Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 95, No. 286, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 2, 1986 Page: 8 of 10
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Chickasha Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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THE CHICKASHA DAILY EXPRESS, Tuesday, December 2,
SE
11. Help Wanted
To Place
Your
CLASSIFIED
-
--
AD
call:
1. Free
2. Personals
PIZZA
13. Business Oppor.
3. Special Notices
tnr
Peopletalk
6. Lost and Found
Kenneth Crump
7. Beauty Culture
224-2800
224-4800
1
I
352-5037
949-2742 j
11. Help Wanted
Marlow, OK
61 Units
47-6 Davis, 500 S. B. Street,
Davis, OK
41 Units
Units
31
2
Senate Intellagence
Panel Presses Ahead
—EIGHT
Talking Toys Top Christmas Lists
>
<
I
EXCLUSIVE
REALESTATE
BROKER
NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS,
meets Thursday, 8 a.m. to 9
p.m. at St. Luke's Episcopal
Church, 6th & Kansas. Nar-
cotics Anonymous is a self-
help program for persons with
desire not to do drugs. NA is
not affiliated with any religion,
profession or any other or-
ganization. For more infor-
mation, call 224-7801.
applications for cooks, and
waitresses. Housewives, high
school and college students
welcome. Starting salary up to
$4 per hour. Apply in person,
1428 S. 4th, no phone calls
please.
LOST: brown & block male
dog, name Tigger, orange
collar; 222-1735, lost South-
east of Chickasha.
LETUSSHIP
YOUR PACKAGES.
O&OTACKLE
ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS
meets every Tuesday & Friday
nights at 8 p.m., St. Lukes
Episcopal Church, 6th & Ka-
nsas. Alanon meets every
Tuesday night at 8 p.m. Call
224 7372 or 222-3049 for more
information. We may be able
to help you. Mailing address
124S.6th.
TURNKEY BUSINESS
Handling Nabisco, Keeblef,
Fritolay and similar food pro
ducts. No selling involved
Service commercial accounts
set up by parent company.
National census figures show
overage gross earnings of
$1,518.97 per month. Requires
approx. 8 hours per week. You
will need $15,000 cash for
equipment. Expansion finan-
cing is automatic for those
qualified. Call Natl. Toll Free
1-800-325-6000. Ask for Dato
Gram ID F1681. Phone staffed
24 hrs. a day. Sunday calls ac-
cepted.
47-10 Ardmore, 402 Park
Street S.E., Ardmore, OK 101
Units
47-13 Healdton, Union &
Humble Drive, Healdton, OK
Thurgood Marshall became the
first black associate justice of the U.S.
Supreme Court on Oct. 2, 1967.
I
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s
2
2 •
FREE PUPPIES, will make
small dogs. 224-5916.
MOTHER PIT BULL DOG & 4
PUPPIES; 1515Texas.
I
COM PANY Den
Newton, Iowa 50208
i
MARY KAY
Christmas Gifts
and Facials
LYNETTE JOHNSON
ROOMADDITIONS
& REMODELING
RON SAXON
224-0871
TREES&SHRUBS
Trimmed or Removed
Delbert Spearman
224 4417
TRENDTYPE
FULL TYPING AND
RESUME SERVICE
TERMPAPERS,
DATASTORAGE
NEWSLETTERS
Repaired
Mantel-Wall-All Types
Risner's Jewelry
406 Chickasha Ave.
224-2575
HOMEREPAIR&
REMODELING
HOUSE PAINTING
INSIDE & OUT
COMMERCIALS,
RESIDENTIAL
HARMON BROTHERS
224-1586
HOUSECLEANING
REFERENCES
222-4037
MICRO-C
CALL 222-1090.
OKC& NATIONAL
DIRECT
LOW AS
$65 PER MONTH.
MOON'S
CUSTOM BEDDING
ANDRENOVATING
224-4036
with elderly, 222 2137.
LAUB S TREE SERVICE
Fully Insured
FREE ESTIMATES
1502 Country Club Rd.
TATTLETALE
EXERCISE SALON
FIRST TIME EVER
GOING CO-ED
MEN COUPLES
START YOUR NEW
YEAR S RESOLUTION
EARLY.
125CHICKASHA AVE.
224-7789
SPECIALNEEDS
•Mastectomy forms, bras,
swimwear
‘Maternity & Nursing Linge
rie, Swimwear
LACE & CO.
222-1498
THE TOP NOTCH
Men and boys haircuts. No ap
pointment necessary. Wed.
thru Sat., 8:00 to 3:00. 237 N.
Main, Verden. "I go over your
head toplease."
WILL RENT OR LEASE,
dance floor for any type of cel-
ebration, TUMBLEWEED,
224-5654.
J
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1
Legal Publication
(Published December 1,2
& 3,1986)
“Real Baby for example responds when position is changed. When
a bottle is put in its mouth Real Baby sucks. Rub her back and she’ll
say—‘that feels good. ’
“I think the real strength is going to be in staples. Things of good
quality and things parents think have good educational value for
their children. Construction sets. Lego. ’ ’
Thomson foresees a holiday toy shortage “because buying
throughout the year has been flat. Buyers have not bought enough
through the summer. Consumers will go into the stores for the holi-
day and they may find not enough suppl ies of the toys they want ”
But never fear. In the midst of the electronic age, there are still
old-fashioned toys that work on nothing but affection and im
agination. Cabbage Patch dolls, last year’s nonbattery-operated
champs with $600 million in sales, are expected to run up $300 million
in sales this year, Aguilla says.
Toy and Hobby World’s Hit Parade for November provides a good
index of toys likely to make it to Santa’s pack, reports Anguilla. The
top lOtoyslast month were: G.I. Joe; Pound Puppies; Barbie; Teddy
Ruxpin; M.A.S.K. Action Figures; Cabbage Patch Dolls; Trans
formers; LaserTag; WWF Wrestlers; and Muscles.
This holiday also may go down as the year of the dinosaur.
After 70 million years of extinction, the big lizards are back and
hotter than ever — at least in toy stores. They range from tiny
stocking stuffers to huge stuffed animals big enough to sit on.
Models of dinosaurs are being made from construction sets and
building blocks. An animated 8-foot reptile spotted in a toy store was
a Lego production.
There also are dinosaur puzzles, dinosaur bathtime stickers and,
from the Imperial Toy Corp. in Los Angeles, what may be the world’s
first dinosaur soap bubble pipe (kids blow into the tail and bubbles
come out of the mouth). Imperial also makes a 6-foot inflatable
Godzilla that is proving a hit.
From Small World Toys come kits full of wooden parts that one
assembles — without glue — to make models of the whole dino gang.
Choices include brachiosarus, brontosarus, triceratops and
stegosaurus.
More flashes from toy land:
—In Elmhurst, Ill., entrepreneur Tom Cholewa is selling exquis
itely costumed nun dolls for $90 apiece. They are dressed in authentic
reproductions of nun’s habits for such religious orders as Domi
nicans, Franciscans and Sisters of Mercy.
—Hal’s Pals are handicapped dolls introduced this year by Mattell
and marketed through a non-profit corporation called For Chal-
lenged Kids Inc. Hal is a one-legged ski instructor and his pals
include dolls who are blind or who must rely on crutches or
wheelchairs. They are used in therapy with handicapped children
and also in education programs that teach other children about life as
a handicapped person.
—A $12,000 gold carousel from the Grandma’s Shop is available at
the new flagship store of F. A.O. Schwarz across from the Plaza Hotel
on Fifth Avenue in New York. Only 250 of the handmade, 25-karat
gold carousels are available.
—Anyone who misses out on the limited edition carousel can
always settle for a kid-sized battery-operated Ferrari Testerosa.
also for $12,000. Peter Harris, head of Schwarz. expects hundreds of
the highpriced toy cars to be sold by Christmas, along with other less
expensive toy cars (in the $4,000 range).
—Tyco’s Turbo-Train rates a tip of the engineer’s hat from rail-
road buffs of all ages. The locomotive glows in the dark as it zips
around the track at 200 scale miles per hour.
—BabyCise, an entry from Matchbox for new parents, is a video
gift set that comes with a 3-by 5-foot exercise mat, bolster, three
triangle playblocks, two baby bar bells and an easy-to-follow vi-
deotape with five different 10-minute segments that stimulate parent
and infant interaction. Developed in conjunction with pediatricians,
BabyCise is aimed at improving infants’ muscle tone motor skills
and coordination. ,
—For astrology buffs, there is a Jeane Dixon doll modeled after
“the world’s foremost psychic and astrologer,” says manufacturer
Atlanta Novelty. The doll comes in two heights—7 inches or 12 inches
—and sports an apron featuring the zodiac sign of the buyer’s choice.
-Tried-and-true toys haven’t lost their appeal. In one toy discount
store, crowds were spotted around stacks of baseball gloves selling
for $9, footballs for $8 and baseball bats and balls for less than $10.
HOUSEWORK, ironing, sit
GRANDFATHERCLOCKS *
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53
QUITTING BUSINESS
SALE
1 week left
20% - 40% off
MASSEY FURNITURE
1004 S. 4th
MOWING w brush hog. yard?
leveled, driveways & fill-dire
& gravel. Call after 5, 224-1300.52
---+
:8;
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Solicitation No. 42-26-7-4
Farmers Home Admin?
Istratlon (FmHA), 2211 S A
Chickasha, OK 73018, seeks
real estate broker, licensed in
the State of Oklahoma, to act
as exclusive agent in Gredy
County for the sale of FmHA
Inventory properties during
the calendar year of 1987. This
solicitation is reserved for
small business concerns. If
interested, make inquiry prior
to December 15, 1986, after
which proposals may not be
accepted.
NEEDED EXPERIENCED
FLORIAL DESIGNER, refer
ences required. Call for an ap
pointment, 222-2220.
224 -5932
——<
(
By United Press International
This holiday season toyland is populated with talking dolls, ani-
mals and laser tech toys, and the total bill for the annual buying binge
may top $12.5 billion.
The rage for electronic toys that began last year by Teddy Ruxpin
has now launched a talking Big Bird, Snoopy, Smarty Bear, Mother
Goose and a whole zooful of chatty animals and dolls.
“Lazer Tag” looks like this year’s hot toy and industry leaders
believe supplies may not keep up with demand.
And the sleeper toy of 1986 may come from Erno Rubik, the
Hungarian inventor of Rubik’s Cube that frustrated millions some
years back.
The new puzzle, “Rubik’s Magic,” consists of flat panels with
hinges. Rick Anguilla, editor of “Toy and Hobby World,” predicts it
will be a hot toy for children of all ages.
“It costs $8 and has 43 quintillion combinations but only one sol-
ution,” says Anguilla.
For parents who prefer quieter toys that stimulate a child’s im-
agination, toy stores still carry such standbys as Cabbage Patch
dolls, Paddington Bears, Raggedy Ann and Andy, and Barbie and
Ken.
Barbie and the Rockers, the most recent edition, is moving out of
the stores very fast, according to Anguilla.
He said Jem, Barbie’s chief competition who’s an executive by day
and a punk rocker by night, also is being snatched up by holiday
shoppers
Lazer Tag is a space-age light-emitting gun used to attack targets
worn by the enemy. “Hits” are registered electronically when the
gun’s rays “tag” the target.
The gear makes electronic noises, spews rays and otherwise give
players a thrill. Lazer Tag’s retails for about $50 for the basic game
kit, $20 for the vest and also for the sensor targets, $35 for the helmet
and $23 for the cap.
Photon, another light toy, also is growing in popularity, Anguilla
said.
One of the newest developments is a talking companion for Teddy
Ruxpin. Grubbie, an animated talking toy that connects to and works
only with Teddy, retails for as low as $50. Teddy himself can be
bought for $60 and a storytelling Snoopy runs around $80.
In Ruxpin and many other talking toys, lip, nose and eye move-
ments are directed by a coded tape cassette tucked into the torso.
Others speak only when an imbedded sensor is touched.
Baby Talk is triggered by microchips hidden in her face and chest
which respond to pressure. Smooth her cheek and she’ll say, “Mama,
I love you.”
In a recent interview, Douglas Thomson, president of the Toy
Manufacturers of America, said there is no well-defined hot toy this
year — “nothing to compare to Cabbage Patch at this time last
year.”
However, “we see some trends. Talking bears and reactive baby
dolls that say something when touched or spoken to are among
(them).
——--+-
CHRISTIAN LADY, to babysit
7 month old and 4 year old. 5
days a week from 8-5. Call
224 3226after 5:30p.m.
WASHINGTON (UPI) — The
Senate Intelligence Committee
pressed ahead today with its
closed-door hearings on the sec-
ret Iran arms-Contra funds op-
eration and a key Republican
senator said President Reagan
should fire his chief of staff and
CIA director.
The hearing resumed at 9 a.m.
with committee staffers refusing
to identify the witnesses.
At Monday’s opening session,
former national security adviser
Robert McFarlane testified
first, presumably about his trip
to Iran in May aboard a plane
carrying arms. He was followed
by Marine Lt. Col. Oliver North,
the accused arms deal master-
mind who was fired last week
from his staff job with the
National Security Council.
North was reported to have re-
peatedly taken the Fifth
Amendment to avoid anwering
questions.
Neither of the two former
White House officials would
comment about his secret tes-
timony to the Senate panel. Mc-
Farlane was grim-faced when he
emerged after a sixhour session.
Television networks reported
today that North, in full Marine
47-14 Rush Springs, Circle
Drive, Rush Springs, OK 23
Units
Specifications, together with
all necessary form documents
for qualified siding con-
tractors may be secured from
the CHA by colling the Pur-
chasing Department at (405)
236-1560, Ext. 18. There will be
a $12.50 fee for each bid packet
obtained. There will be no re-
fund for returned packet(s).
A certified check or bank
draft, payable to the CHA, U.S.
Government bonds, or a
satisfactory bid bond executed
by the bidder and acceptable
sureties in the amount equal to
five percent (5%) of the bid
shall be submitted with each
bid.
Each bidder shall complete
the form of Non-Collusive Af-
fidavit, and Form of Bidders
Qualifications and submit it In
Invitation to Bid
BIDDATE: December 17,1986
BIDTIME: 10:00a.m.
BID PLACE: Chickasaw
Housing Authority, 901 N.
Country Club Rd., Ada, OK.
The Housing Authority of the
Chickasaw Nation will receive
five (5) separate bids for the
installation of vinyl siding, vi-
nyl soffitt, and aluminum facia
on it's Low-Rent Projects lo-
cated at:
47-6 Marlow, Marlow Drive,
f CLASSIFIED ADS’
f PAYOFF! 2
18. Services Offered
BILLLEE
GENERALPAINTING
CONTRACTOR
INSIDE&OUTSIDE
DRYWALL,
ACCOUSTICCEILINGS
222-2226
BRUSH-HOG WORK, by hour
or by job, 453-7108, Verden.
CARPENTER
STORM WINDOWS
New screens, also repairs. ?
FREEESTIMATES )
222 2088
CRUMP‛S
HOME REPAIR
Remodeling, Siding
Quality Work, Fair Prices i
New York Academy of Art. It’s
not a cheap night on the town,
however. General admission
tickets cost $1,000 each and a
ticket entitling the bearer to sit
at a table presided over by a star
will cost $2,500 each. Organizers
say they hope to raise $250,000 for
AIDS research.
MAIL CALL: Richard Nixon s
mailbag was opened to the public
Monday and inside were
Watergate-era letters of support
from the likes of John Wayne.
Zsa Zsa Gabor and painter An
drew Wyeth. “Dear Sir, nobody
has lost faith,” Wayne said in a
telegram. Nixon’s return letter
said, “Dear Duke, it was good to
receive your words of en-
couragement at this time. ”
The correspondence was am-
ong the first 1.5 million of 40
million pages of Nixon’s presi
dential files stored at the
National Archives. One letter
was a response to Whit Waldo
III, 13, of Miami, who wrote on
Nov. 15, 1971, with a suggestion
for a Supreme Court vacancy.
“It was good to receive your let-
ter suggesting your mother as a
possible appointee for justice of
the Supreme Court,” Nixon
wrote. “Whatever other qual
ifications your mother may
have, I can see that she must be
well qualified for her role as a
mother.”
GLIMPSES: Ava Gardner, 64,
is out of the hospital after a bout
with pneumonia. The actress
was in St. John’s Hospital in
Santa Monica, Calif., for almost
seven weeks. She had flown to
California from her home in
London and checked into the
hospital Oct. 9 for a routine
checkup and then developed
pneumonia ... Lady Bird John-
son went to her tiny hometown of
Karnack, Texas (population
750), during the weekend to dedi-
cate a new community center
named for her father, T.J
Taylor. The wife of President
Lyndon Johnson was ac
companied by her daughter
Lynda Bird Robb, wife of former
Virginia governor Charles Robb.
^ 224-2600
‘(IIIISINIIIIISISISS
uniform, refused to testify and
took the Fifth Amendment on
grounds his answers might in-
criminate him. The New York
Times quoted one source as say-
ing North “invoked the Fifth
Amendment as soon as he ap-
peared before the committee
and did not respond to any ques-
tions.”
Asked about North’s refusal to
testify, Sen. Richard Lugar, R-
Ind., the chairman of the Sen-
ate’s Foreign Relations
Committee, told NBC’s “Today”
program: “We must get to the
truth, but clearly this particular
avenue won’t work. ... A special
prosecutor must come (and) the
president must make changes in
his staff,” Lugar said, stating
that U.S. foreign policy is “badly
crippled.”
“I think in basic areas, Middle
East and Central America, for
example, we’re dead in the
water until we get this thing re-
solved,” Lugar said.
Lugar said Reagan should ask
for the resignation of White
House chief of staff Donald Re-
gan and CIA Director William
Casey and consider the resig-
nation of Secretary of State Geo-
rge Shultz.
FEDERAL, STATE & CIVIL
SERVICE JOBS; $15,414 to
S58,785 year. Now Hiring. Call
JOB LINE 1-518 459 3611 ext.
F1454forlisting.24HRS. a
------------#$
the Bid Package. The other
documents (Equal Employ-
ment, Section 3. Clause, Ex-
ecutive Order 11246,
Non-Segregated Facilities,
Form of Contract) will require
answers and documentation if
you (siding contractor) in fact,
are the accepted bidder on the
proiect.
Any addenda issued during
the time of bidding are to be
covered in the proposal and in
closing contract, they will be
come a part thereof.
Prevailing Davis-Bacon
wage rates will apply.
Eoch proposer shall be
aware that proposals will be
received from Indian and
non-Indian Contractors and
preference will be given to
those received from Indian
Contractors. Qualification for
each preference shall be de
termined by the Authority and
based on receipt of additional
requirements submitted with
or prior to the proposal. Con-
tact the CHA for detailed re-
quirements. Contractors will
be required to implement In-
dian Preference in sub-
contracting, buying materials,
services, and hiring of em
ployees as required by Section
805.204 of the HUD Indian
Housing Regulations.
The competency and re-
sponsibility of bidders will be
considered in awarding the
contract, and the Owner re-
serves the right to reject ony
or all proposals and waive ir-
regularity In bidding. The
contract will be reasonable,
and if it is in the interest of the
Housing Authority of the
Chickasaw Nation to accept it.
A pre bid conference will be
held at the Chickasaw Housing
Authority on December 11,
1986 at 10:00 am.
AIRLINES NOW HIRING.
Flight Attendants, Agents,
Mechanics, Customer Service.
Salaries to $50K. Entry level
positions. Call 805 687 6000
Ext. A-10135.
AN OHIO OIL COMPANY
offers high income, plus cash
bonuses, benefits to mature
person in Chickasha area. Re-
gordless of experience, write:
G.S. Reod, American Lubri-
cants Co., Box 426, Dayton,
Ohio 45401.
GOVERNMENT JOBS.
$16,040 - $59,230 yr. Now
hiring Call 805-687 6000, ext.
R 10135 for current list.
LIVE-IN SITTER, non
smoker, over 17 up to $860
month, relocation paid. (713)
667 1 510.
MAKE MORE MONEY!
Earn weekly commissions
with our Profilable Line of Ad
vertising Calendars, Pens,
Caps, and Jackets. Helpful
sales ideas, a Toll-Free Mess-
age Center and other great
selling tools. All while being
your own boss. No investment.
No Collections. Full or Part-
Time. Our 77th Year. Write
Kevin Peska, NEWTON MFG.
By United Press International
BISSET THROWS FLOAT-
ING BIRTHDAY PARTY: Ac-
tress Jacqueline Bisset hired a
small boat in Bangkok, stocked it
with champagne and toasted
long-time boyfriend Alexander
Godunov in celebration of the
ballet dancer’s 37th birthday last
Friday.
The staff at the elegant riv-
erside Oriental Hotel said the
couple arrived Thursday from
Singapore and the personnel
were instructed to pay no atten-
tion to them because Bisset had
requested absolute privacy for
the birthday surprise. The
couple left Monday for Los
Angeles.
HERE TO WORK: Michael J.
Fox is extremely im-
ageconscious. “I would hope that
whatever people think of me —
good, bad or indifferent — is an
accurate perception of me,”
says the Gentleman’s Quarterly
coverboy. “But it can never be.
That’s the conundrum. No mat-
ter what you do to set the record
straight, it stays crooked. If I
stop smoking, will anybody
know?”
The “Family Ties” star says
he gets letters because of his
cigarette habit from people
complaining that he sets a bad
example. “And then again I get
letters defending my right to
have a private life,” he says.
“The trouble is that I believe
both.” Fox realizes his fame
may be fleeting. “I won’t be
wandering around Hollywood
Boulevard in a trench coat say-
ing, ‘Remember me? I used to be
so-and-so’ and showing them my
star on the sidewalk,” he says.
“It’s not about that. I’m just here
to work.”
AIDS AID: Joseph Papp will
produce a gala concert Sunday
at the New York Shakespeare
Festival’s Public Theatre in New
York for the benefit of the Am-
erican Foundation for AIDS Re-
search, the celebrity-studded
organization headed by El-
izabeth Taylor.
Leonard Bernstein, Marvin
Hamlisch, Marilyn Horne, Ber-
nadette Peters, Linda Ronstadt
and Isaac Stem are expected to
perform at the concert, which
will be followed by a dinner at the
316 Missouri 224-9406 3
LICENSED DAYCARE !
HOME, will keep children :
Monday thru Friday, 224 2013. ;
LONGDISTANCE
PHONESERVICESBY :
INN taking
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Quinn, Jerry. Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 95, No. 286, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 2, 1986, newspaper, December 2, 1986; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1871528/m1/8/?q=aRCHIVES: accessed June 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.