The first comic book I remember buying with my own money was a copy of "Western Comics" from DC in August of 1953, and I bought it in Temple Drugs in Riverton, Wyoming on my fifth birthday. Temple Drugs had a soda fountain and if you were with your parents who were waiting to have a perscription filled you could have a free soda (they had free coffee). Western Comics featured Pow Wow Smith and Nighthawk, and I bought the issue because I was crazy about Nighthawk but that was also the first comic in the spinner rack that caught my eye and it could as easily have been some other issue bought on impulse. Temple Drug also sold a wide variety of other things, includig fishing licenses, and the thing that really stuck in my memory was a Timex display which was switched out two or three times a year. Sometimes the Timex was struck repeatedly by a mechanical hammer, other times it would be dunked repeatedly in a tank of water, but not matter what it was subject to the Timex keep on ticking, as long as it was wound regularly which no one ever seemed to do to the demonstration models and they were generally only right twice a day.
Unlike Dubois, which was the closest town to where we lived (just fourteen miles away), Riverton had a wealth of stores which sold comics but Dubois only had about 300 people in the summer and a little less than 200 in the winter and only Dubois Drugs sold comics (they also had a soda fountain and sold fishing licenses but didn't have a Timex display). Riverton was more like a city (it had a population of 3000), so of course it had more stores that sold comics; it even had a library that was open six days a week (The Dubois Community Library was open twice a week, except during hunting season). Since Dubois only had one place to buy comics, you had to be on the ball if you wanted to get the latest issue of Western Comics, or Detective Comics, or the Lone Ranger, or Uncle Scrooge, or Adventure Comics, or Turok - Son of Stone, before somebody else bought all two or three copies of the newest comics. Since the person who restocked new magazines lived in Riverton and didn't seem to be on a regular schedule, there was no telling what day of the week the new books might come in. On the other hand, although Dubois Drugs has a sign by the magazines and the spinner rack that said you weren't in the public library, no one seemed to mind if you read the comic books as long as you didn't look like you were camping out while you did it. Early in the 1955-56 school year, the elementary school burned down (it was a wooden building which had been constructed in the twenties and, reputedly, went up like a match) and the elementary school classes (all six of them, the largest of which was the first grade class which had a whopping sixteen students) had to hold classes wherever there was room. The first graders had classes in Bob White's taxidermy studio, and I lucked out because I got to have classes in the back of the Post Office which was right across the alley from Dubois Drugs, where I spent all my recesses reading comic books for a blissful six weeks or so. Eventually, my mother used the lack of a proper school as an excuse to take me and spend the winter in Riverton. Since Riverton had two movie theaters that were open every day, instead of one theater that was open only on Monday and Tuesday so I was enthused by the change (the Rustic Pine Theater was too small to hold all of regular movie goers at the same time, so it was open two nights in a row and everyone had a chance). As a result, I started seeing more movies, and if I searched hard enough at the various grocery stores, drugs stores, and the one filling station that sold comics, I could almost certainly find any new comic book my heart desired there was only one drug store that would let kids read comics before they bought them, and that depended on who was working after school got out. I got to read fewer comics, but I did get to see more movies which seemed like a fair trade.