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Show _The Salt Lake TribuneHOME & FAMILY Friday, May 26, 1995 Garden Tour Will Show _Bunkbeds recalled The Consumer Product Safety Commission has rec than 320,000 wooden bunk bedsfrom 11 bed manu Top-bunk safety @ Less than 3 1/2 inches of opening in @ Guardrails Foot boards | + = needed on both sides The problem Achild’s body led more Zt Guardrail Head boards How They Grow # Continued from C-1 water lilies can be seen from decks on twolevels of the house. There are native plants near the pool and a picnic area for outdoor meals and entertaining. MTonya and Lynn LeMone’s place featuresa colonialherb garden with a large variety of culi- mayget trapped nary and medicinalherbslaid out in rustic style. Thereis also a delightful children’s garden. From 1990 to Quinn & Bed frame @ Secured mattress 1994, 24 children - including one in Utah - have died from foundation to prevent injury from easy dislodgement getting caught in openings Warning labels §8 Manufacturers attach warning labels that prohibit children under age 6 from using top bunk SOURCE: Consumer ProductSafety Commission Knight-Ridder Magid ed everythingI ate. Astounding. While I can offer ‘And Friends Count Calories the excuse that my newspaper and reduced calorie are words we question. We tend to be skeptical (““Yeah, sure, 1,200 calories a day”) and _smart-mouthed. “Doughnuts Are Death.’ Isn't that the title of a country song?” “How about ‘The Naked Pancake’?” “Soundsobscene.” Wealso are hopeful. This is neither the first nor the beat meansI eat out a lot, that isn’t the problem. When you are out to dinner, someonewill whisk away your plate before you eat the last bit of potato without thinking. if you say ‘No, thank you” to dessert, you don’t get one. To mychagrin,I realize I hit the refrigerator every time I walk by it. I find myself at the snack machines in the office on a regular basis. C’mon. The Marshmallow Munchie (LOW FAT)is breakfast. I havea new plan.I write down whatI don’t eat. No more caramel rice cakes with butter. No more sodas. I'm determined. Heaven only knows I’m too embarrassed to hit the snack machinesin front . second class for some. They have of mypeers. @ Continued from C-1 faith that “this time’ they will achieve goals. ‘It’s not about dieting. It’s about learning to eat for goodhealthfor a lifetime,’ someone says. I have a flashback to a friend on her way to a Weight Watchers meeting. “This had better work,” she said darkly. “I’m in no mood to diet.” Mythoughts exactly. Resentful from Day 1 — howcome other people eat anything they want and stay thin? Huh? Huh? — record- I'm probably not going to meet my weight goal, which I set modestly, certain I could lose that small amount of weight in a couple of days. On the otherhand, the class has hadpositive influences. Dreaming about salads has got to be a step up from dreaming abouttweall-beefpatties on a sesame-seed bun,special sauce, fries and a... hot fudge sundae. Well, there’s always the dry dog food. and Dorothy Hatch have a large garden filled with choice roses, a waterfall, a pool and garden statues. A vegetable garden surrounded with shrubs, fruit trees and fine shade trees completes this practical planting. @ Dorothea Welckerhas an exquisite small garden with mature plant material and garden rooms. Serene and private, it invites a person to comein andrelax. @Ted and Sylvia Pitts have a gardener’s garden with large and well-maintained grass areas. A large rock garden in front and a vegetable garden in backare featured. Ron and Sheila McDonald’s garden is a floral arranger’s delight, with a large cutting garden, a variety of flowers, an herb garden and a naturalized water garden. A gazebooverlooks the pond. @Craig and Kathy Bryson’s garden is built on several levels with manysteps on a steephill. It utilizes the natural oak onthehillside, which is planted with perennials and annuals. Thereis a spectacularview of the valley. @ Vern and Donna Whisenant’s garden features a colorful rock pattern underthe overhang of the home.Theperenniais are planted in the natural scrub oak. Huge rock walls bring privacy. @ Lowell and Judy Anderson have a garden featuring water. A creek andpoolare in front of the home. There are waterfalls and pools around the yard. Tall rock walls surround the garden, which is in the second yearof a five-year plan. @ Kyle and Lois Clark have designed their garden to attract birds. This mature gardenisin its natural state with huge plantings of pine, spruce, sequoia, Himalayan pine and a waterfall. @ James and Pam Dain’s herb garden is scattered among interesting old buildings and structures that add charm to the plantings. Other gardens on the tour in- Nursery, and the Riverside branchof Central Bank: in Lindon at Lindon Park Nursery; and in American Fork at Cascade Shadows Nursery. clude a splendid, well-planted es- Tickets are also available at the tate with an elaborate gazebo, thousands of blooming plants, a long and beautiful grape arbor, huge strawberry bedsand a sunken garden with raised planter boxes. A shade garden planted with perennials anda collection of hostas and tree peonieshighlight another. Also on the tour is an Oriental garden with a waterfall and poolin a scrub-oak setting. Tickets, which include a detailed tour map, are $10 in advance and $12 at the door. They can be purchased in Orem at Countryside Nursery, Garden Spot Nursery, Planted Earth and Freeway Gardens; in Provo at cashier's counter at Utah Valley Grants Plants, Vineyard Nursery, Carpenter Seed, Cascade Shows Regional Medical Center, Orem Community Hospital and American Fork Hospital, and by calling Central Utah Health Care Foundation at 371-7600. Last-minute tickets can be purchased for $12 at the McDonald Garden, 455 E. 1145 North, Orem. Perennial herbs and flowers, two for $1, will be available at three of the gardens for ticketholdersonly. The eventis underthe direction of a volunteer committee consisting of John Beal, Laurel Cornia, Joan Lewis, Leslie Louw, Sheila MeDonald, Sharon McDaniel, Don Nelson, Judy Petrotta and Tregaskis. DOWNTOWN STORE MUST MOVE! SAME SAVINGS AT SANDY STORE! 55 Naest) Gaus haels| 15% OR 20%OFF! Agonyofthe Feet? GANNETT NEWSSERVICE If your feet smell, your shoes maybe at fault, according to the University of Texas at Houston Lifetime Health Letter. “Foot odor” is mostly a misnomerbecause the problem is nonexistent among people whorarely or seldom wearshoes, say Texas health professionals. The odor comes from the combination of perspiration,bacteria, and shoe andsock materials. The inside of a shoe provides a warm, moist environmentin which odorcausing bacteria can thrive. Sometips: @ Avoid wearing the same shoesevery day W@Store shoes where they can air dry. @Go barefoot and wear open shoes such assandals asoften as possible. ALL TABLES & CHAIRS AND italy ELSE! ALL DRESSERS AND CHESTS BOOKCASES SANDY SALT LAKE CITY 1 510 South 200 - a 9436 South 650 East Easy Freeway Access Union Square 576-2595 (322-2595 “Utah'sA Largest Selection of Unfinished Fumiture” Reese What could be more DAY SALE NOW THRU MAY 3ist Beautiful 2yi Hybrid Roses 2 Gallon Reg. $16.99 yi SALE a 12 or 3 for DWARF ALBERTA we SPRUCE 18”-24”Tall @ Lush ®@ Slow growing ® “Cute little pine” 2 Gal. Reg. $24.99 SALE $48°° 1 Gal. Size Reg. $7.99 NOW $4o9 Just right for native & accent planting SALE SELECTION! $4999 1 Gallon Reg. $6.99 20” 3999 OFF Some Varieties Excluded See us first for your complete landscape and gardening needs. ® Bulk Top Soil & Bark Products (The $12.255 Saturn SCL) Recently, 44,000 people came togetherin Spring Hill, Tennessee to celebrate, ofall things, a car. What's more, most everyone who came took thetime to + personallythank the people responsible for building that car: the men and women of UAW Local 1853. Obviouslythere's more going on here than dent-resistant door panels. Thingslike honesty andintegrity and an appreciation for a job well-done. Pretty much the values we all grew up with that have somehowgottenlost over the years amongst the efficiency experts and K work ales But tha have been renonenin an automobile oalled Saturn. mm F SATURNof SALT LAKE * 8th So. & West Temple 801-521-5055 A DIFFERENT KIND of COMPANY. A DIFFERENT KIND of CAR. t PR t ROTH'S COUNTRY GARDENS CENTER Rasmussen Farms in Draper 12300 So, 323 East 572-9299 9-6 Sat. 9-8 Mon.-Fri. Closed Su inday rf E |