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anaheim-gazette 1952-05-29

1952-05-29 · Anaheim Gazette · page 7 of 12 · OCR glm-ocr
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SECTION TWO MODEL VEGETABLE GARDEN at the corner of La Palma and Water Street is the spare time activity of K. B. Rigby who keeps it in production the year round. Between rows of vegetables, berry vines developed by the late Rudy Boysen be heavily. Sweet peas and gladiolus provide cut flowers and an attractive note color. (Gazette photo by Kreidt) PARIS (F) — French police broadened their crackdown on demonstrating communists today in the wake of the arrest of France's top red and 900 or more of his cohorts after brief but LOS ANGELES (P)—Los Angeles International Airport is now one of the three largest in the nation. Its extended east-west runways—they've added 2100 feet—were put into operation yesterday. The Armistice Talks Let Reds Amass 1.000.000 Men PARIS (P) — French police broadened their crackdown on demonstrating communists today in the wake of the arrest of France's top red and 900 or more of his cohorts after brief but bloody rioting against Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway. LOS ANGELES (P)—Los Angeles International Airport is now one of the three largest in the nation. Its extended east-west runways—they've added 2100 feet—were put into operation yesterday. The strips can now accommodate any plane. BIG SAVING ON PLUMBING and HEATING From 10% to 30% on All Items Close Coupled TOILETS ... $3000 Double SINKS ... $2995 up Bath Tubs ... $7750 Lavatories ... $3000 up WATER HEATER SPECIAL ... $3650 up One Year Guarantee ½" Gal. pipe, 14c ft.; ¼" Gal. pipe 18c ft SALE STARTS FRI., MAY 23 ENDS JUNE 7 OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS Terms if Desired BILL WARD THE PLUMBER 246 E. Center St. Anaheim Phone 6105 Armistice Talks Let Reds Amass 1,000,000 Men TOKYO (P)—United Nations officers in a position to said today a communist force under 1,000,000 men is capable mounting a spring offensive Korea without warning. The figure is nearly 250 greater than the estimate of forces given by Gen. Matthew Ridgway April 27 shortly before he turned the Far East United Nations command over to Mark Clark. The latest estimate is shy of 1,000,000 men British Prime Minister Winston Churchill told allament the reds had in Korea was assumed Churchill was taking in round numbers. A year ago the red armies Korea totaled fewer than 600 men. The rapid growth in strength has been brought about in the past two months as artice talks grow more bitter already daily. Clark would not evaluate situation. Officers who should know enemy's current ground streak includes 80 infantry division backed up by a number of nese communist artillery divisions each containing approximately 100 big guns. A Chinese division is made of about 10,000 men. Half these combat divisions in the forward areas. U.N. officers say the commist force in Korea today is pable of greater offensive action than any heretofore attempt BILL WARD THE PLUMBER 246 E. Center St. Anaheim Phone 6105 anoth ab it's conve Almost e kitchen n jobs bett rule, the Happi kitchens electricit to gladd —from m You'll planned on your SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA EDISON 'Rudy Boysen Garden at Palm and Water Still Bears Berries Developed by Famed Horticulturist BY JOAN S. WHITE A man with a hoe is a familiar figure in Anaheim and its environs as backyards, vacant lots, and idle acreage are converted into vegetable gardens calculated to cut down the family food bill. Prominent member of this gardening fraternity is K. B. Rigby who tends a whopping big garden the year round at the corner of La Palma and Water streets. Through his efforts, this garden keeps three different families well supplied with fresh vegetables. JOINT ENTERPRISE The garden is unusually interesting in several respects; it is productive the year round, its king size fruit and vegetables are strictly "State Fair" calibre, and although Rigby now does all the work on the 50 x 125 foot plot himself, friends and neighbors continue to affectionately refer to it as the "Rudy Boysen garden." Rigby and Boysen, Anaheim's famed horticulturist who developed the Boysenberry, farmed the plot as a joint enterprise until the time of Rudy's death less than two years ago. The garden was started as a victory garden at the onset of World War Two, and thanks to scientific rotation of crops, systematic fertilization and proper irrigation, it has been made to produce abundantly ever since. "Rudy taught me all I know about gardening," modestly declared Rigby, as we talked with him over the garden fence one afternoon. "It is a matter of preparing a fine seed bed, applying plenty of fertilizer, watering regularly, and fighting the garden pests." It is evident from the long rows of thriving plants that his system really works. Huge solid green heads of cabbage are ready to harvest now as are full podded Telephone peas, small yellow carrots, rhubarb, cauliflower, etc. "Most people plant too much at once," Rigby went on. "I try to plan for the amount of each vegetable we can comfortably use, and then put in successive plantings to keep them coming." He pointed to graduated rows of corn and green beans. Graduation at Katella Set For June 11 Twenty-seven pupils of Katella school will graduate June 11 in commencement exercises at the school with Dr. J. Wesly Bratton, dean of Education Services and Summer Sessions, Long Beach State college, delivering the address. His subject will be "How Far is Up?" Pregraduation activities for the graduates will include a banquet, to be given in their honor by the Seventh grade at Knott's Berry Farm today at 8 p.m. On June 6 they will go to Catalina Island on the annual Ditch Day. Expenses will be paid from funds raised by the class, selling ice cream, magazines and old newspapers. The graduates include Oscar Aguirre, Sharon Bell, Robert Bivens, Norman Cave, Sally Cuthbert, Robert Gardner, Conrad Hudson, Diane Kent, Larry Landweer, Hazel LaFromboise, Larry Lehman, Billy Dean Martin, Diane Mitobe, Michael Peterson, Sue Ann Powell, Susan Reed, Loren Rodin, Margaret Rodin, David Rose, Jerry Stillwell, Alan Story, Thomas Terry, Jack Trott, Anne Williams, Jerry Wylie, Timothy Stickney and Robert Bilton. LOS ANGELES (AP)—Cellings on certain grocery products are being raised nationally next Monday, but the effect on the Los Angeles area consumer will be only slight, says the local Office of Price Stabilization. Most people plant too much at once," Rigby went on. "I try to plan for the amount of each vegetable we can comfortably use, and then put in successive plantings to keep them coming." He pointed to graduated rows of corn and green beans to prove his point. Also, he plans to set out three different varieties of tomato plants through the summer for a constant supply of this vegetable well into late fall. Rigby finds that he is time and money ahead by buying some well developed plants instead of starting all vegetables from seed. He has planted the seed for small root vegetables, corn, cucumbers, squash and the like but has set out the young plants of tomatoes, eggplant, cauliflower, cabbage and artichoke. WALK YOUR ROWS Gardener Rigby has a special method of preparing a seed bed which goes as follows: deep spading followed by hoeing to break the clods. Then he "walks his rows" by purposely walking over the loose dirt while raking vigorously. This pulverizes the soil while packing it down to remove air pockets and prevent the humps and hollows common to gardens in less experienced hands. Only when the moist soil is leveled in this fashion does Rigby plant his seeds or plants in rows kept straight by the stake and string method. Stand pipes placed at intervals throughout the garden make for easy irrigation and a mulch of bean straw or barnyard manure around each plant helps retain the moisture in the soil. This soil which bordered on heavy adobe at the start has been lightened and made highly productive by applications of manure, compost and commercial fertilizer. another nice thing about an all-electric kitchen... it's convenient Almost every home, these days, has electrical appliances in the kitchen making some jobs easier for the housewife—and doing the jobs better than they have ever been done before. As a general rule, the more appliances, the happier the home. Happiest of all, naturally, are the fortunate housewives whose kitchens are all electric. And that figures—because the way electricity makes kitchen tasks mere flick-of-a-switch jobs is enough to gladden any homemaker's heart. That includes every job—from meal preparation to dishwashing and garbage disposal. You'll like an all-electric kitchen, too. And if you install it in planned stages, you can complete it with no strain at all on your budget. See your electric dealer. Reddy Kilowatt CALORNIA EDISON COMPANY YOUR ELECTRIC SERVANT MADE-AT-HOME furniture can be handsome and reasonable in cost. An amateur craftsman built end tables, like the ones shown above, of common materials—lumber, plywood and bamboo. Finished to match the room decor and other furnishings, the end tables are decorative and useful, too. Ordinary tools were used to create this handicraft project. Monarchists Gain In Italian Vote ROME, (P) — Fiercely Nationalist fascism, soaring in new returns from last weekend's local elections, challenged communism today as Italy's second strongest political force. The rapidly rising party is the Italian Social Movement (MSI), which believes in Mussolini's corporate state in open defiance of Italian Constitutional bans on resurgent fascism. It teamed with the diehard Italian Monarchist party — whose pre-war king played straight man for Il Duce — to pull the biggest surprise of the Sunday-Monday elections in 2400 Italian towns and 26 provinces. While Premier Alcide de Gasperi's pro-western, Christian Democrat government majority bloc was winning in Rome—the biggest prize — the MSI-Monarchist alliance seized control of two rich consolidations. The rightwing hookup captured both the provincial and city councils of Naples, NATO headquarters for Southern Europe, and Bari, through which much U.S. arms aid funnels to Italy. If You Drive! Don't Drink If You Drink! Don't Drive MADE-AT-HOME furniture can be handsome and reasonable in cost. An amateur craftsman built end tables, like the ones shown above, of common materials—lumber, plywood and bamboo. Finished to match the room decor and other furnishings, the end tables are decorative and useful, too. Ordinary tools were used to create this handicraft project. If You Drive! Don’t Drink If You Drink! Don’t Drive Pack up a PICNIC... with good foods from SAFEWAY PRIED CHICKEN makes a plank per meal! And for perfect fried chicken, shame lye from Salem. They’re you really…each bird completely pleased and cut into flying size planets. Chickens be easier for picnic packing! And jack wolf will you join the delicate beer and jelly tenderness of three related children. Please govern in the hott through special feeding to produce meat, tender meat. Fryers .59¢ Manor House, Grade A, Eviscerated, cut up, pan ready. TURKEYS SMALL SIZE, GRADE A. Belleville type, 4-8-lbs. Eviscerated, ready for oven. GROUND BEEF FOR PICNIC LUNCHES Selected beef, freshly ground, packed in Vicking. CHUCK ROAST U. &. CHOICE Arm graded beef. cut $59¢ cut $53¢ BOILING BEEF Plate meat, cut from U. &. CHOICE beef. $19¢ SLICED BACON Morrell Pride, Grade A, in hot seal pack. CORNED BEEF Boneless brisket, mild curd. Excellent for picnic lunches. $69¢ MARGARINE DALEWOOD YELLOW Golden cubes. Use in cooking or as spread. SWIFT’S PREM Top quality lunch meat. Serve hot or cold. CHEESE FOOD Excellent for picnic sandwiches. Priced low. VAN ZEE 2 lb. loaf Potted Meat Libby Deviled. 3 3½-oz. cups $25¢ Deviled Ham Underwood’s Original. 2 3¼-oz. cups $18¢ Libby’s Hash Corned Beef. For quick meals. 16-oz. cups $35¢ Karo Syrup Cottage Cheese Blossom Time, the best taste. MORE PICNIC ITEMS Margarino Sweet Rolls Chip Pickles Heinz Mustard Doviled Ham Underwood's Original. 2 1/4 oz. can 18¢ CHEESE FOOD Excellent for picnic sandwiches. Priced low. VAN ZEE 2 lb. loaf 79¢ Libby’s Hash Corned Beef. For quick meals. 16 oz. can 35¢ Karo Syrup Choice of light, dark or maple flavored. Red label, Blue label, Green label. 1 1/2 lb. bottle 21¢ Baby Foods Gerber's, strained or chopped. Wide assortment, priced low. 3 cans 25¢ Beef Stew Nalley's, 15 oz. brand. 37¢ can 73¢ Cottage Cheese Blossom Time, the best tasting cottage cheese you can buy. Farmer Style (Small curd) or Creamed (Large curd). 8 oz. cup 12¢ 1 lb. cup 23¢ Welch Preserves Cherry, Plum or Chopped Cherrylode. 10 oz. jar 19¢ FANCY GRAPEFRUIT Plump, juice-heavy, tree-fresh fruit. Excellent for breakfast. DESERT VARIETY COACHELLA 8 pounds in mesh bag 35¢ BULK Per lb. 5¢ FRESH CARROTS TOPS OFF. 5¢ Crisp, tender, sweet. For picnic relish or salad. HEAD LETTUCE Crisp, solid. For picnic sandwiches, salads. YELLOW ONIONS Mild, sweet. No. 1 quality. For sandwiches. SAFEWAY MORE PICNIC ITEMS Margarino Beveryland Yellow. Sweet Relish Dal Mocha. Chip Pickles Del Monte Sweat. Heinz Mustard Brown or Yellow. For meats. Olives MARGARINE 22c LARGE 24c Ebony Ripe (SMALL, P-ole, 20c) Pitted Olives Banana Large 30¢ Heinz Ketchup Banana Large 23£ Chill Sauce Dulce Mocha 18¢ 21£ Plain Chili CON CARNE, Gobblehardt. 47£ Tamales WITH SAUCE. Yum Canopy's. 25£ Raviolis WITH SAUCE. Yum Canopy's. 27£ Meal Balls WITH GRAVY. 14¢ 37£ Vienna Sausage Libby. 19¢ Cragmont Soda 2 lb. bottle 25¢ Orange, Strawberry, Cream, Root Beer, Sparkling Water, Gingerale or Cola. Deposits extra on bottles. Pepsi Cola Deposit: 6 oz. bottle 37£ Black Cherry Deposit: White Bite: 39£ Deposits are extra on bottles. Zee Napkins White, Great pho. 12¢ Dinner Napkins White bread pho. 12£ Wizard Wick Green or Pink. each 33£ PRICES EFFECTIVE THUR-FRI. SAT., MAY 29-30-31, 1952, AT SAFEWAY STORES IN THIS AREA. Right to lend reserved. He takes to dishonor. Buffet tax added to retail price no taxable home.