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Show Wednesday, October 22. 1997 M usdc Oct m W ednesday Locals night, live DJ, 10 p.m., Cisero's. Jubilation (Acoustic Jam Night), O'Shucks Bar & rT- larill. live Classical and Latin Aan hu I Mediterraneo, every Wed., Thurs., Thursday Jam Band, Cisero's. 10th Mountain, The Cozy. F r i d a TJ Mr A I Zion Tribe. Cisero's. j-mt 'Unshakable Race. The Stranae Brew. The Alamo. Joel Peters, traditional folk, Mulliaan's Irish Pub. D.J. and dancing. The Club. Mary Beth Gelbuda, 7:30 - 10:30 p.m., Riverhorse Cafe. Jessie Thurgood, 6-10 p.m., Cafe Terigo if-1 ' m Saturday Strange Brew, The Alamo. TBA, The Jammin' Salmon. Unshakable Race, The Cozy. D.J, Disco Funk with Funkin' Around, Cisero's. Stone Circle, traditional Irish music, Mulligan's Irish Pub. 'Mary Beth Gelbuda, pianist, 7:30 - Pichas Zukerman and Joseph Silverstein conduct the Utah Symphony, 7 p.m., Abravenel Hall. 533-NOTE. i a Sunday Hootenanny, Thea's Pub, i i J V Tuesday 90's night D.J., Cisero's Fleetwood Mac, The Delta Center, SLC. For info call 355-2020. WW J-w i .if lh FJ H iti ivT it. I .VFl'lfTT. irilTTM " si" J ' " - v - Park City, Etc. AAA MOUNTAIN EXPRESS RESTAURANT DELIVERY SERVICE SER-VICE Enjoy fine food without leaving Hour home, condo or hotel. Let us rjpljver your favorite foods from 35 pf the finest restaurants in Pafk City and Deer Valley. Open daily 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. Also, grocery gro-cery shopping, condo stocking, Pa'rk Record newspaper delivery catering. Gift certificates available. avail-able. Call 649-MENU (6368). COURTSIDE (formerly Sneakers) Open 7 days a week 8:30 am -10 pm, at the Racquet Club. Great new fall menu, totally redecorated, and ready for the football season with 6 televisions Lwilh cable and satellite. 1 200 Little Kate Rd. A private club for the benefit of members. 649-7742 649-7742 MT. AIR CAFE Park City's leading family restaurant restau-rant for 20 years. Breakfast, lunch and dinners. Most reasonable reason-able prices in town. Home cookin', biscuits and gravy and irresistible fried chicken. Take out available. Jet. Hwy. 248 and Kerns Blvd. Open 6 am-11 pm 7 days. IVIain Street 350 MAIN SEAFOOD & OYSTER CO. An American seafood bistro fea turing fresh daily arrivals of fish, shellfish and lobster. Enjoy dining din-ing in one of Park City's most beautiful historic buildings. Nightly specials offered. Oyster Bar opens at 5:00 pm, dinner at 6:00 pm. Open Tuesday thru Saturday. 350 Mam St. 1649-3140. Reservations recommended. nnioiriu 2 2 2 8 nral Artists Merratn and Sun. 7:30 - 9:30 p.m. Cozv. 10:30 p.m., Riverhorse Cafe. For info and tickets call 8 p.m. -12 a.m. ALEX'S BISTRO Now open! After the remodeling. remodel-ing. Featuring weekly live entertainment, enter-tainment, Fri. & Sat. evenings. Open Tues.-Sun. 5:30-1 0pm. Closed Mondays. After hours menu 10pm-2am, Fri. & Sat. only. 442 Main St. 649-5252. BANGKOK THAI ON MAIN Park City's authentic Thai restaurant. Serving the world's most exciting cuisine in an atmosphere of casual elegance. Open daily for dinner 4 pm to 10 pm. 605 Main Street, first floor Park Hotel. 649-THAI. CAFE TERIGO From our trout on polenta toast to Papparadelle pasta with chicken and sundried tomatoes, you'll love how we prepare our creative cuisine with fresh quality quali-ty ingredients. Open 7 days a week for dinner at 5:30. Lunch Mon.-Sat. from 11:30-2:30. 424 Main St. Reservations 645-9555. CHIMAYO Try it once and your hooked! Chimayo itself is filled with enchantment where Southwestern cuisine, full of creative cre-ative flavors and unique combinations, combi-nations, already has critics raving. rav-ing. Tasty food and incredible variety, all at a great price! Dinner served nightly. 368 Main Street, 649-6222. CLAIMJUMPER STEAK HOUSE & DOWNUNDER SALOON Relax in our turn-of-the-century dining room. Enjoy sizzling top sirloin steaks, 20 oz. prime rib or our famous baseball steak! Huge Alaskan King Crab Legs, Utah trout and nightly specials. Voted "Local's Favorite" in Ski Magazine (Nov. 94). Dinner nightly 5:00-1 0:00pm. 573 Main St. 649-8051 The Park Gardening doesn't have to end in the fall Continued from B-6 easiest ways to a hassle-free garden as soon as the snow melts, the practice prac-tice does require a little foresight and special care in a high altitude environment. "I recommend that bulbs be planted in soil as deep as three times the diameter of the bulb," said Maria Barndt, landscape gardener gar-dener for Park City Municipal Corporation. Because of the long winters in the Wasatch, some gardeners chose to plant their bulbs in more shallow soil. But Barndt says the soil in and around Park City experiences several upheavals and shifts from frosts, and to insure the bulb's stability, sta-bility, she practices a six-inch deep standard. The private lives of royals revealed in Mrs. Brown by Rick Brough RECORD GUEST WRITER The public never tires, it seems, of hearing about the private pri-vate lives of the royals. In that spirit, the next offering from the Park City Film Series is Mrs. Brown, playing on Saturday, Oct. '25. One critic suggested the film could be a companion piece to The Madness of King George. It would be titled "The Sadness of Queen Victoria." It's 1864, and Victoria, still mourning the death of Prince Albert three years before, has isolated herself at the royal mansion man-sion on the Isle of Wight. She's a monarch too depressed to rule or live at dinner she nibbles a few bites. For diversion, she takes a stately royal "wade" in the ocean for a few moments. As a last-ditch measure, the court sends for John Brown, since he was Albert's former hunting guide. The Scot shakes things up, ordering the Queen to take prolonged horse rides for her health. Victoria's shock eventually subsides into reserved affection and the forming of a close bond with Brown. Moving her court to Balmoral in the Highlands, the queen even indulges in behavior that is a bit un-royal (visiting an ordinary farm family and sampling sam-pling whiskey). i;ot1 .( THE EATING ESTABLISHMENT CELEBRATING 25 YEARS Serving legendary breakfasts, lunches, dinners. Eggs benedict, bene-dict, huevos rancheros, lox & bagels, pancakes, Belgian waffles waf-fles served all day. Homemade soups, salads, sandwiches, the best burger in town. Open daily at 8 am. Dinner from 5:30 pm. 317 Main St. 649-8284. GAMEKEEPER'S GRILLE Supreme Cuisine like heaven on earth. Closed from Oct. 13th to Nov. 1 3th. Come see us in November, after the 1 3th. 508 Main St. Reservations: 647-0327 GRAPPA Award winning Grappa restaurant invites you to dine in the most beautiful outdoor setting on Main Street Our light summer menu will dazzle you with unique taste and presentation. 151 Main Street 645-0636 MILETTS ITALIAN RESTAURANT A local's favorite for 27 years. Serving fresh pasta dishes, fresh grilled seafood and many other creative dishes. Ask us about preparing the food for your next party. Located at 412 Main St. For reservations call 649-821 1 after 4 p.m. MULBERRY STREET RESTAURANT & GRILL American with an Italian accent Fresh seafood, pasta, chicken, chops, grilled steaks. Children's menu. Across from the Town Lift. Free parking under the Marriott. Pool table & game room. Open Monday thru Saturday. 738 Main St 649-0888. Record And dont think you have to buy new bulbs year after year. If you can remember where you've planted plant-ed bulbs the previous fall, they can be split and reused again and again. "A bulb will produce other offshoot off-shoot bulbs underground over the course of the summer that can be reused the following fall," said Dave Molden, supervisor at Red Barn Nursery. Bulbs also benefit from a small application of bone meal and mulch on the top soil after the bulb has been planted. Barndt also recommends planting planti-ng a variety of bulbs that show continuous con-tinuous color from early spring to mid-summer. A good combination might be crocus to bloom in early spring, followed by daffodils, then an early-blooming tulip like the Luckily, there are no paparazzi around, but discontent brews over the queen's continued isolation from her public and the increasing power of her Scottish friend. Newspapers brand her "Mrs. Brown" and some factions call for the dissolution of the Crown. Though some critics saw the film as emotionally remote, there was general praise for Judi Dench, a distinguished English actress little known in this country. coun-try. (She's most visible here for taking over the role of "M" to Pierce Brosnan's James Bond.) Scottish comedian Billy Connolly is John Brown. And Anthony Sher was praised for a scene-stealing performance as Disraeli, the sly politician who convinces Victoria to, once again, become the ruler of the British Empire. Mary Dickson of the Salt Lake City Weekly observed, "The script by Jeremy Brock is filled with heart, intelligence and abundant wit. Mrs. Brown is not only a fascinating historical chronicle, but a superb exploration explo-ration of platonic friendship between a man and a woman. The kind of spiritual bond they enjoyed, based on mutual need, admiration and respect, is too seldom portrayed on film." Mrs. Brown plays on Saturday, Oct. 25, at the Jim . Santy Auditorium at 8 p.m. . O'SHUCKS BAR & GRILL A private club for members only with a neighborhood pub feel. Marinated chicken breasts, garlic and veggie burgers, famous for late night eating. Open 10:30 am-1 am, 365 days a year. 427 Main 645-3999. RIVERHORSE CAFE Utah's first recipient of the prestigious presti-gious DiRoNA Award for outstanding out-standing dining. Contemporary American cuisine. Outdoor dining on the deck overlooking historic Main Street (weather permitting). Live entertainment on weekends. Dinner nightly from 5:00. Reservations suggested. 649-3536. 649-3536. SCHLOTZSKY'S DEU Those "WONDERFUL BUNS" are baked fresh daily. Sourdough, dark rye, wheat, jalapeno cheese. Choose from 15 mouth-watering sandwiches , and 10 sourdough crust pizzas, six healthy salads and an array of hearty soups and delicious desserts. Open Sun.-Thurs. Sun.-Thurs. 11am to 4pm, Fri.- Sat. 11 am- 8 p.m. 658-3030, Fax order 658-2020. 804 Main St. THEA'S Our dining room is closed for the month of October for remodeling, but our banquet facilities & group parties are both still available. Call us at 655-4575 to get on our Grand Re-opening party list! 255 Main Street TASTE OF SAIGON A healthier choice in Asian dining. din-ing. Come and experience Park City's authentic Vietnamese cuisine. Open Tuesday - Sunday: Lunch 11:30am-2:30pm, dinner 5:30pm-10pm. 580 Main, Grand Galleria Mall. 647-0688. Take-home meals available. Emperor and mid-season and late-season late-season blooming tulips. "A good combination of bulbs will maximize the enjoyment you get from the effort of planting bulbs," Barndt said. A bulb that requires a fall planting plant-ing with a lesser-known reputation than tulips or daffodils is garlic. Cloves of garlic can be planted in the same fashion as flowering bulbs. Lawn and garden rules of thumb Most plants dont require much care over the winter, but there are a few steps gardeners and home owners can take to make the most of the spring bloom, like fertilizing, mulching and cutting back. Winterizing a lawn means nothing noth-ing more than applying a slow-release slow-release fertilizer to ensure green eon!!! Hit 1 ti - fi - I A'w k7W CATS, the International award-winning musical based on T.S. Eliot's "Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats," will be performed at Kingsbury Hall In SLC starting on Oct. 28. For information and tickets call 355-ARTS. v.. lie. !W Pros pectorSq. GRUB STEAK RESTAURANT Features specialties like Prime Rib, Black Angus New York steak and fish, seafood and chicken dishes. 35-item fresh salad bar. Join us for lunch featuring soup, salad & sandwich sand-wich bar. Mon-Sat 11:30-2 pm. Open for dinner daily from 5:00 to 10:00. Live entertainment Fri. & Sat. nights. 649-8060. NACHO MAMA'S We serve a creative interpretation interpreta-tion of popular Mexican-style dishes combined with unique regional specialties borrowed from throughout the Southwest. Visit the Hop'n Jalapeno room for appetizers, pool & foose ball. 1821 Sidewinder. 645-TACO. 645-TACO. Open 7 nights a week at 5 p.m. THE PUB AT THE OLYMPIA PARK HOTEL Outdoor dining conveniently located near the Rail Trail. Big screen sports, darts, popcorn, nightly appetizers, soups, salads, sandwiches, burritos, burgers and so much more! 11am-11pm. 11am-11pm. The Pub, a private club for the benefit of members. 1895 Sidewinder Dr., 649-2900. ZIEHM We specialize in wild game, fresh fish, housemade pastas, breads & pastries. The combination of fine food, soft jazz, warm decor and attentive service allows us to provide the finest dining experience experi-ence in the Wasatch Front. 1781 Sidewinder Prospector Square. 655-7006 B-7 grass early in the spring. Wildflowers particularly benefit from a fall planting. Simply sprinkle sprin-kle a packet of seeds over the area where you wish to have wildflower growth in the spring. Raking the area will protect the seeds from being eaten by birds and rodents. "Wildflowers can even be spread over the first snow after the ground freezes. As the snow melts in the spring the seeds will have good, moist soil to germinate in," Barrett said. Dead leaves in a garden should be raked up, a compost or mulch can be applied to flower beds and greenery on all perennials should be cut back. "The more clean-up you do in the fall the less you have to worry about in the spring," said Barndt. Deer Valley THE GLITRETIND RESTAURANT AT STEIN ERIKSEN LODGE Contemporary European specialties special-ties for breakfast, lunch, dinner and Sunday Jazz Brunch. Named Most Romantic Restaurant - Zagat Survey, recipient recip-ient of the Wine Spectator Award of Excellence. Come see our incredible renovation. 649-3700. . m v. (. 1 ' w Lr- ? . V, i . - n v t'-"" ) C v ?n V. j, m |