The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 72, No. 29, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 18, 1964 Page: 4 of 8
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FOUR
By HAMLIN
Ghirkasha Sutlu Exprena.
BERRY'S WORLD
NEVER HEARD OF
HER WHERE
vou WENT IF
MEDICINE’S PRETTY
STUFF:
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MEDIA GROUP
BUGS BUNNY
Thought For Today-
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Plane 'Incidents'-- Stoic Restraint
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By ERNIE BUSHMILLER
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SIDE GLANCES
BY GALBRAITH
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OUT OUR WAY
HE'S MAKIN US
LOOK FOOLISH FOR
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LOOK...IF YOU
SEE HERA.
DON'T TELL {
PSSr.F HE IS
COHlNGf.' —
OJOTHING
BUT THE
FINEST FOR
HOOPLE -
| HOW can I
TELL YOUR
WIFE WHERE
A PLACE CALLED
MOO. BUT THEIR
Do
com-
com-
SHE'S
PRETTY
SMOKY,
^IT STOPPED...
WHAT DO YOU HAVE
THEN YOU’RE
DUMBER’N ,
YOU LOOK:)
YES,
MY-JG4’-
GOOD
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TURNS’
He reveals deep and mysterious things; he knows
what is in the darkness, and the light dwells with
him.—Daniel 2:22.
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TH M US Fat OW
HEY, NUMBER 2 !!-
ARE YOUSE MRS.
BOPSHIRE, O'
PARK AVENOO?
THEN, TH IS IS FOR YOUSE!’
BUT READ it ON YER OWN
TIME.'* YAGOTDESET’REE
executive lunches to r
SOIVE!. _______-
I'LL
GET
UP
THIS
TREE
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Stolen Smile
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\ IIDONT
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(VOU.BUT
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Chartes C Drew
George Miller
Earl Reeves .....
Fred R Kluver
( THAT'S WHY ME
CAN SLEEP AND
)N,,I CANT',
Generel Manager-Editor
Executive Editor
Advertiaing Manager
Circulation Manager
(
1-3
18
1, OH —
HERE COMES
THAT MEAN
—7 DOG
* THE CHICKASHA DAILY EXPRESS, Wednesday, March 18, 1964 *
ALLY OOP
2
Al
*,
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1 Hentp
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SLINGSHOT, I WITH YOU
FRECK/ --------
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"No matter what Monsieur Clay says, Charles ... YOU
are the greatest!"
FOOLING,
AROUND!
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III tell ,"rjumGu,
M&M BAW! jumping .
—OU BULLY!/ GROUND/ r
2
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PRICKLES AND HIS FRIENDS
(NOpE!I
GIMME MYCAN'T DRIVE
1
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71
3
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I GUKS NOBODY)
CARES HOW j--
Advice From
A Physician
By Wayne G. Brandstadt, M.D.
NEA
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A LOCALLY OPERATED MEMBER
Ga
Okiahoma $ Mum Readabie Newspaper'
Publisher
Central Publishers, Ltd.
-*y
eam
Housewife: "Do you mind es-
corting me out to the garbage
can. dear?”
Husband: “Why that?”
Wife: "I want to tell the
neighbors we get out once in
a while.”
MEL JIN, YOU IDtCT.LET MR. patakey!
up: HE 5 HURRYIN to TEACH J
--r ELWOOD ART LESS0NS. vd
111 have To use
THIS SLINGSHOT
< MYSELF! .
p
Often Mispronounced Qualm.
Pronounce kwahm, with the
“I" silent.
Often Misspelled: Dark-com-
plexioned; not "dark-complect-
ed. ”
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Two women who were maneu-
vering their car into a tight
parking space gave up after
a valiant struggle when the
driver shut off the motor and
said to her companion
“This is close enough. We
can walk to the curb from
here. ”
Many actors would be glad to get a small role in
a television picture, feeling it’s much better than a
loaf.
j r"----( .0)2=
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‘...NOTICE HOW EASY IT IS T'
^PUSH WHEN ITS OUTA GAS’
1/ '
9
( NOTICE TM'>
/ FAST GET-
f AWAY THIS LIL
\ SPORTS CAR
NHAS, ELMER?
e14tn,tmTMRes‘e.Ot
“Careful about calling names, Della. Likely as not this
call is being bounced off of something!”
=v
"--4-
-------- - __ - (NOT 40 FAST MMOU
AG,, 16 A REAL CIGAR? dOIRATNOGERs
NOT A MASS OF HAIR CLIPPING51)7, THA) . G°EEM-;
IN FACT I Lie It 50 WELL YOU A.L "CHSpE, A'
CAN SEND THE WHOLE SOK TO H -
MY HOM E UM-H AK—
Ten Years Ago
(From The Express Files
March 18. 1954»
William A. 'Red) Hall, former
state Corporation Commission
employee, tossed his hat into the
governor’s ring although he was
already busily engaged in a di-
vorce action with his wife. Ok-
lahoma’s Democratic national
committeewoman ... A pre-
diction for warmer weather fol-
lowed on the heels of a weekend
freeze which cost the countv a
majority of its fruit crop. John
Bitsche. a local nurseryman,
said all fruit trees in bloom
when the mercury dipped to 17
degrees were killed . . . Mrs.
Nancy Jane Cox and Mrs.
Zelma Isaacs were initiated in-
to Bethlehem No. 16. Order of
White Shrine of Jerusalem . .
“Major Achievement Award”
was presented the local branch
of American Association of Uni-
versity Women at a meeting
in the Chamber of Commerce
room . . . Three Grady County
schools, Amber. Friend and
Middleberg, were invited to par-
ticipate in a School Bus Driver
Training School to be conducted
March 22-26 in Blanchard . . .
Mrs. Bob Lamar was elected
as president of City-Wide Par-
ent-Teachers Association.
. \NowGUr
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TO SAY A/O!¥?
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a BARREL HEAD
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Words Often Misused
s--3UST ADD IT TO MY r
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PRISCILLA'S POP
/ANOTHER BIRTHDAY.
. AND I DIDN'T GET —
MY HORSE AGAIN! ) I
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Eager throngs storming a public hall in such num-
bers the doors have to be locked to keep them out.
Hundreds of people standing patiently in block-
long queues to get inside a house.
To see what? A championship sports event? A
play that has been banned by censors? An appear-
ance by the Beatles”
No To see a Flower and Home Show and to in-
spect a model home.
It happened recently in a large American city. And
reports indicate it is happening elsewhere around
the country at similar shows.
Somehow, this is comforting in a day when the ac-
cent is on trouble and conflict and strife and when
you get the impression no one ever plants a garden
or flower bed any more, or even bothers to go home
unless there's something special on television.
Maybe things are more basically sound and nor-
mal than we think. Dare we hope?
Barbed Comments . . .
A woman got a divorce and one of the reasons was
that her hubby took her out only once in seven years.
W e feel that if she was a good wife she deserved the
night out.
not say, 'The work is
pletely finished " Omit
pletely. To finish means to
complete
- ■
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HER WHERE / you WENT IF ----
I WENT.' /r PONT KNOW 'L e*
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______
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. ...
Another unarmed American plane, a reconnais-
eance bomber this time, has been shot down over
East Germany. Happily, its three crewmen para-
chuted to safety.
Not so lucky were the three aboard an unarmed
trainer shot down six weeks before, also over East
Germany. Their deaths made a total of 80 Ameri-
can killed since 1950 in incidents involving U.
S planes and Iron Curtain territory.
Such “incidents” make headlines for a time Then,
except for the friends and families of those immed-
iately involved, they apparently are forgotten and
the dead written off as cold war casualties
If the war stays cold, it is because the heat gener-
ated at the friction points where the two systems rub
against one another is allowed to dissipate, even if
that heat consumes a few human lives.
We are told that this is the reality of our time. But
that does not make it easy to accept. So we put aside
patriotism and righteous indignation and seize upon
excuses: The planes did violate borders; the Rus-
sians apparently did give them fair warning; the
latest plane was designed for photo reconnaissance;
survey of their domains is an extremely raw nerve
in the Russian make-up.
We try to understand but. fundamentally and ulti-
mately, we cannot. We can only hope that some-
how these deaths will be redeemed, not by revenge
but by building a world where such things no long-
er happen.
----YES, I GUESS SQ. DE
/ WELL.ZEUS, \ I----
/ nick smith N
GOT US PRETTY
\ WELL TOLD OFF ) I
\ DIDNT HE? X
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20 Years Ago
(From The Express Files
March 18, 1944)
Washington relaxed its rigid
rules demanding WAC’s wear
their uniforms during the mar-
riage ceremony. The WAC’s
didn’t like the ruling and said
so. The regulation was relaxed
and corps members could wear
bridal gowns at their weddings
. . . Rev. Joe Pask Van was
named pastor of the Michigan
Avenue Baptist Church succeed-
ing Rev. Harold Lassiter who
resigned to enter evangelistic
work ... A senior Duroc shown
by Glen Clark of Carnegie took
the grand championship of the
swine division of the Southwest
Oklahoma Junior Livestock
show . . . Borden General Hos-
pital contributed $476.50 to the
County s Red Cross Fund to
push it to a total of $23,818
J M King announced he would
open a coffee shop in the Mac-
Farland Hotel. 203 Chickasha
avenue . . A city-wide collec-
tion of musical instruments to
be used by soldiers at the front
Was made to bolster the morale
of the fighting men ... A new
clas of cadets arrived at the
WB Flying school for primary
fught training and the upper-
Cass group left for Coffeyville,
Kan . for basic training
Lesson In English
Look And Learn
1 What does each of the
following collect as a hobby:
(a• Philatelist; ibi lapidary;
(ci lepidopterist; (d) numis-
matist; (ei deltiologist”
2 Although Chicago is tra-
ditionally known as "The Win-
dy City," what other city now
claims the “championship ’’’
3 What are the plural forms
of the following words (a)
Genius; (b) stimulus; ic, cam-
pus; (d) opus; (ei crisis”
ANSWERS
!. fat stamps; (b) precious
gems; (c) butterflies; (d)
coins; (e» postcards
2. Oklahoma City, Okla.
3. (a) Geniuses: (bi stimuli;
(ri camprses; (d) opera; (e)
crises.
29
6M5
—2
2"
Drug companies are in bus-
iness to make an honest profit.
But, like all groups that profit
from man’s misfortunes, they
are often under heavy attack
from the government and other
sources.
Let’s take a look at the other
side of the ledger. When an
outbreak of botulism, a very
severe form of food poisoning
occurred in Kentucky, a drug
manufacturer provided a sup-
ply of botulinus antitoxin with-
out cost
This is an example of what
is known as a public service
drug. The total demand for
it is so low that, even though
the company may have spent
more than $1 million on re-
search and development, it
cannot hope to make any
money on it. It therefore sup-
plies the product when need-
ed at the cost of production or
at no cost at all.
Among the many other ex-
amples are an antivenin for
victims of a black widow spid-
er bite, an intravenous solution
for persons with acute ammo-
nia poisoning, concentrated fib-
rinogen for those rare persons
whose blood lacks this sub-
stance necessary for clotting
and an antidote for cyanide
poisoning.
In the same general cate-
gory there is a well-known
manufacturer of formulas for
infant feeding After five years
of research and the expendi-
ture of more than $85,000, this
company developed a formula
for infants with phenylketonu-
ria. a disease which, if it is not
treated with the proper diet,
results in mental retardation.
There are not many chil-
dren who need this formula;
but those who do need it badly.
The price has been kept down
to the cost of production for the
parents of these unfortunate
children. After four or five
years on the proper diet, the
danger is past and the children
can return to a regular diet.
This is. however, not the only
type of public service our drug
manufacturers perform. They
provide postgraduate instruc-
tion for your doctor in a variety
of ways: through sponsoring
special courses, lectures, sci-
entific motion pictures, closed
circuit telecasting of clinics
from teaching hospitals and the
publication of scientific reports
and surveys These fringe bene-
fits help your doctor to take
better care of you.
None of these services would
be possible, however, if the
drug companies could not make
an honest profit on the every-
day drugs needed by thousands
of people
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Drew, Charles C. The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 72, No. 29, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 18, 1964, newspaper, March 18, 1964; Chickasha, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1863908/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.