The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 75, No. 135, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 26, 1967 Page: 4 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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POUR
By HAMLIN
BERRY‘5 WORLD
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As chairman of the American
Committee for
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on the progress of
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ROBIN MALONE
By BOB LUBBERS
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/TS NOUSE,
FATHER- i
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EASIER FOR EVERY
BODY, WERE GONNA
GO BACK TO DOING
THINGS MY WAY!
3,
YOU PICKED
DP THE BALL
LIKE A PRO,
A CLAY-
WRONG
CALL'
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FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS
EWELL,
LOOK!
I SHOULD ITE 1
MY BRAIN FOR 4
THINKING WHAT I <
THOUGHT ABOUT A
MRS MALOKE'^
SHE'S U
r TERRIFIC.' W
Stolen Smile
Or Two
--MOOSE . Ip HE MEARS
I HE LL GET MIS HEAD-OUT
OF THAT WINDOW THE SAME
WAY HE GOT IT IN!
Heme goes/
2"
27
IF YOU'LL RUB TWO ................
STICKS TOGETHER AND THERE ISN'T
I COULD GET MORE
ACTION OUTA LEFT-
OVER BAIT/CLEAR /
5-—y OUTA HERE, K
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THI CHICKASHA BAILY EXPRESS, Wednesday, July 26, 1967 *
-----ALLY OOP
THATS BECAUSE YOUD No
, IPSA YODRE STILL HBR.
KNIGHT IN SHINING ARYOR1
mmmmg SEE YOU
"66 A tomorrow
2
WASH TUBB
/ THERE YOU
/ GO, FLOWIE.
« LOOKING AT
1 I EVERYTHING
• \ FROM THE
i,\ WORST IDE!
gke
045*
SEE? IT WOULDN'T
HAVE HAPPENED IF
WE’D GONE TO PARIS.'
(A FOKNOU, V—
M---—--•—•6RANDPA MOSES, TELL
US THIS SOME KINDAbYOUR KEEPER TO GET
GAG OR SOMETHIN' 4) A DIGGER NET THE
GOOD
HEAVENS!
YOUR ,
FACE.'
DON'T COME
DOWN YET J
I SEE A
, SPOT YOU
. MISSED,
BUGSI ,
' ‘CoP 1228
HEATS UP QUICKLY*
2Ls
By LESLIE TURNER
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• MOOSE ISA
VERY LOVE-
SICK ANIMAL,'
IT# TIMES LIKE THI THAT BRING OUT
MN’ INSTINCT A A PROVIPER- OOPS!
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<1 WAS^
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eem FOR g
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I'D NO N
IDEA HOW
MUCH SHe$
COUNTED
ON US
VACATIONINS
TOSETHERY
By ART SANSOM
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How Can I ?? ?
Q. How can I clean oii paint-
ings at home?
A. If they are not too old
and coated with varnish, try
this method: Remove the can-
vas from its frame and place
over a soft pillow to avoid
cracking the paint surface. Wash
the surface gently with luke-
warm soapsuds—repeatedly if
necessary to get the painting
clean. Remove the suds by
using a cloth moistened with
clear water. Follow this by ap-
plying boiled linseed oil with a
soft lintless cloth, or a dull-
finish mastic varnish obtainable
at the art stores. Don’t rub the
picture hard or flood it with
waterl
Moo-
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OKAY, EAGLE EYE! I
THINK I CAN REACH IT
from r-H-
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MEMBER
Chars c o
George MilTer
Eor Reeve,
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"Sure, ht lookt like that now; but if he ever stops exer.
citing, he'll look like everybody else!"
ma
The Credit Card Explosion
Inflation is hitting Americans’ pocketbooks in
more ways than one. The money flows out, but
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20 Years Ago
(From the Express Files,
July 26, 1947)
R. C. Kelly drank a root beer
which reminded him of the sas-
safras tea he drank as a boy
in Tennessee . . .Jack O’Leary '
liked to sleep outside and vow-
ed he was immune to skeeters
. . . Loyd Benefield was stress-
24 (
“4
WELL, HE’S ALWAYS MAKIN'
ME FRET ABOUT HIS CHEWIN'
UP STUFF, STRAYIN' TOO FAR
FROM HOME, GETTIN’LOST,
AND LOTS OF OTHER THINGS-
WHAT'S THE MATTER WITH
HIM DOIN' A LITTLE WORRYIN’
ONCE IN AWHILE? W-
193
NOW, AIN'T
THAT NICE?
)
a monument under construction at the notorious
concentration camp where 34,000 Jews and others
perished at the hands of an older generation.
He rejects the notion that today’s young Germans
should be burdened with guilt over the persecution
of the Jews, although he emphasizes that ‘‘they
cannot escape responsibility for history.”
This attitude was summed up bv one young Ger-
man who told him, “If I belong to the people of
Goethe and Schiller, I belong to the people of Hit-
ler.”
Cahnman now plans, with the support of the Ger-
man government, to set up an organization to bring
young American Jews to Germany to engage in
constructive dialogue with German young people.
One wonders if it will take another generation be-
fore Arabs can engage in constructive dialogue with
Jews—or, for that matter, before white men can
Bit down with black men in the professor’s home
city of Newark.
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_THE WORRY WART b
LISTEN, WART, MUST VOU
WAIT RISHT THERE AT THE
DOOR? LET TH* DOG EAT IN
PEACE --HE'S SCARED TO
DEATH YOU'LL GO
WITHOUT HIM.' .
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“-IE
(I-
4NNA HAVE A SAY IN _( ATS \ VOL AN* Vog
CUR COUNTRY'S POL ICY? ( RIGHT. /CRUMMY IDEAS AN'
AU WE GOT WAS
TROUBLE... ,
$
Linguists have estimated
that 700,000 distinct ges-
tures can be made by a
combination of arm, finger,
hand and facial move-
ments, says The World Al-
manac. In every culture,
gestures are an eld to
spoken language. A gesture
in one culture, however,
may have an entirely dif-
ferent meaning in another.
Copyright e 1007,
tlowaader Einterprise Aa—.
23
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...SO NOW, TMAKE IT \---*■
/...AN ANY
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HASTA BE
I DONE, TU.
\, DO/
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A Physician
By Wayne G. Brandstadt, M.D.
Careless observation and In-
accurate identification of mush-
rooms can prove as serious as
the bite of a copperhead.
For that reason authorities
advise: Gather wild mushrooms
if you must but don't eat them.
There is no fool-proof awy to
differentiate the poisonous from
the edible varieties. For exam-
ple, there is an old rule: “Nev-
er eat a mushroom that turns
a silver spoon black.” This dis-
coloration indicates the pre-
sence of sulfur but is of no im-
portance otherwise.
Another rule: “Boil the mush-
rooms in salt water to remove
the poison" has about a one
per cent chance of success and
that's not good enough. The
admonition: “Never eat mush-
rooms with white gills” is also
misleading. Most but not all of
those with white gills are poi-
sonous but the silent inference
that, if the gills are brown, pink,
gray or green, they are safe
can lead to a fatal error. There
are more than 4,000 varieties
of mushrooms and even the
experts can’t identify all of the
poisonous ones by just looking.
Furthermore, even perfectly
safe varieties can cause severe
illness if you have an allergy
to them. Some varieties are
safe at one season or in one
locality and poison in another.
Some are poisonous only when
variety of edible inky caps con-
tains disulfiram, a drug that
makes one deathly ill if he takes
an alcoholic drink.
Because there are at least
12 different types of mush-
room poison, no single set of
symptoms can be listed but, if
anyone becomes suddenly ill,
it is wise to determine whether
he has eaten mushrooms with-
in the preceding 48 hours.
If a person who has eaten
them becomes sick he should
be made to vomit. Since mush-
room poison is absorbed from
the digestive tract slowly it
may be possible to eliminate
some of the poison by giving a
brisk cathartic and a high en-
ema.
If vomiting and diarrhea are
prominent symptoms of the poi-
soning the victim should be in
a hospital where he can be giv-
en supportive treatment. It
helps, too, if some of the mush-
rooms are available for study
by a specialist in this field.
Don't be afraid of commer-
cial mushrooms whether raw
or canned. They are produced
by mushroom farmers who
have marketed their product
safely for many years.
WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS
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WHAT ARE YOU ) IL IMITATE THE
Going DDO? ) mating call of a
A young GI was getting some
advice about marriage from his
top sergeant.
“Well,” said the old-timer,
“if I had to do it all over again,
I'd marry a girl I knew in
Japan. She was pretty, grace-
• ful, obedient—and my mother-
in-law would have lived in Yoko-
hama.”
A Boy Scout found a wallet
with considerable money in it.
The owner’s address was shown
in the wallet, and the Scout,
accompanied by his little broth-
er, returned it.
“You’re an honest lad,” the
owner said. “Here's a $5 bill.” •
"No,” said the youth. I
couldn’t accept money for doing
a good deed—I’m a Scout."
As the man started putting
away his $5, the youth added,
“Of course, my brother isn’t.”
51916
How Long The Path
To Harmony?
Israel scored a "major breakthrough” in the Mid-
dle East war, says Dr. Werner Chanman. profes.
•or of sociology at Rutgers College of Arts and
Sciences in Newark.
The breakthrough he means was not in the desert,
however, but in German-Jewish relations.
Just returned from several weeks in West Ger-
many, Cahnman had extensive contacts with young
Germans from all walks of life. The most striking
thing he found was the difference in attitude be-
tween younger Germans and those from 35 to 50.
“The older generation still discusses Jews as a
race or a religion," he says, "but the young people
think of Jews chiefly as indifiduals . . . Jews are
also thought of as the people who founded the
State of Israel."
The Mideast war was a breakthrough, he ex-
plains, because it gave German youths an oppor-
tunity to express support of Israel.
34
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(AND FELL
( OFF THE
\ ROCkS!
P•----
—a(9/M
John P. Phillips was assigned '
to Altus Air Force Base .. . |
Mrs. E. N. Johnson and Carol i
of Casper, Wyo., arrived Sat- ! .
urday night to spend two weeks i
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. | '
J. R. Nesbitt .. .Miss Martha •
Jean Smallwood, bride-elect of ‘
Ed Schenk, was honored with
a bridal shower in the First
Christian Church.
",24
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SEE YOU VK
TOMORROW, I CANrB
MRS.M. / J WAIT
__ A TWINKY/
ws84A 'NITE.'
Currently, more than 200 million credit cards are
Issued in the United States each year—by travel
•nd entertainment organizations, gasoline compan-
ies, hotels, airlines, auto rental agencies, you name
it. The figure is expected to increase 25 per cent
by the end of 1967.
Credit cards have become popular with the crim-
inal element, too. Stolen cards can bring up to
1250 on the underground market. Who steals your
purse may steal trash, but if one or more credit
cards are in it, it could be an extremely expensive
loss.
Over the years, American Express agents have
investigated thousands of cases of stolen credit
cards and have come up with a series of simple
rules:
— Keep cards on your person, and check fre-
quently to make sure they are all in your possession.
— Keep a record of all numbers and issuers of
cards.
— If a card is missing, report its loss immediat-
ely to the issuer—first by telephone or wire, then
by letter. Your responsibility ends with due notice.
Also report it to the police.
— Screen your cards. Destroy those you really
don’t need.
— Always make sure your card is returned after
making a purchase.
UDI CLANCIS ' '
ing the need of improving High- (
way 19 between Chickasha and i |\ \/
Pauls Valley . . . J. W. Ows- \ \
ley had an Indian room in his —
home which made it look like
a regular museum . . . United
States Congressman and Mrs.
Jed Johnson were expected to
arrive in Chickasha from Wash-
ington, D. C.
\S1I «
/ SEE ANY C777ZBX? PLACES Al 8
THAT NEED TOUCHIN' UP, J I j 2
\ FUDDSY?--— --- i3
B-nvrea z
10 Years Ago
(From the Express Files,
July 28, 1957)
Chickasha’s hastily - formed
“Dollar Club” was a success
and the 1250 goal was reached
Saturday morning. The group of
18 players and four adults left
at 5 a.m. for Paragould, Ark.,
for the first step toward na-
tional Little League recognition
. . . Miss Loretta Brown and
June Kingsbury, were looking
for Jupiter at 3 a.m. . . . L. D.
King and Jack Barnett, counting
the days until another school
year would start . . Frank
Shaffer, wondering what he
could do to help his Brooklyn
Dodgers . . . Blair Nelson, who
said the reason he fractured I
his toe while swimming was
that he kicked Sheldon Brink in
the head . . . Mrs. Edna From-
mer was attending a late sum-
mer workshop at Bowling Green j
State University, Ohio . . . A3c
/E
YOU NINNY... RUNNING OUTA GAS IN A REGION
NEVER BEFORE SEEN By MAN OR BEASTI LOST!..
MHUNGRYwEVEN OUTA MATCHES !
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NEXT TIME •a-
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FOK « IT, ‘
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Central Pulelishters, Ltd,
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rew .................... Generor Manager
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. Aevertising Monaget
Franck Best Composing Ropm iFovman
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By BLOSSER
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Drew, Charles C. The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 75, No. 135, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 26, 1967, newspaper, July 26, 1967; Chickasha, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1864956/m1/4/?q=1966+yearbook+north+texas+state+university&rotate=270: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.