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Show ‘Mr. andMrs. George Wood to Note 60th Anniversary With Open House Sunday will 60th wedding 4 endin 1g World War Union y ne Coup! le moved to for 37 three mark the anniversary Pacilie Railroad years before retir Delta where Mr. Woodworked house for all Si Y ariltederl They boiler inspector during nds wall he he came to Provo in 1922 his employment and their home 775 E. Third where they lived in the tended many convention N, Saturday, Provo frmm 3to6 p.m. The couple request no gilts Mr. Wood was born in je house for the past all over the United States He was involved in Thanksgiving truck rdening during treasures the and letter he the depression and he received from them developed a newstra celery. For n thanking him Mrs. Wood was born hesent celery allover the June 1. 1895 in American United States in gift Fork to Jonathan and packages One year he Mary Clements Steggell 53 years and Canada representin sent some as a gift to the third of 13 children He worked for the the union 4 6 President Roosevelt for She attended school in a one room school house July 16. 1894 to William: and later attended the first high school that was and Eliza Stevens Wood He is the fifth of eight children, He graduated Chipman store. Holden. Millard County taught in American Fork in a farms in the area and then moved to Idaho for They have both been active members of the LDS church and served in positions throughout their lives Among parties which two years where he was trained as an auto mechanic He met BertheSteggell in Kaysville where they were both employed for the summer, They were married Oct. 2, 1917 in have honored the couple the past few weeks were a dinner for their children Salt Lake Cily and the Shortlyafter their mar tiage Mr. Woodserved in the US. Army and was on a ship going to France when the Armistis was and their spouses at the homeofa daughter, Mrs. tf reunionat their home for their 60th wedding anniversary with an open all family members » which nownumber 104 The couple are parents !. turday from 3 to 6 p.m. at their home Third N., Provo. At right they are shown of nine children: Mrs BarryT. (Junne) Jensen, Canoga Park, Calif. Don Lee Wood, Springville ; as they appeared at the time of their marriage 60 years a 20 Norma Wood, Provo official, or even unexpected, sights. — Thousands of “London speaks to the dawdler, to every day unaware that William the wanderer up side streets.”’ Shakespeare is leaning out of a window and peering down at them photographed dozens of quaint shops Dawdling up side streets, Lawson Hundreds more trudge into the National Gallery and unknowingly walk with pictures of noteable doors. He has a chapter on “London's Countryside’’ — its unusually “London is full of surprises,” says Andrew Lawson, who knows most of them Now Lawson, a Londoner by adoption, has collected the oddities and unusual details of this quirky city into a glossy new book called ‘Discover Unexpected London.” He uncovers a London tourists numerous parks seldom glimpse and which even residents hardly know—acitylike a coral reef, growing slowly and without plan and madeup ofthingsliving creatures historian Hugh Trevor-Roper in the book's introduction. In London, “‘everything is gradually changed but nothing is ever ended.’ Lawson trained as a doctor but switched to painting. Both a painter's eye and a doctor's care for detail came into play when he began roaming London with a camera Moreover, he looked at London with an insider's eye. He isa Freemanof the City of London anda liveryman of the “charity boys and girls’ which once identified schools run by charities His book, published by ElsevierPhaidon, digs into the reasons behind theseoddities and excavatestheir roots Worshipful Company of Fishmongers oneof the city’s ancient guilds, some of whose lesser-knownactivities his book depicts andnot at London and where to find Dick Whit- tington’s cat They show Shakespeare leaning from his windowon the Carnaby Street pub called the Shakespeare's Head, and PEANUT BUTTER CAKE 2 eups flour 3 tablespoons baking powder were 7th and 8th grade boys (The book was published in 1968.) Act 2: “Nowon to Mr. Klein with my questions, they just happened Wehadnobenevolent despots in the 18th century, no strategic boulevards in the 19th.” he says London is still, in spite of all its ° their fathers 7 's minutes per week on an average changes here to 7'z minutes) he got it from a good man, Philip Wylie, who had written it in an article entitled, “American Men are Loving Fathers with candlelight add mirrors on sophisticated aside In large bow! of mixer, cream peanut buter and shortening. Beat in brown sugar until well mixed ; add vanilla. Beat in eggs until fluffy. At low speed, stir in flour mixture alternatelywith milk beginning and ending with flour mixture. Pour into well-greased, 12-cup fluted tube pan coated with breadcrumbs, if desired. Bake at 350 degreesfor 40 to 50 minutes Cook in pan 10 minutes, then turn out on rack to *; teaspoonsalt cool completely. Glaze and arrange peanuts as flower petals, if desired Note: This recipe may be baked in greased, 9- by 13-inch pan for 40 minutes. Cut in 2-inch squares. Mrs. Pauline Hawthorne of Goodlettsville, Tenn., prefers a Chocolate Glaze on her cake PEANUT BUTTER FROSTING 1's cups powdered sugar ‘2 cup peanut butter set 14 cup butter ‘2 teaspoon vanilla Combineingredients and add enough hot water to spread PEANUT BUTTER FROSTING ‘4 cup margarine ‘4 cup peanut butter 1 teasponn vanilla ‘2 teaspoon salt 2! cups powdered sugar 3 tablespoons milk Act. 5: “Philip Wylie’s article, found at the Cream margarine blend in peanutbutter, vanilla library, turned out to ‘American Menare Lousy and salt. Add sugar gradually with milk. Beat well Fathers.’ It appeared in the March, 1956 Reader's Digest, condensed from the American Weekly, a now For your copy of the booklet, Pistachio Pudding extinct Sunday newspaper supplement Recipes, send 25 cents and a long, stamped, self‘However, my examination of the Reader's Digest addressed envelope with your request to Carol reprint showedthat the reportof the 300 boys wasn’t McGarvey, Box 4994, Des Moines, Iowa 50306. even part of the Wylie piece. It was a sort of bonus the editors had thrownin for readers: a boxinsert Don’t be afraid topair quoting an earlier Christian Herald article by Rev @ suit jacket with a pair Gordon H Schroeder, Baptist minister Act. 6: “I wrote to the publisher of the Chrsitian of jeans. You'll be right Herald, and received a copy of Schroeder's story in style. ‘Parents Should Behave Too.’ It was dated To spice up a plaid flanSeptember, 1955 (which begins to make ‘recent survey’ a bit exaggerated). There, amid heart-rending nel shirt and denim outtales of deserted children and evil parents, is a fit, add a man’stie or an reference to our 300 boys and their bloody 72 antique yest. minutes per week with good old Dad “But who did the survey and why?Let's ask the Revenred Act 7: “Alas for those wholike happy endings-or any endings at all: Rev. Schroder does not remember here hefirst heard about the infamous 300 boys. He read it in an article some place.” - RICHARD He discovered these data in a speech madebya well- Fatherhood” ; but this “recent survey” mentioned known psychologist, Dr. Daniel G. Brown, and several hundred 8th grade boys and girls who kept printed in ‘Vital Speeches of the Day,’ September1 track for a month of how much time they hadalone 1961. I contacted the doctor, and HEW consultant in with their fathers mental health Where did Norm find the quote? Oh comeon. We Act. 4: “Dr. Brown's letter told me that although could make this the longest 7 = (744 minutes in he had not done the research (‘average time history! - H Most of the city’s idiosyncrasies on the National Gallery entrance version. street peddlers and police and developed into dynastic collectors for charities and good causes. andthey survive because theyfilled a need According to Trevor-Roper's introduction, so did the whole of unex: pected London floor London is a shy old lady, discreet reserved and unostentatious about her charms.” Lawson says She does not reveal much to the manyreplies. A Lancaster, Pa., reader shares this ‘Who says the boys spend 7's minutes per week with K. KERCKHOFF, Ph. D NOTE: I'mindebted to their fathers, and howdoes he (she)@ know?’ author Norman Lobsenz who passed Dr. Kerckhoff's Act. 3: “Klein reported there were 300 such boys Seven Act Tragedy on to me. Yes, you guessedit: he whokept a diary, and they were indeed ‘alone with too dropped the well-traveled 7'2 minutesin to one of grew this way along with a mosaic Christmas pudding and mud pie By CAROL McGARVEY Dear Carol: Recently, I asked for a Peanut Butter Cake recipe madein a ring mold, and I received in history The famous ‘‘pearly kings and queens,”’ for instance, fill several pages of his book. Hetells how they beganas unofficial mediators between But his 278 color photographs and ex tensive text also show you wheretosit Greta Garbo in mosaic I answered, ‘Don’t believe everything you read!" has factsto proveit. seemto have been designed for the exHis interest in the quote dates from May, 1971, clusive enjoyment of steeplejacks and when heread in “Today's Child,” “A recent survey windowcleaners.’” (showed) the average time per week fathers spend The bulk of what he pictures, with their 5th grade sons was 7 ' minutes," (says however, can be seen by anyone — Dr. Betty Sigel of the University of Florida) though few ever notice. Like the Dr. Kerckhoff presents his research on the subject chimneyrising froma railing of Tower as A Tragedy in Seven Acts." Forth with Bridge, serving the fireplace of a tiny Act 1: “Because I wasstartled bythe finding,” he guardroom below. Or charminglittle writes, “I asked Dr. Sigel for more details. She statues all over the city of children in replied she had come across the study in ‘The quaint, 18th century costume — Father's Book by Ted Klein, but (correction) they “It has absorbed and preserved the deposit of all those centuries,” says z00 A correspondent wrote to my column last month ‘I read that a recent psychological survey says fathers on an average give only 7 ‘4 minutes per week of listening time to their children.’ Dr. Richard K. Kerckhoff, professor of Family of London buildings,"’ Lawson says, Development, Purdue University, agrees ; and he “are so high abovethe groundthat they have left behind on a metal camel BY HELEN BOTTEL LET'S TRAC ‘RECENT SURVEY’ Old quotes never die-nor do they fade away! shimmery. Chunky Peanut Butter Cake Recent S urvey Ancient — and another on colorful ceremonies from odd little charities to events like Trooping the Color Lawson's inside knowledge reveals that “the hustings’’ is not just any political platform but the nameof the dais where the election of London's Lord Mayortakesplace, Inside the Eccentries’ Club, appropriately enough, he finds a clock which runs backwards “Someof the mostdelightful details Room spa decorative terrace doors. Plaid no-waxflooris Ask the Cook Helen Help Us and charming signs. He fills two pages all over Greta Garbo. terned on lifestyles of the big-city Northeast Dewayne (Betty) 1 cup chunky peanut butter Magna; Mrs. ‘4 cup shortening H. (Ruth) 1'2 cups dark brown sugar , Petersen, Provo; Mrs 1'z teaspoons vanilla James G. (Alice) 3 eggs Andersen, ElDorado 1 cup milk Hills, Calif., Karl G Fine dry bread crumbs (optional) Wood, Ogden ; M ‘4 cup salted roasted peanuts (optional) 1. (Anne) Peay, Glaze and William S. Wood, (recipes follow) Santa Anna, Calif Stir together flour, baking powder andsalt Shakespeare is Watching tourists parade along CarnabyStreet CAMARADERIE of a piano bar is what the designers sought in this “live-in” room pat Don Peay; and a family MR. AND MRS. GEORGE WOOD will celebrate Don’t Look Now, But LONDON (UPI) After Salt Lake City until her marriage. Her hobbies are making handwork for her family and with her husband raising flowers. Hinkley. Utah. As a young man he worked on marriage was solemnized in the Manti LDS Temple the following June room above the graduation she workedin from Holden district school and then attended the Millard Academy at his magazine articles, iL beautifully ve. FLOWERS Regular Departures "A Second Chance at Got a problem? An adult subject for discussion? You can talk it over in her column if you write to Helen Bottel, care of this newspaper. 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