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Show Page 4 Thiirdd, August 14. IW I Newspaper nc9s s "t i 1 " imr - - - tw Mirttltodlay Sttan AS'5' .aWxr r" .Ave 1 xVe.,,et 1 vA T'Jv J0i . oft BUILDI 6ERVICE6 If you would like to be listed in our Building Services just call 649-9014. HOT TUBS & SAUNAS Park City Spa & Tub Fiberglass spas, wood hot tubs, whirlpool baths Saunas, dry & steam Located in Brent C. Building, 649-8172 PAINTERS Painters & Stainers Licensed Painting Contractor Free Estimates, quality workmanship 6498439 Painting Interior & Exterior Excellent Brush and Airless Spray Work Call Chet 322-0664 For Free Estimate WELDING Bob's Portable Welding Certified Satisfaction Guaranteed Pipe thawing 649-7544 MAINTENANCE ABoldingCo. Windows Washed, Construction Clean-up Complete Interior Cleaning Commercial & Residential Call 649-8795 for Free Estimates Shangri La Ent. Specializing in window washing. Janitorial, maintenance & repair service reasonable prices, reliable work, free estimate call Bob ( Michelle . 801-649-6887 MASONRY Quality Masonry Need a fireplace, retaining wall, brick patio or other QUALITY masonry? Call Bob 649-8167 or Garry 649-9088 after 6 p.m. SNOWPLOWING Park City Snowplow & Landscape Co. 649-8250 BUILDING MATERIALS Heber Lumber 700 Wet 100 South-Heber City 654-1 1 70 We Oeliver! Anderson Lumber Co. Highway 248-Park City 649 8477 Everything lor your building needs! PLUMBING' Emporium Plumbing Installation & Repairs, Drain & Sewer lines cleaned Licensed & Bonded 649-8511, 24 Hour Emergency Service CONSTRUCTION WTC Construction Remodeling Specialist Licensed Contraction 2523 East 2100 South 485-2385, S.L.C. High Country Builders Professional builders for 25 years. We may have the home or lot you want for sale now. If not, we can build for you. 24 hours. Phone 649-6375. Paul de Groot Contracting Carpentry and Building Established with excellent reputation Large or small, new or old Competent, licensed, insured, references We Do It All "Best Quality" Call a Professional First Day or Night 649-7581 INTERIOR DESIGN Inside Story Personalized interior design service Window and Wall Coverings, Furnishings, Carpet Paint & Accessories available in Park City 586 Main Street, 649-9332, 531-6262 LANDSCAPINGEQUIPMENT Greenstreet Gardening Company Mowing weed control & fertilization. Specializing in floral design & ground cover, flowers, ornamental shrubs & trees available for patios, beds & trim. Call 877-5204 (Marion number) or 654-4179 (Heber number). Serving Park City. Nevada Smith & Co. LAWN MAINTENANCE SERVICES Spring Clean-up Mow & Trim Lawn Fertilization Tree & Shrub Fertilization Weed Control Power Rake & Vacuum. LANDSCAPING SERVICES Sprinkler Systems Grading Plantings Sodding or Seeding Any Typo ui Tractor Work Available $22.50hr. CALL NEVADA AT 649-6170 EXCAVATION P & C Trucking & Excavation No Job Too Big or Too Small Excellent work, reasonable rates Hauling, basements, trenches Gravel & sand, general excavation Craig Kunkel, days 649-7838, evenings 336-2707 ELECTRICIAN Atlas Electric Daily service to Park City & surrounding areas Established in residential, commercial, industrial or remodeling Free Estimates Salt Lake City 262-8408 Reed Knight, Master Electrician INTERNATIONAL Jerusalem Menachem Begin, in an angry letter let-ter to Anwar Sadat, declared that Jerusalem would remain the eternal, undivided capital of Israel, and also said Israeli settlements on the West Bank never would be removed. The 14-page letter came in response to Egypt's suspension of the Palestinian autonomy talk, which was itself a response to a bill in the Knesset (Israeli parliament) making Jerusalem part of Israel. Said Prime Minister Begin, "Whoever declares this (act) null and void makes a declaration that is null and void." Begin's response quashed any rumours that he was adopting a conciliatory tack toward Egypt. In fact, Begin chastised Sadat, accused him of trying to influence African countries against Israel, and said Egypt's official newspapers were guilty of anti-Semitism. Saudia Arabia and Iraq threatened economic and diplomatic reprisals against countries who locate their embassies in Jerusalem. Syria, Jordan, Jor-dan, and seven other Arab nations joined tyiem this week, representing a substantial portion of the world's oil-producing countries. (Saudi Arabia alone supplies 24 of U.S. oil.) The U.S. embassy is in Tel Aviv. Liverpool There are no Penny Lanes or Long Winding Roads, not even in the Beatles' home town of Liverpool. The city's housing committee has refused to name their city streets after the former teen idols of the '60s, but decided to name an old folks ' home after Paul McCartney. Why? "McCartney is the only one who keeps his Liverpool connection," said committee chairman chair-man Richard Kemp. "At least he pomes here with his family." George Harrison Lives in Britain, John Lennon is a New York resident, and Ringo Star is in California. This represents the second defeat in three years for discouraged Beatles fans, who failed in 1977 to have a statue erected to the musicians once known as "The Fab Four." Tehran Islamic hard-liner Modammed Ali Ragaie was elected prime minister Monday by the Iranian parliament, spelling defeat for Iranian moderate President Bani-Sadr. Rajaie's election strengthens the hand of those who favor spy trials for the American hostages; he is considered con-sidered a party-line follower of radical Ayatollah Mohammed Beheshti. Other Iranians still say the hostage question cannot be considered until a cabinet is named, which Rajaie said he will do within 10 days. Bani-Sadr's nominee for the post, police minister Mostafa Mir-Salim, was rejected by the ruling Islamic Republican Party. In the wake of his defeat, the Iranian president attacked the Parliament in a streetside speech, while crowds yelled, "We will back you Bani-Sadr." Rajaie, who won the post by a 153-24 vote, is a former minister of education who banned the us,e of English in Iranian schools. In other news, an Iranian diplomat was quoted as saying the hostages will not be released until the U.S. pledges not to interfere with the affairs of any Islamic nation. London The two gentlemen trying to arrange a duel through the classifieds ads of the London Times are still at it. After two failed attempts, the duellists announced in a Times ad that they are waiting for "The Phantom Scribbler" to obtain ob-tain "suitable weaponry of large calibre." The two opponents, it has been revealed, are a doctor and his friend, who felt the surgeon's attentions at-tentions to his wife during a party impugned his honor. The BBC reported their first duel was a dismal failure: "The pistols weren't loaded, but the participants were." The second attempt at a gentlemanly shoot-out was thwarted by police. NATIONAL New York, New York President Carter closed off the last Democratic challenge to his candidacy by winning a rules fight Monday that binds his majority of pledged delegate to vote for him. "The Carter forces have won an impressive victory," said Sen. Ten Kennedy, announcing his withdrawal from the race. The vote leaves Carter Car-ter with 323 votes more than he needs to win the nomination. The battle was over in two hours, a quick affair conducted even before the invocation was given on this opening day of the Democratic convention. conven-tion. In the debate over the rules, Sen. Abraham Ribicoff spoke against releasing the delegates, saying, "You cannot take from a man what is rightfully his." On the other side, attorney Edward Ed-ward Bennett Williams told Carter delegates they should vote for the president, "because you want to, not because you have to." The vote, 1936.4-1390.6 against the rules change, settled the issue. In a conciliatory move, Carter accepted three Kennedy economic planks for the party's platform, plat-form, including a pledge not to use high-interest rates and unemployment to fight inflation. Press Secretary Jody Powell also said Carter wishes to consult the Massachusetts senator on his new economic policy. Clinton, Utah A 15-year-old youth was arrested on suspicion of killing a 2-year-old girl in this northern Utah town last Wednesday. A 12-hour 12-hour search by nearly 900 people ended when Ann Hoskisson's strangled body was discovered that morning in, the attic above the closet in an abandoned building that had been searched several times before. The unidentified youth was arrested late Wednesday and confessed to the . crime in the presence of his parents. The suspect is being held in the Moweda Youth Center in Roy, while city and county officials filed a petition in 1st District Juvenile Court to have him tried as an adult. The penalty, upon conviction would be death or life imprisonment. The Hoskisson child, daughter of Bruce and Alice Hoskisson, was reported missing about 8 p.m. Tuesday night. The night-long search utilized helicopters, dogs, police loudspeakers, door-to-door interrogations, and even assistance from the 388th Fighting Wing Force from Hill Air Force Base. Hollywood Baretta on a picket line? Eric "Chips" Estrada Creating a traffic jam on a freeway? It all happened Monday, when a galmorous line-up of Hollywood talent urged tourists to boycott the Universal studio tour as .part of their four-week-old strike. "Don't go on the tour," shouted actor Robert Blake, whose "Baretta" series was made on the Universal lot. "Support the actors!" The actors picketed outside the gates of the studio currently cur-rently the largest company making TV series and monies creating a back-up of traffic off the Lankershim ramp of the Hollywood Freeway. Highway patrol officers were forced to close the ramp. The assembly of talent also included Gil "Buck Rogers" Gerard, Ralph Bellamy, and David Wayne. Despite their boycott, a Universal spokesman said, "Business is better than ever." Texas Hurricane Allen changed in a week's time from the second most threatening storm in Atlantic history to a soggy front fizzling out over Mexico. Up to 200,000 Texans along the coast evacuated the area as Allen swept in, keeping the death toll down, currently to four drownings and two heart attacks. Neil Frank,- the director of the Naitonal Hurricane ' Center,' called ' Allen "'a hurricane with eyes." He said, "Every time it threatened a populated area, there was a little zig in the track." Early last week, Allen pounded across the Caribbean, leaving nearly a hundred people dead as it hit Haiti, the Dominican Republic, and Jamaica. Oil rigs in the Gulf of Mexico and Mexican coastal resort hotels were evacuated as Allen approached along the Yucatan Channel. Winds up to 185 mph were the second worst recorded. Allen was believed headed for Brownsville, Texas, a major populated area. Winds knocked out the city's electricity, gas, and water, and the local branch of the National Weather Service signed off saying, "From now on, we must just endure. May God help us." But, according to hurricane expert Frank, a weakening Atlantic pressure system caused Allen to slow down and change direction, churning churn-ing ihto Texas between Brownsville and Corpus Christ! Washington The National Multiple Sclerosis Society wants $400,000 from the federal government govern-ment to see if injections of snake venom is a cure for MS. The society puts no stock in the idea, but 2,000 MS patients already have received the treatment in Florida, devised by the late Dr. Ben Sheppard, and countless more are asking about it. The society wants to settle the question. Sheppard never conducted scientific studies to prove the benefits of his treatment, nor did he show that his patients even suffered from MS. He claimed about 20 of his patients had long-term relief from symptoms, especially those with bladder problems. His treatment gained nationwide nation-wide attention on a "60 Minutes" report. Chicago A former federal judge appointed by Richard Nixon was chosen as special counsel to a Senate panel looking into the so-called "Billygate" affair. Phillip W. Tone is a registered Republican who retired from the bench to private practice last year. Tone told reporters he doubted another Watergate was waiting to be discovered. "It would be difficult to get a case that would approach ap-proach that magnitude." He said committee chairman Birch Bayh, D-Ind., had given him an oral Pledge of impartiaFty. Toccoa, Georgia A former county official here has been charged with the murder of his political opponent. The suspect is Donald Addison, Ad-dison, 40, the Stephen County tax commissioner from 1972 to 1976. He is charged with killing Elizabeth Williams, 51, who defeated Addison in a 1976 run-off election, and was scheduled to meet him in a primary on Aug. 5. Despite the death of Mrs. Williams, Addison finished second in the race to a late entrant, and faces another run-off election. |