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Show ' Lakeside Review, Tuesday, August 7, 1990 eyes on the chef usually spoils the recipe Ail By SHARON 1 1 We had a nice visit along the way. but when we returned home after dropping the food off, the full can of tuna was still sitting there on my counter top unused. Of course, my kids are aware of the fact that I just cant seem to NAUTA STEELE Lakeside Review columnist Fve never been able to cook in front of an audience. On my own. I can follow a recipe, as well as anyone, but when people are watching me practice m,y culinary skills I do crazy tilings like adding twice as much salt and forgetting half the flour it takes to bake a loaf of bread. A neighbor walked in my kitch-eone day when I was making a tuna casserole for a sick friend. She talked while I boiled the little ones mill around underfoot bumping into my elbows and sticking their fingers into anything that looks like it could be broken down by the human digestive tract. At the same time, they make as much noise as possible, arguing with each other, telling insane jokes, and asking questions they already know the answers to, in hopes theyll get me so confused Ill forget to put the onions in my potato salad or Ill add an extra cup of sugar to the punch. concentrate on cooking when -- people are around, and they try to use it to their advantage. Like magic, they begin jostling into my kitchen the minute I open the Rain or Shine macaroni, stirred the white sauce and opened a can of tunafish. Later she went along with me to deliver the steaming dish. hl fridge. The big ones sit on the bar stools and make wisecracks. The Occasionally this scheme works to their advantage like the times Ive bribed them all to leave with a promise of seconds on desert. More often it backfires like the day I spread their pizza with tomato soup insted of pizza sauce. Serves you right! I said, when everyone wanted to call in the dog and Dominoes, in that order. Of course, might as well have been talking to the wall as to my children at that moment, because I Id already begun to clear the table, and so, naturally, theyd all which brings me taken leave to another point: If those kids have a sixth-senfor detecting when Im going to start cooking, that they have a seventh-sens- e tells them when Ill need help cleaning up. se As good as they are at material- izing in my kitchen before din- nertime, theyre even better at vanishing when the dish towels come out. Yogi Bear, Scooby Doo to give kids a show LAYTON The Hannah-Barbe- and ra characters Yogi Bear, Jabberjaw, George Jetson, and will perform at several free shows next week at the Layton Hills Mall. Sfboby-Do- o Saturday, Aug. p.m., 3 p.m., and 'TScooby's School Daze, at the mail's center court is scheduled for Friday and Saturday, Aug. 10 -- The show, with a Bder can on the wall sent to Whitesides by Billy Carter himself. JVjiy would Carter send an empty jiepr can' to Whitesides? Because rtjwas against the law to send a full one," he said. !!Tn1983 the Whitesides hosted iff barbecue at thpir farm for representatives of hp Laytons sister city Motsumo-to- ; Japan. For the special occasion, Whij tesides erected a huge round gaze-fi- b in his yard. High in the center iTTthe gazebo is a railroad bell njm a Narrow Gauge Engine iAt ran to Elko, Nev. The Whitesides erected the d bell themselves using only a lariat. Perhaps one of his most cherished prizes is part of a horse- -' drwn scraper from the farm of ijravid O. McKay. Whitesides tumbles a little and chokes back some emotion as he tells the sto-iof how he got it. ' was up on his farm in Hunts .I 1 I said. Because the committee is just beginning to gather facts, she can not make any other specific recommendations yet. Hansen is in her third year as principal at Layton Elementary. Prior to coming to the school she was principal at Valley View Ele . lifetime. The memoirs are too many to mention, one of the first dentist chairs in Layton, saws from former Layton doctor Noel Tanners farm, a suet remover from Effies mother's stove. The items are endless. In a large field among the sheep are priceless pieces of antique farm equipment that belonged to William I. Layton, Mayor James Laytons grandfather. Whitesides made a living on some of the equipment working for Layton for a dime an hour. Among the farm equipment is a n maryire spreader dated back to 1904. This is the only thing Sears and Robuck sold that they wont stand behind, Whitesides said. As you can see, weve had a good life until Jack had his stroke, Effie said. - 4 ' 4, i - ft h A STAFF DEDICATED TO CARING FOR YOUR HEALTH Private or Group Insurance Over 700 Insurance companies recognize and cover Chiropractic care. This can reduce your cost to little or nothing. horse-draw- Palmer Method We offer well patient care" 546-360- 0 Senior Discounts 195 E. Gentile LAYTON f nr' -- i ' mentary, Bountiful. has She a bachelors and mas- ter's degree in education from Wright State University, Ohio. She has also earned a doctorate in education administration from the University of Utah. Hansen and her husband, are the parents of twcu married daughters and the grandparents of six. Her husband is retired from the Air Force and is currently working on writing a a (p 4 Hi 4 & A f . j; I f i t i3 t t fr S 7 1 K he great foil book. Hansen will be joined on this years executive board by Leon St. George; Jones, president-elecPaul Crookston, second vice president and state representative, Price; secretary and treasurer, Velda Morrow, Bountiful; and membership secretary Martin i ...... 1989. The only way you get things is to ask for them, Whitesides said. When they give it to you, take it now; they can always change their mind later. For many years Whitesides was the sales manager for Carlson Pontiac and Cadillac, Salt Lake. He claims to have sold McKay 33 Cadillac convertibles in his w Although research has just begun. Hansen says she is not ready for a change in the way school governments operate as a whole. I feel that the system we have is generally working well. The system, I think, is appropriate, she ol scraper. 350-poun- our schools? back-to-scho- 1 ville one day and I said, President McKay, you know, Id sure like to have something off your farm to remember you by. McKay agreed. As they walked out past a barn Whitesides saw the old plow scraper. I said, You know, I'd sure like to have that. McKay told him to come truck back some day in a pick-u- p and he could have the scraper. I said, Well, I just happen to have my pick-u- p right here with me. So I went to the top of the hill where Id parked my yellow Cadillac convertible. President McKay said, Thats the darndest pick-u- p truck I ever saw, he said. The Whitesides let .down the top of their convertible and with, McKays help loaded the rusty from page 10 page a.m., flavor, will include hits Hollow Jo answer the question, Is that tfe; most appropriate way to run 11: 11 5 p.m. BENNETT CHIROPRACTIC OFFICE others. The show is produced by Kings Productions of Cincinnati, Ohio. The characters are the creation of William Hanna and Joseph Barbera, who celebrated 50 years of animating together in p.m. H Frcim like "Power of Love and Be True to Your School, among, 11. Show times are as follows: Friday, Aug. 10: 11:30 a.m., 1:30 p.m., 3:30 p.m. and 6:30 . t, coer-u- p i 1 f i $ TK2G3I&TFAUL. Ba-:i- k, C ;.; Alpine. with $75 in Mall receipts. Customer Service, August FREE I $ e I t j 6-3- 1. n limiim" Tils DEIVSH3!' See his 4x4 on display. August ANIXJIFT-SERVC- L 00K WHOS TYING THE KNOT THIS MONTH REGISTERED BRIDAL COUPLES FOR S 11 am-- 2 f- I f; if 1 O HTK L-- t pm. 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