The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 75, No. 123, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 12, 1967 Page: 2 of 8
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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•k THE CHICKASHA DAILY EXPRESS, Wednesday, July 12, 1967 %
TWO
START PACKING
TWENTY HURT
Minor Damage In Mishaps
EDWARD JOHN RIDDLE
Edd John Riddle, 63, died
Aho Several Used TV Set*
X
A Chevy pickup
gives you
more truck
A
4
Answer to Previous Puzzle
Vanished Cities
iNSUSANS•
e
—
22 Land rich in
24 Pulpy substance 45 Juicy fruit
1
IT
2
4
6
1
15
-
America's best selling 6-cyhnder pickup—Chevrolet’s Model CS 10934 Fleetside
18
n
L
Only Chevrolet offers all these pickup features:
30
■
36
1
40
50
—
it
NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.
N
V8
□ Self-washing, rust-resistant fender skirts
N
8
r
A
=
!
)
PHONE CA 4-2132
2801 Hiway 11 South
MEDLA GROUP
IRiFFI
= 3/2
kirjieMM
FAIRMONT
Gs
till
B8
CHEVROLET
DQN
EY]
Fourth Division Troops
Engaged In Bitter Battle
34
35
58
60
$12.00
6.00
3.25
Montana
16 Dance step
17 Feminine
Also
New.
Alia Minor
6 Gomorrah’s
municipal court with careless
driving and for not having a
valid state driver’s license.
MiAUIRrl
■ =EiiHi=i=
Chickasha
Okla. 73018
24 Extinct bird
27 Auricle
28 Cuttlefsh
30 Ventilate
Africa
19 Morning
moisture
37 Armed conflict
40 Make deeper
Established
IBM
F-adi=
m==
1903 in Texas. He ad lived in I
Chickasha for the past 20 years.
He is survived by one brother,
Ezra Riddle of Chickasha.
Services are pending under
the direction of Sevier’s Funer-
al Home.
25 Lubricated
28 Brazilian macaw
Residence
CA 4-1396
Business
CA 4-0551
Walter Snedeker, dish
Phone CA 4-0376
force of about 30 men.
Long range U.S. artillery was
called in —175 millimeter guns
which can fire 10 to 15 miles.
Both sides brought in reinforce-
ments but heavy fog rolled
eown from the mountains and
[•-121
=i=IE#
BARGAIN
PRICES
$21 00
10.30
5.25
1.75
.40
July 20 Reception
(Continued from Page ONE)
marking what we already know
will be an exhilerating year
on OCLA campus. In September,
OCLA not only is starting a
trimester system of operation,
but the college also is inaugura-
ting its new curriculum,” Miss
Dews points out.
5
IT
v-i=[=I-!H1
Mill HiHie"
Viziiejiz)
"Look at the third shift man,"
the crowd jeered at a departing
worker. "His pockets are full of
money.”
Half a dozen small vanloads
of workers inched through the
crowd and past the gates.
RESURFACING
(Continued from Page ONE)
from Second to Sixth, Second
Street from Choctaw to Colora-
do Avenue, Third Street from
Choctaw to Iowa Avenue, and
Fifth Street from Choctaw to
Colorado Avenue.
Improvement of Choctaw Ave-
nue from Ninth Street west is
included in the State Highway
Department programmed U. S.
62-81 bypass, said Bowers. In
addition, the State Highway De-
partment plans to resurface
Sixth Street from Choctaw north
to Frisco Avenue then Frisco
Avenue west to the present U.
S. 81.
Bowers said this morning he
had talked with planning engin-
eer with at the State Highway
Department and the quickest
they can take bids on the re-
surfacing of Choctaw and Fourth
is at the August letting. The
State Highway Commission is
end get ready to move when
vou lilt vour home with
FOOL INSURANCE ACINCY
Call HENRY BAKER
To Place Your Ad
Call CA 4-2600
Chickasha Daily Express
USED
FURNITURE AT
1
WATCH
FOR OUR BIG
SALE AD
REFPIGERATION SERVICB
Air Conditioning
Commercial - Household
Phonograph Repair • Needles
ED SHOEMAKER CO.
Home of Complete Service
Ph CA 4.7260
508 Chickasha Ave.
20 Raised platform 35 Ancient city in 51 Symbol for
— ‘ • Italy cadmium
9 Miles
10 Ancient city in
Childea
11 Small particle
13 District
DISCOUNT SrORE
<
1
47 Seaport in
Phoenicia
49 Once existed
50 Before
P 0470
STATE FARM
kanan Companies
taMtaaa Blaomingten, U*»
------- 29 Old
31 in the company . 32 Cavity
i of
1 Ancient city la 7 Distends
‘J - 8 Odd numeral
52 Legal point
53 Mariner's
direction
54 Pouch
55 Poem
58 Correlative of
either
Expert—Inexpensive
Re-Upho’stering
— arllUHt
The second accident occurred
at the intersection of 4th and
Oregon around 5:35 p.m.
Involved in the mishap were
Willie Esie Miller, Route 1,
Pocasset, driver of a 1963 sedan,
and Donald Lovell Richie, 925
South First, driving a 1960 sed-
an.
According to police reports,
Miller was attempting to make
a left turn onto Oregon from
Fourth. when his car collided
with Richie's sedan, which was
traveling south on 4th.
Miller was charged in muni-
cipal court with failure to yield
the right-of-way and for not
having a valid state driver's
license.
Valley, scene of the bloodiest
battle of the war in November.
1965, when both sides suffered
enormous losses.
Size of the Communist unit
was not knov.n but two North
Vietnamese divisions were re-
Kedgey
y",
FURNITURE CO
410 Chickasha
2
1
4
X •
B -
9
'33 Strong tobacco
34 Blow with open
hind
136 Spectacle
138 Adjective suffix
39 Biblical king
Ml Winglike part
<42 Crimion
'43 Baronet’* wif*
144 Microbe
46 Masculine
nickname
,48 Female sheep
'51 Slow moving
54 Spanish dance
57 Weight for silk
yarn
■58 Worshiper
59 Net
•0 Heredity factor
DOWN
1 Diminutive of
Christina
2 Chinese civet
3 Native of
(suffix)
4 Word of assent
5 District in
London
»0
□ Superior forward visibility, down-front and
overhead
□ Generous leg and knee room in cab fori
driver comfort
□ Truck-engineered independent front
suspension with coil springs
(series CIO, C20, C30)
□ Two-stage rear coil springs (series CIO, C20)
□ Full double-wall side panels and double-wall
tailgate (Fleetside)
□ No external joints to rust or corrode on
Fleetside box
□ Dual master-cylinder brake system with
warning light
CHICKASHA
f
Two accidents were reported
on Chickasha streets Tuesday
afternoon with no injuries oc-
curring in either mishap.
The first accident occurred
around 1:10 p.m. in the 200
block on Choctaw.
Lillie Mae Jones, Route 2,
Amber, was reported traveling
west on Choctaw when her 1962
tudor smashed into a 1965 sedan
parked along the curb.
The sedan, owned by Becky
Ann Lasseter, 1312 Mississpipi,
was knocked into the bumper of
a third auto, damaging its fen-
der.
Mark Jones was charged in
Chickasha Aaily Express
302 No. tit Street
p. o. DRAWER *
I
»
I
1011
14
MiGHlY
CMK
□ Wheelhouse undercoating. Aluminized
muffler
□ Smooth ball-gear steering
n Telescoping lower steering shaft
(series CIO, C20, C30)
□ Padded instrument panel crown. High
level ventilation
□ Safety door latches and hinges. Pushbutton
door locks
□ Thick-laminate windshield. Dual-speed
wipers. Washers
□ Four wav hazard warning flasher. Backup
lights. Direction signals
□ Delco battery and Delcotron generator
□ Specially protected electrical circuits
□ Special camper-truck equipment packages
available
□ And many other features contributing to
comfort, convenience and job-tailoring utility
QING
Ha song of value on
ESe car, home and life
99 insurance. Contact
“ me today.
। pass project in October or Nov-
ember, said Bowers.
In discussing the street im-
provement work being planned
in Chickasha, Bowers said that
the widening of Grand Avenue
■ from Sixth to 21st is expected
' to get underway about the first
of the year after utilities have
been moved.
appellation __________
18 Icel andic sag* gold (Bib.)
21 At the summit 23 Italian river
11 ..i
‘HOMOGENIZED
MILK
VITAMIN 0
neighbor
10 Byuntine
Catholic, for
! one ________
112 Thought attorney (ab)
14 Washes lightly 17 Ancient city in
15 Capital of
shipbuilding "compamy, silence planning to let bids on the by-
fell over the crowd. Lines of
helmeted state police drawn up
in front of the gates stiffened.
But only a few non-union
Grady Memorial
Hospital
ADMISSIONS
Jim Bidleman, Blanchard. sur-
gical.
Mrs. Melbourne Stock, Chick-
ashan surgical.
Miss Veda Joy Wilcox, Chick-
asha, medical.
Mrs. Harley Bone, Chickasha,
surgical.
Mrs. Lonnie B. Crawford,
Blanchard, medical.
William G. Bailey, Chickasha,
medical.
DISMISSALS
Mrs. J. D. Pennington, Brad-
ley.
Mrs. Effie Summers, Chick-
asha.
Mrs. Anna McDaniel, Amber.
Mrs. William H. Ball, Chick-
asha.
Fred M. Dalton, Chickasha.
Mrs. Mary Ehel David, Chick-
asha.
Mrs. Emma Morrissey, Minco.
Deaths and Funerals
PAPER DRIVE
(Continued from Page ONE)
One of the major projects is
the street marker program.
Grady Cearley, president,
pointed this out in renewing
the club request for the "fine
cooperation of residents in waste
paper drive.”
"If you think a waste paper
drive is an easy way to make
money, you are mistaken”,
Cearley said. "It is work in true
hard-labor fashion.”
The Lions’ president also add-
ed an appeal for some added
pride in street markers. Lions
club members work hard to
earn the money to buy street
markers and from time to time
vandals damage the markers.
These have to be replaced.
Any assistance citizens, young
or old, can give in keeping the
markers in good shape will be
appreciated, added the club
president.
The waste paper pickup was
started some 25 years ago when
Myron Humphrey was county
salvage chair nan during the
war The first drive chairman
was Roy Pierce.
The street marker program
was started more than 10 years
ago at the suggestion of Floyd
Bleger who served as chair-
man until this year when Jimmy
Self was named chairman.
Money earned by Lions mem-
bers also carries out an exten-
sive sight conservation pro-
gram This includes support of
the Oklahoma Eye Bank, pro-
viding glasses for needy and
other such work.
The club also provides equip-
ment for the Kiddies’ Park in
Borden Park, contribute to the
OIA ranch and supports var-
ious local youth projects, added
Cearley.
Firemen Answer
One Auto Blaze
Chickasha's Fire Department
sent one unit to 5 Cottonwood
Drive around 3:40 p.m. Tues-
day after receiving a report of
an automobile on fire.
A 1961 tudor was reported to
have backfired, causing the
overheated carburetor to erupt
into flames.
Firemen extinguished the
blaze quickly with only minor
damage reported.
*••3
GIRL - Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
Holt, Route 3, Cickasha, are
the parents of a seven-pound,
13-ounce girl born at 7:19 p.m.
Tuesday in Grady Memorial
Hospital.
GIRL — Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Boswell, 1302 Park Crcle Drive,
Clarksdale, Miss., are the par-
ents of a six-pound, nine-ounce
girl born July 3 in a Clarks-
ville hospital. Mr. and Mrs.
Boswell are former residents of
Chickasha. Mr. Boswell is a
former member of the Chick-
asha Daily Expreas advertising
staff.
Body-surfing is the sport of
sea lions in the Galapagos
Islands, says the National
Geographic.
LEE W. GIGER
Memorial services for Lee W.
Giger, 70, were held at 2:30
p.m. Monday in the Southern
Baptist Church of Rush Springs.
He died at his home early
Sunday morning following sev-
eral months of illness.
Mr. Giger is survived by his
wife, Besse, of the home; three
sisters, Mrs. H. F. (Mae) Mur-
phy of Brighton, Colo., Mrs.
J. E. Bailey of Chickasha, and
Mrs. J. E. Smith of Rush
Springs.
Interment was in the Rush
Springs Cemetery under the di-
rection of the Callaway - Smith
Funeral Home.
a major offensive into the
wooded and jungle-covered hills
west of Pleiku and about 225
miles northeast of Saigon.
Checking Damage
B52 heavy bombers have
repeatedly hit Communist troop
concentrations in the invasion
area near the Cambodian
Sanctuary and patrols of the 4th
Infantry Division were combing
the area to check B-52 damage
when they met a Communist
publication.
Sunday. 12 Noon Friday.
Monday: 5 p.m. Friday.
TELEPHONK
Chickasha subscribers who miss
service may get their Expreas by
calling telephone CA +-2600 between
1:00 and 7:00 p.m. Weekdays and 7:00
and 9:30 a.m. Sunday.
SUBSCNIPTION RATES
BY CARRIER IN CHICKASHA
CHARLES WAYNE
SPEARMAN, JR.
Gravesde rites for Charles
Wayne Spearman Jr., the in-
fant son of Mr. and Mrs. Char-
les Wayne Spearman, 1901 South
Sixth, will be held at 10 a.m.
Thursday in the Rose Hill Ceme-
tery. The casket will not be
opened.
James W. Nash of the Jeho-
vah's Witness Church will of-
ficiate.
Survivors include his parents,
Mr. and Mrsm Charles Wayne
Spearman; his grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Spear-
man nand Mrs. Louise Bilyeu
of Chickasha and Eimo Earl
of Plainview, Tex.; and great
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Spearman of Chickasha.
Interment wll be in the Rose
Hill Cemetery under he di-
rection of Sevier’s Funeral
Home.
n Chevy’s money-saving 250 six; available
292 six, 283 V8 and 327 ‘
(series C10, C2O, C30)
ad1m2! Hv-E1=[#24=
ie[#v- ■ -- •) madizi =
m=-ilejErt=i-MeNHi1#
• iE Ei/ciHiciHEie
ported in the area preparing for cut down strikes by U.S. planes
and helicopter gunships.
One Year —----------------I
Six Months _______________
Three Months ______________
One Month --------------____
Week
BY MAIL INOKLAHOMA
(Exeept Chekasha)
One Year ------------------ I
Six Months —___________
Three Months _____________
SAIGON (UPI) -Troops of
the U.S. 4th Division fought
through the day with North
Vietnamese in the Central
Highlands today in a battle in
which an American company
was cut off for hours before it
made its way to the other units.
A U.S. military spokesman
said 35 Americans were killed
and 25 wounded and that two
U.S. helicopters flying in
reinforcements were damaged.
Communist losses were not
known since darkness prevented
battlefield reconnaissance.
About 500 American troops —
three companies —were in-
volved in the struggle three
miles from the Cambodian
border near the la Drang
“6
53
2i=iviizi ■ raa # ■ auv-ui=
Sjv2l ==i/=/=1I auIH-j
Tuesday in a local nursing J workers went in, and even
ome. He was born hAug. 24, j fewer came out.
for the money
At the height of the battle one
U.S. company reported it was
receiving heavy fire from three
sides. Later, it was completely
cut off. It suffered most of the
casuaities in today’s fighting
but fought its way free.
At nightfall the Communists
broke off the battle and
infiltrated back across the
border into Cambodia, a U.S.
spokesman said.
Senior Citizen
Pot Luck Lunch
To Be Thursday
Senior Citizens of the Chick
asha area will hold their regular
monthly covered dish “pot
luck” luncheon at 12 noon Thurs-
day at the Salvation Army cen-
ter, 227 North Fourth, accord-
ing to Bill Magid, program di-
rector.
Mrs. Roy Daniels will play
the guitar and sing several
selections for the entertainment
program following the luncheon.
All senior citizens are invited
to attend and bring a covered
dish of their choice. Utensils
will be furnished and coffee and
tea will be served, added Mag-
id.
5152
Ee
Second:class postage paid at Chick-
asva, Okla. Published every afternoon
(except Satunday and Christmas Day)
and Sunday morning.
Any eroneous reflection on the
character of any person, firm or
corperation and any misstatement
whs may appear in the columns of
The bxpress will be gladly corrected
upon its being brought to the atten-
tion of the management.
Advertiaing Deadlines
Weeldays: Noon preceding day of
One Month . 1.25
CHICKASHA POST OFrICK BOXES
One Year ______________(17.80
Six Montha _________________- 8.50
Three Montha . 4.50
— ALL OTHERS -
One Y ar ______________________
Six Month____________ 7.7S
Three Month! ____________ 4.00
On! Month __________________ 1.40
(AU prleeo Inelude Tax)
MEMBER OF
UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
OKLAHOMA PRESS ASSOCIATION
MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF
CIRCULATION
A LOCALLY OPERATED MEMBER
OF THE
OSSI'S
2
• Awnings • Drapes
• Traverse Rods
• Custom Venetian
Blinds
ANTINORO
FURNITURE SHOP
611 $•. 15th CA 4-6866
ACROSS 6 Musical dramas
—
_ _ 1
& Ken Singleton
♦ ! 124 No. 5th
Bui. Ph.
i CA 4-1968
7p Rm. Ph.
4 CA 4-0771
See your local Chevrolet dealer for summer savings now!
35-1561
DON MARTIN CHEVROLET-CADILLAC, INC.
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Drew, Charles C. The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 75, No. 123, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 12, 1967, newspaper, July 12, 1967; Chickasha, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1864944/m1/2/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed July 5, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.