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Show r Page A4 Thursday, July 16, 1981 The Newspaper MOTTO mm gm. LA LTtt9s Stlfili (tat mmm Now open for Breakfast Daily Specials 7:30.-11:30 Seven days a week Featuring: Omelettes Potato Pancakes Continental Breakfast Apple Pancakes Bouillon Pork Chops Open for Lunch & Dinner Seating from 11:30 to 10:00 Specializing in: Fine German Pastries Cappuccino & Expresso 402 Main Street For the cyclist who has everything -insurance to protect it On the road or off, I can assure you that you and your bike are fully protected. Farmers insurance coverage even provides for medical payments for your passenger. You can arrange to pay your premiums in easy monthly installments. And, if you have 24 continuous months of accident-free driving, you may qualify for a special discount. For more information, call me today and learn about Farmers fast, fair, friendly seivice. Judy M. Kimball, Agent Tom Wilson, Agent 202 Silver King Bank Bldg. Park City, Utah 649-B656 hess BUILDI 6ERVICE. If you would like to be listed in our Building Services just call 649-9014. HOT TUBS & SAUNAS Universal Spa Systems 6980 South 400 West ' Midvale, Ut. 566-7727 CLEANING Millcreek Cleaners We Specialize in cleaning velvets, draperies & carpet cleaning. Kenneth Elk, Owner-Operator Call Collect 467-5131 1631 Millcreek Way Salt Lake City, Utah MAINTENANCE Shangri La Ent. Specializing in window washing, carpet cleaning, janitorial, maintenance and repair service. Commercial or residential. Free estimates. Licensed and insured. Call Bob Grieve 649-6887 FENCING Fence & Deck Wasatch Fence & Deck Park City, Utah Free Estimates Call 649-9678 649-5127 August 27 CONSTRUCTION Park City Homes Licensed General Contractor Wayne Lofflin 649-7349 LANDSCAPING Alpine Landscaping Landscape design & planning Complete sprinkler design and installation Call 649-8521 Complete Landscaping Maintenance Specializing In Commercial and Residential Landscaping. REPAIR! Mountain Home Repairs Odds & Ends Small or Large Home Repair & Maintenance Top Notch Service Why wait? Call now. Mike Haas 649-9776 PLUMBING Emporium Plumbing Installation & Repairs, Drain & Sewer lines cleaned Licensed & Bonded 649-8511, 24 Hour Emergency Service FLORIST Park City's The Flower Box Full Service Floiist Wire Service Renee Daines 649-4144 Holiday Village Mall Park City BUILDING MATERIALS 1 Anderson Lumber Co. Highway 248 Park City-649-8477 Everything for your building needs! REMODELING J.S. Home Improvements Remodeling, room additions, basement finishing, decks, repairs. 25 years experience. We stress quality at a fair price. 649-8502. INTERNATIONAL London Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher said Tuesday that police will be allowed to use rubber bullets, water cannons, and tear gas to try to quell rioting that has raged in Britain for 1 1 days. Thatcher visited Liverpool earlier this week to try calming the situation, and for her trouble was almost hit by a tomato thrown by a protestor. The Prime Minister rejected House of Commons Com-mons criticism that the rioting could be blamed on an 11.1 unemployment rate caused by her economic policies. Thatcher said the violence must be stopped before economic and social causes can be probed. Government ministers admitted, however, that employment problems stirred up the situation. Another cause, observers said, was racial tension between immigrant blacks and Asians, and white youth gangs, called "skinheads" because of their close-cropped hair. The violence has spread to 20 cities and at least 2,500 people have been arrested. Paris The times are a-changing under new French President Francois Mitterand. The government announced its plans to nationalize 1 1 major industrial groups, including steel firms, chemical companies, and private banks. The Mitterand government also said it would outlaw the guillotine and joined the other countries of Western Europe in stopping capital punishment. The French stock market didn't fall in response to the nationalization plans, but one observer said that was because it had never recovered after Mitterand's victory. "Prices are so depressed, there are no sellers left," he said. Belfast, Northern Ireland Two more hunger strikers died in the Maze prison, setting off new outbursts of street fighting. Joe McDonnell, 30, died a week ago Wednesday after 61 days without food, and Martin Huron, 27, succumbed on the 45th day of his strike. Hurson, who was sentenced to 20 years for possessing explosives and conspiracy to kill security forces, was the sixth hunger striker to die. The IRA's political wing, Sinn Fein, claimed Hurson was murdered. The violence after his death was less intense than on other IRA prison deaths. Six injuries were reported, but none were serious. New Delhi, India An illicit liquor racket has killed 219 people in this city with poisonous booze, said officials, and the death toll could rise even higher. The brew makers working cut of three rural villages, may have mixed toxic methanol with water to make the liquor, guessed State Excise Commissioner B. K. Bhattacharya. Doctors still are trying to save the lives of 130 hospitalized drinkers. Entire families died, except ex-cept for children, after drinking the mixture, and a death is being reported every five minutes, say officials. London Brides traditionally get something borrowed and something blue, but the Lady Diana Prince Charles wedding is leaving a lot of angry blue faces in its wake. A Swiss ecology group said an endangered group of Canadian bears were slaughtered to provide ornamentation ornamen-tation at the wedding. In a related story, Lady Diana fired a bodyguard she said was too domineering. The Swiss said 600 Canadian brown bears were killed to provide new bearskin helmets for the royal cavalry at the wedding. But the World Wildlife Fund, led by Prince Phillip, said the bears were black, not brown, and were so numerous they are commonly hunted down as pests. Lady Diana, meanwhile, has clashed with a member of the royal bodyguard, Chief Inspector Paul Officer. Inspector Officer, according to a O'KELLY- INSURANCE AGENCY.INC. MMMMIMIIIHIllllllTnffa SHIRLEYOKELLY AGENT ALL TYPES OF INSURANCE 421 MAIN STREET 649- 68 3 1 ml your mndtptndent , Insurance g Agent . SlflVI & VOU FIRST London newspaper, began ordering her around as if she were his daughter, and wouldn't allow her to even drive herself around. Leigh, England A couple has been denied the opportunity to adopt a child because their marriage is too happy. Social workers here say a child raised in such a blissful household would not be exposed to a sufficient number of "negative experiences." Harry and Esther Hough have been foster parents to 47 children. "To say we are not suitable because we do not row or argue is beyond belief," said Mr. Hough. NATIONAL San Jose, California Caught between a rock and a hard place, the state of California began spraying this area with the pesticide melathion to stop a crop infestation of the Mediterranean fruit fly, in spite of worries the chemical itself might cause long-term illness. Gov. Jerry Brown opposed the aerial spraying at first, but conceded con-ceded after Washington threatened to quarantine quaran-tine all California farm produce. The spraying began Tuesday as helicopters took off with a diluted version of the pesticide experts say is not harmful, and began to cover 117 square miles between San Francisco and San Jose. A last-minute court challenge was unsuccessful, unsuc-cessful, and, despite the fact many residents said they would flee the area, the special shelters in the region were almost deserted. Eleven southern states said they would ban crops from the infested area. And while Gov. Brown was even ordering luggage inspections at airports to find diseased produce, he urged the federal government to ease up on their quarantine. quaran-tine. Residents in the area said they felt no effects at all and would not have known they were being sprayed, except for the helicopter noise. San Francisco In the biggest fire here since the 1906 earthquake, a swiftly-moving fire reduced half a city block to rubble Friday, destroying 24 buildings and a homosexual S & M house where officials said they may yet find victims. vic-tims. The next day, police arrested Otis J. Bloom, 38, on suspicion of starting the blaze. The blaze brought every on-duty fireman in the city to the scene, and no deaths were immediately im-mediately reported, : but fireman said , they smelled "Burning meat." When the houses are safe: to search, fire officials said, they may find several victims, possibly gay "slaves" who had been chained to their beds. The fire broke out at 2:15 a.m. Friday in a bathhouse called the Folsom Street Barracks. It spread to a warehouse where a highly flammable flam-mable sexual stimulant called "rush" was stored, and police are wondering if that played a part in the fire's rapid spread. The blaze was contained after three hours. Roy, Utah Senators Orrin Hatch and Jeremiah Denton conducted hearings for the Senate Labor and Human Resources Committee probing charges that exposure to toxic chemicals has caused death and illness among workers at Hill Air Force Base. A union representative for the workers, Neil B. Breeden, charged Hill officials had covered up evidence even from their own superiors at the Air Force Logistics Command. The most memorable testimony, however, t ine from the wives of Hill personnel. Janice Limburg told of her husband Bob's apprehensions apprehen-sions as co-workers began to die. "Bob talked of the men at the lab wondering among themselves as to who would be next," she said. Limburg died of cancer in .1980. "Now I ask you the same question. Who is next?" she said. An Air Force representative said tests in 1978 showed no link between the chemicals and the deaths. And he asserted that safety efforts at HiH have been intensified. sm mm mmm CUISIIIB Monday-Friday 11:30-2:30 5:00-10:00 Weekends 12:00-10:00 mmm mm HH800 Call 1-943-8357, collect. July 30 |