The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 74, No. 259, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 15, 1966 Page: 4 of 12
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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FOUR
by HAMLIN
BERRYS WOULD
K*
28,
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Composing Room Foreman
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BUGS BUNNY
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★
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LI'L ABNEN
"SomtJay, son, all thia will bt younl"
( COULD VO'GO AS
Stolen Smile
Advice From
HERE S
MAKE TH'
Or Two
ONCE!!
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A
NANCY
By ERNIE BUSHMILLER
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WASH TUBBS
By LESLII TURNER
FIRES DUB TO THERMAL RADIATION
BUT
MIGHT RAGE OUT TO THE SUBURBS: I DR.OYEN
)
1
h
A
Down with Automation
A
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PRISCILLA’S POP
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12-15
FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS
to B LOSS El
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SIDE GLANCES
BY GALBRAITM
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OUR BOARDING HOUSt
OUT OUR WAY
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OID Vu HEAR ABOUT
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WN, PLACE, AMP SHOW
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HM’-MEBBE
AH COULD .
Earl Reeves
Francis Best
OTHER.
SALE//
WHERE’D
HE GO?
Mt
FINISH TH'
HAIRCUT//
/ KNOWS
ALL THIS!
SURELY
HEP NEVER
GO THRU
: WITH IT!
HOUSE FOR
SUPPER —
TONIGHT )
WE'LL TRY ONE O’
YORE 98-CENT «
WEDDIN'S.SAM.T
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l
AM
WAS
BAI JDAGE HIM! IT TOOK
A LOcK9MITHTO
STRAIGHTEN HIM OUT?
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a fi
ARE YOU SURE YOUR
AUNT FRITZ I KNOWS
ABOUT IT-
r
b
o
a
t.
.... General Manager
....... Executive Editor
Advertising Manager
53
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of
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• 1966 by NIA, k»
POP GETTIN THE J
whole motorcycle'
CUsTOTRNTOWN,
THE SOUND? I'M 1
BACKIN'HIM KAT JI
WAXg.' I
Gop‘*
KNOWS
HOW
TO
TEACH-
HIGH AS -
RO‘$1.25 AM DON’T
SA KISS TH' BRIDE?/ .
aad"
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: A
MEMBER-DONREY
Charles C. Drew ..........
George Miller...............
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12-1
mm-naumz
YES. A SURFACE BLAST WOULD
VAPORIZE BUILDING5 AND PEOPLE
FOR SEVERAL BLOCK§.WITH TOTAL
DESTRUCTION FOR A RADIUS OF
mm 3000 YARDS! mem
1
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7
1
Ours is not the first culture to be concerned about
automation. The ancient Mayas in what is now El Sal-
vador had a similar problem, says the National
Geographic Society.
It is believed that a powerful guild of porters fought
against the automation of their trade by wheeled ve-
hides. So successful were they that the first European
explorers found no evidence that the wheel had ever
been invented in the New world.
485
©
U
HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS MIGHT
-—7 SB KILLED! Jaa-
OH, IRMA—YOU'RE
INVITED TOMY-
NLTN,IEWE FIND A
. USE FOR THIS STUFF,
WE COULD BE
MLLIONAIRES! ,
fl
1
r
t
fl
a
t
a
b
" OLRE ,)
T—E BOML
WHO SAYS
WE DOESN'T
BELIEVE «
y IN SANTA )
( CLAUS 7
THEN YO KIN) BOTH
aAAem”,—A AT <
By Al VERMEER
WHAT I REALLY AM
IS A CAUTIOUS
-[HPOCRITE!
Chickasha Batily Expens
"Oklahoma's Most Readable Newspaper”
__Publisher__
Central-Publishers,-Ltd.
•All right it's enough of a crazy, mixed up world with,
eut you woman exchanging wige!"
WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS
How Can I ?
Q. Do you have any sugges-
tions for making draperies or
curtains hang in any position
or fold desired?
A. Solid solder, in the form of
wire, can be cut to the proper
length and inserted into the bot-
tom hems of your draperies or
curtains. Since this soft solder
wire bends and can be easily
molded, it will hold your draper-
ies or curtains in whatever fold
or position suits your fancy.
Q. What is a good stiffening
ingredient instead of starch, to
use in delicate fabrics?
A. Some delicate fabrics won’t
take to the usual starching me-
thods. For these, use granulat-
ed sugar dissolved in water, in-
stead of starch.
52
0)2
Thought For Today . . .
Say not, "Why were the former days better than
these?” For it is not from wisdom that you ask this.—
Eccl. 7:10.
74%
2"
T4ER.ES JUST
ONE SLIGHT , 1 WHATS
HIRH,FRECK!I THAT?
go
7,
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20 Years Ago
(From the Express Files,
Dec. 15, 1946)
Jimmy Joe Conrad, young son
of the Emery Conrads, was
seen very happy over Santa
Claus making two telephone
calls to him ... A special
"Christmas rush” stamp win-
dow was open at the post office
. . . A heavy fog had settled
over much of Grady County . . .
Miss Evelyn Hassebrock and
Miss Corinne Bell entertained
with a buffet dinner honoring
Miss Grace Sills and Miss Lan-
den of Oklahoma City . . . Sen-
ior Service Girl Scout troop 23
held their Christmas party in
the home of Mrs. Cylde M.
Becker.
|x5y (positively}
—f=
-44
few;
* THE CHICKASHA DAILY EXPRESS, Thurday, December 15, 1966 *
_________ ___________ ALLY OOF
i
1
Am
G8.run,2n
FUST//
D
U.S. Flag First On the Moon?
The Russians may have conceded the moon to the
United States.
Their failure to attempt such complex maneuvers
as orbital rendezvous and to demonstrate their abil-
ity to change orbits has put the Soviet moon pro-
gram well behind that of the United States, says
Aviation Week & Space Technology.
The magazine notes that more than 20 months have
elapsed since the last Soviet manned flight, that of
Voskhod 2. Some observers believe that continued
delay could leave the Russians hopelessly behind, at
least in the race to land a man on the moon.
The flight of Voskhod 2 was a spectacular in typi-
cal Russian style. During it, cosmonaut Alexei Leonov
made space history with the first space walk. Hie
flight nearly ended in tragedy, however, when the
capsule came down in a heavily forested region hund-
reds of miles off target.
Space spectaculars were in keeping with Nikita
Khrushchev’s flamboyant method of doing things.
They had, ever since Sputnik I, kept the Soviet Union
ahead of the United States. But it also put them
ahead of their own technology.
When Premier Alexei Kosygin and Party General
Secretary Leonid Brezhnev took control in late 1964,
not only was Khrushchev grounded but the remain-
ing shots in the Voskhod series as well.
Since then the Russians have been doing the home-
work they neglected in the field on instrumentation
and have concentrated on unmanned satellites and
apace probes.
They may, however, have one more spectacular up
their sleeves—a manned flight around the moon. This
is much less complex than a landing and well within
current Russian capabilities.
Coming at a time when this country's Apollo cap-
sule would still be in its earth-orbit proving-out
stage, it could give the Russians the apparent lead
again.
It may be the last time they ever have it.
Ka.--.
-(I DONVT REMEMBER
NhHOWL MADE I/
Right now, says The
World Almanac, you might
be holding tiny dust parti-
cles of the moon in your
hand. The extremely fine
dust comes from the crater
of the moon and settles on
the earth’s surface. Glassy
lunar fragments called tek
tites also settle on the
earth and are large enougi
to see.
BUT YESTERDAYS
I SAW YOU AT THE
STORE, SITTING ON
.80*
Lex
7
5/** i
HAVING f OF COURSE THE FGURE )
EEN6? I I DO/ IS A GROSS..
'__- EXAGGERATION)
]N22/49
mI OH.
-4 Boy
PRIVA
What? Powdered Water?
Teutonic technical genius is still active. The Ger-
man Gold and Silver Refinery has announced it has
discovered how to make “dry water.”
It’s done by taking water and a water-repellant
silicic acid compound called Aerosil and violently
shaking the two together in a machine. The water
separates into infintesimally small droplets, each of
them coated with the compound. The result is a
powder.
There’s only one catch. So far the inventors have
found no use for the product.
Exceptionally dry Martini, anyone?
!
58
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SSM
A Physician
By Wayne G. Brandstadt, M.D.
NEA
A cough is primarily an ex-
plosive attempt to clear the air
passages of liquid, gaseous and
solid irritants. As such, it is a
protective device and in many
cases should be encourage rath-
er than suppressed. Everyone
coughs at times. Everyone who
coughs isn’t sick and everyone
who has a chest disease doesn't
cough.
Coughs have many causes,
some serious and some not so
serious. In winter and spring
the commonest causes are re-
spiratory infections, such as
colds, sinusitis with its post-
nasal drip, laryngitis, bronchi-
tis. pneumonia, measles, whoop-
ing cough and tuberculosis. In
a city, dust, soot and other
forms of air pollution are com-
mon causes.
In the allergic the cause may
be pollens or animal dandruff.
A cough may be the result of
heavy smoking, exposure to a
blast of hot, dry or very cold
air, irregular heart beats, leaky
heart valves, pressure on the
windpipe by a goiter or a can-
cer, Irritation of the pleura, or
it may be nervous habit.
When a respiratory infection
is present the tiny hairlike cilia
that line the mucous membrane
of the air passages keep the in-
flammatory fluids gently flow-
ing toward the upper windpipe
and throat so that the sputum
can be coughed up or swallow-
ed. For this type of cough,
drugs, such as ammonium chlo-
ride and potassium iodide that
loosen or liquefy the secretions
and make them easier to raise,
are given but for a dry, hack-
ing cough, cough-suppressing
drugs are needed.
Because of the wide variety
of causes it is unwise to neglect
a cough in the hope that it will
go away. Have your doctor de-
termine the cause. If it is noth-
ing serious you and your doctor
will both rest better, but if it is
serious, you should get prompt
treatment. In any case your
doctor will want to treat the
cause—not just the cough.
To relieve an annoying little
tickling in your throat in church
or in a theater, recent studies
have shown that no kind of
cough drop is any more effec-
tive than a plain peppermint
or fruit-flavored candy lozenge.
Q—How can a laboratory toll
whether a sample of blood is
from a man or a woman?
A—It can’t, but it can often
tell by serologic tests whether
an unknown blood stain could
given person. This kind of test
is widely used in crime labora-
tories.
I im h NLA. It. 7*. iM*. oh
DIDN'T PUT^
THIS BENCH
HERE FER BUMS
LIKE YOU! IT'S
BAD FER
BUSINESS,
NAMB5S1DES2
“8X
02-s
•wawwmstuune
Picturn, tee.
TM U5 Pet. Of
2246,
3′6
1 74,
t,y2r *
If' y
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I
I
Ln
-==[2
OF THE Boys FROM?
MUSCLE BEACH PUT ,
, DP AN ARGUMENT
| AND RDP-STUFFED
HIM INTO A SADOLE-
.BAG/,
BLAZES. S
FIVE TIMES
THE POWER OF
THE HIROSHIMA
SOMB.,BUTA
FRACTION OF
ITS 51zEl
The girl was sore at her date,
who had taken her to a buf-
fet dinner, because he return-
ed to the serving table for five
hipings of dessert. "Doesn’t it
embarrass you at all?" she
snapped. “Not at all,” he re-
plied. “I just tell them it's for
you!"
3
0
/-is
3
95U7%43
1 1
YOU DENY HAVING
TWENTY QUEENS"
Be CAPP
YO' NEEDS TWO HANDS \
FO‘TH‘WEDDIN,SAM.‘‘
AH'LL FINISH TH'HAIR- )
CUT, WHILE YO‘ <
-^A^MARRlES ME TO I
AG.DAISY MAErP J
WELL,THAT’S THAT/ I W.----
SPENT ALL THE MONEY ./ 5=»--F-
I HAD SAVED FOR < ^/ MeA
, ,)---(TO,__________
"amumnly Wx11 ~
"* 42 I 69%
Hi
c MEDIALGROUp
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10 Years Ago
(From the Express Files,
Dec. 15, 1956)
New mercury lighting system
to brighten up Chickasha Ave-
nue . . . FHA at Chickasha
High School are completing
their annual project of dressing
dolls for the Junior Red Cross
. . . Mrs. Frank Morrow elect-
ed president of Ladies Auxiliary
Patriarch Militant . . . Miss
Betty Sue Eder entertains mem-
bers of Epsilon Sigma Alpha .
. Chickasha Junior High School
takes victory over El Reno with
a 51-11 . . . Quarterback Ken
Faris was elected as "Mr.
Fightin' Chick of ’56" . . . Pvt.
Randle Cloud, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Uel Cloud of Rush Springs
is receiving on-the-job training
with the 513th Antiaircraft Artil-
lery Missile Battalion at Ft
Ward, Wash. . . Pvt. Cari A.
Rempe, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Carl J. Rempe. has been as-
signed to the 79th Engineer
Group at Fort Belvoir. Va , as
message center clerk In Head-
quarters and Service Company
of the 588th Engineer Battalion.
*s
He ALREADY Y—..ACCORDING TO TH' NATIVES, 1-----.
HAS TWENTY/ ATS \ THl KING OF CEE WHIZ 7.
QUEENS? 7 RIGHT ) FRIEND OF YOURS IS A ( RIDICULOUS!
—___ J/ OOOLA. I REGULAR CONNOISSEUR S
55 QUEENS' D-r-
look! rr STICKS LKE GLUE-.-
AND ONE INCH OF IT STRETCHES
'— THIS FAR/ J----r
X GUE 5 $ HE'61 NO ONE WILL DARS ) mim
" ‘ ’ MAKE A WAVE FOR - H
OPERATOR’ONE) MONTHS/THAT HOOD tm
WAS 60TWSTED DP ‘ wwI
THAT THE DOC COULDNT J m-
sE f
%°
‘42) i
K1K12f.neus.raom
THE MILITARY 15 STILL MUM ON
HOW PR. OVEN GOT THE H-SOM&
MiSSING FROM THEIR 5TOCK-PILE.,
BUT IT’S A 100 KILOTON YIELD:
N
KNOW WHAT YOU ARE-,
STUART? You'Re A J-
(HYPOCRITE-
Vea
CHRISTMAS SHOPPING,
• I AND IM FINISHED/
BLAE.
pAro w,
2772 oat/ e
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ERAND 3ON
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\VE ARGUED in
ABOUT IT 4m
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‘ YER NOT
SNOOZIN' ON MY
BENCH T'MY,
SYLVESTER! IM
‘ INTIN’ IT! ----
BEAN
••
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Drew, Charles C. The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 74, No. 259, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 15, 1966, newspaper, December 15, 1966; Chickasha, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1864765/m1/4/?q=frisco+collin+co+tx: accessed July 5, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.