, can go to parties, they're excellent for Sunday school, or they II serve admirably for play or going shop ping with mother. * p ** r i HOUSEHOLD gF i M tM.OStn lyjtunn Chichi ♦. » *... ■... P*Ji' ,• JKHBkd ij i ■■ i :•. H ?r * igg| a * y *Y^fi , "TCT svy - h #-<tW4y J I jl 11’ MH Can with Care to Avoid Spoilage (fee Reiipei Below) Preserving Vegetables GARRENS AKE BURSTING, liter ally, with their produce, and the canning cupboard Is undoubtedly empty after yielding meal after meal of health-giving vegetables over a period of / many months W*'7 <Z It's time for can- •J*' jC.2 nin #- °B ain! // How did you come out on your supplies for t h e Bv P ilst year? Too ” many cans of green beans, or not enough? Used more corn than usual? Or did the peas disappear rapidly? Needs may vary slightly from year to year, but you should take an Inventory each year at the begin ning of the season and have some Idea of the amount of vegetables you need to put up. Take into considera tion increased appetite needs of growing children or perhaps rela tives spending more time at your table. Only in this way can you gauge with any accuracy the amount you'll need to can. Take Time to Get Ready Eor Vegetable Canning It may take you a day or even two days to get ready to can some of your vegetables because all equip ment must be ready, as well as in order once you start. Here are some things that must be done in ad vance: Wash jars and covers In hot soapy water and rinse thoroughly. Check jars for cracks and nicks and use only those which are in perfect con dition. See that you have enough covers as well as rubbers if you're using the type which the manufacturer recommends. Check the pressure cooker or boiling water both to ascertain that everything is in good operating or der. You'll need also utensils for hold ing the vegetables during the prepa ration, large trays or colanders or kettles. If you're going to use a hot pack, then have a utensil large enough for the pre-cooking Other items which you'll need in clude the following: wide-mouth funnel for filling jars, tea kettle for hot water, salt, measuring spoons, towels and dish cloths, pot holders and newspapers for setting the jars on for cooling. • • • Select Young Produce F»r Best Results Plan to choose only those vegeta bles which are young and which have grown quickly. It's better to use vegetables which can be picked as clean as possible, as very dirty ones may have microorganisms on them that are diffiC’ • to remove Try not to handle too many vege tables all at one time Work must proceed rapidly or bacteria develop while the food isn't packed into the jars, especially when the food is pre cooked and packed hot Bacteria de velops rapidly between tempera tures of 105 F. to 150 F. Clean the vege tables p ' ts of ' ,::g X water. Most of them are pre -fl' S -4 pared just as V,. 'ap; they a . w hen you’re cooking ■ * them for the ta ble. To prevent flat-sour, can these vegetables as soon a. possible after picking; asparagus, peas, beans and corn. • When sizes vary greatly, tt ma> be wise to sort the vegetables so that the contents of each jar are as uni form as possible You'll be able to get better processing in cases of this nature. TRADE WITH SAFETY WITH AD LYNN CHAMBERS' MENU Fried Chicken Macaroni Salad Sliced Tomatoes, Cucumbers Biscuits Jam or Jelly Chilled Melon Cookies Beverage Fill canner only with as many jars as it will hold easily, leaving space in-between the jars for proper i circulation of the steam. Corn and Greens Need High Pressure Cooking ' Corn, because of its high starch content, needs high temperature processing to can without spoilage The same is true of greens, but, in this case because heat penetrates the layers of leaves with difficulty For both of these use 15 pounds pres sure. To can corn, kernel style, simmer cars of corn in water 4 to 5 min utes. Cut from the cob, but do not scrape the cob \"vps. Weigh corn and W ___ add H the weight '-Q . ' n wa ' er - Add 1 teaspoon salt and C.. Xx* '( 1v 2 teaspoons I sugar for each Wtjquart. Mix well, heat to boiling and pack at once into jars. Process 80 minutes for quarts, 75 minutes for pints, e For cream-style corn, remove corn, uncooked from the cob by cut ting through grains and pressing out with the back of a knife Add water, salt and sugar and proceed as above. To can greens, wash, remove stems and imperfect leaves. Sim mer until leaves melt, then pack into jars and loosen center with a knife Process 85 minutes for quarts. 60 minutes for pints. Here are Directions For Beans, Peas For canning green beans, pre pare as for table, removing ends I and cutting into lengths. Cover with i boiling water and cook 3 to 4 min utes ick hot, process at 10 . pom. or 35 minutes for quarts i Only small lima beans should be canned, large ones dried. Wash • beans, then shell. Cook in water 5 1 minutes. Pack, add salt and process 1 55 minutes at 10 pounds pressure. Only tender very young peas should be canned. Shell, discard any imperfect peas, then wash and cook for 5 minutes in boiling water Pack, with salt, into jars, adding boiling 'water to fill Process. 45 rm tes i I at 10 pounds pressure for pints ;l (a r rots, Rents %re i : Lastly Canned | Only small beets should b? u<*i j for canning Wash thoroughly <• .1 1 off tops, leaving at- .it 1 ncn „r 5 stem. Cook in Iwnling water 15 min utes, ictnove skins and add <alt and boiling water when pa jars Process quarts 35 n :r. - i 10 pounds pressure To can carrots, wash, then s. r off skin; or. cook until skins :> . n , I and slip off Pack into jars, ad I sa t. j fill with bailing water, then proc ,. ess 35 minutes for q,.arts at 10 pounds pressure „ Asparagus should bo cut in lengths „ to fit the container after being thor oughly washed and all sand re moved. Cover closely to precook for . 3 to 4 minutes Pack in jars, ald , I salt and boiling water Process .10 j I minutes at 10 pound> pressure for I pints, 3.5 minutes for quarts \ ANN SAYS: i Fresh poiK cuts »Lhich -i •• o simmered to make d lie < i s types of entrees include spa: cribs, hocks, kidrnv and heart ERTISERS IN THESE COLUMNS WYLDE AND WOOLY WHEN WAS THE LAST TIME IT "j ( , RAINEP HERE. MISTER P qa < { AftAjp Ggl BESSIE IP >W WONT uET ME BE /OuR PARTNER . (WOWN uEMONAPI ./£**LLll vEMoMAVe !O\ ILL START 1 ?£ STAND/ w MS IC-ZtV ma/ you RIMIN' TIME OLAR6EI BE 4 WCCO AQUA HEADLINERS - Marion Marlowe I Jk| > Iill: ■ Frank Parker Edgar Bergen and Charlie McCarthy head the roster of celebrated entertainers booked for WCCO's Aquatennial Radio Show at Minneapolis Auditorium, 7:45 P.M, Saturday, July 19. Sharing spotlight honors with Bergen and McCarthy on the gala two hour stage review will be more than 200 radio and television performers, including nationally famous Arthur Godfrey Show singing stars Marion Marlowe, Frank Parker and Julius La Rosa. Ventriloquist Bergen will bring with him his entire family of dummies Charlie McCarthy, Mortimer Snerd, Effie Klinker, Podine Puflmgton. the newly created Swedish fisherman. Along with Bergen and the Godfrey show stars, the audience will be treated to Krformances by many more CBS Radio stars and Cedric Adams, Bob i Haven, the Minneapolis Choralaircs and Wally Olson's orchestra. Mail orders for tickets for the show are being accepted at Aquatennial Ticket Office, Northwestern Bank Bldg., and First National Bank Bldg., Minneapolis. Chicago Police Make Quick Work Dispersing Anti-Negro Mob Of 5,000 ti Xi iri'o sentiment in ('hh ;iu<> Chicago. (AXi* \i was hooted last week by an et'lie halted a mob of ."i.lMkl uhit. s fro a home by a Xegro in an all ul Coming on the eve of a >ei Chicago only a few blocks from current Republican National Con- ; vention. the riot was quelled within 48 hours. For the first time, Chicago police put into action its mob con trol plan and it worked. Ever since World War II ended in 1915. summer time has meant nmb time in Chicago, with weeks of tension between races because some Ne groes seek to move his family out of the black ghetto. The violence occurred only 10 days less than a year after the 1951 Cicero riot. This one how ever. happened within Chicago's city limits at 4511 S. Union St . in a frame house purchased by a Negro family from Milwaukee. Wis First ac tion was what appeared to be the innocent burning of trash in the back yard When the fire department showed up to put out the fire, firemen found young hoodlums beginning to loot the building They called the police. , As the crowd swelled into the thousands. 50 police squads with 200 police officers moved into ac tion. Policemen then stopped the young hoodlums, who were being cheered by the white mobsters, from tearing down the house, and began to push the crowd back In than 94 hmim t crowd h.tii from tearing down the house, and began to push the crowd back In less than 24 hours, the crowd had Want Ad Column Is Twin Cities Best Market Place WELL, M/ GREAT-GRANDPA HAO A NEIGHBOR WHOSE UNCLE SPREAD THE RUMOR THAT IT SPRINKLED FOR A FEW r—r' MINUTES BACK IN 1867. ) y I rttMoMADS Poor Me-100 hasn’t got the price. « t ,' W 'V liMr Bergen and friends Julius La Kosa iti-Negro sentiment in Chicagi dent police force as alert actioi nm rioting over the purchase o liite neighborhood. ■ries of political conventions it the Amphitheahre. scene of th broken up. | This occurred the night am I morning of July 1 and 2. The nex night, police stood guard, but m mobsters showed up. A regula police watch has been assigned ti the building. Victims of the mob destructiol were Mrs Harriet Garrett of 552: Wentworth Ave. She bought th home through her attorney. Ar thur H Bellamy, a colored Wes Indian, a month ago from its fou owners who new live in Milwau kee, Mr and Mrs. Walter F. Al win and Mr and Mrs Wilhard F Loomis Active in the background n helping to quell the riot wer Maynard Wishner. acting head o the Chicago Commission on Hu man Relations, and Fritz I’ollarc former football star and membe of the commission. Neighborhood One of Chicago's Toughest I GARDNERS D-X STATION Wetter* end Ceetrel DAU 996 A Battery Sarvi«a D-X GatolUa and Diamond Graaung. WasAUg and D-X Malar Oil* rvitm GAtDNir tray THIS IS NO Y WHAT PLACE FOR I rtc, I A SALESMAN J . y like me. ; TELEVISION STORE INC. All r FB£E A JU KVi BUT ONE CAN FINO A SHOT THAT'S SHADY, s Z / X The neighborhood m which th' •iolence occurred is consider* one of Chicago's roughest and toughest communities. It has a history of anti-Negro violence. located just behind Chicago's famed Stock Yards, this neighbor hood was one of the roots of the ill famed 1919 race riots in Chi cago. Some of its present resi dents were active in that violence of more than 30 years ago. Sons of these people were active in last week's violence. A number of these families occupy the same wooden homes they dwelled in in 1919. Mrs. Garrett bought the home about a month ago for $7,500, with a down payment of SSOO. She and her attorney did not act through a real estate agent. The home was cheap, compared to usual prices in Chicago, because it needed many repairs. Bellamy said: “We bought it and sent in Ne gro workmen to repair the place. It was old and worn out, that's why we got it so cheap. All week long these workmen were in there fixing and decorating." In the building's three apart ments was one white family, Mrs Bertha Verran, at S2O a month. Another of the apartments had been rented to a Negro family for occupation as soon as decoration and repairs were completed. Hoodlums literally destroyed the building, and Mrs. Verran was forced to leave her home be cause of the violence. Nobody can live there now. How Police Stopped Violence Wishner ami Pollard gave all the credit for stopping the mob to city police. Key men in the ac tion. according to Wishner. was Redmond Gibbons, chief of uni formed police, with the support of Commissioner Timothy O'Connor ;C taste . made the iJagfe> t a yp r i </ wfe»j£tS<* j; - nnfmffi Discover th that has fyeerti/ ss its A/ame Su BRAND 10 PHILLIPS A SONS COMPANY - EXCLUSIVE DISTRIBUTORS - MINNEAPOLIS Can a Young Wife I KILL You? ■ gjHB Tluv were a handsome couple But it "as l^e s{or > °* thr marriage RS|RI| J i l^e '°ung wife and the I i AA ddtrh husband (>uld he stand fjc/ I the hot pate of a<ti\i(\ set h\ his Bfefeh •1 JPJJt too-umng wife.'' (an such a ’„■ '*9 J marriage last' Read "Can A I I 4|m' \ ung \\ ite Kiil \ou•" in the ' 'i3h &L* August issue of T\X now ”’■ R WBk ”* wZ on \<»ur newsstand t ■ A TAN Jy 1820 S. Midupn Ao. | ; \ Stab » chic«£o HHH By Bert Thomas RAINCOATS AND \« LIGHTNING RODS? J —t y ; ■ - *ViT’Ak « W By NICK P By POSfN By PARKING NEAR A DIG MT „ LADY’ Gibbons, who actually originat ed the mob control plan several years ago following the Peoria street riot in Chicago, personally had charge of police action along with Breitzke. Introduction of this program came in the form of classes to officers of the force on how to act in racial situations and on how to handle mobs. All of this was done efficiently under Gib bon's direction. If the mob had been allowed to do as it pleased, it could have meant danger for the thousands of Negroes who work in the Stock Yards for their living. Commenting on this, Wishner said: "The police department did the best job in Chicago history in dispersing the crowd. This is in deed encouraging. When the police department enforces the law, and lets the mob know that it is going to enforce a citizen's right to live where he wants to be he Negro or something else— then it has made a progressive step in halting race riots in Chi cago." Wishner added, however, that because of the riot, it will be much more difficult to get Ne groes to move in peacefully than it may have been otherwise. He said usually the human relations commission works in advance when a Negro plans to move to a "white” community. He said the commission usually works with community organizations such as ■hurches and civic groups f MEN'S Sbh S EL io»i ig" j°°;M fils (i liani To Thur To Jame: and 1 Lnda. week: He: P M will 1 ing f the t