The Perry Daily Journal (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 89, No. 42, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 27, 1982 Page: 5 of 8
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P. 5, Perry Daily Journal Saturday, March 27, 1982
Classifieds are easy to place.
Phone 336-2222.
• *
BULLETIN
LIVE STOCK
Weekly Sale Highlights Of
PERRY LIVESTOCK CENTER INC.
TV
in
Review
"Dallas," it could become a
television classic.
Don Loftis
The stocker steer and heifer
calf market was steady to
stronger. Feeder steers and
heifers also sold steady. Stocker
steer calves sold $64 to $72,
stocker heifer calves $56 to
$63.50, and stocker bull calves
$60 to $66. Feeder steers sold $60
to $64, and feeder heifers, $54 to
$58. Beef cows sold $37 to $39,
utility and commercial, $34 to
$37, and canners and cutters $30
to $34. Bulls sold $48 to $53.50.
Springer cows sold from $375 to
$520. Cow and calf pairs brought
$470 to $550 per pair.
Some of the prices paid were:
Cows — One w.f. cow, 1,455 lbs.,
$36.25 cwt.; two w.f. cows, 1,240
cwt.; four blk. w.f. heifers, 440
lbs., $61.25 cwt.; five blk. heif-
ers, 395 lbs., $65 cwt.; four
By KENNETH R. CLARK
UPI TV Reporter
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
mixed heifers, 690 lbs., $55 ewt.; phoenix of legend was a
20 mixed heifers, 556 lbs., $56.50 marvelous bird that periodical-
cwt.; six blk. w.f. heifers, 400 ly died in flames of spontane-
lbs., $60 cwt.; three mixed ous combustion, only to be
heifers, 430 lbs., $57.25 cwt.; 15 resurrected from its own ashes.
mixed heifers, 600 lbs., $55.90 With that in mind,
cwt.; 15 mixed heifers, 523 lbs., marvelous series ABC
$55.30 cwt.; seven blk. w.f. heif-
ers, 558 lbs., $57.20 cwt.; five
blk. heifers, 558 lbs., $57.20
the
pre-
mieres tonight from 9-10 p.m.,
EST, is aptly named.
1
lbs., $41.50 cwt.; one w.f. cow,
We are happy to 1,000 lbs., $38.80 cwt.; one w.f.
announce that we
are back in busi-
ness in Perry! Our
new staff includes
cow, 975 lbs., $37.25 cwt.; one
w.f. cow, 1,045lbs.,$37cwt.; one
w.f. cow, 935 lbs., $37.25 cwt.;
one blk. w.f. cow, 1,140 lbs.,
$36.75 cwt.; one w.f. cow, 910
Betsy (Pope) Wil- lbs., $35.75 cwt.; one Charolais
lard, Michael Wil-
lard, and Mike Lof-
tis. Many of you will
j remember all these
people. We are al-
I ways learning bet-
ter ways to serve
you...aligning our-
selves with com-
panies that provide
COW, 1,090 lbs., $37.75 cwt.; two
blk. cows, 1,100 lbs., $38.25cwt.;
one blk. cow, 840 lbs., $36 cwt.;
one w.f. cow, 1,145 lbs., $40.25
cwt.; one w.f. cow, 1,160lbs., $35
cwt.; one w.f. cow, 1,275lbs.,$38
cwt.; one blk. cow, 900 lbs., $34
cwt.; one w.f. cow, 990 lbs., $37
cwt.; one Holstein cow, 1,260
lbs., $37 cwt.; two Holstein
cows, 1,185 lbs., $36 cwt.; one
w.f. cow, 1,060 lbs., $36.50 cwt.
the best policies
and services...keep-
ing up to date with
the latest insurance
developments that
will effect you. Call
or stop by and visit
our fine group and
Steers — Four mixed bulls,
652 lbs., $60.50 cwt.; three
mixed bulls, 800 lbs., $58.50
cwt.; five mixed bulls, 337 lbs.,
$69.50 cwt.; three mixed bulls,
371 lbs., $67 cwt.; two mixed
bulls, 245 lbs., $71.50 cwt.; five
mixed bulls, 480 lbs., $65.50
cwt.; sixblk. steers,520lbs ,$63
- cwt.; four mixed steers, 382
find out just why lbs., $70 cwt.; three blk. steers.
you might find Don
Loftis Insurance
your best source of
insurance in Noble
County.
336-4488
dependent
DDL/
DON LOFTIS
INSURANCE
615 lbs., $64.30 cwt.; three blk.
steers, 480 lbs., $64.50 cwt.; nine
mixed steers, 753 lbs., $63.85
cwt.; three w.f. steers, 390 lbs.,
$73cwt.; four w.f. bulls, 451 lbs.,
$67.50 cwt.; four blk. steers, 595
lbs., $62 cwt.; four w.f. steers,
660 lbs., $63.60 cwt.; eight w.f.
steers, 430 lbs., $70 cwt.; three
w.f. steers, 570 lbs., $66 cwt.;
four mixed bulls, 500 lbs., $66
cwt.; five blk. steers, 632 lbs.,
$64.40 cwt.; 14 blk. steers, 542
lbs., $69 cwt.; three w.f. steers,
500 lbs., $69.25 cwt.; three w.f.
steers, 373 lbs., $74 cwt.
Heifers — Three mixed heif-
ers, 303 lbs., $58.50 cwt.; six
mixed heifers, 426 lbs., $60 cwt.;
four w.f. heifers, 401 lbs., $59.50
cwt.; 10 w.f. heifers, 398 lbs.,
$62.25 cwt.; four w.f. heifers, 446
lbs., $58.50 cwt.; four blk. w.f.
heifers, 311 lbs., $64.50 cwt.;
‘Peace of Mind Guaranteed’ three blk. w.f. heifers, 446 lbs •
oranteed $63 cwt.; three blk. w.f. heifers,
2 * N.
390 lbs., $62.25 cwt.; four blk.
w.f. heifers, 440 lbs., $58.50
Perry Memorial
Hospital
336-
3541
New Phone No.
Bernice Schieffer, Agent
Sumner Local No 131
737 Holly 336 4903
OKLAHOMA FARMERS UNION
FAMILY OWNED AND OPERATED
FOR 38 YEARS
There’s a BIG difference between "You look like a
breath of Spring" and "You look like the end of a
Hard Winter".
AUTO - PROPERTY - LIFE -
HEALTH-HAIL CROP
Open 24 hrs a day Come by for a cup of coffee
(If I’m away from the office, leave your name
& number on my answering service. I’ll return
your call.)
POSITION AVAILABLE:
Machine Tool Instructor
REQUIREMENTS:
Minimum of 2 years trade experiemce
in a machine shop
Able to set up and operate manufacturing
machines Degree preferred
SALARY: Negotiable
AVAILABLE: August 1, 1982
For more information, contact:
Mrs. Ora Morgan, Adm. Assistant
Indian Meridian Area Vo-Tech School
1312 South Sangre Road Stillwater,
OK 74074 405/377-3333
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
If ABC’s "Phoenix" flies
cwt.; five blk. w.f. heifers, 503 tonight — and it has every
lbs., $57.10 cwt.; seven blk. m.f. right to, despite lamentable
heifers, 537 lbs., $55.75 cwt.; six scheduling that puts it opposite
blk. w.f. heifers, 663 lbs., $52.50 “Dallas" on CBS — America
cwt.; nine roan heifers, 520 lbs., will have a new superhero and
$55.30 cwt.; 10 blk. heifers, 465 the network should have a
lbs., $58.25 cwt.; nine blk. heif- winner.
ers, 567 lbs., $56.75 cwt. "The Phoenix" actually made
Bulls - One blk. w.f. bull, its appearance last fall as a
1,515 lbs., $51.75 cwt.; one blk. sleeper sci-fi pilot dealing with
bull, 1,150 lbs., $47 cwt.; one w.f. a youthful "ancient astronaut”
bull, 1,470 lbs., $51.50 ewt.; one found in suspended animation
w.f. bull, 1,605 lbs., $52.75 cwt.; in a Peruvian sarcophagus.
one blk. bull, 1,220 lbs., $45 cwt. He was Bennu — a blonde
Greek god with sea-green eyes,
massive powers of the mind
and a mysterious amulet in the
form of a phoenix with which
The had to recharge his power
from time to time in the weak
light of an alien sun.
Revived by E.G. Marshall, in
In a world filled with danger,
darkness and the soulless
hellspawn that sometimes
seems to have taken over the
streets of America, it’s nice to
have Luciano Pavarotti to sing
"Celeste Aida" and “Vesti La
Giubba" for us.
And sing the great tenor
does, from 8-9 p.m., Monday,
on an ABC special titled
“Pavarotti & Friends."
The “friends” include
Jacqueline Bisset, John McEn-
roe, John Williams and Richard
Thomas who brings his triplet
daughters into a charming
dialogue about philosophy, film
and opera.
In the high point of the
special, Pavarotti joins his
father — who should have been
an opera star himself — at the
family church in Modena, Italy,
in a glorious duet of “Panis
Angelica" while his mother,
who never has seen her great
bear of a son perform
professionally, looks on in
rapture.
Sumner
By MRS LAURA QUICK
HONK FOR AMERICA
Used House
Lot Proves
Successful
By ROBERT CRABBE
MANTECA, Calif. (UPI) - A
lot of people run used-car lots.
Tony J. Lozano is different. He
runs a used-house lot.
"Your old house may be
somebody’s dream castle,”
Lozano says.
A professional house mover
since 1951, Lozano buys unwant-
ed houses and hauls them to his
20-acre display lot near Man-
teca in the San Joaquin Valley
70 miles east of San Francisco.
He sells them mostly to
people with low-income jobs
and good credit ratings.
Lozano’s firm will help them
find lots, arrange for founda-
tions and plumbing connections,
and in some cases carry them
until conventional financing can
be arranged.
"With a little work, they may
end up with a house worth four
or five times what they put into
it.”
The firm trades about 50
houses a year. His office
manager, Frank McNiff, says
the company has a backlog of
more than 300 inquiries.
The prices range from about
$28,500 down.
Lozano says about 5,000
houses are destroyed every
year in California and up to
100,000 nationally.
“Most of these homes can be
saved,” he says. “They may
look a little run down on the
outside, but the framing struc-
ture is still good because it has
been protected from the wea-
ther.”
A state Senate survey report-
ed Feb. 15 the median price of
a house in California rose from
$23,100 in 1970 to around
$107,000 this year. Only about 5
percent of California families
now are able to afford them.
The same survey estimated
California needs about 310,000
new housing units a year. In
the current recession, there
were only 117,000 starts in 1981.
The houses on Lozano’s lot
range from three-bedroom
dwellings to three-room prefabs
from farm labor camps. Condi-
tions vary, but some have
kitchen and bathroom fixtures
intact and fairly new carpets.
There are duplexes, triplexes
and even a fourplex once used
as apartments for married men
on a military base. It has been
sold for use as a farm building,
and soon will be moved to
Escalon, about 20 miles from
Manteca.
Fifteen used houses currently
stand on timber braces on the
20-acre Lozano lot on a rural
road near Manteca. Several
already have been sold, and
await moving with the arrival
of spring weather.
Lozano pioneered the “used
house lot” idea, but it has
spread. A few smaller opera-
tions can now be found in other
parts of California.
He has written a 28-page
booklet, complete with tes-
timonials from buyers, telling
other house movers how to get
into the business of saving old
dwellings to sell to the young
and the poor. He charges $5 for
it, but he mailed a complimen-
tary copy to President Reagan.
“We’ve got a job to do,”
Lozano says. “We’ve always
got a family looking for a home
to raise their kids in.”
DARMSTADT. West Germa-
ny (UPI) — West Germany’s
silent majority opposed to the
the growing anti-American
movement, are displaying pro-
American automobile bumper
stickers, the U.S. armed forces
mdaily newspaper reported,
the role of a benevolent The Stars and Stripes Friday
American scientist, Bennu soon printed a photograph of one of
found himself fleeing agents the stickers - a heart in the
both of a shadowy CIA-style black, red and gold colors of
organization that coveted his the West German flag, and the
power and officials ot the words "Ein Herz fuerFUSA" (A
Peruvian government who were Heart for the USA) in red.
trying to claim him as a white and blue.
national treasure. a "Finally a sticker I can
The pilot, though unpromoted identify with," say letters from
by he network, did reasonably Germans ordering the stickers
well in the ratings and from a club set up by a 76-year-
generated a substantial flow of old man
admiring mail, but ABC, “It all began in December
nervous about a hero who when seven German men
operates strictly from the level decided to find a way to
of metaphysics, passed the demonstrate their sympathy for
series by in setting up its fall Americans.” The Stars and
schedule. Stripes reported.
Then suddenly - like the "Soon orders were pouring in
phoenix of old — it was from a|| over the country -from
resurrected as a late-entry Hamburg to Lake Constance.”
limited series. Since the sale started in
Tonight S opening episode February about 7,000 stickers
sets up a plot line that have been sold.
promises a rich mix of
“Superman” and "The Fugiti-
ve.” gxsss******
Bennu, played by a little- 2
known actor named Judson 2
Scott, is off and running again J
this time in search of his J
soulmate, Mira, still slumber- 2
ing after thousands of years in 3
an Indian graveyard some- 2
where in the American West. 9
He must find her, it seems, S
because she alone knows his 3
mission on Earth. 2
Scott is superb in the role, 2
the story line is fresh and 2
original and the premise, a 8
metaphysical dealing with good 5
and evil, is unique in prime- 2
time programming. g
If "The Phoenix" can survive S
the physical shadow of 2
Paying taxes is a way of ■
life. However, there is a I
way to pay less taxes today :
and, at the same time, to
provide for your retire-
ment tomorrow. And this is
all done with the blessing of
the IRS via IRA.
Your contributions to an
IRA are made with pre-tax
dollars f thus reducing your
gross income) and the
earnings on these pay-
ments grow tax deferred
until withdrawn.
Call me to discuss EQUI-
VEST IRA, an IRA offered
to you by The Equitable
Life Assurance Society of
the United States.
Marilyn Coker
511 Cedar Street
336-5038
The E quitable Life Assurance e So 1,
or The United States NY N Y
Mr. and Mrs Rick Hendricks,
Edmond, visited March 16 with
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Rieman,
Amie and Jamie.
Miss Shelby Kopp, Oklahoma
City, was a March 13 supper
guest of her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Kopp Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Allen,
Ponca City, were March 11
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Bay.
John Adams and Brandon
visited Henry Rieman March
16.
Mr. and Mrs. James C.
Brown, Oklahoma City, and
Mrs. Tom Underwood, Agra,
were March 16 guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Huie Howell.
Mr. and Mrs. John Bristol
visited their grandson and
granddaughter, Mr and Mrs.
Ron Mize and their infant
great-grandson, Curtis Mize, in
Crescent last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Greg Davidson
and Lacey, Perry, were recent
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Rieman, Amie and Jamie and
Rejina James.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Bay
visited Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Doop in Perry Saturday.
Eldon Bristol, Perry, visited
March 19 with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. John Bristol.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Pancoast
were among those who attended
a sing-along event March 14 at
the Morrison Baptist church.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Rieman,
Amie and Jamie and Rejina
James were March 11 dinner
guests of Miss Phyllis White in
Bethany.
J. D Longan, John Longan,
Steve Womack and Gus Robe-
deaux, Morrison, camped out on
the river, March 20-21.
Mrs Grover Mittasch Jr. vis-
ited Mrs. Pearl Shepherd
March 20.
Guests were Mrs. Laura
Quick March 19 were Mrs.
Karen Tyler, Brenda, David
and Steven, rural Orlando; Mr.
and Mrs. Loren Quick, Paul,
Paige and Phillip, Morrison;
and Mr and Mrs. Albert Quick.
Sumner.
Paul Pancoast was among
those who attended the cattle
auction in Perry March 17.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Quick,
Valerie, Kristi and Amber
drove to Flint Ridge, near
Kansas, Okla., and camped out
March 10. On March 11, they
camped at Lake Texhoma, then
visited Kim Quick at Madill.
Kim Quick then accompanied
the group to a recreation park
near Dallas, Texas. The Quick
family visited Mr. and Mrs.
James C. Brown, Oklahoma
City, before returning home
March 13.
WHEN YOU
NEED...
sensible answers to
any question about life,
health or disability
income insurance
talk To Me
JIM SCHOVANEC
Perry, Okla.
336-4617
BANKERS Illi AND
( ASUAL TY ( COMPANY
( hit ago illnol
We th
? pr
Classified ads get results
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• Snack Pack.......................
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• Smoked Ribs to go.....$7.99 a slab
• Bar-be-cue Beef Sandwiches.... 99*
• Hot Dogs... 69c • Ham & |
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• Fried Pies....39c • Thick Choc.
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• Coffee.
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• Budweiser
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FAMILY GAME ROOM
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West Fir at 1-35
No Sign Up Yet— But We’re There!
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Daniel L. Adams
Perry Optometrist
Dr. Adams Says:
"I Use The Journal Every
Day To Discuss Eye Care
For People of This Area”
"I believe care of the eyes is
one of the most important health
needs for all people. I have
chosen to sponsor a daily eye
care column to help define eye
care needs and I selected The
Perry Daily Journal to publish
these articles.
“I know the readership of my
home town newspaper includes
residents of Perry and the sur-
rounding area. I feel my mes-
sages are reaching the max-
imum number of people through
use of this medium”.
For Help With Your Advertising Call 336-2222 Today!
Kx*****************************************************************************
$
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Watson, Milo W. The Perry Daily Journal (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 89, No. 42, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 27, 1982, newspaper, March 27, 1982; Perry, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2253403/m1/5/: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.