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Hope Star from Hope, Arkansas • Page 2

Publication:
Hope Stari
Location:
Hope, Arkansas
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PAGE TWO HOPE STAR, HOPE, ARKANSAS Saturday, Hope 5H Star Star oi Hope, 1S99; Press, 1927. CoraoUdawxJ January 18, 0 Justice, Deliver Thy Hem id From False Report! Published every xveck-dny afternoon Star I-ubllshlng Inc. C. S. Palmer Alex.

H. Washbum, at The Star building, 212-214 South uTalnut street, Hope, Ark. C. E. PALMER, PresJrtem ALEX.

H. WASHBTJRN, Editor and Publisher (API Associated Press. Means Newspaper Eneternrise Ass'n. Sttbsrtlption Rate (Always Payable in By city carrier, per weak per month 65c: one year $6.50. By mail, in Hempslend.

Nevada, Howard, Miller and LaFayette counties, $3.50 per year; elsewhere $6.50. Member of Tlie Associated Press: The Associated Frrss is exclusively ert- titlec) to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not jtherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. Charges on Tributes. Charge will be made for atl tributes, cards of thanks, resolutions, or mera'orials, concerning the departed. Commercial news- sapers hold to this policy in the news columns to protect their readers from a lelutje of space-taking! memorials.

The Star disclaims responsibility the (jtfe-keer-ing or return of any Unsolicited manuscripts. Did We Learn Anything? We Shall See! ''We learn fronY history that wo loam noUum; from KUtoi'y." Cynical thinking. But never mind tin- cynicism. Is ii vort-cot We are going to find out. Once again, the United Slates is faced with llie heavy Uvk of Irvine to remain out of a widespread European war.

As in 191-1. great majority of tho American people want none of it. They feel instinctively that uge-ohl hatreds which underly all Europe's wars are alien to us: that they are some- I'Ving have been tryim; £c' away from for generations. But like skeletons in tlie closet of our past, they will not let us be. It is true that American feeling is much stronger than in 1914.

Then, most Americans were genuinely indifferent to the bloody brawls of Europe. Now are not indifferent. We cannot be. That works to the disndvantayc of the efi'ort to stay clear. Against it we must set the advantage that we know more of what undernVs these wars: we know 'move of die deliberate efforts that arc made to embroil us.

We have the war debt: in 1938 we admitted 182.946 World war veterans to hospitalization. half of them neuro-psyehiatric. We have not. forsutten our 40,000 battle dead, our 90.000 dead of wounds and disease. As the President has pointed out.

we must try resolutely to draw a line between what we think and what we ask our government to do. We must look skeptically at every effort to rouse passion and hatred, and calmly and oven coldly consider what is best for us. Thus it seems clear that Anthony Drexol Biddle. the Philadelphia socialite who happens at tlie moment to be the S. ambassador to Poland, has done his country no great service in implying that German aviators bombing Warsaw were practically alining at him.

It seems that several bombs were dropped near Eiddle's summer homo in the Warsaw suburbs, damaging the house. Biddle was quoted as that the attack was "deliberate." If by that lie means thai the German aviators took pains to inform themselves of the location of the Biddle home, and then aimed their bombs at it with special intent to kill, tlie American ambassador, then tlie only answer that any such idea is fantastic. In the first place, we might as well recognize once for all that a bombing pilot, harassed by anti-aircraft fire, can never be sure within a matter three city blocks just what his bomb is going to hit. The hellish part of air bombing is not that the aviators coldly choose hospitals and old ladies' homes for their targets, but simply that when the bomb drops they have only the vaguest idea of where it will fall. is not the deliberate choice of defenseless targets, but the sheer aban- dond recklessness of bombing that makes its horror.

The United States has the right to expect from its official diplomatic representatives a special wariness against thoughtless accusations and inflammatory, talk in general. The weariness is a duty wUich every American ought to impose.on himself. But it is a duty which the government must impose on ail Inose who officially represent it. THE FAMILY T. M.

REG. 0. 9, PAT. By OK. MORRIS FiSHBEIN Editor, Journal u( the American Medical Hygcla, the Health Magazine Patients Imitate Illness in Hysteria to Escape Un Pleasant Situations Tin- CM use of hysteria is doctor himself may suggest to 1K 'lie patient certain symptom.s which def'iu'lely in'-are of liakiny, haml.s.

a person with hyy- tue fact Dial i- why is who is iniihitin.i: of the cl in will the hiind with a quick (Infloi iiavc up to the point at which hysteria 1 f.inii|!r.< in thei'O is a the hand clasp occurs. Thou there is no further pressure; but the person who has nctunlly a wenk or pnrnlyxwl arm will be equally slow in bi'Kinninn the haiul clasp. A person who has hyslerln and who walks in a stumbling and manner will usually manage to siive himself from a foil. On tlie other lidiul. a person who actually has cliw.incss or heciiusc of a tumor of the brain or a similar condition will not be able to savo himself ilurinK'ii fall.

One of the difficulties, of course, is the apparent desire of the person to got well notwilhslandini; the I'acl that there is nothing really wi'onn. Mere explanation of thai far! does not seem to suffice to briny about a cui-e. As' one physician "You the that you are denlinK with two people in the same body one 1 of them to get well and the nthei' not." The- must imv-wlaul step in the hystt-riii is ID nuike ahsi For propci 1 combustion, eni-li Kfll- lon of gnsnline Inn-nod in an inito- Two Drives Hit lon of Rns Him and Ran mobile requires amount of mi- nqunl that contained in a ronm 10 I', i I'v ft Ii ff feel i.j lit ift.fKi- anMinneiy I KA KG I WN. llloeclink I MpiaM MUM accurate anil to he coi lam a lu'inl I'Ut. Hobert 2fi.

ni'Sliirm phy- into lunch room on a Mctill.y. Tin- IH-XI move is to Vil near hero and wild he was ANSWER TO by siiyKesticiii. per.Miasion in- usv ui -k by a truck while walking. of to c.ci the paiiont fil treatment CRANJUM CRACKER I in i i -III i i lllii i I 1 i'i i 111 Ki in i Bl set out on font. A few min- liiex later lit- was struck by atltci- the basi, oi in.s nance ML OIII BU refined eon- uu'Ji'J" O'-Wl-wn lie neither of the which.s which -tiuck him slopped to aid MONTUKAI.

i C'rnmeut has plai-ed a order AieidinK to estimates, there are for field nun; vvilh Marine I motor-di iven fire engines in lndu.iiin.-s of Sorel, Quo. iviee in the l'iiil''d States. mi I'ilUi When slie f.iUled the men- Mi hack mciies. the shorl would be nl mvi'c HI. or -1'2 inches.

If she mciiMiri'S baek six ince.s mi llie shnrl end, the mi-n- sure on the lonK end will be at moinus II, or 'M inches. I OURjOARDlNG HOUSE with MAJOR HOOPLE OUT OUR WAY By J. R. WILLIAMS 'v j- i i i TO SELL IT TOOAY, ii TO DIVUISV-: THI" liil- or 1 i. te AM UNPRETENTIOUS thf (MM I i -Ii i in iiui I'ontiition 1 ni''i; a p.ll"ll\..i-.

ill ol.il-:- to Th. ni.iy r.ol the CT- 'ii KM. i i 1 ii 5 til-, i l'i-i. 'pL C'ARTRiDGK i. i i PlPK Oi- AM AUTOMOBu-V MOX1OLI5 GASFS INTO A FOR MF.X'i' 10, aparl- nieiil.

in cabiiH-t C.dl i-'i-aniJ HutcliiiiLi. I'honv 7'J. rage. A'. Miillips.

HOGPLE'-rzUR VlLL 'I iu SAVORY "ASIMG 6WCLI. OF ci-uu SAUCL OR EUTTV5 COOKIMG IM r'OCN WMI.L vot.i A USU.M- oiii.1. AMD FOR HI'IN'I 1 li.ui.-e in 1 Mi-. ('. Sein.utey i plume i.

1-1- I tp. i l-'OK EVKNT loom apai-tinval. d.VDI-.I!,-,!. Private 1 7 AKL 1 F5 ARE MADE NOT BOCM For Sale BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES I A 'Oov-n- For: A Auto'iiotivi' FOR on moat counter or cold storage com- rnoreial refrigeration unit Automotive Supply Co. "2'fes Afore You Tell the Quicker You Sell" You Can Talk to Only One Man 0 Want Ads Talk to SELL-KENT BUY OR SWAP All Ads cash in advance Not taken over the Phone One word, minimum 30c Three word, minimum 56c Six word, minimum 90c One word, minimum $2.70 Rates a'e for continuous insertions only.

KOR WM-" hairp.i nr Pups. See Mrs. F'en-c-11 B.ikor, Second street. Fisk, Tisk! By EDGAR MARTIN POP AMERICAN COMPOSER WORK OP THE HERE OR. SOMEBODY' MINEKVA GONNA err HURT; A One-Man Anti-Tank Battery By V.

T. HAMLIN i to as passfiiKcr to Sijrinirfiel'l. cheap. Call Lf-aviny 'lay. Hi-pi M.

A. Jf. Gin Company is ginning ami up to jjound Ivde.s AM over fili.j pounds, ad- 'iilional Ii: a your Seoil. A. liruil into Hope jr A.

N. Strou.l, Ark. Sept S-lm WASH TUBES 'J DOPES, OWE MOfife SMOVE) VOU AN'O WE'LL BE FOR IT; TilE HORIZONTAL 1 Man who composed song "Old Black Joe." 12 Ancient. 13 Kind theater. 14 Homeless child.

IS Genus of birds 17 To harass. 18 Shaft part. 13 To rot flax. 20 Tenants. 22 Every.

23 Heathen god. 25 Lacquer ingredient. 27 Outcries, 29 Genus of plant lice. 31 Hair dye, 32 Creed. Into.

Greek letter. Measure. Type 38 Con sum 39 Being. 41 International call for help. Atiswer to Previous Puzzle 11 Rivulet.

12 His life filled troubles. 15 He is now famous for his Show Them By ROY CRANE I for- ii'-ouih. Pliorie Pal. THBV DOU'T SUSPECT WHO WB ARE. I HAVE A VJWH.TWAT WiW GCT THEKA 1 1 CAPTURHD Bv EAL HOLV '6WOKE! CU HOW WE 43 Piece of needlework.

43 Beast of burden. 50 Public auto 52 Ship-worm. 53 Prophet. 54 Finch. 55 56 Nickel, fabbr.) 57 Ancient 5D This; coniposei little honor or in his lifetime.

60 He wrote "My Old Home." VERTICAL 1 Shoe bottom. 2 Contact. 3 Epoch. 4 Large ii State of bliss. ij Spruce.

'I To melt. Sheaf. One pi UK one. 10 Pain in the ear. 20 Revolves.

21 One who neglects duty. 24 Sand hills. 25 Dress protector. 23 Female fowl. .30 Fish.

35 Fit for 38 To arrogate. 40 Law coclo. 42 Instrument. 44 Cow's call. 45 Pair.

46 Smooth. 47 Ireland. 4'J To sag. 51 Halfpenny. 53 Sour plum.

MisU-r. f)8 Affirmative' vote. OUUV TO THE W.EVJ WHO 1U 1 Allen. 28-If WE THIS 15 VCD TO TW. KAUTV IG THAN CEH'-fAOl-iV '50 THAT I THOUGHT.

VJIJ MAV 5EE TVllWCi FOK i-OL -vr Want It Printed RPIIP -J a i a We'll a call yu.i. have mi joli. What- ev; 1 iii-i i- i au rve Thai an FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS 1 I Cause for Joy By MERRILL BLOSSER RED RYDER A Reign of Terror Stopped By FRED HARMAN AMI GO MEXICO Wf.ir.L ftt rn LI 2 VIE.3EVJOIF OP" Vour i.

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About Hope Star Archive

Pages Available:
98,963
Years Available:
1930-1977