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Hope Star from Hope, Arkansas • Page 3

Publication:
Hope Stari
Location:
Hope, Arkansas
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Thursday. June 1. 1930 Mrs. Sid Henry Telephone 321 0 Knrl of Krlmol Year Kirs( Cinuli! Tho little drosses thoi wore new nm bright Whan-school lit-gnn, me dulled nm mended now, And skirls tlml touched the Uncos Ins fall, somehow Ttevenl mi inch of thigh, on inch height Incredibly nddud on sonce Labor Dny And childish longer enimpe'c and Unlit Around the pencil, know the wny write; Now words nre things to spoil ns woll os The final nanm siring is cut last They know Unit life i.s lived by ok fuitl rule, That spring is gone and bnbyhood pnst. These velei-nns in the mysteries of Nojongcr shy, bewildered or afraid, STARTS SUNDAY Ij.

TKo screen's most dashing herol Tho West's wildest frontier! BRUCE CABOT FRANK McHUGH ALAN HALE Directed by MICHAEL CURTIZ JOHN UTEl HENRY 1 RAVERS-VICTORY JORY WILLIAM IUNDIOAN fiat br fatmt Mutlc bv Maa Sl.lntr The now sophisticated Second Grndc. After a visit with home folks, Vnsco Bright has returned to Stillwator, where lie will attend summer school nl the Oklahoma A. M. Drs. Chas.

A. and Etta Champlin have as guests this week, Mr. nnd Mrs. R. M.

Hotichens, and daughter, Miss Georgia Houchcns, grand daughter, Norma Jean Edwnrds and Miss Hull! Bateimm, all of Sikeston, Mo. Mr. nnd Mrs. Houchcns were former residents of Emmet, Ark. Mrs.

E. I 3 Stewart, Mrs. R. V. Herndon, Mrs.

L. W. Young and Mrs. C. C.

Lewis have returned from a delightful motor trip to Clanton, where they were house guests of Mrs. Arthur Johnson. During their week's visit they were the inspiration for a number of social affairs, and enjoyed visits to points of' interest in Alabama and Mississippi. En route going and returning, they were over night guests of Mr. and Mrs.

Jack Sluwart in Vicksburg, Miss. Commencement exercises will be held on the front lawn of the high school beginning' Thursday evening nl 7 o'clock. (Should is rain, the program will be hold in the high school auditorium). Sena lor James Pilkinlon will deliver the address. Tho public is cordially invited to attend.

The Cemetery association will moot fit 8 o'clock Friday afternoon in the basement of the First Methodist church. Mrs. J. A. Henry had as Wednesday guests, Mrs.

I. A. Howoll and Mrs. R. V.

Benson of Waldo, and will have as Thursday night guest, Mrs. James B. Clarke of Blylhuvillc, president of the Arkansas Division, U. D. C.

on route lo Magnolia to attend a distric. mooting of the United Daughters Hie Confederacy, including chaptei from Hope, Texarkana, Lewisvill Fulton, Cnmdcn and Hamburg. Mr. and Mrs. J.

J. Lip of Hope an nouncc the marriage of their onl daughter, Doris LcNell lo John I. Wilson son of Mr. and Mrs. Join L.

Wilson, of Hope. The nuirriag was solemnized September 23, th ionic of the Rev. Harry S. DcVort Jiistor of the First Methodist churcl of Tcxarkana, Ark. The bride i.s i of Carlisle High School; tin is a graduate of Hope Higl Jchool, and both have attended Hen- Icrson State Teachers college.

Mr. am Mrs. Wilson will make their home ii 'lope. Serious Comic Joe E. Brown, cavern-mouthed, clownish comic of the films was in serious mood when, as pictured above, he pleaded with tha House Immigration and Natural- ix.ation Committee to admit 20,000 German refugee children into the United States.

Like Ihe swell of some sweet tune, Morning rises into noon, May glides onward into Juno. 'Deacon" Moore to Play at Camden Monday Night Carl "Deacon" Moore of the do folks, howdy do" fame, will play for a dance at the American Logioi Hut, Camden, Arkansas, Monday night June 5, Other than his twelve-piece band, "Deacon" will present Miss Marge Hudson, talented young blues singer. "Deacon" is now playing in the Olmos club, San Antonio, Texas, am makes regular broadcasts from to 10:30 every night except Wednesday The dunce is sponsored by the Alpha C'niega fraternity and the American Legion and will begin at 10 o'clock Monday night. Tickets arc on sale nl Home's drug store, Camden, Ark. Big Double Feature "VAILEY OF THE GIANTS" and "PARTNERS OF THE PLAINS" Confessions of a NAZI SPY IHIHP BRBBR EDW.

G. ROBINSON THURSDAY FRIDAY 28th Producer for Magnolia Section Seventh Location Is Made in New Lafayette County Field MAGNOLIA, Baker B-l, SW SW 1-1-17-20, was being gungcd Wednesday with depth at a lilllu below 7000 feet, to which point casing WHS being set. This is the Magnolia field's 28th producer. Lion Crisp-Glasgow No. 1, NE SE 23-17-20, which came in Monday, has been gauged fit 28 barrels through inch choke with gas pressure standing imniml 1200 pounds on both casing and tubing.

Standard Oil company began the running of casing Wednesday in Phillips No. 2, NE NW 15-17-19, which i.s bottomed at 7214 feet in Village Field and expected to start running pipe WccV.icsduy night in Harris Bl, SE NE 15-17-20, which is bottomed at 7452, The second string of casing went out to Atlantic's Pinewood Lumber company No. 1, NE NE Wednesday. 7'his is a wildcat well. Fiifnycttc Activity LEW1SV1LLE, late, Wednesday afternoon spudded' in the surface hole, of the Erwin and Leach nnd East Texas Refining company's Cicve Warren No.

1 in section 24-1G-24 it being the location in the Lewisvillc field. Drilling operations at the company's F. L. Wright No. 1 in section 24-16-24 reached feet Wednesday.

Trouble was encountered at the Har- Islon No. 1 in section 23-16-24 Wednesday when the drill pipe stuck 125 feet the tup. Drilling has reached i375 feet in sandy shale. Hl.s were being prepared at the fc.cru.ggs No. 1 in section 23-l(i-24 Wednesday and the location was being cleared at the Willie Wright No.

1, in 12-1G-24. Machinery was being hauled to the J. C. E.tevens-Allen No. 1 in section The Stevens Drilling company of Talco is an independent concern.

Irii Dillard will drill the well. Former Fayetteville Banker Is Reindicted FORT SMITH, C. Key, former cashier of the First National bank of Fayetteville, who Mirrcmlured to the United Slates consul at Toronto, Canada, April 25, shortly utter nine-year-old embezzlement clinrgcs against him luul been quashed, was reindicleil by a Federal Grand Jury here. Tho new indictment, containing two counts, charges Key with embezzlement of from the bank in 1929. It i.s not identical with the old indictment.

Key is in custody here. THURSDAY FRIDAY Prize Play Screened at Last! FRANK Yon Can't Take It With Yon JEAN LIONEL Arthur Barrymore JAMES EOWAJRO Stewart Arnold A PER ANN PlusYVuH Disney's i- KW "KING OF TINS ARENA" 1 T-AJSO-, No. 14-DiCK TRACY RETURNS T8KEEI STORY DATE WITH DANGER BY HELEN WORDEN VMliWtari MAM- frank, tin wntiu touke MtirtIA (o, keep linmltt blrm Slilrlcy, X)(pf French tuiirritl irtip AvrJfuMi "Him Kr.pnih'B Hccrtjt liucn buried wlti CHAPTER XX night Clem Shirley standing at (he bar of Dove with Jack Burden when Duke Martin walked, in. He saw that Jack, half-drunk, was arguing with Clem. Instead of speaking to them, the Duke silently pulled out a chair at a table in a far corner, quietly told a waiter to bring him.

a drink, then settled down to watch the pair at the bar, a dark look on his saturnine face. Clem was drinking a highball, black hair was tumbling in careless curls about a defiant face and the strap of a scarlet evening gown had already slipped off one shoulder. Her voice was high-pitched and reckless as she replied to Jack's pleading tones. His face was flushed, his hair rumpled, and his dinner coat wrinkled. Half-drunk, he was making a desperate effort to hold her attention.

Occasionally curious eyes strayed in their direction, but the crowd which frequented the tap. room 'of the Dove was accustomed to scenes of this sort. As a rule it tolerated them with bored indifference and objected only when the principals grew, noisy. "You don't care a damn!" Jack's words, tense and deep, suddenly penetrated the haze of barroom chatter. A woman laughed shrilly.

"He's off again. Why doesn't he come over here? She isn't the only girl in the world." Another woman sitting at the same table tittered. "The idiot was going to marry her. She's thrown him over for Duke Martin. Caught in the mesh, I'd say." The first woman sniffed.

"She's more scatterbrained than I thought. Lppk where Janice French landed." A fresh lot of people came in and their conversation was lost again in the babble of noisy tongues. TACK steadied himself at the bar as he ordered another drink. His handsome face was drawn and his blood-shot eyes was a harassed, desperate look. "You're a silly little fool head-r ing straight for jhe said.

Then rqaching lor the glass the bartender handed him, he added, "And I'm going with "Don't talk rot;" she said sulk-. iiy. "I want you policing me. You don't own me." Her voice grew hysterical. "I don't; see.

what I ever saw in such a prigl" "A prig because I object to yo'itf going with, Martin when you know he's crook. A prig because I don't the pretty drinks he concocts for little girls." His voice broke. "My God, Clem. Can't you see it's only because I love you that I'm talking this way?" As Jack's words again rang out through the room, Martin left his table and walked slowly across to the bar. "Sorry to interrupt," he drawled, "but I thought we had a dale tonight, Clem." Like a little slave, Clem put down her drink and turned to go with him.

Jack, white anger, faced Martin. "You can't take my girl." There was a flicker of amusement in the Duke's eyes, "She wants to go." Jack's right fist clutched convulsively, then trembled. "Perhaps you would like my money well." He reached in his pocket. "I'll buy her back. How much is she worth?" He flung a roll of bills on the bar.

"You're acting like a fool, Burden. Put that money back in yo.ur pocket." Spluttering with rage, Jack struck out at Martin, fanning the air as the side-stepped his fist. Clem stepped between the two men, her eyes were cold and hostile. "I never want to see you again, Jack Burden," she cried. unspeakable!" Martin caught her by the arm, his lowering face red and dark.

"Come on, Clem." But before he could turn, Jack had swung again and this time he landed a neat one on Martin's chin. The owner of the Dove reeled slightly. "Don't be such a sap," he warned, shoving Jack into a chair. "Clear out and come back when you're sober." "I'll clear out when I damned well get ready," shouted Jack. ''THE little group at the bar had everybody's attention.

The head waiter rushed excitedly forward, a couple sitting near Martin and Jack moved to a far table and Nick came hurrying through the door. "You louse," he cried, grabbing Jack by his shoulder. "So you thought you could strong arm the boss!" With cold brutality Martin walked out. Clem followed him. People returned to their tables.

The tap room again hummed with chatter. "Take a drink to clear your head," Nick advised, nodding to the bartender to pour Jack a stiff one. Feigning to reach for the drink, Jack swung at Nick's head instead, sending him spinning like a oil- liard ball among the tables. Before the crowd could grasp exactly what had happened, or before Nick could recover, Jack had drained the glass of whisky, hurled it at the head of an advancing and menacing waiter and bolted for the door. Still running, he bumped hard into Mary Franklin, just as she Was stepping into the main, entrance.

When he didn't stop to apologtee she stared after him. He stood on the curb in front of his automobile, swaying unsteadily as he tried to Unlock the car door. Mary rushed toward him as he stumbled in. "Jack, she cried, attempting to grab the car door, "What is the trouble?" He banged the car door shut. Mary was thrown backward on the pavement.

His only reply was a screeching of the tires' as he swung the car out into the middle of the street and careened wildly off. UICKLY picking herself up, Mary shouted at a taxi whirling by. Climbing excitedly in she called to the driver, "Follow that blue coupe." The taxi man nodded. Jack's car was already turning up Third Avenue. A shifting of the brakes threw Mary forward as her taxi jerked to stop.

"Go on," she cried, "can't you see we're already losing track of that blue car?" But the driver didn't answer. A policeman had thrust a grim face into the front of the taxi. "Where's the fire? Let's see your "You can't stop this cab," Mary spoke sharply. "I'm on the Gazette." She reached in her bag. "Here is my police card." "Just a minute, sister, just a minute." The officer held up a warning hand.

"I ain't got no quarrel with you, but I will have if you keep this up. Show your police card to the commissioner, not me. This bpzo was breaking the traffic laws and he's going to get a ticket worse." "You fool," cried Mary. "I'm on a story that the commissioner cares a lot about." "Another word, young lady, and you'll go to the hoosegow with this guy." A crowd was gathering, attracted by the argument. The cab driver maintained a discreet silence.

"Here, take this." Desparingly Mary a five dollar bill at the driver and jumped out of the car. 'That'll cover your fine," she called and started gunning up Third Avenue looking frantically for another cab. (To Be Continued) Cheating the Sun the settler. But their big industry was doomed and Bodge -City's -future as the farm and of Western Kansas: was discernible. DODGE At (lie Paradoxically enough, the most col- orful yiid fabulous cow town on the entire frontier of an expanding United States during a period of what has most aptly been degpribed as "wild and woolly" is perhaps the least familiar to this modern generation.

Almost everybody has heard the picturesque name of Tombstone, Santa Fe, New Mexico, Wichita and Kansas, San an El Paso, Laramie and Cheyenne, and Readwood, S. and in- variabjy associates them with an era when men wore Colt six-shooters on either hip aud djdn't hesitate tg reach for them. fe ware familiar with the history or, for that wi.aUer, have ever heard of the wildest and woolliest, rQotin'est, tootuVest, shooUn'est town of them Dodge City, Kan. Literature and art signally have failed to capture the atmosphere of the town that was perhaps best described as the "bibulous Babylon of the western frontier." A journalist, after a s.ur,y«y MI the 1870's, wrote: "West of Kftnsas City there is oo Sunday aad west of Fort Smith no Qqdge City is west of Fort Smith. Podge City more than a town; i.t was a distillation of all the varied aspects of the old west in one spot.

Mpre traditions attach to it than to all the other famous frontier cities combined. Pr. Herman Lissauer, head of the Warner Bros. Studio research department, unearthed a host of interesting facts concerning the one-time cattle capital of Kansas during his labors in connection with Warner nijllion-and-a-haif-dollar Technicolor glorification of the town, "Dodge City," starring Errol Flynn and Olivia de Havilland which opens Sunday at the Saenger theater. Seldom a day passed during Dodge City's most hectic years without at least one gun battle taking place; usually more.

Along the wooden sidewalks of Front street were many large barrels filled with water to be used in case of fire, but they served a much better purpose; protection for one or both contestants in a gun battle. More than 7,000,000 Texas longhorn cattle were shipped out of Dodge City during its boom days. The town was also the shipping point of countless millions of buffalo hides. Dodge City, at one time or qnother, visited by most of the great musters of the six-shooter. The cattle trade through Dodge began in the middle '70's and continued as a booming industry to the middle '80's.

The cattlemen made their last desperate stand against encroaching homesteaders, who got their living from the soil, in 1884. That year the cattlemen of all the West met in Dodge City and formed the powerful Cattlemen's Association and divided up the rangelands of four states among themselves as a protective measure against Black rings around eyes of Mildred Black, Louisiana State Normal College rings of value. She wears new eye- shades, developed by fellow- student David Scott, which wprk on principle of camera lens- shade, allegedly cut out more ihan 30 per cent of harmful light rays. Barrymore Is Placed Under Oxygen CHICAGO T- (W) John Barrymtrfe veteran star of stage and screen flieted With a heart ailment, was pfafi- ecl under an oxygen tent ly Wednesday. Dr.

T. J. Coogan reported the 57- year-old actor had a "narrow squeak" Tuesday, when he suffered a tack, but was much better Wednesday. If he continued to improve at the same rate, the physician added, he should be able to resume his role in "My Dear Children" next Monday night. MALARIA Speedy Relief of Chills and Fever When your teeth are chattering with chills and your body burning with malarial fever, you want timely and reliable relief! Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic is the medicine you want to take lor Malaria.

This is no untried preparation, but a treatment of considerable merit. Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic contains tasteless quinidine and iron. It relieves the chills and fever due to Malaria and also tends to build you up. This is the double effect you want. The very next time you feel Malarial chills and fever coming on, get a bottle of Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic.

Start taking it immediately find it will soon give you relief. AlldrugstoressellGrove'sTasteless Chill Tonic. Buy the large you much more for your money. DANCE To the Music of CARL "DEACON' MOORE Legion Hut A. Camden, Ark.

Monday, Jime 5th Dance Floor Sponsored by Alpha Oiwega Fraternity anil American Legion 10 'til 2. Script $2-00 HERE: ALI, WEEK-OPENS TONIGHT EUANGELINE SHOWS FREE Rox mm RIDE. 2-lor-l mm TICKET this ticket at Rye pcfoet Iftc receive Ask Your ercJi for (' John Phone 84 Co. We Give Eagle Beverage Set Glasses Melal Rack CHROME FINISH TOASTER Mica'element! Strains as it ex tracti! Compact Make even golden brown toaitl -Polar Cub Electric Fan 8 inch ICE CUBE CRUSHER Savesyou work' Sturdily Built .122 Makes beverages cold quick! Strong, pure brittleit NOW ONLY Buy several this low price. Fully REAL VALUE Can't overheat or burn the hair.

COLD CREAM MALTED MILK ftoe or ALCOHOL For. Rubbing Full Pint ASPIRIN CREAM sracML FOR OUTDOORS i Energine White Shoe POLISH ZIPPER BAG PO-DO GOLF BALLS The 300 yard talll 6 lor 1.35 12 lor 2.50 wnWarneke.Jr. GLOVE TENNIS RACQUET Warwick Brandt FUIL SIZE SOO PAPER NAPKINS for PLAY6ROUND BASEBALL FOR. PAK White, cmbotscU Boudoir Lamps DENTIFRICE FOR TlfTH AMAZING New sale LIQUID way sparkling Ponds Cold.

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About Hope Star Archive

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